erowe1
Member
- Joined
- Sep 7, 2007
- Messages
- 32,183
He is not the guy who questioned the Civil Rights act
I don't see anything here that's incompatible with what he said about the CRA.
He is not the guy who questioned the Civil Rights act
That was a broader comment about who Rand has become since his election. He wouldn't dare say that he thinks the 1964 Civil Rights act went too far today. I wish he would, but it would never happen now. He might think it, but it's never something he'd say in public. When he runs for President, it's going to come up and you're going to see him distance himself from those comments faster than Usain Bolt.I don't see anything here that's incompatible with what he said about the CRA.
I can say that the sky is red, and that wouldn't make the sky red. The people who claim that he's for open borders are stupid and would never vote for him anyway. This won't make any difference to them. Rand has consistently advocated the exact opposite of open borders. He's consistently said that he doesn't support giving any type of legal status to illegal immigrants until the border is secure. So the people who claim that he supports "open borders" are irrational and illogical and should just be ignored and forgotten about.
Steve Deace routinely has callers on the air that trash Rand on this issue, as does Deace himself.
Asked about what to do with the people here illegally, however, he stressed that he had never tried to undo the goal of allowing them to stay.
“The amendment that I introduced removed the path to citizenship, but it did not change the underlying work permit from the Gang of Eight,” he said during a recent visit to El Paso. Mr. Cruz also noted that he had not called for deportation or, as Mitt Romney famously advocated, self-deportation.
Mr. Cruz said recent polling indicated that people outside Washington support some reform, including legal status without citizenship. He said he was against naturalization because it rewarded lawbreakers and was unfair to legal immigrants. It also perpetuates illegal crossings, he added.
Rand Paul has been FAR too wishy washy on the issue of amnesty and immigration as a whole. His pathetic "outreach" to minority voters has sent him spinning one fuzzy position after another. He is not the guy who questioned the Civil Rights act, politics turned him into a game player and made him increasingly inconsistent.
The position of any "conservative" worth the title should be clear: no amnesty, border security, mass deportations,repeal the 14th amendment. The idea that the state can't deport at least a huge percentage of them is ridiculous. You're telling me Eisenhower managed to deport illegals but modern America can't? It's a complete myth that deportation couldn't be done, maybe not for all 11 million, but for a lot of them.
I do wish you would just say what you think of me and my opinions instead of beating around the bush. Don't worry, being painted with the scarlet R doesn't send me into fits of hysterics like it does to some.Just because you disagree with him doesn't make him wishy washy. Immigration doesn't have an easy answer. There are issues with making sure people don't get welfare and people aren't incentivized to come here illegally in the future because of amnesty. I get that. But it sure as hell has nothing to do with the Civil Rights Act. I am not going to speculate on why you brought that up. I could guess why you brought it up but I am not going to say it. I am against the public accommodation part of the Civil Rights Act but I am in favor of making easier to immigrate here. One has nothing to do with the other.
Immigrants who work make the country better off and raise the average standard of living. That isn't just my opinion. That is something every remotely free market economist from Ludwig Von Mises to Milton Friedman on down to Larry Kudlow agrees with.
If people want to make the case that immigrants change the culture for the worse or whatever. Fine. Immigration is an issue where there can be legitimate disagreement. But I don't get why people have to impugn someone else's motives. I am solidly with Grover Norquist and libertarian economists on this issue. And isn't some sellout position. Being for a free market in labor is the libertarian position. It will also create the most economic growth in the long term all else being equal.