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Impossible. The Constitution gives total power over immigration and foreign policy to the Congress and Executive. Only "Thwough them to the gwound, very woughly, Centuwion, before deporting them" law could be unconstitutional. But while the "Very Woughly" part could be overturned, whatever standard Brian violated and was being deported on would still stand.
AmericanKulak says
Now explain how Boasberg suddenly came to the conclusion after decades, that deportees need a full judiciary hearing.
This, I will look into. I did not know that he made this conclusion, and I will have to research it.
DeficitHawk says
AmericanKulak says
Now explain how Boasberg suddenly came to the conclusion after decades, that deportees need a full judiciary hearing.
This, I will look into. I did not know that he made this conclusion, and I will have to research it.
I could not find this ruling, can you give me a reference? I only found a ruling on halting AEA deportations, and contempt proceedings for violating that order.
Surely the DHbot can scrape the legal databases to corroborate the reference?
By the way, mere opinion is enough for deportation, right Deficithawk?
But it IS possible for the courts to reject the constitutionality of immigration acts. They are not immune to judicial review on constitutional grounds.
Maybe, just maybe the law is too complex and convoluted that Trump needs to just take action and defend the American homeland?
Oh, you’re opposed to it? Could it be you have an agenda?
Glock, it seems from your comments that you don't agree with the concept of "Follow the law, follow the constitution".
I oppose using war time powers in peace time. Both with respect to Alien Enemies Act, and with respect to suspension of Writ of Habeas Corpus.
We're not in a peace time. We're literally being attacked by foreigners
Deportation is not legally classified as a punishment in most legal systems, including the United States, but rather as an administrative or civil measure.
The U.S. Supreme Court has consistently held that deportation is not punishment. In Fong Yue Ting v. United States (1893), the Court ruled that deportation is an exercise of the government’s sovereign power to control its borders and determine who may remain within them, not a penalty for criminal behavior.
In INS v. Lopez-Mendoza (1984), the Court reaffirmed that deportation proceedings are civil, meaning constitutional protections like the Fifth Amendment’s double jeopardy clause or the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment do not apply.
What's not to like?
deportation is a courtesy,
That's all there is to it. 99.9% of "asylum" cases are bullshit.
I dont agree with you. Illegal immigraton has been a chronic problem for hundreds of years.
To answer AmericanKulak above: the lack of possession of the proper visa is sufficient for deportation, just like almost any other country.
You seriously do not understand the severity of this and that's sad.
WookieMan says
You seriously do not understand the severity of this and that's sad.
This is exactly why I called him/her/zer a dishonest person, at best.
I dont agree with you. Illegal immigraton has been a chronic problem for hundreds of years.
This is a great example of an argument so distorted, I really think it's dishonest.
Unless one is willing to take in a stranger, paying for the stranger, you have no leg to stand on
What I am trying to say is that this country has had ~10-20 million illegal immigrants for decades and that fact didnt fundamentally change during biden/harris even if there was an uptick.
I have done this for refugees. But I have not done it for illegal immigrants. Why is this the test of whether my opinion is right?
"I can't believe we imported millions of people from low trust societies who were raised to use low trust tactics, and we're losing our high trust society. How can this be happening?"
If you feel that way
"I can't believe we imported millions of people from low trust societies who were raised to use low trust tactics, and we're losing our high trust society. How can this be happening?"
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