A few interesting events occurred last week in the immigration legislation world. First, the Arizona legislature enacted and its governor signed the most draconian anti-immigrant law in the 50 states. This story has been well covered in many other forums, blogs, and media sources, so I won’t be discussing it much here. My emphasis is […]
Posts Tagged ‘immigration reform’
Weakness in U.S. Immigration Policy Exposed
An article in the New York Times today highlighted a gaping weakness in the United States’ immigration system—our government has no reliable way to track if a visitor has left the country. That’s right, the immigration agencies don’t know whether or not the 2.9 million persons who entered the U.S. last year (and the tens […]