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View Full Version : Alabama passes tough immigration law



tachosomoza
12th June 2011, 15:58
The new legislation, similar to one passed last year in Arizona, requires schools to find out if students are there illegally.
The law, which takes effect on 1 September, also make it a crime to give an illegal immigrant a ride in a car.
Advocacy groups say they will challenge the measures, which they call racist and unconstitutional.
There are an estimated 12 million illegal immigrants in the US - and individual states have increasingly taken matters into their own hands in an attempt to tackle the problem.
Fear of deportation
But none has gone so far as Alabama, says the BBC's Jane O'Brien in Washington.
As in Arizona, police will now be allowed to arrest anybody suspected of being an illegal immigrant - even if they are stopped for something else, says our correspondent.
But in addition, businesses and schools will be required to check the legal status of workers and students, while landlords will be committing a crime if they knowingly rent to illegal immigrants.
Republican Governor Robert Bentley, who signed the bill into law Thursday, said: "We have a real problem with illegal immigration in this country.
"I campaigned for the toughest immigration laws, and I'm proud of the legislature for working tirelessly to create the strongest immigration bill in the country."
But an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union warned the move could deter some immigrant parents from sending their children to school, for fear of arrest or deportation.
A district judge blocked the most controversial parts of Arizona's law - such as wider police stop-and-search powers - amid fears of racial profiling.
That case is expected to end up in the US Supreme Court.


Huzzah. :rolleyes:

Astral_Disaster
21st June 2011, 21:11
Why is it that whenever I read about some atrocious crime some government of the world is perpetrating on its citizens, the government in question is almost always the United States?

Ismail
21st June 2011, 22:03
Why is it that whenever I read about some atrocious crime some government of the world is perpetrating on its citizens, the government in question is almost always the United States?I'm pretty sure Syria's been in the news quite prominently these past few weeks. Then Libya before that. Then Tunisia and Egypt before that. In 2008 the focus was on Myanmar, and in 2007 on Sudan. Tibet gets mentioned every few years.

I don't see the basis for saying that the USA is singled out in terms of "atrocious crime."

Reznov
27th June 2011, 07:29
If only they knew what it felt like, heartless fucks.

tachosomoza
28th June 2011, 02:10
If only they knew what it felt like, heartless fucks.

The best way for someone who has experienced privilege to appreciate it and eventually get pissed off for having it is to walk in another's shoes.