Dear Members The first two articles in this email are enough to make you pull your hair out and scream.............. "What Is Going On" And see what Napolitano is doing now in item #3 Please tune in to The Ruthie Report this Thursday for my thoughts on these items... but for now.......................... ***************************************************** 1. So you exactly is this judge advocating for? Does she - from her bench - know that she just ruled that terrorists can get drivers licenses? She has no idea if those applying, are just the illegal alien who spit on our laws, create havoc and mayhem, take our jobs and then demand financial assistance etc. or someone with willful intent to kill Americans Where is the Dept of Justice now? First family to lose a loved one from this ruling - if it ever sees the light of day - should sue this Judge, the DPS of Texas if they implement it and the Governor........... Oh that's right - we cannot sue these individuals - just those representing illegal aliens INSANE http://www.examiner.com/immigration-reform-in-national/judge-sides-with-maldef-says-texas-must-give-driver-s-licenses-to-immigrants ******************************************************** 2. Complete anger and disbelief! Why doesn't anyone ask Obama, Napolitano or Holder why it is that States cannot enforce immigration laws without being sued - but States like CA and the DREAM Act or a judge in Texas (above) can do any and everything to ignore them - and that's okay. Time for the Patriots of this GREAT Country to banned together and for States to join in Unity and enforce our Federal (on the books already) Laws Enough screwing around - :et's Get It Done Ruthie Here http://blog.al.com/spotnews/2011/08/hold_us_justice_department_see.html and here........................... The Justice Department has filed a lawsuit against Alabama's new controversial immigration law, essentially fighting Alabama on grounds similar to its legal battle with Arizona over that state's controversial law. In both cases, the Justice Department argues that the states are overstepping their authority by wading into something that is a strictly federal responsibility: immigration enforcement. The law is modeled on Arizona's immigration law, parts of which have been blocked by federal court. It's said to be the strictest state-level immigration law in the country. The Justice Department, in its filing, says a state cannot set its own immigration policy and cannot pass laws that conflict with federal immigration laws. "To put it in terms we relate to here in Alabama, you can only have one quarterback in a football game. In immigration, the federal government is the quarterback," said Joyce Vance, U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Alabama. The American Civil Liberties Union applauded the lawsuit, calling Alabama's immigrant law "draconian" and "anti-immigrant." The law has already faced lawsuits from civil rights groups and others, and Alabama religious leaders announced Monday their own lawsuit against the law, saying, "the bishops have reason to fear that administering of religious sacraments, which are central to the Christian faith, to known undocumented persons may be criminalized under this law." The sponsor of the Alabama law, Republican state Rep. Micky Hammon, defended it Monday. "The Obama administration and the federal bureaucrats have turned a blind eye toward the immigration issue and refuse to fulfill their constitutional duty to enforce laws already on the books. Now, they want to block our efforts to secure Alabama's borders and prevent our jobs and taxpayer dollars from disappearing into the abyss that illegal immigration causes," Hammon said. "Allowing hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants to run unchecked under the radar threatens our homeland security and insults those who come here legally," he added. In a Department of Justice statement, Attorney General Eric Holder and Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said immigration enforcement is the job of the federal government. "Legislation like this diverts critical law enforcement resources from the most serious threats to public safety," Napolitano said. The Justice Department's complaint quoted Birmingham police chief A.C. Roper as saying the law would divert scarce resources from local policing priorities to immigration enforcement. Last year, the department obtained a preliminary injunction against an Arizona immigration law. Fox News' Mike Levine and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2011/08/01/justice-department-sues-alabama-over-controversial-immigration-law/#ixzz1Tw30fnt5
************************************************************** 3. Question Members Wouldn't it be nice if Nappy and this Administration would worry about the American entrepreneurs over everyone else but the American... Ruthie | Secretary Napolitano Announces Initiatives to Promote Startup Enterprises and Spur Job Creation Release Date: August 2, 2011 http://www.dhs.gov/ynews/releases/20110802-napolitano-startup-job-creation-initiatives.shtm |
Ruthie Minnesotans Seeking Immigration Reform "Restore Order - Secure Our Border" "The Ruthie Report" 8 pm CST every Thursday and select the corresponding date from menu
Ruthie Minnesotans Seeking Immigration Reform "Restore Order - Secure Our Border" "The Ruthie Report" 8 pm CST every Thursday and select the corresponding date from menu |
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