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On 4/6/2025 6:24 AM, zen cycle wrote:On 4/5/2025 9:27 AM, AMuzi wrote:On 4/5/2025 3:12 AM, Catrike Ryder wrote:On Fri, 4 Apr 2025 21:38:04 -0500, AMuzi
<am@yellowjersey.org> wrote:
On 4/4/2025 9:06 PM, Frank Krygowski wrote:On 4/4/2025 3:55 PM, AMuzi wrote:
Are there illegals in agricultural work? Probably yes.
Are they of a significant or critical number? Probably
not.
That said, there are probably ag operations dependent on
tax cheating for their survival. I for one will not cry
when their operations are closed, illegals deported, and
the principals pursued, tried and convicted.
"When"? How naively optimistic! :-)
Some such operations may face legal challenges. But I
expect
the brunt of the enforcement will fall on their employees.
Good riddance.
+1
--
C'est bon
Soloman
Most USAians have absolutely no idea how difficult,
frustrating, lengthy, uncertain and expensive a process
legal immigration has become.
That said, it does seem to filter for great citizens. As
evidenced.
Great, then lets constitutionally mandate that all people
over 18 living in the US goes through the process.
Question 1: Are Haitian immigrants were stealing and
eating pets in Springfield, Ohio?
If the answer is anything but an adamant and equivocal "NO",
you get deported. That should clear out an appreciable
portion of the left side of the bell curve.
On a more serious note, there are advocates for passing the
immigrant citizen tests before voter registration. On one
side, I think that would be great in concept but on the
other, I doubt many of my fellow voters could pass even with
some study effort.
I've made a habit over the years of giving people copies of
our Constitution:
https://store.cato.org/products/pocket-constitution-10-pack
I estimate about one in ten actually read it, even
partially. The amazing parts are the conversations
afterwards, "I had no idea!".
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