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Old 05-20-2008, 03:00 PM
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Default Re: Should birthright citizenship continue?

Quote:
Originally Posted by mlurp View Post
Dga, I saw it on Lou Dobbs and he had the Senator who heads the committee who himself was upset because no talks were held and it was slipped into his
committees bill. I found this earlier today. I would like any eleccted member to bring things to the floor for a vote not sneak one pass us! That is the real issue i am talking about.
Just took a google search to find this. Michelle Malkin Update: More details

Amnesty alert: Feinstein reportedly trying to sneak one through Update: Yup, it’s in there; Update: More details
By Michelle Malkin • May 15, 2008 02:35 PM Scroll down for updates…Feinstein/Craig amendment passes…More details….

My friends at NumbersUSA have sent out a warning that Sen. Dianne Feinstein may attempt to sneak an illegal alien amnesty measure into the Iraq supplemental war spending bill. (Yes, the same bill the White House is trying to stuff the Merida Initiative into, too.)

More info:

Our NumbersUSA Capitol Hill Team got several confirmations through both Democratic and Republican sources that Sen. Feinstein (D-Calif.) was preparing to add an [agricultural] amnesty to the Iraq bill Thursday afternoon in the Senate Appropriations Committee.

We don’t know the details of the amnesty. There is some chance she may try to slip it through by not including permanent legalization but just giving one or two million illegal ag workers a 5-year amnesty that allows them to work and live here while further sinking roots. The open-borders champions hope that the longer illegal aliens stay the more difficult it will ever be to deny them U.S. citizenship.

We need phone calls into the offices of members of the Senate Appropriations Committee — massively and immediately!

202-224-3121

If you live in the state of one of these Senators, please make a phone call immediately.

If you don’t have a Senator on the Committee, you may want to call a Senator in another state with which you have some attachment. We particularly need extra phone calls to Senators from small-population states.

Here are the Appropriations Senators who need your call:

Alexander (R-Tenn.)
Allard (R-Colo.)
Byrd (D-West Va.)
Bennett (R-Utah)
Bond (R-Mo.)
Brownback (R-Kan.)
Cochran (R-Miss.)
Craig (R-Idaho)
Domenici (R-N.M.)
Dorgan (D-N.D.)
Durbin (D-Ill.)
Feinstein (D-Calif.)
Gregg (R-N.H.)
Harkin (D-Iowa)
Hutchison (R-Texas)
Inouye (D-Hawaii)
Johnson (D-S.D.)
Kohl (D-Wis.)
Landrieu (D-La.)
Lautenberg (D-N.J.)
Leahy (D-Vt.)
McConnell (R-Ky.)
Mikulski (D-Md.)
Murray (D-Wash)
Nelson (D-Neb.)
Reed (D-R.I.)
Shelby (R-Ala.)
Specter (R-Pa.)
Stevens (R-Alaska)

…North Carolina growers, for example, have set up a North Carolina Growers Association that meets all of the ag labor needs through local workers and through legal foreign workers brought through the H-2A visa which ensures that the guest workers go home. Why shouldn’t California growers play by the same rules as law-abiding farmers in other states?

Based on past experience, there is a good chance that Feinstein will decide not to introduce her amnesty Thursday afternoon if she feels there is a major move against it. That’s what we want. Please let every member of the committee know just how worked up citizens get as soon as they hear of a possibility of an amnesty.
Lou Dobbs, The point is that California farmers are faced with a shortage of workers, and it is disgraceful that their Senators feel the need to slip this through another bill. It would be great if the problem could be addressed without having to oblige the almighty wrath of "the people" and the politicians that cater to the anti-illegal sentiment for fear of losing their seats.

The fact that it is being labeled as an "amnesty" when it is nothing but a guest worker program is proof enough that it is being taken out of context. The 1.3 million workers would not acquire any right to stay in the country permanently, but they will be brought out of the shadows, not open to exploitation. In order to participate in a guest worker program, they will of course need to be inspected (in house) and be granted an H2-A visa.

Yes, I guess the best solution is to import 1.3 million more workers into the country, instead of giving the opportunity to 1.3 million hard working illegal immigrants who are already here,
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