Saturday, May 11, 2013

Abstract Reform BS

When you sign a petition at White House website, that is the cue you are one of them. I guess.  Periodically, emails such as this come to me.
Hi, everyone --
This is the start of a national debate. Across the country, we're having a serious discussion about how we can build a fair and effective immigration system that lives up to our heritage as a nation of laws and a nation of immigrants.
And we need your help to make sure that genuine, personal perspectives are part of the conversation. The truth is, that if we go back far enough, nearly every American story begins somewhere else -- so often with ancestors setting out in search of a different life, carving out a future for their children in this place that all of us now call home.
We want to make sure that idea isn't far from the minds of policymakers here in Washington as we work to reach an agreement to reform immigration.
To kick things off, one of the President's senior advisors sat down to share his story with you.
Watch David Simas tell his American story, then tell us yours.
When Americans from all over the country -- each with different backgrounds, each from different circumstances -- all speak out with the same voice, it's powerful in a way that's hard to ignore. We've seen it again and again, in debate after debate.
And this is the kind of issue where putting a face on the push for reform takes an abstract concept and makes it real. So share your American stories with us, and we'll put them to use.
We'll publish them on the White House website. We'll share them on Facebook and Twitter. We'll do everything we can to make sure they're part of the debate around immigration reform.
Get started here:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/issues/immigration/stories 
Thanks,
Cecilia
Cecilia Muñoz
Director, Domestic Policy Council
The White House 
My opinion of this is that the White House is using government resources to foster the spread of a political position.  I guess that is nothing new, but the intimacy of an email combined with respect for the importance of the presidency, make it seem overtly political and over-reaching, perhaps inappropriate.  
Truth is, the central government always wants the population to be growing as an excuse for the Federal Reserve System to expand the money supply which is used to buy more political power. The fact that Democrats endorse converting illegal aliens to citizenry can be construed as racist because it requires the presumption that these new citizens will carry a lower proportional economic earning load than increase in money supply. 
The fact that poor citizens tend to vote for Democrats is just a happy by-product.  The government wants inflation, this gives them an excuse to do it.

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