I'm glad I don't live in any of these ShitHoles

Skulnik

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New York to Issue ID Cards for Undocumented Immigrants


By Henry Goldman Jun 26, 2014 3:00 PM CT


New York City?s 500,000 undocumented immigrants will be able to open bank accounts, visit libraries and use medical clinics, thanks to an official municipal identification card approved by the City Council.

The measure, backed by Mayor Bill de Blasio, passed in a 43 to 3 vote today with two abstentions. The photo IDs will display the holder?s name, birth date, address and -- at the cardholder?s option -- a self-designated gender.

?It sends a simple and clear message that we are a city that believes in including everyone,? Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito said before the vote. ?We don?t accept that some people can be left out because of their immigration status, how they identify their gender or whether they may be homeless.?

In a city where 40 percent of residents were born outside the U.S., politicians may gain support backing legislation that would help undocumented newcomers lease an apartment or apply for school or city services. Democrats outnumber Republicans by more than 6 to 1 , and as much as 20 percent of party voters are Latino, said Jerry Skurnik, a New York-based demographic-political consultant.

?Hispanics who are citizens and voters are pro-immigration; they want their families, friends and countrymen to come here,? Skurnik said in an interview. ?And in a liberal city like New York, most people are pro-immigration anyway.?

New Haven

Similar cards have been created in Los Angeles, San Francisco and New Haven, Connecticut, which began its program in 2007 in response to a series of street robberies of undocumented immigrants who carried cash because they lacked access to banks. The victims? status made them reluctant to report the crimes, said Officer David Hartman, a New Haven police spokesman.

New York?s program would be the largest in the U.S., costing $8.4 million when it goes into effect next year, decreasing to $5.6 million annually over the next three years, Mark-Viverito said. The city will seek sponsors to offer discounts and other inducements for residents to carry the card so that its use would expand beyond undocumented immigrants, Mark-Viverito said. Details of how the card would be administered are still being worked out, she said.

?If you can?t sign a lease, if you can?t get a bank account, if you can?t do the basics, if you can?t even prove who you are, it doesn?t feel like you truly belong,? de Blasio, a 53-year-old Democrat, said in April, in support of the card. ?These half-million New Yorkers are building this city alongside all of us every single day, and we will do better by them.?

Foreign Passport

Documents that would be acceptable to apply for a card include a U.S. or foreign passport, a domestic or foreign driver?s license and a birth certificate or proof of foreign military service. An applicant would also have to show proof of city residence, such as a utility bill or bank statement.

Aside from immigrants, those supporting New York?s bill include transgendered individuals who want the right to identify themselves as they see fit, regardless of what their birth certificate or driver?s license may say.

Democratic Council members Mark Treyger and Alan Maisel of Brooklyn were among several who raised concerns that the program could create a list of undocumented immigrants who could be targeted for deportation.

To contact the reporter on this story: Henry Goldman in New York at hgoldman@bloomberg.net
 

THE KOD

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The Arkansas GOP official who claimed Hillary Clinton would "probably get shot at the state line" if she ran for president resigned on Wednesday.

Republican Party Chair Doyle Webb said in a statement that Johnny Rhoda turned in his resignation even though he felt his comments were "taken out of context."

?Moments ago I received the resignation of Johnny Rhoda as 2nd District Republican Chairman,? Webb said, according to the Associated Press. ?He was apologetic for the statements he made to media yesterday and although he feels he was taken out of context, he knows that his statements have created an unnecessary distraction from the important issues before the state today.?

Rhoda made the comment in a Tuesday interview with U.S. News, after being asked what kind of reception the former first lady of Arkansas could expect in the state should she decide to campaign for the White House.

"She?d probably get shot at the state line,? he said. "Nobody has any affection for her. The majority don't."

Rhoda later told Business Insider that while he meant no ill will to Clinton, he could have been more eloquent.

"That comment was taken way out of context. It certainly was not meant in a threatening or hostile way at all. It was just a comment. Perhaps I used the wrong word," he said.

A recent poll conducted by Democratic-leaning Public Policy Polling in Arkansas found Clinton leading every potential Republican challenger except the state's former governor, Mike Huckabee.

The firm attributed Clinton's high standing to her husband, Bill, who was a popular Democratic governor in the state before being elected president.

According to the AP, Rhoda served as Van Buren County chairman for Rep. Tim Griffin?s (R-Ark.) congressional bid in 2010. Griffin said Rhoda?s comment was ?obviously inappropriate, offensive and shows poor judgment
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:mj07:
what a dumb ass
 

THE KOD

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Among the survey's most striking findings is that about 80 percent of conservatives agree that "poor people have it easy because they can get government benefits without doing anything." Meanwhile, over half of conservatives believe that an individual's poverty is based on "lack of effort on his or her part," rather than circumstances beyond their control:

Wide Differences Between Right and Left Over Why Some People are Poor

The survey found similar divisions over whether government programs help or harm society. More than 80 percent of conservatives in all three groups agreed that "government aid to the poor does more harm than good, by making people too dependent on government assistance," while a majority of left-leaning respondents said the government does more good because "people can't get out of poverty until their basic needs are met."

Pew's findings likely come as no surprise to those following the ongoing Capitol Hill debate over the merits of the social safety net.

The belief that such assistance breeds overreliance on government is a key component of Republican arguments against programs like food stamps, with lawmakers condemning what they call the "culture of permanent dependency" and holding up individuals like Fox News' "food stamp surfer" as examples of typical beneficiaries. Conservatives make similar arguments in favor of slashing unemployment benefits -- Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) argued last year that extending unemployment insurance past 26 weeks would be a "disservice" to jobless workers.
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how pathetic

take everything from the poor and watch the US explode with riots

hope it comes to a neo con near yu
 
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