![]() |
Re: Front Page NYT Article
Quote:
At what point did Amadou break our laws? He was left here by his mother when he was a minor. That was not his choice, that was not his action. By the time he was 18 his only choice was to surrender himself to the immigration department and be deported, or to find a way to go back to Africa himself (self deportation). There never was a way for him to say here legally. He had no do-the-right-thing option. Back in the 19th century when a slave escaped from his owner he was breaking the law. If someone helped him escape he was breaking the law. Anyone who was a part of the Underground Railroad taking slaves across the border into Canada was breaking the law. Now we consider those people heros of American history. It is absurd that, at this point in human history, if a person stands, or is born on one side of a line painted across a road, that he is treated differently, has different rights, has different opportunites. I am not advocating that anyone should break the law to help or harbor Amadou, or anyone else. I recognize that he was left in a no-win situation, and I believe that we (the FIRST community) should do everything in our power to help him. |
Re: Front Page NYT Article
Quote:
Quote:
Second, His violation of the law was an inaction since he failed to attempt to get a green card when his visa ran out. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
No, we need to work within the system to bring justice to the people. Our civilization requires people to follow a set of laws. If the laws are injust, then we need to work to change the laws, not break them. Quote:
Quote:
While this decision should weigh against him (responsibility), those who know him as a community should stand by his side writeing letters stating the good that he has done and that should speak volumes about his character. |
Re: Front Page NYT Article
Quote:
Our world is changing, and silly lines drawn on a map are beginning to mean less and less. Isolationism is yielding to globalism. We will still have separate countries, but a peaceful future lies not in drawing chalk lines and apportioning up the world, but in everyone opening our borders. Just look at recent trends - the United States, the European Union, and United Nations - all separate sovereign entities joining together for the betterment of everyone. |
Re: Front Page NYT Article
For anyone that hasn't checked CBS yet, our FIRST community came through - Amadou's story will be reported on Friday's news.
I can see both sides of the story here - Amadou is a victim of circumstances and couldn't help what happened to him when he was 14. Someone along the way (one of his adult friends) should have advised him to go to Legal Aid when they realized what was happening - but since that didn't happen, there's no reason to throw blame on Amadou or anyone else. The reality is that he is here and in a bind - and in America everyone has a chance to become their best, that's what makes our country great. There are many cases where public opinion has swayed Congress to make special exceptions for immigration cases and other individual legal problems - maybe the result of all this publicity will help Amadou achieve legal citizenship. We met the team, they were on Archimedes with us, a great group who worked really hard. All of the team members want desperately to achieve...and they deserve every break they can get. |
Re: Front Page NYT Article
wow. just wow.
|
Re: Front Page NYT Article
Quote:
Quote:
Let me put Amadous story in a FIRST setting: We all know that the robots have a 130 LB weight limit. Now lets assume that 1 team arrived with a 250 LB robot and was allowed to play. That would be very unfair to all the other teams. Now think of all the immigration applicants. How do you think they feel if the rules were not enforced in reguards to Amadou but are enforced for them. Again unfair. This is what breaking the law does (whether intentional or not). Quote:
It is my hope that someday this discussion would not need to take place, but until the world is a safer place and we can cross those 'chalk lines', stories like Amadous will happen. |
Re: Front Page NYT Article
I disagree, Daniel LaFleur.
See, the thing that's so persuasive about your argument is that on the surface it seems logical. You say, "So we should break the law anytime we see an injustice?", and it makes sense. We have laws, those laws govern our society, so breaking those laws is wrong. The reality of the situation, however, is that a balance must be struck. When a law is unjust, blindly following it is just as bad as breaking it. Teach your kids to follow the rules, but also teach them to think about why they're following them. Teach them to make their own decisions. The question becomes, then, where do you draw the line? Which laws should people follow, and which should they protest? People immigrate to America illegally because a demand exists for them. Illegal immigrants fill a void - they fill jobs and opportunities that we need them to. If there was no demand, people wouldn't come here. If you want to stop immigration, you have to stop the demand. The government does this by passing laws making it illegal for unapproved immigrants to fill those voids. Sometimes, though, the demand for something is more powerful than laws. A prime example would be prohibition. When this happens, the law doesn't make sense, and needs to be changed. Now I understand you propose "If the laws are injust [sic], then we need to work to change the laws, not break them." Do you really believe that the primary engine for rectifying bad policy is to sit back and wait until the government changes it for us? You don't need to a scientific study to show that the government moves intolerably slowly on its own. While the government is "working to change" its policy, people will continue to immigrate illegally. It will never go away as long as the demand exists. That's why sometimes people need to force change. That's why this country has a rich history of civil disobedience and protest, as pointed out by artdutra. [As a corollary, it turns out your 'overweight robot' argument does not apply here. The rule is cut and dry, and there exists no demand to break it.] Did Amadou break the law as some sort of civil disobedience? I won't speculate, because I don't know (even though you seem to have made up your own reason). However, I do believe Amadou's case highlights one problem with current immigration policy. As US society approaches (slowly) a meritocracy, a premium exists for citizens who take an interest in academics and pursue higher education. Amadou wants to educate himself, get a good job, and contribute to our economy and society. We have a very difficult time convincing our own population to do this. Yet our policy says we should deport him immediately (talk about sending jobs overseas!). This makes no sense. The point is, it's obvious something needs to change. Yet, you continue to respond dogmatically. Jeff |
Re: Front Page NYT Article
anyway enough debating, his story is truly remarkable, whether or not he did the wrong thing we should support this member of our community, all he did was want to experience the same joys of robotics as the rest of us, so lets help him with his goal.
|
Re: Front Page NYT Article
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
And as for the 'overweight robot' argument, ask the team that weighed in, got thier inspection sticker, then got weighed just before the elimination rounds and was found 13 pounds overweight :ahh: . Do you still think there is no demand to break the rules? How do you think the teams that lost to this team feel? Quote:
Being in America requires advanced citizenship. It is our responsibility to question our leaders and the laws that they make. The Ballot Box and Soap box are excellent vehicles for this, while the Ammo box is a poor choice. Unfortunately, too many are unwilling to do the real work that the 1st 2 require. |
Re: Front Page NYT Article
Quote:
Who should the consequences be given to? Through no action or decision of his own you have a minor living in the US, with no parent or guardian, no relative, no supervision. At some point his visa (if he had one to begin with) expires. At that point there is no legal way for him to stay here. What should he do? What choice does he have? Legally he has no options: he will be deported if he follows the immigration laws. I believe that even if he did have a visa he still could not stay here as a minor without a legal guardian. It was a no-win situation, and he had nothing to lose by staying here. When a person has nothing they are in survival mode. What consequences can you possibly call down on someone who has nothing to lose? The fact that Amadou has done so well under these circumstances, will graduate from HS and has been accepted into college is absolutely amazing. This is why we have courts and judges, and our laws are not cut and dry. If someone had been in a no-win situation, and their actions and character has been shown to be exceptional, then we do make exceptions. |
Re: Front Page NYT Article
Daniel, it seems like we can all agree that immigration laws need to change. I also believe we agree that illegal immigration is also not inherently bad (as I mentioned earlier, people like Amadou may actually contribute positively to the country).
We disagree that Amadou should be punished because he broke the law. There are four reasons why the government punishes people ("the purposes of punishment"): deterrence, retribution, incapacitation, and rehabilitation. Many laws contain portions of each of these purposes. But some laws are made purely for deterrence - like laws against carrying loaded guns. Carrying a loaded gun doesn't necessarily hurt anyone, but it probably has a high correlation with bad outcomes. A subset of deterrence laws are regulatory laws. These are laws where the action isn't inherently evil, like speeding or jaywalking. Speeding or jaywalking may be correlated loosely with bad outcomes, but obviously carrying around a loaded gun is much worse than doing 5 over or crossing the street while there is no traffic. In my opinion, because we both seem to believe that illegal immigration isn't inherently evil, we would both interpret the law to be regulatory in nature. That means illegal immigration is really no worse than speeding. To an illegal immigrant, they're doing 5 over. Any possible harm to anyone else is so remote that it probably doesn't matter. This brings me to my point. By your logic, we should bring the maximum weight of the law on everyone who goes over the speed limit ("Without consequence there is no rule"). Would that be OK? You can't just say that everyone who speeds deserves to be punished. That would mean pulling over half the cars on the highway. When nearly everybody breaks a regulatory law at one time or another, and the chances of harm are so remote, it's probably OK to do so. The point of the law is deterrence, not incapacitation or rehabilitation, and is interpreted as such. In Amadou's case, the argument is even more powerful. This is a case of necessity. Not only is he not hurting anybody by being here, he needs to be here because he had no choice (and furthermore, he's probably actually helping the country by being here). It's like going 5 over because you've got someone in the back of your car who needs to get to the hospital. It's clearly OK to cross the street even though the sign says 'don't walk' if your grandmother is having a heart attack and you've got to get her medical attention. Yet by your logic, the law should come down hard on any and all jaywalkers. Jeff PS: I should have been more clear about the "overweight robot" rule in my last post. The reason it doesn't apply is because the rule is not just regulatory. The bad outcome in this case is gaining an unfair advantage, which happens as soon as the rule is broken. It's not at all like immigration in that respect. Some demand probably exists to break it, by people who wish to cheat. That's different than economic demand, though. Nobody fills a void the competition needed to be filled by playing an overweight robot. It actually harms other teams when you break the rule, and is inherently evil to do so. |
Re: Front Page NYT Article
Quote:
Quote:
Secondly, the reason 5 MPH over the speed limit is not enforced has more to do with manpower and the accuracy of the speeometer in your car than how dangreous an issue is. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
This would have 2 effects: 1> Low paying jobs would need to up their salaries to attract workers. 2> Corporations (with thier big pockets and lobbiests) would be asking the government to loosen the immigration laws to allow more immigrants in. So by him (and others) being here (and breaking the law) they actually hurt thier own cause to become citizens. It is my belief that the immigration laws need to be Loosened up, to allow more legal immigrants. This will remove some of the 'demand' for illegal immigrants. I also believe that the punishment to corporations who hire illegal immigrants should be stiffer and enforced more (also removing the demand). Peaceful revolution ;) P.S. I want to thank the CD members. Most forums I've been to would have flammed me down by now for putting forth a dissenting view. What I have found here is enlightened discussion on what could be an emotionally charged subject. Your adult and informed posts make it a joy to be a member. |
Re: Front Page NYT Article
Quote:
Many of the low paying jobs that illegal immigrants now fill are not necessary for our national economy. I will use a couple examples that came up after mondays Immigrant protest day. A guy who owns a landscaping company complained that 30 of his workers did not show up monday, and he lost thousands of dollars in business. 95% of the 'landscaping' work these businesses do is mowing lawns. The guy buys a bunch of lawn mowers, then pays illegal immigrant less than minimum wage to run them. Ok, lets say the small time 'landscapers' are all put out of business because their cheap labor is deported. Whats going to happen? Are they going to hire new workers at minimum wage or more, and double the price they charge to homeowners to get their lawns mowed? most likely not. Some people will start mowing their own lawns. Some will get a neighbors kid to do it. Some will go in halves with a neighbor or two and buy a nice riding lawn mower. Some will cover their lawns with trees and astroturf so it no longer needs to be cut. Some people who have nice riding mowers will cut their neighbors grass for free. What is the result on our economy? Difficult to say. Some homeowners will be in better health from the exercise they get mowing their own grass. Some wont cut their grass more than once a month. If enough people really hate mowing their lawns then some genius will come up with a cost effective lawm-mower-robot that runs on grass clippings. Scientists will be driven to come up with new forms of ground cover that dont need to be mowed at all (hybrid grass and such). You could do the same exercise on many of the industries that illegal immigrants now work in: hotels, food service, food production, farming, house construction.... If they are taken out of the picture its difficult to predict what the end result will be, and whether our economy would be better or worse in the long run as a result. Look at Japan for example. They have a shortage of people to take care of the elderly. What are they doing? Creating robots to be senior adult companions! In an innovative society like ours the squeaky wheel doesnt automatically get oiled. It gets scrutinized. Sometimes it gets replaced by something better. |
Re: Front Page NYT Article
Quote:
|
Re: Front Page NYT Article
Quote:
|
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 08:21. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi