Title: bush just said he wants illegals to stay in the country SO THEY CAN DO ALL THE JOBS LAZY AMERICANS WON'T - FOX NEWS Source:
WHITE HOUSE URL Source:[None] Published:Oct 11, 2006 Author:BUSH Post Date:2006-10-11 12:05:54 by TLBSHOW Keywords:None Views:13812 Comments:26
PRESS CONF - HARD TO SECURE BORDER
Poster Comment:
Bush: "You Can't Kick 12,000,000 People Out Of Your Country" [ tells ILLEGALS HE IS ON THEIR SIDE NOT THE AMERICAN PEOPLES SIDE = BUSH IS A TRAITOR ]
The Kool-Aid-sipping morons over at TOS are saying, "See, he SAID he is building a fence. < exasperation > Will they be satisfied NOW!?"
This bastard needs to be impeached.
I have never heard such a mealy-mouthed pile as his comments on border security at today's presser. He may have barely uttered the words that we are building a fence but it was utterly whiney, without conviction, qualified and requalified. And then he told us that "you can't fence the whole border." And, of course, his first priority (only priority, really) is his amnesty program.
Most people would be willing to talk about "guest worker" if the government showed any resolution whatsoever to stop illegal immigration FIRST. But Bush and his business buds, Democrats, and liberal Jews (Neocons and otherwise) are determined that they WILL HAVE massive immigration. They are afraid that the country -- while it probably would support some level of guest workers -- would not allow this country to have its essentially Christian, European culture submerged into a third-world stew. So they want to enshirine virtually unlimited immigration into law BEFORE any discussion of security. Fortunately, most of the country understands this and is rightly demanding, SECURITY FIRST! FENCE (or WALL) FIRST! A DEMONSTRATION OF WILL TO CONTROL THE BORDER FIRST. Then we will talk.
A leading senator on immigration-reform says he has serious doubts the 700-mile fence on the country's nearly 2,000 mile-long border with Mexico will ever be built despite a bipartisan Senate vote of 80-19 last week.
Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, chairman of the Immigration, Border Security and Citizenship Subcommittee, told WND "we have not yet appropriated nearly enough to complete the job."