I mean in both cases we have plenty of existing cases to be skeptical
corporations do skirt the rules so it’s easy to believe Hyundai had some of their people doing work in violation of their visas.
ICE is a stain on our ideas of justice and human rights, so I’ll always assume they’re in the wrong.
However even with these assumptions, how is this an arrestable offense? I’d expect levying fines against the corporation. All it takes is one lawyer. These are not criminals
Violation of visa/work permits isn’t an “arrestable offense”? What do you expect the government should do with those who stay and work in the country without valid documents?
Pull out a gun and start blasting? Do you really think it’s only a binary choice?
How about matching the severity of response to the infraction? As far as I know overstaying a visa has always been done through the judicial branch. More importantly if there are that many at a single company violating their visa restrictions, the company is the problem, not the individuals. An even better response might be legal action against the company. Either way these mass detentions are way out of proportion
I m not seeing it.
I mean in both cases we have plenty of existing cases to be skeptical
corporations do skirt the rules so it’s easy to believe Hyundai had some of their people doing work in violation of their visas.
ICE is a stain on our ideas of justice and human rights, so I’ll always assume they’re in the wrong.
However even with these assumptions, how is this an arrestable offense? I’d expect levying fines against the corporation. All it takes is one lawyer. These are not criminals
Violation of visa/work permits isn’t an “arrestable offense”? What do you expect the government should do with those who stay and work in the country without valid documents?
Pull out a gun and start blasting? Do you really think it’s only a binary choice?
How about matching the severity of response to the infraction? As far as I know overstaying a visa has always been done through the judicial branch. More importantly if there are that many at a single company violating their visa restrictions, the company is the problem, not the individuals. An even better response might be legal action against the company. Either way these mass detentions are way out of proportion
Jaywalking isn’t an arrestable offense? What do you expect the government to do with those who flaunt traffic rules nonchalantly?