Monday, March 7, 2016

Don's Common Sense Renewal of Immigration Laws

Whereas Americans and America's legal immigrants have no justifiable faith that our immigration laws are being faithfully enforced without preferences, the following is a common sense proposal to reinforce and renew said laws:

All who have either entered, or remain in, America illegally are subject to deportation without notice upon contact with law enforcement at any level. To that end, all law enforcement officers at federal, state or local levels are deputized to inquire of any person contacted whether they reside here legally, all other laws, regulations or court decisions notwithstanding.

All who are illegally present in America and who have committed any violation of any law, minor traffic citations excepted, have no legal or judicial recourse against immediate deportation. Said deportation shall be enforced upon serving sentences with no allowance for probation or parole.

Upon registration with federal authorities, illegal residents who have no criminal violations beyond minor traffic citations can, by admitting and agreeing to the above, be allowed no longer than 2 years to leave America. Illegal residents not complying with said registration will be subject to immediate deportation upon contact with any officer of the law. Registered illegal residents waive any legal recourse to protest 1) their 2 year reprieve from deportation and 2) their immediate deportation upon violation of any law beyond traffic citations.

Illegal residents who are otherwise law-abiding may apply for legal permanent resident status (LPR/"green card"), during the balance of their 2-year reprieve; however, said reprieve shall not be extended. Illegal residents qualifying for reprieve may, upon authorization by Congress, receive $2000 per family member for the purpose of relocation to their country-of-origin; those eligible for relocation funds waive any legal rights against the removal and relocation process and must pursue their LPR card from abroad.

The above proposals can restore the faith that Americans deserve to have, in immigration law enforcement, a transition to a "zero tolerance" atmosphere for illegal entrants, visa over-stayers and unauthorized workers. Future immigrants will likewise arrive with the knowledge that America's laws are not suggestions and will not be set aside out of sympathy for their plight, beyond the extent that the people's representatives enshrine it in lawful immigration policies.

No comments:

Post a Comment