Molyneux wrote:
He had his fucking driver's license. How much more ID do you need?
Kanastrous wrote:Apparently under ICE's standard practice - what their spokesperson described as standard practice, anyway - sometimes you are expected to provide more.
Molyneux wrote:"Standard practice" is not an excuse. If that IS standard practice, then those practices obviously need to be changed.
You're right, it's an observation and not an excuse. That said, I don't believe that the practice needs to be changed simply because it subjects a comparatively small number of people to additional inconvenience (even when the inconvenience is damned substantial).
Kanastrous wrote:Molyneux wrote:And I love how you stress the "intent" of the law, when its effects are the only important thing.
I agree that effects trump intent. The law is aimed at obtaining positive effects, and we will not know how effective it is at delivering them until it has been implemented. I'm willing to tolerate a degree of unintended negatives in the pursuit of the positive. If you aren't, that's a position I can respect even if I don't share it.
Molyneux wrote:That's easy to say, if you don't know what the "unintended negatives" may be. Can you say that you support a law unflinchingly even if the negatives associated with it are monstrous?
I don't find a small number of people being asked for additional ID, and being detained until they can show it "monstrous," considering the dimensions of the problem we're trying to remedy. If you do find that monstrous it just means that we have different standards when it comes to applying the "m" word.
Kanastrous wrote:Molyneux wrote:If the effect of the law is that the police can stop anyone, any time, for whatever reason they feel like and imprison them if they don't have their proof of citizenship on hand, then that is a bad law, even if the "intent" of the law was to dispense hugs and puppies to everyone.
I don't believe that's the effect of the law. In any case, since the law has not yet taken effect we can't really know yet.
Molyneux wrote:What do you mean?
The law explicitly gives the police the ability to require those they suspect of being illegal immigrants to prove their legal status - to show their papers. If you're a natural-born citizen but don't have your ID on you, what do you expect to happen if you piss off a cop in Arizona - or just "look suspicious"?
The law explicitly requires that the demand for residency etc papers may only take place in the course of officers' contact with a given person
that has already been initiated because of a non-immigration-related matter. As the Federal law stands anyone here on some kind of paperwork is *already* obliged to keep it handy to show upon officers' demand (once only Federal, now state as well). This is not an expansion of rules requiring papers for people who were never before required to show them; it's simply an expansion of who is permitted to ask that they be shown, and those people may only ask if they are already in contact with the person in question over something non-immigration-status-related.
Sorry for the hideous text-and-quote editing; I'm at the tail end of lunch and I don't have time to make it pretty.