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Politics : Foreign Policy Discussion Thread -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bill Ulrich who wrote (2015)1/10/2003 7:20:07 AM
From: Ilaine  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15987
 
I was reading the paper during the O'Reilly Factor, so only caught the tail end of something about Saddam going into exile in Libya? It got my attention, but wasn't repeated, and I can't find another reference.

What gives?



To: Bill Ulrich who wrote (2015)1/10/2003 7:20:22 AM
From: lorne  Respond to of 15987
 
INS Still Can't Find More Than 300,000 Immigrants Ordered Deported
Thursday, January 09, 2003

WASHINGTON — More than 300,000 illegal immigrants who have been ordered deported remain at large in the United States, roughly the same number as in December 2001 when the government began a campaign to capture them.


Immigration and Naturalization Service officials said some of the original illegal immigrants on the list have been deported, and have been replaced by others who go underground rather than be returned to their home countries.

But the bulk of the immigrants originally named have not been caught.

A smaller group of about 6,000 immigrants were given special attention because they are from countries considered at risk for terrorism. Of those, just over 1,100 have been captured and deported, INS spokesman Bill Strassberger said Thursday.

Then-INS Commissioner James Ziglar announced to Congress in December 2001 that the agency would enter the names of some 314,000 illegal immigrants into the National Crime Information Center database used by police across the country.

The theory was that police might catch more of the immigrants who fled before they could be deported by running their names through computers when they are stopped for such things as traffic tickets. The program continues but the number still at large still exceeds 300,000, Strassberger said.

INS officials say they never envisioned sending out teams of agents to track down such a large number, first reported Thursday by The San Diego Union-Tribune. There are roughly 7 million illegal immigrants in the United States.

"We just don't have the resources to do that," Strassberger said. "The intention of the program was to put their names into the NCIC database."

Most of those being sought have committed some sort of administrative violation, such as overstaying a tourist visa, and have not committed a crime. Strassberger said that in some cases, those on the list to be deported are allowed to remain in this country if they get paperwork in order and get the agency's approval.

The INS has been under heavy criticism for months for its failures in tracking people who enter this country. On the other hand, it has also encountered criticism for a new program to photograph and fingerprint thousands of mostly Muslim men in a bid to improve its record.

The Justice Department has also tightened screening of U.S. visitors at the border and questioned universities around the country about their foreign students.
foxnews.com



To: Bill Ulrich who wrote (2015)1/10/2003 9:11:18 AM
From: zonder  Respond to of 15987
 
And not very much of it is representative of the Palestinian issue.

I did not say it was.

I gave the Indians losing their land to Americans as an example to someone (was is you?) saying the Jews had the right to the land because they were there before and the land was forcibly taken from them. Or something. So I asked if he thought the land Americans took from Indians should also be given back. That's all.



To: Bill Ulrich who wrote (2015)1/10/2003 1:12:44 PM
From: Nadine Carroll  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15987
 
When the first Spaniards wandered over what is now Texas and Louisiania in the mid-sixteenth century, they already found entire villages deserted because the inhabitants had died of European diseases...they had died without ever seeing a white man, infected by other Indians coming to them from the coasts.

All the Indian lands were in turmoil before the white men met the Indians, due to the influence of disease and game growing scarce due to white hunting, and Indian people being pushed into each others territories and fighting for land.