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Re: New immigration plan breaks with White House: msg#00480

culture.discuss.cia-drugs

Subject: Re: New immigration plan breaks with White House

Jim,

You are again manning the Maginot line with the pent up ferocity of
a geriatric saber rattler.

Why are you worried about terrorists among the wetbacks when some of
the alleged perps of the 911 attacks attended military colleges as
the guests of our government?

How about the US business visas granted to terrorists in Riyadh by
the US embassy at the request of the CIA.(Michael Springman INTO THE
BUZZSAW)?

Wasn't Osama at the Redstone Arsenal under the name Tim Osman?

Why is it that in the face of some of the most blatant political
crimes ever you still focus on minor crap and recrimination of the
Clinton regime (out of power some five years now!!)?

Jim, let me know, when you can, of course, how Osama brought down
WTC7. 'Cause that just takes the cake as far as I am concerned.



--- In cia-drugs@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, "Jim Rarey" <jimrarey@xxxx> wrote:
>
> http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/print?id=1249471
>
> They are determined to leave the more than eleven million illegals
in the country whether they are cheap labor and/or sleeper
terrorists. - JR
>
> New immigration plan breaks with White House
> Reuters
> WASHINGTON - An influential Republican Senator introduced
legislation on Tuesday that would allow many of the estimated 8
million to 12 million illegal aliens in the United States to
eventually gain legal status, in a proposal that broke with the Bush
administration.
>
> Nebraska senator Chuck Hagel, who is considering running for
president in 2008, put forward four separate bills to address border
security, employment security, create a guest worker program and
encourage those in the country illegally to apply for legal status.
>
> "Immigration reform is an urgent national security priority. We
cannot continue to defer making tough choices about our nation's
immigration policy. It is not in our interest to have 8- to 12-
million people undocumented and unaccounted for in our country," he
said.
>
> Hagel's bills represent the third major proposal making the rounds
in Congress. Additionally, the Bush administration has been fleshing
out its own plan, under which illegal immigrants and foreigners
could apply under a guest worker program to work in the United
States for up to six years. After that, they would have to return
home.
>
> Shortly after Hagel presented his legislation, Senate Majority
Leader Bill Frist met with Sens. John McCain of Arizona and Sen.
John Cornyn of Texas, sponsors of the two rival bills, and agreed to
take up immigration legislation early next year.
>
> Frist said they would start with border enforcement where there
was a lot of agreement among lawmakers, and then try to move beyond
that to deal with the millions of illegal immigrants living in the
United States.
>
> All the bills that have been put forward include measures to
enhance border security and create some form of guest worker
program. But they differ on the key points of how and whether
illegal aliens could eventually gain citizenship.
>
> Nobody knows exactly how many people are in the country illegally.
The 2000 Census estimated the number at 8.7 million and said it was
growing by half a million a year. Others put the number much higher.
>
> But the fact that hundreds of thousands of people continue to
cross the Mexican border each year is fast becoming a major
political and security issue.
>
> In a CBS poll this week, just over half of respondents disapproved
of the way President George W. Bush was dealing with immigration; 21
percent said they approved, and 26 percent said they did not know.
>
> Three-quarters all respondents said they did not think the United
States was doing enough along its borders to keep illegal immigrants
from entering the country.
>
> Under Hagel's proposal, illegal aliens who had been in the country
for at least five years and had worked three of them could pay a
$2,000 fine and apply for permanent legal status which they could
get eight years later.
>
> But Hagel acknowledged that immigration divided Republicans and
might be difficult to move forward in the runup to what is expected
to be tight and bitter election campaign to control Congress next
year.
>
>
> Copyright 2005 Reuters News Service. All rights reserved. This
material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or
redistributed.
>
> Copyright © 2005 ABC News Internet Ventures
>






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