Originally Posted by 2Dogs
Originally Posted by Bulls eye
I used to think everything was black and white. Wrong or right. Well the more I live the more I realize there is a hell of a lot of gray area between those two. At this point in time you simply cannot successfully deport every illegal immigrant living in this Country. There are too many of them and they are to imbedded in the economy of this Nation. If you can’t see the damage that would to to our economy then you don’t know much about the economy. Who is going to replace them!!! Plus, what are we gonna do with their minor children who were born here and like it or not are citizens.

So here is my plan. Feel free to disagree.

1. Definitely run down the felony committing ones and deport.
2. Strengthen the border and stop all future illegal immigration as much as possible.

3. Make the process of getting them at least a work visa relatively simple.

4. Key point in plan- DO NOT MAKE THEM GO HOME AND RE ENTER THE COUNTRY TO DO SO.
Instead, use the resources that were gonna be used for mass deportations and set up local green card offices throughout the Country. Lets get them in the system. They pay income tax, get Drivers Licenses snd insurance. Develop a data base of who has registered and provide them proof. If after adequate time, maybe 2 years, if you do not have at least a green card and still remain here, you get deported.


You took my plan, LOL. There's got to be a reset. You know , some of those felons they're looking for might just show up at the "green card office" . grin


The reset has got to include a component of absolutely no welfare or any assistance at all, for non-citizens, as well as kicking all able bodied Americans, that are of working age, off of welfare, and forcing those people that are too lazy to work to either get their butts to work or starve to death. This is just as big of a problem as the illegal immigration.

"According to data from the Department of Health and Human Services, roughly 27% of working-age 24-64 adults in the United States participate in a social safety net program, meaning they receive some form of welfare assistance; this translates to around one in four working-age Americans. At a time when the United States is struggling with labor shortages, nearly 20% of prime-age adults—approximately 24 million Americans aged 25-54 — are not working. The vast majority of these people, roughly 21 million, are not even looking for work and are therefore “out of the labor force.” Only three million prime-age adults are seeking work and so are “unemployed”.

Last edited by abolt300; 02/13/25 02:20 PM.