Friday, May 31, 2013

Rubio billboard against Amnesty

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Billboard near Ocala, Florida along I-75


“What people are saying is, we don’t trust the Department of Homeland Security to come up with a good border plan, we don’t trust the Department of Homeland Security to come up with a good fencing plan, and so maybe the alternative is to have the Congress do that. The point is, that needs to happen. That is the lynchpin of whether this will work or not”

~ Marco Rubio

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Why can we give temporary work visas and employee support that they are needed and only give them 10 years or more to show they are working and PAYING taxes too before giving them something permanent. We need to do more what they do in Europe, with the European Union, if there is work for them great, let them come if someone is going to give them work and it is needed if there is no one here to do that job. We cannot keep giving amnesty as it just promotes more of the same and all to come here illegally. We need it all done legally, they need to pay taxes, work legally with their employers paying their fair share. The problem too is we have too much human trafficking of or for illegal work and we have big business that wants our government to overlook big business doing this to get cheap labor here. It all has to stop, they need to do more like what they do in Europe and they all need to pay their fair share of taxes, the illegals do not want to pay taxes, so the ones who do not, let them go back home. WE all need to pay our fair share of taxes to make this government work.

Anonymous said...

SECURE OUR BORDERS, no more amnesty, anyone who was human trafficked here, must return to their country first and do it the right way.

Anonymous said...

Until the 1920s, immigrating to the USA was relatively easy. America needed people to populate its Western frontier and work in its factories.

In 1921, Congress passed the first law setting numerical limits for visas based on countries of origin.

As the USA moved toward a service-oriented economy in the 1960s, immigration officials became more selective about the kinds of workers the nation wanted.

These days, U.S. immigrant visas are limited mostly to the educated, the affluent or people who have spouses or parents in the USA, said Gustavo Garcia, an immigration lawyer in Mexico City. If the ancestors of most Americans had tried to immigrate to the USA under today's rules, their American Dream would have ended before it began, Garcia said.

Anonymous said...

These days, U.S. immigrant visas are limited mostly to the educated, the affluent or people who have spouses or parents in the USA, said Gustavo Garcia, an immigration lawyer in Mexico City. If the ancestors of most Americans had tried to immigrate to the USA under today's rules, their American Dream would have ended before it began, Garcia said.

And your point is, Mr. Garcia?
So every uneducated slob that wants to come into America has to be let in? Screw that! We don't have the same needs as 100 years ago. Mr. Garcia, maybe if millions of illegals hadn't broken the law and come here illegally,bleeding our welfare system dry, America could afford to be more generous with it's quotas. Note to illegals- get your criminal asses out of my country, go back to the trash heaps you left and fix them!

Anonymous said...

Time to take Rubio out of the oven-He's done!