Author Topic: California is the dumbest fucking state in the union (worse than Alabama)  (Read 2986 times)

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ManaByte

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So this whole Arizona boycott in California is getting beyond stupid to really show the distinguished mentally-challenged fellows who live in this state:

1. People are boycotting Arizona Ice Tea, and in some places groups of dumbshits are going into mini-marts and trashing their stock of the tea. ARIZONA ICE TEA IS MADE IN NEW YORK

2. Los Angeles is seeing if they can ban the Diamondbacks from playing baseball in the city. People want a state-wide ban for the team. As if the MLB club had anything to do with the anti-illegal immigration law in the state.

3. Speaking of the Diamondbacks, idiot Dodger fans are threating "citizens arrests" of anyone wearing Diamondback gear at the next Diamondbacks-Dodgers game at Dodgers Stadium in the next couple weeks.

4. If you have an Arizona plate on your car you can expect slashed tires (or worse).

5. Sanctuary City San Francisco is calling for a statewide boycott of doing business with Arizona. The State of California is flat broke. We have NO MONEY and the state exports more goods to Arizona than we buy from them, so doing this would cause the state to LOSE MORE MONEY. Fucking idiots.

CBG

The Fake Shemp

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what brought this on?

People found out Arizona Iced Tea sucks :-\
PSP

ManaByte

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Arizona passed an anti-illegal immigrant law that allows cops state-wide to check someone's immigration status. It also punishes employers for hiring illegals.

I have relatives in Arizona and they say that Phoenix has been doing this for a while, with about 38,000 arrests and hardly any overturned. They made it a state-wide law and then it got national attention.
CBG

ManaByte

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Yes because they are screaming that it's racial profiling and violates the civil rights of illegals to be here.

Again, if it didn't work so well in Phoenix they wouldn't have made it a state-wide law.

And I'm sorry. If you're Hispanic, don't speak a word of English, and are sitting in front of Home Depot waiting to jump in the back of a pickup; YOU LOOK LIKE AN ILLEGAL.

CBG

Stoney Mason

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In this thread Manabyte raves like a madman.

ManaByte

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CBG

Bocsius

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Re: California is the dumbest state in the union (worse than Alabama)
« Reply #6 on: April 29, 2010, 02:30:04 PM »
I'm sure there are also documented immigrants here that don't speak a word of english and stand in front of Home Depot looking for day labor and they would like to be left well enough alone by the po-po, 5-0, or whatever the kids call them these days.

With that said, California is distinguished mentally-challenged.

Phoenix Dark

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And I'm sorry. If you're Hispanic, don't speak a word of English, and are sitting in front of Home Depot waiting to jump in the back of a pickup; YOU LOOK LIKE AN ILLEGAL.



Well yea, obviously in that perfect example of course it would make sense for police to investigate. The problem is that the law gives police the right to treat all Hispanics with the same suspicion, and that's not right.
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Smooth Groove

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I'm boycotting beans to show my disapproval of this movement.  

Mandark

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I forgot to bring this up in the other thread, but I'm pretty sure Manabyte posted that weird, pause-y political ad as something he seriously endorsed.

ManaByte

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And I'm sorry. If you're Hispanic, don't speak a word of English, and are sitting in front of Home Depot waiting to jump in the back of a pickup; YOU LOOK LIKE AN ILLEGAL.



Well yea, obviously in that perfect example of course it would make sense for police to investigate. The problem is that the law gives police the right to treat all Hispanics with the same suspicion, and that's not right.

Where was the national uproar when Phoenix has been operating under the same terms of this law for the last couple of years? Again they have made about 38,000 arrests and like two were overturned.
CBG

ManaByte

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In Quebec, you can't get social services or work for the government with a Niqab. I think that's pretty awesome.

Oh shit. I'd love to see the uproar if any state in the US tried that.
CBG

Mupepe

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Wait until some asshole cop is going to offend and/or arrest the wrong person.  All it takes is one. 

Mandark

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Phoenix Mayor: City May Sue AZ Over Immigration Law

Considering this, I'm gonna need to see some hard evidence before I accept that 1) Phoenix has been enforcing a near-identical policy and 2) it's working out super awesome for them.

Mupepe

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I just love the people who say "looks illegal"

That leads me to believe you guys haven't met many illegal aliens.  They're not fucking wearing sombreros, walking a donkey and eating a taco.

A quick count off the top of my head and I know... at least 15 illegal aliens.  I'd bet anyone here 200 dollars and a saturn that you couldn't pick them out in a beaner lineup.

ManaByte

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Phoenix Mayor: City May Sue AZ Over Immigration Law

Considering this, I'm gonna need to see some hard evidence before I accept that 1) Phoenix has been enforcing a near-identical policy and 2) it's working out super awesome for them.

Phoenix is part of Maricopa County and their Sheriff Joe Arpaio has been doing this for YEARS with or without permission. So are they now going to boot him out of the state now that people found out about it and are pissed off at Arizona?
CBG

Himu

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I know more than a few illegal immigrants. Shit, Luis didn't his green card or something until high school.
IYKYK

Mupepe

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Luis?  :o

I never would have guessed.  I guess he kept his poncho and bag of beans hidden in his locker. 

Still, if this law was around in Texas 10 years ago, we wouldn't have this pesky Luis problem.

ManaByte

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Luis?  :o

I never would have guessed.  I guess he kept his poncho and bag of beans hidden in his locker. 

Still, if this law was around in Texas 10 years ago, we wouldn't have this pesky Luis problem.

Texas is worse actually, but again it doesn't get national attention. If you own land near the border and you see people crossing into your land Texas allows you to shoot them.
CBG

BlueTsunami

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38,000 arrests must = a whole lotta' money just to process these people
:9

ManaByte

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38,000 arrests must = a whole lotta' money just to process these people

Not really. They grab them and put them in a tent city while they process them so they aren't taking up space in the jails.
CBG

Mupepe

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Luis?  :o

I never would have guessed.  I guess he kept his poncho and bag of beans hidden in his locker. 

Still, if this law was around in Texas 10 years ago, we wouldn't have this pesky Luis problem.

Texas is worse actually, but again it doesn't get national attention. If you own land near the border and you see people crossing into your land Texas allows you to shoot them.
uh... link or proof?  According to my CHL class you're only allowed to shoot someone if you're defending your property after dark or are in real danger from them.  And even then, you better have God on your side to prove you were in such danger.  

Mupepe

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This is like discussing health care or immigration reform with old white ladies at my job. 

"We heard it somewhere so it must be true!"

Mandark

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Mana's trying to sell the idea of Phoenix quietly accepting a harsh yet effective policy until it became a PR liability.  But a couple years ago Phoenix's mayor called for Arpaio to be investigated by the FBI for possible civil rights violations.

So yeah, there's apparently been conflict over immigration policy in Phoenix for some years now, and Manabyte's account of events shouldn't be accepted on his say-so.

Mupepe

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Sounds like Manabyte's been listening to michael savage and glenn beck.

Phoenix Dark

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Sounds like Manabyte's been listening to michael savage and glenn beck.

Excuse me sir, can I see your birth certificate?
010

Dickie Dee

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How is your SSN not already a defacto National ID card - unless maybe there's a push to make them photo ID's
___

Saint Cornelius

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Bunch of bullshit. I don't see why California is so dumb.
dap

Mupepe

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I've been requesting mupepe's Icon papers over in our forum for days.  No luck.

I was wondering, if this law spreads throughout several states, doesn't that just get us one step closer to national ID cards?
Sounds like Manabyte's been listening to michael savage and glenn beck.

Excuse me sir, can I see your birth certificate?
Uhh... Uhh.. It's in my car, mang!

*runs*

Mupepe

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How is your SSN not already a defacto National ID card - unless maybe there's a push to make them photo ID's
I'm pretty sure it's because that using the current system of SSN's, it's pretty worthless.

Even now, do you know what happens when you file your taxes with another person's SSN?

spoiler (click to show/hide)
You get your tax refund and a letter saying that your name and SSN don't match and that if it's not fixed that your SSI contributions aren't going to be counted toward you when you're old and wrinkly!  Oooh, truly frightening.
[close]

Joe Molotov

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You're starting to sound kinda illegal, mupepe.
©@©™

Mupepe

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:teehee

I just know a lot of them.

Hey, where did Manabyte go??

ManaByte

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http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/04/26/national/main6434031.shtml

Quote
But supporters of the law, set to take effect in late July or August, say it is necessary to protect Arizonans from a litany of crimes committed by illegal immigrants. Arizona is home to an estimated 460,000 illegal immigrants.

The controversial Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio says his department has arrested some 38,000 illegal immigrants in the past three years and the new law will give him the tools to step up his efforts to combat the flood coming across Arizona's border with Mexico.
CBG

Dickie Dee

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How many tweets were sourced for that? :smug

Also, "new law" Manabyte, "new law" will "give him the tools", it fucking says it right there. This isn't simply a statewide expansion of an existing Phoenix law.
« Last Edit: April 29, 2010, 04:56:24 PM by Mamacint »
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ManaByte

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The new law will allow it to be state wide. Right now he only has jurisdiction within his county.
CBG

Arbys Roast Beef Sandwich

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do you know what happens when you file your taxes with another person's SSN?

spoiler (click to show/hide)
You get your tax refund and a letter saying that your name and SSN don't match and that if it's not fixed that your SSI contributions aren't going to be counted toward you when you're old and wrinkly!  Oooh, truly frightening.
[close]

WTF :lol
うぐう

Dickie Dee

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The new law will allow it to be state wide. Right now he only has jurisdiction within his county.

He's a Sheriff, he only has jurisdiction in his county. OMG YOUR STUPID BURNS
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Raban

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This is why I'm moving to New York

brawndolicious

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what's better in NY?

ManaByte

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what's better in NY?

Jobs for "day laborers"?

http://apnews.myway.com/article/20100429/D9FCDCN00.html

Quote
PHOENIX (AP) - Many of the cars that once stopped in the Home Depot parking lot to pick up day laborers to hang drywall or do landscaping now just drive on by.

Arizona's sweeping immigration bill allows police to arrest illegal immigrant day laborers seeking work on the street or anyone trying to hire them. It won't take effect until summer but it is already having an effect on the state's underground economy.

"Nobody wants to pick us up," Julio Loyola Diaz says in Spanish as he and dozens of other men wait under the shade of palo verde trees and lean against a low brick wall outside the east Phoenix home improvement store.

Many day laborers like Diaz say they will leave Arizona because of the law, which also makes it a state crime to be in the U.S. illegally and directs police to question people about their immigration status if there is reason to suspect they are illegal immigrants.

Supporters of the law hope it creates jobs for thousands of Americans.

"We want to drive day labor away," says Republican Rep. John Kavanagh, one of the law's sponsors.

An estimated 100,000 illegal immigrants have left Arizona in the past two years as it cracked down on illegal immigration and its economy was especially hard hit by the Great Recession. A Department of Homeland Security report on illegal immigrants estimates Arizona's illegal immigrant population peaked in 2008 at 560,000, and a year later dipped to 460,000.

The law's supporters hope the departure of illegal immigrants will help dismantle part of the underground economy here and create jobs for thousands of legal residents in a state with a 9.6 percent unemployment rate.

Kavanagh says day labor is generally off the books, and that deprives the state of much-needed tax dollars. "We'll never eliminate it, just like laws against street prostitution," he says. "But we can greatly reduce the prevalence."

Day laborers do jobs including construction, landscaping and household work for cash paid under the table. Those jobs have been harder to find since the housing industry collapsed here several years ago.

Standing near potted trees and bushes for sale at a Home Depot in east Phoenix, Diaz, 35, says he may follow three families in his neighborhood who moved to New Mexico because of the law. He says a friend is finding plenty of work in Dallas.

Diaz says he has too much to lose by staying - he's supporting a wife and infant son back home in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, across the border from El Paso, Texas.

"They depend on me to survive," he says. "I'm not going to wait for police to come and arrest me."

Jose Armenta, a 33-year-old illegal immigrant from Mexico's western coast, is already planning to move to Utah within the next 20 days because of a combination of the economy and the new law.

"A lot of people drive by," he says as he watched nearby cars speeding past, "and they yell, 'Hey, go back to Mexico!'"

Analysts say it's too soon to tell what lasting effects the law will have on the state's underground work force, which also includes baby sitters, maids and cooks.
A study of immigrants in Arizona published in 2008 found that non-citizens, mostly in the country illegally, held an estimated 280,000 full-time jobs. The study by researcher Judith Gans at the University of Arizona examined 2004 data, finding that they contributed about 8 percent of the state's economic output, or $29 billion.
Losing hundreds of thousands of unskilled laborers wouldn't hurt the state's economy in the short term, but it could limit the economy's ability to grow once it recovers, says Marshall Vest, director of the Economic and Business Research Center at the University of Arizona's Eller College of Management.

Legal workers who are willing to take any available job now will become more choosy if the unemployment rate falls back to low levels seen before the recession hit.

"That's really the question, as to whether the existing population is willing to work those (low-level) jobs," Vest says. "I think economics provides the answer. If job openings have no applicants, then businesses need to address that by raising the offered wage."
Some illegal immigrants, however, intended to stick around.

Natalia Garcia, 35, from Mexico City, says she and her husband - a day laborer - will stay so their daughters - both born in the U.S. - can get a good education and learn English. The couple have been living in Arizona illegally for the last 10 years.
"Mexico doesn't have a lot of opportunities," she says. "Here, we work honestly, and we have a better life."

Olga Sanchez, 32, from southern Mexico, lives in Phoenix illegally with her two brothers, who are 21 and 17. While the youngest boy is in high school, all three work and send money back home to their parents.

"This law is very bad for us," says Sanchez, who gets about $250 a week cleaning three houses. "I'm afraid of what's going to happen."
She says the family is going to wait and see if the law takes effect and what the fallout will be before deciding whether to leave. The law is certain to be challenged in court; Phoenix, Tucson and Flagstaff already are considering lawsuits.

"All I ask from God is a miracle for us to stay here and work," she says.
CBG

Ichirou

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Phoenix Mayor: City May Sue AZ Over Immigration Law

Considering this, I'm gonna need to see some hard evidence before I accept that 1) Phoenix has been enforcing a near-identical policy and 2) it's working out super awesome for them.

Phoenix is part of Maricopa County and their Sheriff Joe Arpaio has been doing this for YEARS with or without permission. So are they now going to boot him out of the state now that people found out about it and are pissed off at Arizona?

Are you a complete fucking moron?  Joe Arpaio is a racist piece of shit, and it's pretty clear that so are you.

Go back to masturbating over Disney Princesses and leave the political talk to the Mandarks of the board.
PS4

Ichirou

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Yuppppp.  Fucking Manabyte.  Dumb racist piece of trash, PD was right.
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M3wThr33

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It's too far reaching if we're going to need to carry around birth certificates or Visas all the time.

But drive by any Home Depot and you kind of see why people felt a need for a law to be able to do this on a state level.
« Last Edit: April 29, 2010, 07:34:53 PM by M3wThr33 »

lordmaji

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nothing is worse then Alabummer. fuck this place. lol
:-[

brawndolicious

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I don't think manabyte's any racist but lets just say he isn't too upset by the struggle of the poor immigrant peoples or something.

I don't think it makes sense to try and use this law to debate about the case for and against illegal immigrants and all that when the issue isn't so much about illegal immigration but fighting it with such a fuck-tarded method.

And that link that genghis posted brings so much shame on Phoenix's legal system that I think manabyte should be given a chance to admit he was very possibly wrong about the numbers.

Oblivion

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In a just world this would be the moment that people realized the Tea Party movement had nothing to do with the constitution and everything to do with retreading all the same conservative bs we've heard for years.  You can't be super concerned with the constitution and not have issues with this law, it's fucking impossible.

But of course the media will skip that in favor of shots of old men in tri-cornered hats.

I love how we only recently had a poll from the likes of CNN and the NY Times that seemed absolutely astounded that the teabaggers beliefs coincided with that of the republicans.

AdmiralViscen

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I forgot to bring this up in the other thread, but I'm pretty sure Manabyte posted that weird, pause-y political ad as something he seriously endorsed.
:lol

I think you're right

 :lol :lol

AdmiralViscen

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The new law will allow it to be state wide. Right now he only has jurisdiction within his county.

:rofl :rofl

Mandark

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http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/04/26/national/main6434031.shtml

Quote
But supporters of the law, set to take effect in late July or August, say it is necessary to protect Arizonans from a litany of crimes committed by illegal immigrants. Arizona is home to an estimated 460,000 illegal immigrants.

The controversial Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio says his department has arrested some 38,000 illegal immigrants in the past three years and the new law will give him the tools to step up his efforts to combat the flood coming across Arizona's border with Mexico.

How many tweets were sourced for that? :smug

Also, "new law" Manabyte, "new law" will "give him the tools", it fucking says it right there. This isn't simply a statewide expansion of an existing Phoenix law.

The new law will allow it to be state wide. Right now he only has jurisdiction within his county.

:lol :rofl :lol