well done... see some independent thinking... wasn't that fun??

the only problem that I can think of with your idea is that it exsists, just not in that form... but what doesn't exsist is a congress that care about that part... what I've been preaching the whole time...


It is on the jobs front that the hypocrisy of our leaders becomes so maddeningly apparent. From 1997 to 2005, we added 4,300 agents to patrol our borders, increasing the force to 11,100 and making it appear as though the government was getting serious about a crackdown, according to the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse. But at the same time, the number of federal immigration agents who investigated work-site compli- ance actually went down, from 240 in 1999 to 65 in 2004, according to the Government Accountability Office.
The same study found that the number of notices of intent to fine employers who had hired illegal aliens dropped to three in 2004. At least 7 million illegal immigrants are estimated to be working, but our immigration service could only find three employers hiring them.
http://www.sltrib.com/opinion/ci_3771055

when our government is making money on them being here... money from the businesses who hire them... they aren't too keen on kicking them out by not letting them work... cause they don't get paid that way...

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2003/...in546248.shtml
(AP) A federal jury acquitted Tyson Foods and three managers Wednesday of hiring illegal immigrants from Mexico and Central America as part of a nationwide conspiracy to boost production and profits.

(didn't they shut down on monday cause of all their illegals?? that was in 2003 that they were found not guilty... trial by jury though, right bong.. they were allowed to cause 12 people say so, not cause it's right or wrong)

Past high-profile cases haven't slowed the tide of illegal workers. Not a $1.75 million fine paid by Houston-based Pappas Restaurants in 1997 for training undocumented workers as chefs, then supplying false papers and hiding places at its Pappadeaux Seafood and Pappasito's Cantina eateries in the Metroplex. Nor the $1.9 million penalty shouldered two years later by Filiberto's, a Phoenix chain of Mexican restaurants, or the $11 million forked over last year by Wal-Mart for having illegal immigrants fill cleaning crews even though the chain said it was unaware of their status.

Although there's little consensus among employers on which legislative proposal is best, those interviewed acknowledged that from a national security perspective, the current system isn't working.
http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/business/14466774.htm