C
In exactly what ways are the illegals damaging the USA?
Are they damaging the economy or what?
After all i think "invaded" is a very strong word, makes it sound like they're coming over the border with the intention of toppling the US government and making it a state of mexico, I think you have to be pretty damn paranoid to believe that.
Why don't they organise mass demonstrations and publicly refuse to vote for politicians who are soft on the problem?
Invade definitely works. You think maybe I should us a wimpy word like visit.
in•vade
v. in•vad•ed, in•vad•ing, in•vades
v.tr.
1. To enter by force in order to conquer or pillage.
2. To encroach or intrude on; violate: "The principal of the trusts could not be invaded without trustee approval" (Barbara Goldsmith).
3. To overrun as if by invading; infest: "About 1917 the shipworm invaded the harbor of San Francisco" (Rachel Carson).
4. To enter and permeate, especially harmfully
Why do Arizona's citizens put up with it?
Why don't they organise mass demonstrations and publicly refuse to vote for politicians who are soft on the problem?
Can't a high barbed-wire fence be built along the Arizona-Mexico border and patrolled?
And why can't the people who hire illegals be jailed?
..Washington D.C. has their panties in a bunch now because Arizona passed a mirror of the federal law for a state and local level enforcement.
Well, after finding this: http://history.state.gov/milestones/1830-1860/TexasAnnexation
U.S. Troops in Mexico
"In July, 1845, Polk, who had been elected on a platform of expansionism, ordered the commander of the U.S. Army in Texas, Zachary Taylor, to move his forces into the disputed lands that lay between the Nueces and Rio Grande rivers. In November, Polk dispatched Congressman John Slidell to Mexico with instructions to negotiate the purchase of the disputed areas along the Texas-Mexican border, and the territory comprising the present-day states of New Mexico and California.
Following the failure of Slidell’s mission in May 1846, Polk used news of skirmishes between Mexican troops and Taylor’s army to gain Congressional support for a declaration of war against Mexico. The President neglected to inform Congress, however, that the Mexicans had used force only after Taylor’s troops had positioned themselves on the banks of the Rio Grande River, which was effectively Mexican territory. On May 13, 1846, the United States declared war on Mexico."
I am even less convinced that these Mexicans can be called "invaders". :suspicious:
Its enough that they are illegals.