"There is a sense of fear, a sense of rejection in the Latino community about this bill," said Andrés Cruz, editor and publisher of La Voz, an English/Spanish newspaper with a circulation of 10,000 that reports on Central Kentucky's Latin American community. "To me, the bill is simply political pandering."
Cruz and Marilyn Daniel, a volunteer attorney for Maxwell Street Legal Clinic, held a two-hour informational meeting about the controversial bill at the Lexington Public Library.
During the meeting, the group also learned about a rally at 11:30 a.m. Feb. 8 at the Capitol in Frankfort to oppose the legislation.
The Republican-controlled Senate approved the bill earlier this month; the Democratic-controlled House is to consider it when the legislative session resumes next week.
House leaders have said the House is unlikely to approve the bill. They compare it to Arizona's tough immigration law, which is being challenged in court.
The sponsor of Senate Bill 6, Senate President David Williams, R-Burkesville, said Kentucky should approve the bill before neighboring states pass strict immigration laws and the Bluegrass State becomes a haven for illegal immigrants.
Williams is running for governor this year.
If all printers were determined not to print anything till they were sure it would offend nobody, there would be very little printed. -- Benjamin Franklin
Monday, January 24, 2011
Scapegoating For Fun And Profit
Kentucky's Latino community is not too happy with state Senate Bill 6, an anti-immigration bill that would go further than Arizona's, would cost the state tens of millions a year, have much of the bill's enforcement procedures stripped due to Constitutional reasons, and be yet another embarrassment to the state. Needless to say, Kentucky Latinos are not taking the legislation lightly.
Rick Scott, the Medicare Fraud King who purchased the FL governorship for bargain-basement price of $70M+, has been strangely silent on the immigration issue. He flogged it endlessly during the GOP primary, but once he got into the general election, he wisely closed his pie hole on that topic. I guess he noticed the state's general demographics were a tad different than the GOP base's.
ReplyDeletewould cost the state tens of millions a year
ReplyDeleteSilly Zandar. Evil Mexicans cost us money. Rounding them up is free.
In fact, here's a rule of thumb: if a government policy feels mean-spirited and punitive, and if it increases the overdogs' dominance of the underdogs, it doesn't cost any money. By definition. Doesn't everyone know that?