QUIT is Spelled QUIT not QUITE.
Just thought of this. #If the illegals are supposedly performing jobs Americans will not do, when they become citizens, will they as Americans be performing jobs Americans won't do or will they quit those jobs that any self respecting American will not do? I'm confused.
K2WH
Yes. Then we'll get some new illegals.
W2ILP
05-11-2006, 06:37 PM
People may not want to hear this...BUT...
Many American tourists go to Mexico for sexual pleasure because prostitutes are cheaper there. #My suggestion is to import the Mexican prostitutes to the U.S.A.and give them political and legal amnesty. #This will not only keep the money spent by Americans on Mexican prostitutes in the U.S.A. #but it will allow the illegal Mexican immigrants to afford professional prostitutes who are able to use birth control devices efficiently and thus reduce the amount of poor children that illegal immigrants propagate to be supported by U.S. taxpayer supported welfare. #Now don't say that this will lead to cheaper prostitution that would be unfair competition for American citizen prostitutes. #Heck if we don't worry about lower wages for chicken pluckers and shrimp deveiners, why worry about professional prostitutes?http://www.qrz.com/iB_html/non-cgi/emoticons/rock.gif
w2ilp (Illegal's Licensed Prostitution)...could pay more than helping religious Pilgrims get citizenship when they are pregnant!
WA5KRP
05-11-2006, 06:39 PM
Quote[/b] (K2WH @ May 11 2006,12:41)]If the illegals are supposedly performing jobs Americans will not do, when they become citizens, will they as Americans be performing jobs Americans won't do or will they quit those jobs that any self respecting American will not do?
Definitely.
WA5KRP
Texas
W2ILP
05-11-2006, 06:52 PM
I dunno if it is true BUT it might be true that prostitution is a profession that not many Americans want to do. This could be causing hooker fees to be too high for the poor who may need them the most. We need to import more Chickas Latinas to the U.S.A. This IMHO would be a great price stabilizing move. We might be able to replace some jobs that Americans don't care to do with robotic machinery...BUT IMHO there is nothing like the dames.
w2ilp (Import Latin Prostitutes)...let them live in Vagas...Whatever goes there stays there.
WB2WIK
05-11-2006, 09:46 PM
Quote[/b] (W2ILP @ May 11 2006,11:52)]I dunno if it is true BUT it might be true that prostitution is a profession that not many Americans want to do.
I never heard that.
No shortage of them here!
And certainly no shortage in Washington, DC. Female, male, and in between. http://www.qrz.com/iB_html/non-cgi/emoticons/tounge.gif
They are still coming, don't worry about that. Some 8500 arrested in my county alone last month and that's just the ones they managed to catch!
From the local paper today:
The number of illegal immigrants apprehended by the Border Patrol in Cochise County in April was down significantly from a year ago, continuing a trend seen throughout the first trimester of 2006.
Last month, Border Patrol agents apprehended 8,467 undocumented immigrants in the county as compared to 13,136 in April 2005 — a decline of 36 percent. Apprehensions were down 52 percent in March 2006 from the previous year and were down 50 percent in February.
In the Border Patrol’s Tucson Sector, which covers all but the westernmost stretch of Arizona’s border with Mexico, apprehensions dropped slightly from 52,656 in April 2005 to 51,513 last month. So far in the first trimester of 2006, sectorwide apprehensions are down 6 percent from 2005 while the countywide figure has dropped 49 percent.
The agency credits the decline to an increase in manpower and migrant-detecting technology, which it says deters potential immigrants from crossing in the region.
But while apprehensions of illegal immigrants are down in 2006, marijuana seizures have risen 14 percent in the sector.
The Border Patrol reports that 399,917 pounds of the drug were confiscated in the first four months of 2006 as compared to 281,575 pounds during the same period in 2005. In Cochise County, however, marijuana seizures were down more than 50 percent, from 4,396 pounds in April 2005 to 2,003 pounds last month.
Asked why sectorwide apprehensions of individuals are down but drug seizures are up, Border Patrol spokesman Sean King said both phenomena resulted from an increased number of agents in the field.
“Because we have more agents out here, what we’re doing is deterring the aliens, who aren’t crossing here but are crossing now in Yuma and New Mexico,” he said.
“But the drug-smuggling organizations have their ways so entrenched they are still bringing it up (through the sector) and since we have more agents out here we’re able to cover more ground and make more seizures.”
King’s comment that migrants are choosing to cross in areas west and east of the Tucson Sector is also reflected in Border Patrol statistics. In the first six months of fiscal year 2006 — which began last Oct. 1 — apprehensions were up 22 percent in the Yuma Sector and 24 percent in the El Paso Sector, which includes New Mexico.
Border Patrol statistics reflect the total number of apprehensions, not the number of different individuals apprehended. Some migrants are stopped multiple times as they try to enter the United States.
As a result, critics have suggested that apprehensions don’t stop border-crossers but instead force them to try repeatedly until they succeed.
One variable that may have affected apprehensions in the Tucson Sector during April was the presence of Minuteman Project volunteers, who spent the month patrolling the Altar Valley region and alerting Border Patrol agents to the location of possible illegal immigrants.
The Minuteman Project reported 1,502 sightings in the state in April leading to 520 apprehensions. The Border Patrol, however, does not confirm Minuteman figures, saying that all citizen alerts are treated the same and not identified by their organization.
Meanwhile, at Fort Huachuca, spokeswoman Tanja Linton reported that 63 illegal immigrants were detained on the post last month, well below the 200 detained in April 2004. So far this fiscal year, 717 illegal immigrants have been detained on the fort, compared to 1,656 in the first seven months of the previous federal budget year.
Post law enforcement personnel are not allowed to apprehend illegal immigrants, but can detain them to be turned over to the Border Patrol, at which time they are considered apprehended.
In other sectorwide statistics released this week, the Border Patrol said it had rescued 88 individuals in distress this year through May 5, recorded 63 migrant deaths in the sector during the same period, and arrested 24,155 individuals through May 7.