COMING SOON!
I am sorry but after hearing they want to sing the National Anthem in Spanish - enough is enough. Nowhere did they sing it in Italian, POLISH, Irish (Celtic), German or any other language because of immigration. It was written by Francis Scott Key and should be sung word for word the way it was written The news broadcasts even gave the translation -- not even close. Sorry if this offends anyone but this is MY COUNTRY - IF IT IS YOUR COUNTRY SPEAK UP -- please pass this along. I am not against immigration -- just come through like everyone else. Get a sponsor; have a place to lay your head; have a job; pay your taxes, live by the rules AND LEARN THE LANGUAGE as all other immigrants have in the past -- and GOD BLESS AMERICA! PART OF THE PROBLEM Think about this: If you don't want to forward this for fear of offending someone -- YOU'RE PART OF THE PROBLEM !!!! It is Time for America to Speak up If you agree -- pass this along; if you don't agree -- delete it!
Yep, I passed it on!
Thursday, March 15, 2007
Ok America Take a hint already
If all states had the balls to do this Illegal Immigration would be a thing of the past. VIRGINA catch up already, geez the Virginia Assembly can vote on giving them selfs raises and appoligizing slaver, which no one in the Virginia Assembly living today owned/owns slaves, but let another form of slaver take place in the illegal use of illegal immigrants as a labor force.
MONTGOMERY — Rep. Micky Hammon sees his bills aimed at illegal immigration as a package and predicts that if the entire group becomes law, illegal immigrants will start leaving Alabama.
Hammon, R-Decatur, said three of the bills are from Gov. Bob Riley's Plan 2010.
They include HB 286, which denies state economic incentives to employers who hire people who are in the country illegally; HB 287, which requires people applying for or renewing professional or commercial licenses to prove legal status; and HB 288, which requires immigrants 18 or older to prove they are legally in the country. Topics: Illegal Immigration, employers, laws, in-state tuition, legal residency, benefits, licenses, voter registration, felony, fines, Alabama
Mar 14, 2007by M. J. EllingtonThe Decatur Daily NewsThe House Republican Caucus included HB 288 in its 2007 legislative package.
House Minority Leader Mike Hubbard said the legislation would also apply to in-state tuition rates for public universities.
Hammon said HB 288 is similar to a Colorado law that denies non-essential services to adults but not to children. The prohibition does not apply to life-sustaining medical care or other exceptions in federal law.
"No one wants to be ugly to children," Hammon said. "This bill provides for children, but adults have to provide proof of legal residency to receive the benefits."
HB 286 would put into law requirements that are now policy for contractors who want to do business with the state.
Hammon said HB 287 would deny state licenses to immigrant professionals and commercial business operators who cannot prove they are legally in the country. When they cannot operate without such licenses, he said, they will go elsewhere.
Three of Hammon's other bills are identical to measures he introduced in 2006.
HB 289 would let law enforcement officers impound vehicles of immigrants driving without a valid driver license, current vehicle insurance or proof of legal entry into the United States.
Under HB 290, illegal immigrants would forfeit property when stopped for traffic violations unless the property were life-sustaining.
Under HB 291, illegal immigrants who voted or tried to register to vote, or others who assisted in registering immigrants, would be guilty of a felony and face a fine.
Hammon also introduced a bill that prohibits "pass-through" appropriations from one government agency to another. But Hammon's HB 109 has exceptions, including those that allow transfer from one agency to another for the same program.
MONTGOMERY — Rep. Micky Hammon sees his bills aimed at illegal immigration as a package and predicts that if the entire group becomes law, illegal immigrants will start leaving Alabama.
Hammon, R-Decatur, said three of the bills are from Gov. Bob Riley's Plan 2010.
They include HB 286, which denies state economic incentives to employers who hire people who are in the country illegally; HB 287, which requires people applying for or renewing professional or commercial licenses to prove legal status; and HB 288, which requires immigrants 18 or older to prove they are legally in the country. Topics: Illegal Immigration, employers, laws, in-state tuition, legal residency, benefits, licenses, voter registration, felony, fines, Alabama
Mar 14, 2007by M. J. EllingtonThe Decatur Daily NewsThe House Republican Caucus included HB 288 in its 2007 legislative package.
House Minority Leader Mike Hubbard said the legislation would also apply to in-state tuition rates for public universities.
Hammon said HB 288 is similar to a Colorado law that denies non-essential services to adults but not to children. The prohibition does not apply to life-sustaining medical care or other exceptions in federal law.
"No one wants to be ugly to children," Hammon said. "This bill provides for children, but adults have to provide proof of legal residency to receive the benefits."
HB 286 would put into law requirements that are now policy for contractors who want to do business with the state.
Hammon said HB 287 would deny state licenses to immigrant professionals and commercial business operators who cannot prove they are legally in the country. When they cannot operate without such licenses, he said, they will go elsewhere.
Three of Hammon's other bills are identical to measures he introduced in 2006.
HB 289 would let law enforcement officers impound vehicles of immigrants driving without a valid driver license, current vehicle insurance or proof of legal entry into the United States.
Under HB 290, illegal immigrants would forfeit property when stopped for traffic violations unless the property were life-sustaining.
Under HB 291, illegal immigrants who voted or tried to register to vote, or others who assisted in registering immigrants, would be guilty of a felony and face a fine.
Hammon also introduced a bill that prohibits "pass-through" appropriations from one government agency to another. But Hammon's HB 109 has exceptions, including those that allow transfer from one agency to another for the same program.
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