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Political Threads This section is for Political Threads - Enter at your own risk. If you say you don't want to see what someone posts - don't read it :hihi: |
03-20-2021, 05:12 PM
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#1
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Registered User
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https://www.gopusa.com/?p=107674?omhide=true
Some passages:
. . . Three-quarters [thousands]of these unaccompanied minors are young men ages 15 to 17 . . .
. . . A few weeks after surrendering to border officials, they’ll board buses to Los Angeles, Houston or New York City [and other places]. . .
. . . The law requires them to go to school. But they’ve endured trauma on their trek and missed months or years of schooling. Few speak English, and many don’t know Spanish, only Mayan . . .
. . . Their education will cost thousands of dollars a year more than for the average student because they’ll need linguistic experts, tutors, psychological counseling, vaccinations and other support . . .
. . . only 66% of students without English skills ever graduate. . .
. . . In 2014, New York City schools rolled out the red carpet for 1,662 migrants from Central America, committing a whopping $50 million for special programs. .
. . . President Joe Biden seems oblivious. Last week, he announced a program to enable Central American children to apply for admission to the United States from their home country . . .
. . . The Democratic Party pays lip service to reducing economic inequality. But their open border policy is doing the opposite — fostering a permanent underclass working for low wages . . .
. . . Teens who fail to get a diploma are almost doomed to poverty. Nearly half the Central American adult migrants in the U.S. don’t have a high school diploma. Their education levels are lower than other immigrants or the U.S.-born population. And no surprise, they are also poorer . . .
. . . In the Chicago suburbs, these young teens labor nights in meatpacking plants and auto parts plants, come home at 6 a.m. when their shift ends, and then go to school two hours later on almost no sleep, according to a ProPublica expose. No wonder they fall asleep in class and age out of high school before getting a diploma. The #^^^^&ensian era of child labor is being resurrected in our country today, thanks to open borders . . .
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03-21-2021, 10:56 AM
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#2
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Super Moderator
Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: Middleboro MA
Posts: 17,125
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Move some of them into Nancy Pelosi's home, she has room, plenty of room.
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The United States Constitution does not exist to grant you rights; those rights are inherent within you. Rather it exists to frame a limited government so that those natural rights can be exercised freely.
1984 was a warning, not a guidebook!
It's time more people spoke up with the truth. Every time we let a leftist lie go uncorrected, the commies get stronger.
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03-21-2021, 12:55 PM
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#3
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: RI
Posts: 21,481
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Slipknot
Move some of them into Nancy Pelosi's home, she has room, plenty of room.
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Soon they will be antifa and trained marxists. Millions and millions of them. Then... they all move to Warwick.
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03-21-2021, 02:01 PM
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#4
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 7,725
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Quote:
Originally Posted by spence
Soon they will be antifa and trained marxists. Millions and millions of them. Then... they all move to Warwick.
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Violent far left Antifa members were recently filmed at a gathering during which a Hispanic female member of the group scolded a white male member of the group for the pigmentation of his skin.
“You’re still white,” she yelled at the man. “You’re still responsible. This is your fault. You’re inherently racist. It’s in your blood. It’s in your DNA.”
Remember, these are the people who are supposedly fighting racism in America.
The exchange took place after the woman berated the man for what she called “white performativeness,” which apparently means showing up to an Antifa rally as a white person and not punching “Nazis.”
“I’m seriously telling you to do the work,” she said. “Punch a Nazi. Stop being performative.”
The man embarrassingly groveled for acceptance among the Hispanic Antifa tribe as he tried to explain that he had put a good deal of time and effort into fighting “Nazis.”
“I’ve been f****** fighting for like three months,” he said. I’ve put myself at risk for us all the time! Somebody threw a f****** megaphone at my head!”
It wasn’t enough. No amount of megaphones to the head could overcome that poor man’s cardinal sin – being born with the immutable characteristic of whiteness.
WATCH: (Warning: Explicit Language) https://www.facebook.com/MilneNews/v...5124663229656/
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03-22-2021, 07:52 AM
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#5
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Super Moderator
Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: Middleboro MA
Posts: 17,125
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Quote:
Originally Posted by spence
Soon they will be antifa and trained marxists. Millions and millions of them. Then... they all move to Warwick.
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don't forget MS-13 or the Cartel
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The United States Constitution does not exist to grant you rights; those rights are inherent within you. Rather it exists to frame a limited government so that those natural rights can be exercised freely.
1984 was a warning, not a guidebook!
It's time more people spoke up with the truth. Every time we let a leftist lie go uncorrected, the commies get stronger.
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03-23-2021, 08:47 AM
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#6
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Canceled
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: vt
Posts: 13,434
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Zero of the top 50 most densely-populated cities in the world are in the United States. If there's one thing we've got plenty of, it's room.
Unless you fall for the losers big lie, one of many, who routinely demonized undocumented immigrants, calling them drug dealers, criminals, and rapists.
More people will die from the stupid kids packing south Florida for Spring Break bringing the latest variant of Covid home and senseless gun crimes like Atlanta and Boulder this week than from illegal immigrants.
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Frasier: Niles, I’ve just had the most marvelous idea for a website! People will post their opinions, cheeky bon mots, and insights, and others will reply in kind!
Niles: You have met “people”, haven’t you?
Lets Go Darwin
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03-23-2021, 01:16 PM
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#7
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Canceled
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: vt
Posts: 13,434
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The GOP is fear mongering over Muslims, immigrants, and cancel culture because they literally have nothing else to offer anymore.
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Frasier: Niles, I’ve just had the most marvelous idea for a website! People will post their opinions, cheeky bon mots, and insights, and others will reply in kind!
Niles: You have met “people”, haven’t you?
Lets Go Darwin
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03-23-2021, 05:08 PM
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#8
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 7,725
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pete F.
The GOP is fear mongering over Muslims, immigrants, and cancel culture because they literally have nothing else to offer anymore.
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Obviously, we have no Muslim problem. All is going well there. Zip the lips re that.
No immigration problem. It's all good. Or will be when every shred and crumb of Trump and GOP policy is wiped out. That's what Uncle Joe is doing. Folks misconstrue his creating new policies as a reaction to some phantom crisis. Nope. He's just making what was already great before Trump even better.
And cancel culture is great stuff. It's New Wave cleansing of bad people who thought they had some fictitious right to opinions and actions that run counter to the will of the good folk of this country.
Things are getting straightened out fast under the Harris/Biden administration. They've got total control of Congress and the Presidency. They will give us an American Renaissance. The Constitution will be cleansed of those silly glitches that constrained their power. The Federal Government will now be free to, how did you put it, to "offer us" stuff--that we can't refuse.
We don't need that nasty fear mongering by the GOP. We only have to be afraid of white supremacists and white males.
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03-24-2021, 10:39 AM
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#9
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Canceled
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: vt
Posts: 13,434
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You're all set with the future conservatives
Dinesh D'Souza? Allen West? Ted Nugent? Steve Crowder? Curt Schilling?
Biggest bunch of victims since the Confederacy
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Frasier: Niles, I’ve just had the most marvelous idea for a website! People will post their opinions, cheeky bon mots, and insights, and others will reply in kind!
Niles: You have met “people”, haven’t you?
Lets Go Darwin
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03-24-2021, 11:52 AM
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#10
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 7,725
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pete F.
You're all set with the future conservatives
Dinesh D'Souza? Allen West? Ted Nugent? Steve Crowder? Curt Schilling?
Biggest bunch of victims since the Confederacy
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As far as the subject of this thread goes, I would trust their opinions over any Democrat. But I understand why you must take every opportunity to make fake smears. I don't expect integrity from someone who must resort to lying and slander in order to destroy what he fears.
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03-24-2021, 12:33 PM
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#11
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Canceled
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: vt
Posts: 13,434
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Quote:
Originally Posted by detbuch
As far as the subject of this thread goes, I would trust their opinions over any Democrat. But I understand why you must take every opportunity to make fake smears. I don't expect integrity from someone who must resort to lying and slander in order to destroy what he fears.
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Calling the person who came in second in an election a loser is not lying or slander.
In this country elections have winners and losers.
55% of Americans now think the country is on the right track
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Frasier: Niles, I’ve just had the most marvelous idea for a website! People will post their opinions, cheeky bon mots, and insights, and others will reply in kind!
Niles: You have met “people”, haven’t you?
Lets Go Darwin
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03-23-2021, 01:24 PM
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#12
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Canceled
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: vt
Posts: 13,434
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There’s no migrant ‘surge’ at the U.S. southern border. Here’s the data.
Evidence reveals the usual seasonal bump — plus some of the people who waited during the pandemic
Image without a caption
Migrants in custody at a U.S. Customs and Border Protection processing area under the Anzalduas International Bridge on Friday in Mission, Tex. (Julio Cortez/AP)
By Tom K. Wong, Gabriel De Roche and Jesus Rojas Venzor
March 23, 2021 at 7:00 a.m. EDT
We looked at data from U.S. Customs and Border Protection to see whether there’s a “crisis” — or even a “surge,” as many news outlets have characterized it. We analyzed monthly CBP data from 2012 to now and found no crisis or surge that can be attributed to Biden administration policies. Rather, the current increase in apprehensions fits a predictable pattern of seasonal changes in undocumented immigration combined with a backlog of demand because of 2020’s coronavirus border closure.
It’s not a surge. It’s the usual seasonal increase.
The CBP reports monthly data on how many migrants its agents apprehend at the southern border, including unaccompanied minors. The figure below shows the most recent data the CBP has made publicly available.
As the blue line shows, the CBP has recorded a 28 percent increase in migrants apprehended from January to February 2021, from 78,442 to 100,441. News outlets, pundits and politicians have been calling this a “surge” and a “crisis.”
But as you can see, the CBP’s numbers reveal that undocumented immigration is seasonal, shifting upward this time of year. During fiscal year 2019, under the Trump administration, total apprehensions increased 31 percent during the same period, a bigger jump than we’re seeing now. We’re comparing fiscal year 2021 to 2019 because the pandemic changed the pattern in 2020. In 2018, the increase is about 25 percent from February to March — somewhat smaller but still pronounced.
But was 2019 an aberration? In the figure below, we combine data from fiscal year 2012 to fiscal year 2020 to show the cumulative total number of apprehensions for each month over these eight years. As you can see, migrants start coming when winter ends and the weather gets a bit warmer. We see a regular increase not just from January to February, but from February to March, March to April, and April to May — and then a sharp drop-off, as migrants stop coming in the hotter summer months when the desert is deadly. That means we should expect decreases from May to June and June to July.
Data: U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Figure: U.S. Immigration Policy Center (USIPC) at UC San Diego
What we’re seeing, in other words, isn’t a surge or crisis, but a predictable seasonal shift. When the numbers drop again in June and July, policymakers may be tempted to claim that their deterrence policies succeeded. But that will just be the usual seasonal drop.
So why are we seeing more migrants so far in 2021?
The CBP has indeed reported apprehending more migrants in February 2021 than in the same month in previous years. But that too doesn’t mean it’s a surge or a crisis. In the first figure, above, the blue trend line for fiscal year 2021 is above the orange trend line for fiscal year 2019. But 2020 was the pandemic, when movement dropped dramatically. Countries around the world closed their borders. Here in the United States, the Trump administration invoked Title 42, a provision from the 1944 Public Health Act, to summarily expel migrants attempting to enter the United States without proper documentation.
In other words, in fiscal year 2021, it appears that migrants are continuing to enter the United States in the same numbers as in fiscal year 2019 — plus the pent-up demand from people who would have come in fiscal year 2020, but for the pandemic. That’s visible in the first figure, earlier, in which the blue trend line for the five months of data available for fiscal year 2021 (October, November, December, January and February) neatly reflects the trend line for fiscal year 2019 — plus the difference between fiscal year 2020 and fiscal year 2019.
This suggests that Title 42 expulsions delayed prospective migrants rather than deterred them — and they’re arriving now.
That would be consistent with nearly three decades of research in political science. Much of this research has been done since President Bill Clinton’s administration ran Operation Gatekeeper, which tried to keep out migrants by increasing funding and staff for border enforcement. Scholars consistently find that border security policies do not necessarily deter migration; rather, they delay migrants’ decisions to travel, and change the routes they take.
Reassessing our understanding of undocumented immigration
So have Biden administration policies caused a crisis at the southern border? Evidence suggests not. The Trump administration oversaw a record in apprehensions in fiscal year 2019, before the pandemic shut the border. This year looks like the usual seasonal increase plus migrants who would have come last year, but could not.
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Frasier: Niles, I’ve just had the most marvelous idea for a website! People will post their opinions, cheeky bon mots, and insights, and others will reply in kind!
Niles: You have met “people”, haven’t you?
Lets Go Darwin
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03-23-2021, 04:41 PM
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#13
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 7,725
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pete F.
Reassessing our understanding of undocumented immigration
So have Biden administration policies caused a crisis at the southern border? Evidence suggests not. The Trump administration oversaw a record in apprehensions in fiscal year 2019, before the pandemic shut the border. This year looks like the usual seasonal increase plus migrants who would have come last year, but could not.
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That was funny. The pandemic shut the border. The pandemic must be over.
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03-25-2021, 02:08 AM
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#14
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Canceled
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: vt
Posts: 13,434
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Hamilton in Federalist #22:
"To give a minority a negative upon the majority (which is always the case where more than a majority is requisite to a decision), is, in its tendency, to subject the sense of the greater number to that of the lesser.
This is one of those refinements which, in practice, has an effect the reverse of what is expected from it in theory. The necessity of unanimity in public bodies, or of something approaching towards it, has been founded upon a supposition that it would contribute to security.
But its real operation is to embarrass the administration, to destroy the energy of the government, and to substitute the pleasure, caprice, or artifices of an insignificant, turbulent, or corrupt junto, to the regular deliberations and decisions of a respectable majority.
In those emergencies of a nation, in which the goodness or badness, the weakness or strength of its government, is of the greatest importance, there is commonly a necessity for action. The public business must, in some way or other, go forward.
If a pertinacious minority can control the opinion of a majority, respecting the best mode of conducting it, the majority, in order that something may be done, must conform to the views of the minority; and thus the sense of the smaller number will overrule that of the greater, and give a tone to the national proceedings. Hence, tedious delays; continual negotiation and intrigue; contemptible compromises of the public good.
And yet, in such a system, it is even happy when such compromises can take place: for upon some occasions things will not admit of accommodation; and then the measures of government must be injuriously suspended, or fatally defeated.
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03-25-2021, 10:22 AM
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#15
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 7,725
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pete F.
Hamilton in Federalist #22:
"To give a minority a negative upon the majority (which is always the case where more than a majority is requisite to a decision), is, in its tendency, to subject the sense of the greater number to that of the lesser.
This is one of those refinements which, in practice, has an effect the reverse of what is expected from it in theory. The necessity of unanimity in public bodies, or of something approaching towards it, has been founded upon a supposition that it would contribute to security.
But its real operation is to embarrass the administration, to destroy the energy of the government, and to substitute the pleasure, caprice, or artifices of an insignificant, turbulent, or corrupt junto, to the regular deliberations and decisions of a respectable majority.
In those emergencies of a nation, in which the goodness or badness, the weakness or strength of its government, is of the greatest importance, there is commonly a necessity for action. The public business must, in some way or other, go forward.
If a pertinacious minority can control the opinion of a majority, respecting the best mode of conducting it, the majority, in order that something may be done, must conform to the views of the minority; and thus the sense of the smaller number will overrule that of the greater, and give a tone to the national proceedings. Hence, tedious delays; continual negotiation and intrigue; contemptible compromises of the public good.
And yet, in such a system, it is even happy when such compromises can take place: for upon some occasions things will not admit of accommodation; and then the measures of government must be injuriously suspended, or fatally defeated.
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device
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If the majority is given the power to determine what is right or good, then the majority will always be right and good.
The majority, under the power given to it was right to say Socrates or Galileo were wrong. In hindsight, we would say those majorities were wrong.
Expediency in government necessitates some constant instrumental process to arrive at conclusions and decisions. In democratically structured societies, majority vote is the most expedient process for making decisions. That doesn't mean the decisions are "right." It simply means that the majority has been given the power to decide.
In tyrannical governments, the instrument is the tyrant and the process is the administration of his decisions.
In democratic systems, majorities must be persuaded. When, by argument or demagoguery, majorities are persuaded that they need some particular or other, whether they actually do or not, then the statesmen or demagogues will be proved "right" when the instrument of majority vote or opinion is expressed.
In red states, Republicans are "right." In blue states, Democrats are "right." Even though the parties have opposing views, majorities have proclaimed them both to be right or wrong.
Majorities have proclaimed slavery to be right. Majorities have said it is wrong. Etc., etc., etc. . . .
Hamilton was writing about expediency in government, not about right or wrong.
The Founders did not want a tyrannical system. Nor did they want a system in which majorities created a form of tyranny by imposing the will of the majority over every aspect of the individual rights of all the citizens. That's why they created a Constitution that severely limited the central government. Even Hamilton, the most hungry for central government power, believed in unalienable individual rights which the government could not abridge.
Those Founders would not approve of what current majorities have been persuaded to believe in or vote for. But they would have bowed to the presumed rightness of majority rule and the erroneous decisions arrived at by those majorities.
Or else they would have called for a new revolution.
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03-25-2021, 11:30 AM
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#16
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Canceled
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: vt
Posts: 13,434
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"As the Founders intended" is the laziest of lazy arguments. Which founders? The signers of the Declaration, Articles of Confederation, or Constitution? Because that's a lotta folks who never agreed on much. How about every Congress that's amended the Constitution? All founders
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03-25-2021, 01:03 PM
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#17
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 7,725
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pete F.
"As the Founders intended" is the laziest of lazy arguments. Which founders? The signers of the Declaration, Articles of Confederation, or Constitution? Because that's a lotta folks who never agreed on much. How about every Congress that's amended the Constitution? All founders
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device
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The quote you started this post with is not any quote of mine in this thread. I am not a subscriber to original intent. In the past, on this forum, I have argued against depending on original intent as the means to interpret the Constitution. In my opinion, judicial review, judicial "interpretation," or even academic and popular interpretation should strictly be based on the original text, with some occasional clarifying supportive nods to intent, but not relying solely on the conflicting opinions of intent to support an interpretation of the Constitution.
What we have been steered into discussing here, which deflects from the subject of this thread, is the empirical "rightness" or "wrongness" of majority opinion and majority power. I claim that we give, in our democratic process, the majority the right to decide. But that is strictly an instrumental process which expedites the function of government. It is not some guarantee that majority opinion is "right" in any way other than through the wielding of power through superior numbers.
The notion that a majority believes we are "on the right track" is nothing more than an instance of might makes right.
How that might is accrued depends on the ability of power seekers to influence the majority. When there is a contest between those who hold the political power we have by majority given them, the message of the power mongers can be, and usually is, full of deceptions, exaggerations, misdirection, bribes through promises of all sorts of largesse given or transferred to the voters, and outright lies. When majority opinion relies on political rhetoric and promises, it has no claim to some noble ideological or justicial rightness, just the raw power of numbers.
As for your question of "which founders"--the majority.
Last edited by detbuch; 03-25-2021 at 06:45 PM..
Reason: corrrection
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03-25-2021, 07:21 PM
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#18
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Canceled
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: vt
Posts: 13,434
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The original Constitution didn't even have the Bill of Rights, so you've gotta add on those authors and that Congress as well
BTW, if you think there's a lotta overlap between the signers of the first 3 founding documents, there's a total of 2 people who signed all 3
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03-25-2021, 08:37 PM
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#19
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 7,725
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pete F.
The original Constitution didn't even have the Bill of Rights, so you've gotta add on those authors and that Congress as well
BTW, if you think there's a lotta overlap between the signers of the first 3 founding documents, there's a total of 2 people who signed all 3
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device
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Is this another rabbit hole to escape from the subject of this thread? We could keep morphing from one subject to another and never have to start another thread. I guess that would be to your advantage. Do you want to discuss the Mayflower Compact, or the Northwest Ordinance, or the Missouri Compromises. Maybe the various state constitutions. Perhaps the libraries and letters of Washington and Madison and Jefferson and Hamilton. The Gettysburg Address is a really good one. We could go through the Federalist Papers one by one. The Anti-Federalist Papers would be really good to talk about and very pertinent in regards to how the Constitution has been Progressively "interpreted" in ways that turn it upside down and converted it into a document of nearly unlimited federal power instead of limiting that power.
Yeah, Madison did not originally want a bill of rights. The way the Constitution was written, a bill of rights was not necessary. The Constitution once, as written, reserved for the people that vast residuum of rights that remain beyond the few, limited, rights specified for the federal government. The individual rights specified in the Bill of Rights were already understood to be incorporated within that vast residuum embedded in the Constitutional structure, and the enumerating of a few specific rights of the people, Madison feared, would give the government a plausible pretext to claim that it was only those specified rights given in the Bill of rights which could be claimed by the people, and all else would remain within government power to manipulate as it wished.
But Progressive Courts have basically "interpreted" that quietly understood residuum of rights not listed in the BOR out of existence by giving the federal government nearly unlimited power through, in effect, rewriting various clauses such as the Interstate Commerce Clause, and the Welfare Clause, and others in a way that vanquishes much of the limitations by which the Constitution once constrained government. So now, generations later, the people are under the impression the Constitution guaranties us only those rights listed in the BOR.
So Madison's fear has come to fruition. And even those few rights in the BOR have been whittled down in scope, some to near non-existence. And the first two are now on shaky ground.
Last edited by detbuch; 03-25-2021 at 08:43 PM..
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03-27-2021, 12:28 PM
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#20
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Join Date: Feb 2009
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Texas GOP Congressman Ronny Jackson said Saturday that the federal government's top infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, should be down at the U.S. southern border instead of guilting Americans into wearing "two masks."
Jackson, who was the chief medical adviser to the White House during former President Donald Trump's administration, accused Democrats of having used the COVID-19 pandemic as a political "tool" since the virus outbreak last year.
The Texas Republican told Fox News Saturday that Fauci and other Biden administration officials aren't dealing with the health crisis at the border, which he said is worsening due to overcrowding at migrant detention facilities. He and Fox News host Pete Hegseth agreed that photographs at the border show "super spreaders" are trying to gain entry to America.
"Well, the Dems have used COVID as a tool for the last two years to get whatever they need, and they're using it now to make an excuse why reporters and people can't go in there and see what's going on," Jackson told Fox News. "I'd like to know, where is President Biden's concern about our health down there?"
"Where is Fauci?" Jackson continued. "Fauci should be down there at the border looking at this, instead, he's running around talking about how you have to wear two masks and all this other kind of stuff to keep us safe and if you don't you're responsible. Simultaneously, the border is just being stormed by these people, we know a large percentage of these people are COVID positive. "
Jackson joined numerous congressional Republicans who say the immigration crisis at the border may be worsening the coronavirus pandemic by allowing infected individuals into the country. Alabama GOP Congressman Mo Brooks said "illegal immigrants" are bringing COVID-19 into the country at an alarming rate during an interview last week.
During a U.S. Senate committee hearing about the health crisis at the border on March 18, Fauci said he was "not familiar" enough with the situation in Texas to fully answer Republicans' questions
During a separate appearance on Fox News Friday, Jackson claimed President Joe Biden may not be "fit for duty and in control" of his mental facilities. This accusation was often directed toward the 78-year-old Biden by his critics during the 2020 presidential campaign.
Fauci is the director of the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, a position he also occupied during Trump's administration. The former president frequently criticized Fauci for appearing to contradict his administration during the pandemic.
Jackson said the state of Texas, which lifted its state mask mandate earlier this month, will be reeling from the potentially infected migrants crossing the border.
"We've worked really hard, especially here in Texas, to turn things around with COVID so we can get our kids back to school and open up our small businesses and they are going to absolutely undo this with everything going on down there. This is a huge disaster from an economic standpoint and from a health standpoint and from a national security standpoint...for crying out loud, we know there's people on the terrorist watch list coming across the border."
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03-28-2021, 06:31 AM
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#21
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Canceled
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: vt
Posts: 13,434
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Is Jackson sober these days?
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03-28-2021, 09:14 AM
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#22
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pete F.
Is Jackson sober these days?
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device
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Are you?
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03-31-2021, 09:39 AM
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#23
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EXCLUSIVE: Illegal Migrants Explain Why They’re Coming to the US as They Cross Private Land
BY THE DAILY CALLER NEWS FOUNDATION March 30, 2021 Updated: March 30,
Illegal migrants said they’re coming to the U.S. because of President Joe Biden, natural disasters and violence in their home countries.
A landowner where migrants frequently cross on their way to a processing facility said they tell him they’re here because Biden invited them.
Some of the migrants said they did not want to leave their countries but had to because of corruption and a lack of opportunity.
RINCON VILLAGE, TEXAS—Illegal migrants are crossing through private land seeking asylum in the U.S. for a number of reasons including Joe Biden’s presidency and factors such as violence and natural disasters devastating their home countries, they said Friday.
Approximately 190 illegal migrants were encountered at an undisclosed location in the Rincon Village near Mission, Texas, on Friday. A man calling himself “Junior” told the Daily Caller News Foundation that he encounters illegal migrants crossing through his private land every day he’s there, which is at least four days out of the week.
“They all say the same thing, Biden nos invitó, Biden invited us,” Junior told the DCNF, he asked that his last name be omitted after the media mobbed him in 2018 with requests to access his land.
The illegal migrants have not caused damage to property because they only walk along the road, but they have left behind trash including various medications, clothing and bottles, Junior told the DCNF. He added he has not recognized anyone that stands out as possible coyotes or cartel members.
“With Obama, it was mostly men with children, no women, but I asked a couple of times, ‘Where’s your daddy?’ and the kid—I remember one kid saying, ‘He’s not here,’ and the so-called father was like five feet away and says, ‘I’m right here.’ He was angry, he was upset, and I could tell, he ain’t the father, but there is nothing I can do,” Junior told the DCNF.
A Honduran man crossing Junior’s land with a large group of migrants including women and several children said that the Biden administration gave them the opportunity to come to the U.S.
A woman traveling with the same group said she is escaping Honduras with her son because women are being denigrated and killed.
A large group of migrants from Guatemala said they “aren’t delinquents” and that they came to the U.S. illegally to find work.
Antonio Flores, 22, from Honduras said he and his family came to the U.S. because of corruption and lack of opportunity in their home country. He added that this journey was not something he wanted to do, that he did not want to leave his country and that the group did not pay anyone to get them across the border.
A group of four male Honduran migrants ages 15 to 17 said they came to the U.S. because a hurricane destroyed their house and that it is easier to enter the U.S. under the Biden administration.
Junior’s land is not a port of entry and all the migrants encountered there Friday had entered the U.S. illegally. During the Trump administration, Junior told the DCNF that he would go weeks and sometimes months without seeing an illegal migrant.
Previously, illegal migrants had to walk until they encountered border officials and were brought in. There is now a temporary processing center under an international bridge about five miles from the riverbank, Junior told the DCNF. Many migrants are now headed directly to the facility.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials under previous administrations knew illegal migrants entered the country but wouldn’t pick them up, Junior claimed.
By Kaylee Greenlee
From The Daily Caller News Foundation
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03-31-2021, 09:47 AM
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#24
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 7,725
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Illegal Border Crossings Jump to 150,000 in March
BY CHARLOTTE CUTHBERTSON March 30, 2021 Updated: March 31, 2021
MISSION, Texas—Border Patrol has apprehended more than 150,000 illegal border crossers during the month of March—50,000 more than February—according to former Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Commissioner Mark Morgan.
A further 30,000 evaded capture, according to Morgan, who has received the provisional CBP numbers from internal sources.
The March total edges out the highest month in 2019, during the most recent border crisis. In May 2019, Border Patrol apprehended 144,000 people between ports of entry.
“The border is wide open … it’s not secure. Drugs are pouring in and criminal aliens are pouring in right now,” Morgan said during a press conference on the bank of the Rio Grande on March 30.
In his first press conference since taking office, President Joe Biden on March 25 said his focus is to “rebuild the system that can accommodate the — what is happening today.”
The administration has opened several holding facilities for illegal immigrants, particularly to accommodate the increase in children crossing alone. The San Diego Convention Center is currently holding 500 children, while another 500 were sent to a site on Fort Bliss on March 30. In total, more than 12,000 children are being held by CBP and Health and Human Services.
When asked about the spike in illegal crossings, Biden said: “I like to think it’s because I’m a nice guy, but it’s not. It’s because of what’s happened every year.”
Morgan said the current surge can’t be explained away as a normal seasonal uptick.
“They created this crisis and they’re trying to spin and blame everybody but themselves,” Morgan said. “The only thing that’s really been put out there that’s honest is that we’re going to see numbers that we haven’t seen in over 20 years.”
Former Customs and Border Protection Acting Commissioner Mark Morgan at a press conference in Anzalduas Park in Mission, Texas, on March 30. 2021. (Charlotte Cuthbertson/The Epoch Times)
In a media call on March 26, a senior Border Patrol official said that 85 percent of the 2,200 individuals within family units who were apprehended the day prior were released into the United States.
The official said that if a parent brings a child under the age of 7, they are automatically released into the interior rather than being expelled under the Title 42 health emergency provision.
Morgan said CBP had provided “exhaustive briefings” to Biden’s transition team to warn them of an “unmitigated crisis” if Biden ended the Migrant Protection Protocol program and the Asylum Cooperative Agreements with the Northern Triangle countries.
“We told them that again and again. We told them that the surge numbers would skyrocket and the Border Patrol facilities would be overwhelmed.”
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03-31-2021, 02:34 PM
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#25
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Canceled
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: vt
Posts: 13,434
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March numbers
In 2000 it was 220,063
In 2016 it was 33,316
In 2019 it was 92,833
Maybe push has something to do with it
Be very afraid
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device
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03-31-2021, 03:56 PM
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#26
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 7,725
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pete F.
March numbers
In 2000 it was 220,063
In 2016 it was 33,316
In 2019 it was 92,833
Maybe push has something to do with it
Be very afraid
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device
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According to the U.S. Customs and Border Protection, there were only 34,460 Southwest Land Border encounters in March of 2020. The numbers for this March 2021 is almost 5 times higher. And a further 30,000 evaded capture.
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03-31-2021, 06:59 PM
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#27
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Canceled
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: vt
Posts: 13,434
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Quote:
Originally Posted by detbuch
According to the U.S. Customs and Border Protection, there were only 34,460 Southwest Land Border encounters in March of 2020. The numbers for this March 2021 is almost 5 times higher. And a further 30,000 evaded capture.
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Way less than 2000
This is nothing new
Trumps shortsighted policies which along with his failed pandemic policies reduced illegal immigration in the short term did nothing to reduce the push.
In fact employers like him that were employing illegals increased the attraction.
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device
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Frasier: Niles, I’ve just had the most marvelous idea for a website! People will post their opinions, cheeky bon mots, and insights, and others will reply in kind!
Niles: You have met “people”, haven’t you?
Lets Go Darwin
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03-31-2021, 08:43 PM
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#28
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 7,725
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pete F.
Way less than 2000
This is nothing new
Yeah, it's new. It's the worst since 2000 and is getting worse and projected to do so by both sides.
Trumps shortsighted policies which along with his failed pandemic policies reduced illegal immigration in the short term did nothing to reduce the push.
You repeat mantras about shortsighted policies and failed pandemic policies as if they're a given, simply a priori true. In the meanwhile, reducing immigration "in the short term" is the only term that he is responsible for since his term is over and his policies have been cut.
But we are simply supposed to believe your mantras and to suppose that Trump policies would not make a substantial and long term reduction in illegal immigration, nor that they would actually solve any "undocumented" immigration problems. According to your oft repeated but unsubstantiated mantras there is no connection between Biden's policies along with the cutting of Trump's policies to the dramatic spike in border crossings. Nothing new. And, of course, Biden's polices, we must assume, are far sighted and will actually make it all better.
As of this moment, the numbers make your suggestions and accusations out to be smoke up our butts.
In fact employers like him that were employing illegals increased the attraction.
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device
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His political actions, as you noted, decreased the attraction. Biden's policies and election promises increased the attraction.
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04-01-2021, 06:58 AM
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#29
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Canceled
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: vt
Posts: 13,434
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Quote:
Originally Posted by detbuch
His political actions, as you noted, decreased the attraction. Biden's policies and election promises increased the attraction.
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In 2016 it was 33,316
In 2019 it was 92,833
Simple math will tell you which is greater
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device
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Frasier: Niles, I’ve just had the most marvelous idea for a website! People will post their opinions, cheeky bon mots, and insights, and others will reply in kind!
Niles: You have met “people”, haven’t you?
Lets Go Darwin
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04-01-2021, 02:42 PM
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#30
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Canceled
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: vt
Posts: 13,434
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Just listen to the Wedding crasher and be very afraid
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device
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