Court Subverts Illegal Alien
Back Wage Ban [David
Wilson]
- 01/10/05
The U.S. Supreme Court dispensed a smidgen of common
sense in 2002 with a
ruling that illegal aliens could not recover lost
wages because, well, they could not have
legally earned them in the first place.
However, in direct defiance of that ruling, an appellate
court in New York has ruled that illegal aliens can
collect back wages at their home country’s rate.
[Sanango
v 200 E. 16th St. Hous. Corp.]
A jury handed Arcenio Sanango, an Ecuadoran illegal who
fell from a ladder at a Manhattan worksite, $96,000 in
lost earnings, both past and future. The award in U.S.
dollars couldn’t be upheld, the appellate judges
acknowledged, so they remanded for a recalculation based
on the Ecuadoran pay scale.
“We are
unaware... of any federal policy that would be offended
by awarding an undocumented alien damages for lost
earnings based on the prevailing wage in the alien’s
country of origin,”
wrote
Justice David Friedman.
Uh, how about that big one that says illegal aliens
aren't supposed to be here to begin with?
But here’s an idea: By the same token, are illegal
aliens who commit crimes in America entitled to “home
country” criminal procedure?
If so, we could get confessions with a bullwhip.
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Another Meddling Latino
Leader [Brenda
Walker] - 01/10/05
Fire up the RealPlayer to watch a
gaggle of cheerful
Salvadoran politicians celebrating the third
extension of Temporary Protected Status (TPS). (Paste
this corrected link into the URL line of the RealPlayer:
rtsp://video.c-span.org/15days/e010705_salvador.rm)
The president of El Salvador Elias Antonio Saca
appeared at the National Press Club Jan. 7 to chat up
the
renewal of TPS for 250,000 Salvadorans for another
18 months (until Sept. 9, 2006).
TPS is a non-permanent amnesty awarded on the basis
of a
nation's natural disasters which for some reason
preclude its illegal aliens from being repatriated.
(Say, wouldn't these willing workers be helpful in
rebuilding the earthquake-damaged country?)
El Salvador's major claim to fame these days is as
the home of the ultra-violent
Mara Salvatrucha gang (aka MS-13),
recently linked to al Qaeda. Gangsters covered by
the TPS provisions will now be able to concentrate on
their criminal and terrorist activities without worrying
about annoying deportations.
Once again, the Bush administration's open-borders
expediency is
endangering every one of us.
El Presidente Saca was not shy in declaring that his
purpose was to wangle American citizenship for his
expats (and everyone else, as it happens).
"We are working for permanent legalization of
those people who are living in the U.S." he
declared.
Salvador may be an insignificant backwater but its
leaders have learned a few tricks from neighboring
Mexico, the avaricious champ of human dumping for
fun and profit.
In fact, PBS calls remittances
"El Salvador's biggest industry." Salvadoran
officials estimate their dutiful TPSers alone remitted
nearly $1 billion last year, a substantial chunk of the
nation's
total remittance loot of $2.5 billion.
Incidentally, El Salvador is one of the
most densely populated countries in the Western
Hemisphere. I recall Vdare.com writer
Linda Thom comparing Salvador to the sci-fi
overpopulation film
Soylent Green—at a special
CAPS showing attended by star
Charlton Heston.
Linda explained that her visit to Salvador included a
lot of stepping over people jammed in everywhere, just
like in the film.
El Presidente Tony ended his press conference with a
perfect summation:
"My purpose is to gain
the permanency of these people in the U.S. ... TPS is
good but it is only temporary."
On cue, the Haitian contingent of the Gimme Lobby
piped up in the press with a
"Hey, what about us! We got disasters too!"
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