Fining employers for hiring people without proper identification. This will cut off the flow of money back to Mexico and the myth that anyone can come in here and find work and skirt the law. This will stop the problem of 45 people all holding the same social security number.
You can say what you want but we have to have laws and ways of regulating who comes and go into our country. If the people who wrote the constitiution came back today they would have wondered why they even bothered to write it. Everybody wnats to do thing their way. This is a good way to start another civil war.
In most people's mind there is no middle ground. It seems that the question here is do we as Americans uphold the laws of our country or just turn a blind eye to the mass influx of illegals to our country?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
One solution that would work
Heavy fines for employers hiring any illegal would turn off the spikett, thereby making it nearly impossible for them to gain employment.
The Goshen effect
I live in northern Indiana. Approximately 25 miles southeast of us is the City of Goshen, In. Goshen is close to Elkhart, In which is the RV capital of the world. During the boom times thousands of illegals made their way to northern Indiana to work for any one of 100 manufacturers. The problems was most of them could not speak english, the crime rate in Goshen went from non-existant to dealing with gangs and various other crimes. The cost to the city and taxpayers was enormous. The hospitals were inindated with high number of uninsured patients. You get the picture.
What are your thoughts on Immigration
Search This Blog
Followers
Blog Archive
-
▼
2010
(42)
-
▼
June
(10)
- Time is wasting and people are dying
- Nebraska has the right idea
- Federal government working on law suit against Ari...
- If we don't fix the immigration problem then what'...
- Local governments catching on to the solution
- It's not the country it's the principle
- How about Mexico sharing the cost?
- Hispanic boy shot and killed
- Bullets make good neighbors
- The scales of justice are starting to tip
-
▼
June
(10)

No comments:
Post a Comment