I keep saying what it is and you keep ignoring it. Read back through my posts, it is there.
No, you just keep saying "his agenda".
What is his agenda?
It's a good thing that I didn't hold my breath waiting for your answer, isn't it? :laugh:
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I keep saying what it is and you keep ignoring it. Read back through my posts, it is there.
No, you just keep saying "his agenda".
What is his agenda?
It's a good thing that I didn't hold my breath waiting for your answer, isn't it? :laugh:
Texas Gov. Rick Perry has deployed Texas Military Force helicopters to the border, but he has not deployed the Texas National Guard to the border
http://www.renewamerica.com/columns/hale/100405
No, you just keep saying "his agenda".
What is his agenda?
It's a good thing that I didn't hold my breath waiting for your answer, isn't it? :laugh:
It is him. :tonofbricks:
That response has no real meaning.
Give us an example.
You know if you operated with both oars in the water you wouldn't keep going in circles. :laugh:
The only agenda that Free can point to is: Perry likes to win elections. If there's something else, then I invite Free or others to be candid about their views, rather than continue sounding like conspiracy whackos who have no proof of anything but insist they're right.
No not from the monies from that original grant Governor Perry did not deploy them. The president did however, but this is about Rick Perry.
Okay, now you're just being obtuse. Perry submitted a request to use National Guardsmen on a national border; the president issued an order deploying troops on that border. On the face of it, it looks like Perry got troops deployed to the border.
If you have current, relevant information that proves otherwise, please provide it.
As my eighth-grade English teacher used to say: "Uh, wrong!"The Governor does not have to make the request as they are under his authority.
Wrong again. The situation described in your 2010 article was accurate in 2010; it's no longer accurate, because troops have been deployed to the border since that article was written.What was reported was accurate.
As my eighth-grade English teacher used to say: "Uh, wrong!"
The state governor *must* coordinate with the federal government for international borders. The state governor cannot legally represent the entire nation in regards to an international border that affects *all* the states, not just that particular state's. So yes, the governor *does* have to make a request -- which he did, and which was subsequently granted, even though you refuse to admit it -- or face legal recourse from the federal government, just as Arizona has.
Wrong again. The situation described in your 2010 article was accurate in 2010; it's no longer accurate, because troops have been deployed to the border since that article was written.
You want to hold to your own opinion, even when shown facts to the contrary. That's your perogative, but it's intellectually dishonest.
We are talking about Texas not the whole US. You are wrong again.
Federal laws concerning the U.S. border are different for Texas than they are for other States with Federal borders?
No, but we the right and responsibility to enforce those federal laws. Texas law lets a convicted felon possess a firearm on the premises where he lives once five years have elapsed from his release from prison or from parole, whichever is later. Texas Penal Code §46.04. ,
However, federal law is much stricter. It generally prohibits a person convicted of a crime "punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year" from possessing a firearm. The test is the length of possible punishment, not whether the crime is called a misdemeanor or a felony. No exception is made for having a firearm at the home, no matter how long ago the conviction. 18 U.S.C. § 922(g).
So our law enforcement enforces the Federal law on felons with guns just like we have a responsibility to enforce the border laws. Perry has drug his feet on doing this all the while whining to the federal government.
As a state we have every right and responsibility to make laws that protect us from those who violate our federal immigration laws.
Why didn't you just start out with this? No one's going to argue this point.The Governor has played loose and fancy free with this because he wants the Spanish vote.
You're mixing apples and oranges. You give a clear example of federal vs. state laws that affect our country only; then try to apply that example to international boundaries.
Again, you hold to your own opinion, using non-applicable examples to try to justify it. And again I say, you're being intellectually dishonest--not with us, but with yourself.
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Why didn't you just start out with this? No one's going to argue this point.
I personally would have offered this as my initial premise; then pointed out that Perry could have had some strong stances like Arizona's Jan Brewer, but failed to do so, using federal law as his excuse to pander to the hispanic vote.
I have questions about Perry's conservative credentials, but perhaps being Republican doesn't necessarily mean "conservative" anymore. I think that everyone knows that he pushed to have mandatory Gardisil injections for young school girls in Texas. It is also a fact that he supported and ran Al Gore's 88 campaign in Texas.
He appears to be Republican as a matter of convenience and he is being passed off as a tough-talking, gun-toting, tea party conservative. He is saying all the right things, but can you trust someone with his past to live up to the expectations of voters who want a genuine, unapollogetic conservative candidate to represent them?
Apples and oranges are good for the health. Try them. I am glad that you agree that he is not doing his job.