Ladas wrote:
So you have issues with the concept of "lawful contact", which is a readily used "condition" for a wide range of requests allowed enforcement officers, from seat belt violations on up?
I do actually. I think the plethora of minor violations combined with the admissibility of evidence obtained from pretextual stops and the erosion of Fourth Amendment protections that resulted from the Drug War hysteria of the 80s and 90s has seriously tilted the legal balance toward arbitrary state power. This law is just another step in that direction, but one I object to in particular for reasons I'll discuss below.
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You are objecting to this law, it appears, based solely because you don't like the state governments enforcing a legal requirement mandated at the federal level, and using the notion of "over regulated" as a defense for why this law shouldn't be tolerated?
On the contrary, I have no problem with state governments enforcing federal laws. My general objection is to the snowball effect of using any minor lawful contact as a pretext for unrelated and much more intrusive questioning. In addition, I find this law particularly problematic because (i) "papers, please" is a classic hallmark of police states, and (ii) it will, by its very nature, be applied unequally based on racial and linguistic characteristics.
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And where is the media pointing out the hypocrisy of those that claim this is not the purview of the lower than Federal level governments to dictate terms of immigration, while at same time supporting the "safe haven" laws in other areas of the country?
*shrug* I don't deny that the media narrative on immigration issues is biased and almost completely lacking in coherent legal context. I'm just expressing my views, not defending those of Chris Matthews and Keith Olbermann.