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MEXICO IS ANGRY!

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I

In~Plain~Site

I admit, I did not google your suggestion. I'm always just a little leery when folks suggets a 'link' to search out...lol. I'm sure you understand. ;)

I too am a middle-of-the-road type, but I'm still very proud of my country, with all her faults, and yes, I take offense to those that want to bash her, or Americans in general from the cheap seats.

I guess that's what comes with the territory of being the greatest nation on earth.
 

<~Hades~>

Active member
Ill go with he is a Redcoat , they always Mouth off the most , and drop like flyz , them .U.kers just dont got no fight in um, well Not that can keep up with there mouths !!!:gday:
 

smoke1sun

What Goes Around Comes Around. But Am I Comming Or
Veteran
Or mexico, and he's upset over the illegal beaner bashing.

Yeah and them being illegal is your only problem.

:wave:

Keep them talking and the truth will come out.

You guys all speak of Karma. Maybe America is getting her Karma?
 
I

In~Plain~Site

Speaking of karma...


Fingerprint sharing led to deportation of 47,000 illegals

WASHINGTON — A rapidly expanding illegal immigration enforcement program has led to the deportation of 47,000 people over 18 months when the Homeland Security Department was sifting through millions of fingerprints taken at local jail bookings.
About one-quarter of those did not have criminal records and slightly less — about a fifth — had committed or were charged with what are categorized as the most serious crimes, according to government data obtained by immigration advocacy groups who had sued.
ICE posted the data on its website late Monday in advance of the group's release of the data Tuesday.
The federal government says the fingerprint sharing program, known as Secure Communities, helps to identify criminal immigrants who threaten public safety in the U.S.
Immigration advocates say the government spends too much time on lower-level criminals and people who have not committed crimes. They also allege the program makes people fearful of reporting crimes, does not protect against racial profiling and is being forced on some communities without consent.
"ICE essentially throws a gill net over the concept of immigration reform. It sweeps up all the little people along with what they say is their intention, which is to deport serious and violent criminals," said San Francisco Sheriff Michael Hennessey, whose city is having trouble getting out of the program. He said people picked up on traffic violations, whose charges are later dropped, still get deported.
From October 2008 through June of this year, 46,929 people identified through Secure Communities were removed from the U.S., the documents show. Of those, 12,293 were considered non-criminals and 9,831 were labeled as having committed the most serious crimes.
Fingerprints of people booked into jails already are sent to state criminal justice departments to be checked against federal criminal databases. Under Secure Communities, they also go to Immigration and Customs Enforcement to run through Homeland Security databases.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement divides crimes into three categories, with Level 1 being the most serious. Level 1 crimes include actions that threaten or compromise national security, murder, rape, drug crimes punishable by more than one year, theft and even resisting arrest.
Most of those deported committed Level 2 or 3 crimes or were non-criminals, a monthly report of Secure Communities statistics shows.
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano announced Tuesday that Secure Communities is in place in all 25 counties along the U.S.-Mexico border. Her statement, released just before advocates criticized the program in a conference call with media, did not say when that occurred.
"Secure Communities gives ICE the ability to work with our state and local law enforcement partners to identify criminal aliens who are already in their custody, expediting their removal and keeping our communities safer," Napolitano said.
Richard Rocha, an Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokesman, said Monday non-criminals may be people who have failed to show up for deportation hearings, who recently crossed the border illegally or who re-entered the country after deportation. He also said it's important to remember that more people commit offenses that are considered Level 2 and 3 crimes.
The Obama administration wants Secure Communities operating nationwide by 2013.
As of Aug. 3, 494 counties and local and state agencies in 27 states were sharing fingerprints from jail bookings through the program.
California had the highest percentage of immigrants deported who had committed Level 1 crimes, with 38 percent of a total 14,823 immigrants sent out of the country, according to statistics from 24 of the states participating through the end of June. In Georgia, 39 percent of 624 immigrants removed were non-criminals, the highest rate among the states.
Travis County, Texas led all counties with the highest percentage of non-criminals deported, 82 percent of 724, according to the groups' analysis of the statistics.
The Immigration Justice Clinic at Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law in New York, the National Day Laborer Organizers Network and the Center for Constitutional Rights had requested and sued for the statistics. They are awaiting the release of more data from the program.
 

headband 707

Plant whisperer
Veteran
Not really, other than you're on about something and you don't like Americans?

Not quite sure how our border issues affect those abroad though...that's a stumper.

*scratches head*

I apologize for making you feel inferior with my spelling, puncuation and grammar, just the same.

I knew I should have smoked more weed in school. :laughing:

Don't apoloize bro your just showing your true colors the laughing finger says it all .. Reminds me of the bullies in highschool they were assholes then too..
 

dextr0

Member
The United States has the highest documented incarceration rate in the world.[1][2] The U.S. incarceration rate on December 31, 2008 was 754 inmates per 100,000 U.S. residents, or 0.75%.[3] The USA also has the highest total documented prison and jail population in the world.[1][4][5]

According to the U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS): "In 2008, over 7.3 million people were on probation, in jail or prison, or on parole at year-end — 3.2% of all U.S. adult residents or 1 in every 31 adults."[6]

2,304,115 were incarcerated in U.S. prisons and jails in 2008.[3][7] In addition, according to a December 2009 BJS report, there were 92,854 held in juvenile facilities as of the 2006 Census of Juveniles in Residential Placement (CJRP), conducted by the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention.[3][8]

since your giving statistics out look at that 1 out of every 31 on probation, in jail or prison, or on parole at year-end...and that was in 08.

If i understand correctly u have to be a U.S. citizen to be on probation. Should we kick out our kids and their kids for committing crimes here on U.S. soil? Accourding to those statistics everyfuckin one is a criminal....Wait why send them off U.S. soil when we can make money off them in prisons along with our brothers, sisters, mothers , and cousins.
No that dont mean shit on taxes....not to mention paying for a person (commissary etc.)to live his life in prison while i struggle to make ends meet as taxes get higher and higher.
pass more laws thats what u do. The three strike law in cali was genius huh. Now u got people wishing one day they can reverse that decision. We need to think very hard about what we do before hand.
 
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