ESCONDIDO — A 25-year-old man with an extensive criminal history who has been repeatedly deported was detained this week in Escondido, police said Thursday.
Jose Vigil Carbajal, 25, was stopped Monday by Escondido police officers for a vehicle-code violation, said police Lt. Craig Carter. He was turned over to U.S. Immigration and Customs enforcement officials and was scheduled to again be removed from the country. According to ICE, he has been deported 15 times.
Jose Vigil Carbajal Carbajal’s criminal record includes four arrests for driving under the influence, one arrest for hit-and-run and two arrests for driving with a suspended license.
It’s no wonder the Obama administration can claim they deport so many illegals. They just stoll back across the border to commit more crimes, only to be deported again once they are caught. Maybe if they server some serious time every time they are caught the cost will out weigh the benefits.
If this problem is going to get fixed some serious legislation has to be passed and some hard decisions need to be made. Obviously I'm not in charge of passing any legislation and so far my opinion has had no bearing on national policy however, IMHO I think it might play out like this:
Option one, actually lock down the boarders and deport all illegals. This will be expensive and have some immediate economic consequences, the amount of funding it would take to completely lock down the boarders and the increased costs of unskilled labor would be crushing. Are you ready to pay $9.00 for a head of lettuce, three times the cost for construction of a home, or tripled prices for other unskilled labor?
Option two, do nothing and let the illegals continue to stream in with minimal measures to prosecute them and deport them, only to have them return again and again. This is the reality today and the fault of multiple administrations, jackasses and elephants alike for a variety of reasons and motives.
Option three, adopt a guest worker program, increase the security of the boarders, and prosecute illegals under US law instead of just sending them back to their country of origin. This option will also be expensive and likely to generate opposition from ethnic groups, however it would also ensure that those working in the US as foreign nationals have been screened for a criminal history, those with an extensive criminal past will be barred from entry. Guest workers would be required to pay taxes and be entitled to some limited benefits but not to the extent the US Citizens are. Guest workers would not be allowed to take up permanent residency but could take advantage of the naturalization process and become citizens if they choose to do so. This program offers the advantage of less economic impact to consumers but increased cost of governance.
Option four, open the boarders and grant amnesty to anyone who crosses into US territory regardless of who they are and their history. Not much different from today but minus the deportation issue, by one way of thinking this would save money as it would decrease the number of personnel engaged in defending the boarders and law enforcement personnel enforcing current laws. In reality the burden this option brings with it are a never increasing load of new "citizens" who will seek every entitlement they can get. Individuals coming from countries with far more oppressed economies that ours might consider living on the dole fairly luxurious compared to life in their country of origin and choose to live off of welfare and other government programs instead of finding a job and contributing to the tax base.
I can explain it to you but I can't understand it for you.
"Any man who thinks he can be happy and prosperous by letting the Government take care of him; better take a closer look at the American Indian." - Henry Ford
Corruptissima re publica plurimae leges; When the Republic is at its most corrupt the laws are most numerous. - Publius Cornelius Tacitus
ESCONDIDO — A 25-year-old man with an extensive criminal history who has been repeatedly deported was detained this week in Escondido, police said Thursday.
Jose Vigil Carbajal, 25, was stopped Monday by Escondido police officers for a vehicle-code violation, said police Lt. Craig Carter. He was turned over to U.S. Immigration and Customs enforcement officials and was scheduled to again be removed from the country. According to ICE, he has been deported 15 times.
Jose Vigil Carbajal Carbajal’s criminal record includes four arrests for driving under the influence, one arrest for hit-and-run and two arrests for driving with a suspended license.
It’s no wonder the Obama administration can claim they deport so many illegals. They just stoll back across the border to commit more crimes, only to be deported again once they are caught. Maybe if they server some serious time every time they are caught the cost will out weigh the benefits.
BREAKING NEWS GUYS!:
The other 14.99 million visa overstayers picked our fruits, vegtables and cleaned our toilets for less than minimum wage today...