Anti-Christ through George Bush: Justice just won’t work.
More from anti-Christ through George Bush: “There reaches a point when your enemy has won, has taken a certain threshold amount of ‘free’ will from you while you haven’t taken that certain threshold amount of ‘free’ will from him or her and at that point, you have to back down. Justice just won’t work here for the citizens of the United States of America –it’s unrealistic to expect it will–and so we need to do something else.”
It is no surprise that those who try to define victory in Iraq by how much ‘free’ will ‘we’ have supposedly taken from the enemy by both psy-ops and force and who have now set up two Islamic Republics as blessing (aka –to the ‘policy people’: ‘giving’ those who like us a certain amount of ‘free’ will so that they have a nation of their own whose foundation is the lie of Islam on Christian blood) as best they may the very lie that makes the enemy the enemy to this hour is now using those same deceptions to lose the war against illegal immigrants doing whatever they please in a nation not their own and in which they respect laws randomly.
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excerpted from: My Way News - Bush: Massive Deportation Is Unrealistic
IRVINE, Calif. (AP) - President Bush had a blunt message Monday for fellow Republicans focusing only on get-tough immigration policies: He said sending all the nation’s estimated 11 million illegal immigrants back to their home countries is not the answer.
“Massive deportation of the people here is unrealistic - it’s just not going to work,” Bush said. “You know, you can hear people out there hollering it’s going to work. It’s not going to work.”With Congress coming back from a two-week spring recess to a long election-year to-do list and tensions flaring nationwide over immigration, Bush urged lawmakers to adopt a middle-ground policy. He called a Senate bill, which creates a way for illegal immigrants to work legally in the United States and for many to eventually become citizens, an “important approach.”
“It’s just an interesting concept that people need to think through,” Bush said of the bill sponsored by Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., which stalled before the congressional break.
As for Bush’s comment on deportation, a Time magazine poll in January found 50 percent of the country favored deporting all illegal immigrants. But even Rep. Tom Tancredo, R-Colo., one of Congress’ most outspoken advocates for tougher immigration laws, does not advocate mass deportation.
Well aware that November elections could end GOP control of Congress, Bush is walking a fine line on the emotional immigration issue, between his party’s conservative base which wants a clampdown on illegal immigration and business leaders who believe the economy needs immigrants to fill jobs.
All sides are exerting pressure.
With armed citizen patrols popping up in border states, leaders in Arizona and New Mexico have pleaded for better policing of U.S. borders while other communities complain about the pressure that burgeoning immigrant populations are placing on local services. At the same time, tens of thousands of Hispanic and others - a potentially important voting bloc - have taken to streets across the country in the past few weeks to demand more immigration-friendly policies.
Reflecting that debate, when Bush turned to the audience assembled by the Orange County Business Council for questions, three of the eight queries he took were on immigration, including one from a woman who asked for his solution to emergency rooms crowded with poor people seeking routine care. Southern California’s Orange County is a heavily Republican swath of sprawling Los Angeles suburbs that has been known - even parodied - as white, rich and conservative. But minorities now make up a majority of residents.
Bush said community health centers are the best place for the poor to get primary care. “There needs to be a campaign to explain what’s available for people so that they don’t go to the emergency rooms,” he said.
He sought to highlight the contributions of immigrants to American society, and lamented the harsh - and sometimes deadly - conditions that many people face trying to illegally enter the country.
“One thing we cannot lose sight of is that we’re talking about human beings, decent human beings that need to be treated with respect,” the president said.
“Treated with respect..”: something voters in the U.S. have not had in decades.
So: the answer to those illegally entering the U.S. and obtaining emergency services at the expense and to the detriment of the citizens? Inform them of ‘what is available to them’ –AS ILLEGALS –as if they were not. Remember THEY are human beings and forget that the citizens are as well. Indeed, perpetuate the lie and myth that the poor are a bit more human and a bit more deserving of worship in the supposed Etiquette that Fell From Heaven than those not defined by the political expediancy of the moment to be ‘poor’.
Exodus 23:1 Thou shalt not accept a false report; extend not thy hand to the wicked, to be an unrighteous witness.
Exodus 23:2,3 Thou shalt not follow the multitude for evil; neither shalt thou answer in a cause, to go after the multitude to pervert judgment . Neither shalt thou favour a poor man in his cause.
In the Name of Jesus Christ, Amen
Am I now come up without Jehovah against this place to destroy it? Jehovah said to me, Go up against this land and destroy it. 2 Kings 18:25
Anti-Christ tried the lie that God had sent him to conqueor Jerusalem through the Assyrians. But God says to the worshipers of demons who hate Jesus Christ and Israel: "But I know thine abode, and thy going out, and thy coming in, And thy raging against me." 2 Kings 19:27