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Politics : Just the Facts, Ma'am: A Compendium of Liberal Fiction -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sully- who wrote (79334)4/28/2010 3:14:11 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 90947
 
Racial Profiling: Let's Cut a Deal

By: Peter Kirsanow
The Corner

Conservative supporters of Arizona’s illegal-immigration law should seize this moment to cut the following deal with President Obama and liberals who object to the statute on the basis that it will result in racial profiling:

The statute’s opponents, including President Obama, agree not to support racial profiling in college admissions, public employment, the awarding of government contracts, or in their descriptions of tea partiers, critics of Obamacare, talk-radio hosts, and Cambridge cops. In return, supporters of the Arizona law agree to insert a provision explicitly prohibiting racial profiling.

Oh, wait -- that provision’s already in there.


.



To: Sully- who wrote (79334)4/29/2010 1:06:11 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 90947
 
    Arizona is a sovereign state. Its citizens have a natural 
right to defend themselves, particularly when the federal
government surrenders. The state’s new law does precisely
that, in a measured way that comes nowhere close to
invoking the necessary, draconian powers Leviathan has but
refuses to use.

Illegal Aliens: Law and Sovereignty in Arizona

By: Andrew C. McCarthy
National Review Online

In an inevitable state of ignorance of some of its major provisions, Pres. Barack Obama recently signed a 2,700-page health-care bill. Since then, the president has championed a 1,400-page financial-reform proposal, insisting that it does not provide a blank check for future multibillion-dollar corporate bailouts -- but the bill would, in fact, provide a blank check for future multibillion-dollar corporate bailouts.

The point of these geysers of legislation is to produce tsunamis of regulation. Tens of thousands of pages dense with code will shift control of previously private activity to swelling bureaucracies, unaccountable to any but the most wired insiders. In crony socialism as in crony capitalism, what matters is who you know. When it comes to the law, no one can really know what it is.


In his spare time, on April 8, President Obama signed an arms-reduction treaty with Russia. He urges swift ratification of the accord even though, as former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton observes, important provisions are still being negotiated. In the spirit of the times, though, the pact would become the law of the land before those details are finalized, while its authors either don’t know what it says or are lying about it. Administration officials told Arizona Republican senators Jon Kyl and John McCain -- who will be central to the Senate’s ratification debate -- that the treaty referred to missile defense only in the hortatory, non-binding preamble. Yet when the senators looked at the treaty’s binding terms, they found, right there in black and white, a provision (Art. V, para. 3) that would require the United States to refrain from placing “defense interceptors” in existing missile launchers -- a severe compromise of American national security.

So when the president hastily pronounced Arizona’s new immigration bill “misguided” and “irresponsible,” Arizona residents -- whom the federal government has abandoned to the siege of Mexican warlords, narco-peddlers, and squatters -- may be forgiven for snickering. Come to think of it, snickering has become the default reaction to pronouncements on the law by our ex-law-prof-in-chief , particularly those prefaced by his most grating verbal tic, “Let me be clear#...#.”

Why “misguided” and “irresponsible”? The president elaborated that the Arizona law “threaten[s] to undermine basic notions of fairness that we cherish as Americans.” To be sure, Obama has notions of fairness, but they are his own, marinated in doctrinaire leftism. As for the American ideal that he ceaselessly invokes but clearly doesn’t get, our Constitution’s framers thought fundamental fairness would be fatally undermined by two things: the inability of the governed to consent to legal arrangements because it had become impossible to know what the law is, and the failure of central government to tend to its first responsibility: the nation’s security.

The consent of the governed, it is worth remembering, is the only just source of the power that government wields in a free society. One cannot consent to what one cannot know. Thus, there can be no legitimate government if, as Madison put it in FederalistNo. 62, “the laws be so voluminous that they cannot be read, or so incoherent that they cannot be understood; if they be repealed or revised before they are promulgated, or undergo such incessant changes, that no man who knows what the law is today, can guess what it will be tomorrow.”

Our elected officials and judicial officers don’t rule us. They are there to govern, to implement our will. When they resort to impenetrable legislative monstrosities to implement their own will without our consent -- indeed, over our objection -- that is not governing. It is dictating.

Maybe that’s the Obama administration’s problem with Arizona’s new law: It is too short (16 pages), too clear, and too reflective of the popular will.
Unlike the social scientists in Nancy Pelosi’s federal laboratory, state lawmakers didn’t need to pass the law first in order to find out what was in it. Essentially, it criminalizes (as a state misdemeanor) something that is already illegal (namely, being present in the United States in violation of federal law), and it directs law-enforcement officers to, yes, enforce the law. Democrats and their media echo-chamber regard this as radical; for most of us, it is what’s known as common sense.

And here’s another commonsense proposition: A government that abdicates our national defense against outside forces is no longer a government worth having.

In adopting the Constitution, in giving their consent to our social contract, the sovereign states agreed to cede some of their authority in exchange for one overriding benefit. It was not to have an overseer to monitor our salt intake, design our light bulbs, prepare for our retirement, manage our medical treatments, or mandate our purchases. It was to provide for our security. It was to repel invasion by aliens who challenged our sovereign authority to set the conditions of their presence on our soil.

For that reason, border security has always been the highest prerogative of sovereignty. Immune from judicial interference, it answers to no warrant requirement. At the border, the federal government does not need probable cause -- or any cause at all -- to inquire into a person’s citizenship, immigration status, or purpose for attempting to enter our country.
Agents can detain immigrants and citizens alike. They can perform bodily searches. They can go through every inch of a would-be entrant’s belongings, read his mail, and scrutinize the contents of his computer. A person subjected to this treatment may find it degrading or unfair, but the courts have nothing to say about it. At stake, after all, is the irreducible core of a sovereign people’s power to protect themselves from intruders.

At the southern border, however, the federal government has forfeited its power.
As a result, Arizonans are imperiled by Mexico’s brutally violent warring factions. They are crushed economically as the magnet effect of our unsustainable welfare state falls disproportionately on their schools, hospitals, jails, and pocketbooks, to the tune of nearly $2 billion per year.

Arizona is a sovereign state. Its citizens have a natural right to defend themselves, particularly when the federal government surrenders. The state’s new law does precisely that, in a measured way that comes nowhere close to invoking the necessary, draconian powers Leviathan has but refuses to use.

Demagogues are smearing Arizona’s immigration law as “racial profiling” because it endorses police inquiries into the validity of a person’s presence in the United States. The claim could not be more specious.
The law does not give police any new basis to stop and detain someone. Police may not inquire into immigration status unless they have a “lawful” basis for stopping the person in the first place. And even then, the police officer must have “reasonable suspicion” before attempting to determine whether the person is lawfully present. And that suspicion must be generated by something beyond race and ethnicity -- as Byron York notes, the law expressly says these may not be the sole factors.

The law is clearly constitutional. Yet the Obama administration, having buried unconsenting Americans under avalanches of debt and inscrutable, unconstitutional mega-statutes, is mulling a court challenge, casting its lot with lawless aliens against besieged Arizonans.

A government destructive of our citizens’ basic rights to know, to determine, and to have the protection of the law cannot endure. This one will not. The only question is how much more damage we will allow it to do.


—Andrew C. McCarthy is a senior fellow at the National Review Institute and the author of Willful Blindness: A Memoir of the Jihad (Encounter Books, 2008).



To: Sully- who wrote (79334)4/29/2010 1:23:42 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 90947
 
Remember…

By: Mary Katharine Ham
Weekly Standard
04/28/10 12:14 PM EDT

…when Nazi symbolism, vandalism, nasty signs, misspelled signs, violence, and arrests at protests (even without proof) would have delegitimized an entire movement and caused months of media coverage about the threat to the Republic posed by such barbarians? These are different times, now.



Roger Ebert tweets: Idea for Arizona: Just have them wear a cloth star, easily visible on their topmost outer garment.

Ariz. Capitol Vandalized In Wake Of Protests







YouTube: Arizona SB 1070 Protest Organizer Assaults Photographer

24 arrested in peaceful immigration protest

Read more at the Washington Examiner: washingtonexaminer.com



To: Sully- who wrote (79334)4/29/2010 1:28:45 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 90947
 
Border states to Obama: Send in the Guard!

By: Barbara Hollingsworth
Local Opinion Editor
04/28/10 1:18 PM EDT

Seventeen members of Congress representing southwestern states sent a letter to President Obama today requesting that the commander-in-chief immediately deploy the National Guard along the Mexican border. Because the governors of Arizona and Texas have already requested it, they say, no legislation is required. The president “could do it today,” Rep. Ted Poe, R-TX, pointed out.

The signatories are also asking President Obama to specify new rules of engagement. National Guard troops “should be able to defend themselves if fired upon,” Poe told reporters at a press conference outside the Capitol. “In the first two months of this year, attacks on the Border Patrol in the Tuscon Sector have increased 200 percent. This country does more to protect the borders of other nations than we do to protect our own borders.”

Last time the Guard was sent, they were unarmed and used only as backup support for Border Patrol agents. This time, says Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-AZ, who also signed the letter, the Guard needs to be deployed “on our border, not 50 miles back.” Recent increases in Border Patrol agents and other enforcement improvements are not enough, Giffords told reporters. “Last year, 240,000 individuals were apprehended” in Arizona – and those were just the ones that got caught.

Rep. Poe showed reporters photos of a Russian-made Mexican military helicopter that had ventured over the U.S. border and a Border Patrol vehicle retrofitted with wire cages to protect agents inside from rock-throwing illegals. “If somebody in D.C. started throwing rocks at the local police, they would go to jail,” Poe said. When illegal immigrants do it, they go on welfare.

Rep. Ed Royce, R-CA, also contradicted Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, the former governor of Arizona, who told Congress on Tuesday that the southern border “is as secure as it ever has been.”

“The Secretary is wrong,” Rep Royce said, pointing out that there were over 1,000 attacks on Border Patrol agents last year. “The situation is actually spinning out of control. There’s a breakdown of the rule of law. Organized crime controls both sides of the border.”

So that’s what Napolitano means by “secure”- drug cartels are secure in the knowledge that they can pretty much enter the U.S. at will.


Border Security Letter to Obama

Read more at the Washington Examiner: washingtonexaminer.com