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DAP Forums > DREAM Act > The News Room

Mr. Obama, Go Big on Immigration (OPINION)

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#1
07-04-2014, 11:18 PM
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Quote:
This week, President Obama finally declared his independence from a suffocating debate over immigration reform that Republicans in Congress had never seriously joined. After waiting too long for the obstructionists to move, Mr. Obama has freed himself to do what he can to fix the broken-down system.

His powers are limited, of course. Only Congress can give immigration the long-term, comprehensive overhaul it so badly needs. A bipartisan bill passed by the Senate a year ago — and strangled in the House — was the best hope for that. But Mr. Obama should do his utmost, within the law, to limit the damage done by an obsolete, unjust system that is deporting the wrong people, stifling businesses, damaging families and hurting the economy.

It starts with giving millions of immigrants permission to stay, to work and to live without fear.

Mr. Obama needs to scale back the deportation machinery, which he greatly expanded. His decision two years ago to halt deportations of young immigrants called Dreamers was a good first step. Now he should protect Dreamers’ parents, and, if possible, parents of citizen children. His emphasis should be on protecting families and those with strong ties to this country, and on freeing up resources to fight human traffickers, drug smugglers, violent gangs and other serious criminals.

He should end programs that recklessly delegate immigration enforcement to local police. He should make it easier for family members of citizens to seek green cards without having to leave the country for three or 10 years. Through common-sense fixes to onerous visa restrictions, wise use of prosecutorial discretion and new programs to allow groups of immigrants to apply to stay and work legally, Mr. Obama should move the system away from its deportation fixation, and closer toward balance.

Mr. Obama wants to shift resources away from the interior to the border, where tens of thousands of children have recently been detained after fleeing violence in El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras. He hopes to stem the influx through swifter deportations, but his most urgent priority should be giving these children lawyers and caregivers. While many will probably be sent back, many others will likely qualify for humanitarian protection.

Republicans will howl over Mr. Obama’s solo actions. Let them. Let the party pay a heavy price among Latino and Asian voters for failing to tame its nativist wing, whose only idea for immigration is a fantasy of an airtight border and mass expulsions.

Most Americans find the Republicans’ enforcement obsession unconvincing; polls support the moderation and legalization that Mr. Obama and Democrats have fought for. But fear and panic do respond to stoking, as in places like Murrieta, Calif., where protesters this week blocked buses carrying recent migrants to a Border Patrol center. In a farcical reaction to a concocted emergency, Murrieta’s mayor announced that the city had set up an “incident action plan,” so police and emergency officials could keep a few dozen women and children from destroying his town.

Nobody was even being released in Murrieta. But the mayor urged residents to complain, and in a pageant of ugliness, dozens took action: They waved flags, screamed “U.S.A.!” and turned three buses back.

As the border crisis plays out, public support for legalization will be tested. But Mr. Obama can ease fears if he acts on the belief that millions who are here are a benefit to the country and deserve a chance to stay. Through cynical abdication, Republicans wasted a precious chance to fix immigration for the 21st century. That game is over. The president has moved on. It’s about time.
CREDIT: The Editorial Board of the New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/04/op...tion.html?_r=0
Last edited by Malign0n; 07-04-2014 at 11:21 PM..
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#2
07-05-2014, 06:23 PM
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is it possible that we could see CIR pass by the end of this summer?
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#3
07-05-2014, 08:48 PM
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What do you predict?
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I personally knew that if he wins he's not going to be touching DACA.
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I hope Trump wins second term.
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Tranny is not derogatory term dummy
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#4
07-05-2014, 10:53 PM
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Originally Posted by DACAuser View Post
is it possible that we could see CIR pass by the end of this summer?
No but there will be some sort of expansion by end of summer my brah. CIR is out of the equation now. Only when Democrats fully secure BOTH House and Senate is when CIR will come back to life. At this point, we must push hard for DACA like status for adults who have been here for a long time just like the current DACA beneficiaries! Slowly but surely we must force ourselves in.
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#5
07-06-2014, 01:50 AM
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I just want to be able to enlist.......
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I support the wall 100%
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#6
07-06-2014, 03:50 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pianoswithoutfaith View Post
What do you predict?
I predict CIR will pass before the end of 2015.
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#7
07-06-2014, 04:25 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DACAuser View Post
I predict CIR will pass before the end of 2015.
Are you going for a more cautious approach this time, DAuser?
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#8
07-06-2014, 06:42 AM
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NeedHelp
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if i have to enlist, i will.
but i hope not.
please pass the original dream act.
if mr.president grants asylee or refugee status to us, we can apply for green card a year after.
is it possible through executive order?
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#9
07-06-2014, 09:10 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 2Face View Post
Slowly but surely we must force ourselves in.
Well then.
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#10
07-06-2014, 09:44 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NeedHelp View Post
if i have to enlist, i will.
but i hope not.
please pass the original dream act.
if mr.president grants asylee or refugee status to us, we can apply for green card a year after.
is it possible through executive order?
Good question... Is it possible?
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