If you move to Mexico unlawfully, and get caught breaking a law, you go to prison for two years.
By Frosty Wooldridge
Last week, NBC’s Tom Brokaw presented a one-hour television special on ILLegal immigration, “In the Shadow of the American Dream.” During the program, this great American soft-pedaled ILLegals’ impact on Vail, Aspen, Carbondale, Glenwood Springs, Colorado and the Roaring Fork Valley.
Brokaw used platitudes to describe a growing attitude of anarchy—as if it were okay to break our laws. He presented an entire extended-family of ILLegal aliens on national television. Only one of the sixteen who resided in that house warranted American citizenship—a two year old anchor baby. Instead of being arrested and deported, the adults reported for work as you read this column today. Meanwhile, Colorado citizens lose foreclosed homes, stand in unemployment lines and join the welfare ranks. What is wrong with this picture?
If you move to Mexico unlawfully, and caught breaking a law, you go to prison for two years. Are foreign-nationals unlawfully in the U.S. subject to our laws?







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