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Have compassion for immigrants, lawmakers urged
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In my mind, the best way to show compassion for them is to help them go back and start over legally. My friends wife had to go back to Honduras to clear up an immigration issue and she is back now and so glad she doesn't have to look over her shoulder and wonder if she is legal anymore.
If we think "being compassionate" is letting them live here as second-class almost-citizens who can only do the jobs we don't want and have to live every day with the fear that they could be split from their families at the whim of the government... what kind of existence is that?
Personally I would want to get legal no matter what it cost. Helping someone get legal is the best thing I could do for them, ignoring them as long as they don't rock-the-boat isn't compasionate. Turning a blind eye to those currently here illegally ISN'T compassion. The status quo [don't ask, don't tell... unless your at the wrong place at the wrong time, then your gone] isn't compassionate.
While they are at it maybe they could shed a few tears for all the construction workers who used to make $15 per hour and who are now forced to work for $8. Where is the compassion for those whose lives have been and are being destroyed every day by "hard working people looking for a better life"?
Where is the compassion for the school teachers in Utah who now must teach a classroom full of illegal children who don't even speak English while trying to maintain a decent standard for the children who have a right to be in the classroom? If all these religions are so concerned why don't they foot the bill for them all?
What a joke! I for one, do not support the apparent "message" of Elder Jensen.
Illegal immigrants are taking money out of my wallet when they receive subsidies from many public sources. Far too many are criminals.
They should obey the laws of the land they are in.
"I was assigned to come here by the First Presidency of the church," he said, referring to the church's three most senior leaders, including LDS Church President Thomas S. Monson.
Bottom Line...are you prepared to tell President Monson that he is wrong on this issue?
I believe the Articles of Faith, but this is a living prophet's directive. I believe they can work together.
We may not know the solution to the immigration issue, but when my living Prophet says something, I don't question it.
Many people have brought up why this "support" by Elder Jensen is disturbing. How do we justify accepting illegals immigrants to our children. We have them recite The 12th Article of Faith, teach lessons on obeying the laws of the land, integrity, honesty, and inform them that one of the temple recomend questions is "Are you honest in all your dealings"? It's hypocritical!
This isn't a compasion issue. On a HUMANITARIAN stance...How does everyone feel about there direct and obvious explotation by employers?
COMPASSION? or OBEY HONOR AND SUSTAIN THE LAW?
I am sure glad God governs this church and not some of these Ignorgant General Authorities.
These outdated immigration laws, as you choose to call them, are what keeps this country from being over-run by the rest of the world. With no borders and no immigration laws there is no nation.
What do you do about their children who are legal? Take them from their parents, send them back with their parents so that they starve? What about the young man or young women who falls in love with a young person who has lived in the USA since they were just a very young child and doesn't know any other country. Tell them that they can't marry or that they can marry, but they can't live together after marriage because the illegal one has to be deported?
This is the compassion that the church is asking that the legislature consider.
Also, the legislature (and congress) needs to consider the compassion (not) of using US taxpayers money to pay for the illegal alien's welfare costs, housing costs, etc.
What is needed is a series of laws and initiatives that address the many causes of illegal aliens: including no work south of the boarder, our own appetite for cheap food, products, services, and such provided by their labor.
This is not a cut and dried issue. Both sides have legitimate issues and concerns. It will take compassion on all sides.
It is highly proper that the United States exercise compassion in this case. Given our history we need to be especially charitable and not hold others to standards which our own country was not willing to follow.
It's a sad day when the people of America are more concerned about their almighty wallet, then a human life. Greed, selfishness and pride are ugly things.
I'm amused by all the people who claim all our problems are caused by these illegals! They are all criminals? Really? Maybe we need to take a look at ourselves!
Thank you Mr. Jensen and thanks to all the hard working "illegal" immigrants that are the corner stone of the US economy and the only thing standing between us and $10 heads of lettuce.
When we lived in California, my three sisters met an illegal alien who was living down the street. After the unspeakable things he did to them, I don't really have a desire to get to know him or his family. My sisters are still in therapy, struggling with the issues related to being assaulted at such a young age. Only one has remained in the LDS faith.
Perhaps these church leaders should spend some time with the victims of the illegal alien invasion before making suggestions to be compassionate about them. There is enough anger and frustration that in the coming years this situation could really boil over and get ugly.
The question continues to come up of how the 10th Article of Faith comes into play in all of this. Fortunately, we have living prophets for just this type of situation. While not speaking on the specifics of the bills, the message from our living prophets has clearly been to exercise compassion, or stated differently, ask what Jesus would do.
I say the ILLEGAL Immigrants follow the procedure of Repenting for sin/crime. Return to their Countries and do the LEGAL thing and apply for Citizenship here and enter the U.S. Legally after they have fairly stood in line behind those who are trying to do the right thing.
I can LOVE my Neighbor but if he rips me off I am not going to let it continue to happen and I am going to request justice. Mercy cannot rob Justice.
Can I also assume from your response that Jesus is an advocate for the destruction of the United States, a country he had a hand in founding (if we are to believe the Doctrine & Covenants)? Yes, illegal immigration does destroy nations - it was certainly one of the factors that lead to the fall of the Roman Empire.
Sounds like most of the people on this board worship "the law" more than compassion. Sounds like the Pharisees. Oh ye hypocrites!
We Americans are spoiled and can't understand that sort of poverty. I agree, mercy cannot rob justice, but who made us Gods over these people?
What is it with the pro-illegal crowd? Whenever someone says anything that even slightly shines a negative light on illegal immigrants that person is automatically branded a "Nazi". Can't you do any better than that?
Speaking of hypocrisy, why don't YOU show some compassion and give your social security number to these fine, upstanding "guests" so they can get a job?
You seem to be okay with them stealing the identities of other people, why not volunteer yours so they don't have to steal?
I recognize that if illegal immigrants commit crimes, that is a different story, and there is an issue of safety and protection. But what about the people that, but for entering illegally, are keeping the law the best they can? Aren't these the people that our living prophets are talking about when we need to consider treating them with compassion?
I'm afraid that if we rely solely on the 10th Article of Faith in this discussion, and ignore the encouragement of our living prophets, we will be following a dead prophet and not a living prophet, as the people that remained in Nauvoo did, failing to follow the living prophet, Brigham Young.
What your saying is that its OK for other children of God to break the law?
What sort of child of God are you when you blatantly disobey the law?
Seems contradictory to me.
Elder Jensen isn't talking about obeying or disobeying the law, he's talking to the legislature MAKING the law. The men who decide what counts as LEGAL or ILLEGAL. He's saying we should have compassion in CRAFTING the law in the first place. Why is that so hard for the xenophobes in Utah to understand?
The fact is, we have an unjust system here. We want it both ways: we want cheap produce and cheap labor, but we also want excuses to indulge in the hatred of people not like us. Our economy encourages immigration (illegal and otherwise), then we punish people that react to that encouragement. We need to change the law to reflect economic reality and show compassion.
Shame on racist Utahns for using immigrants as scapegoats for all their social ills. And shame on Mormons with the audacity to counsel the brethren on how to interpret the Article of Faith.
What happens to people who are caught and deported, right now? If they are deported, they often spend time in immigration prisons, with worse conditions and without the rights that American murderers get--these are people who mostly jut wanted to feed their families. And yet people say there's no room for compassion.
It's really frustrating that despite the complexity of the problem, people want to lay all the blame and all the suffering for it on the illegals themselves, who are the least guilty. What about the fact that as a country we liked cheap fruit so much that we couldn't bring ourselves to guard the borders? What about the many businesses which have time and time again employed them, without feeling any guilt at all? Those of you without sin on this issue, cast the first stone.
I never said I was okay with identity theft. Any serious immigration reform should include provisions for persons to be readily identifiable and not be so afraid of US police authorities that they have to commit identity theft. Most posters here are not "pro-illegal immigrant."
We can enforce the laws on the books, build a wall, penalize employers, institute temporary work visas, get immigrants out of the shadows, stop identity theft, pay taxes (and get tax returns too).
I hope that we can become more educated and involve in this issue without any harsh but with the right knoledge upon us.
Why then are so many Utahns trying to make a moral crime out of a civil infraction? (Who appreciate tickets for rolling through a stop sign?)
That reasoning is a red flag that something else, is at the heart of the matter and not the fact that Latinos are "breaking visa laws". Based on my experience, generally Utahns are really uncomfortable about having to share their schools, supermarkets, roads with darker or "ethnic" looking, Spanish speaking people. If you're uncomfortable with people who don't share your exact same culture and looks, look inside yourself and decide what is it that REALLY bothers you about immigration. At this point few if any people are willing to accept that half of Latinos are in fact, residing legally in the US. The beauty of ineffective civil law is it can be CHANGED to reflect reality (our growing economy needing specialized and low-skilled laborers; we simply cannot man all of our business ideas with only US citizens.) Don't confuse crime/sin with infraction/amorality.
Some people have gone so far in trying to preach that the church should oppose illegal immigrants I really think they should be brought before church disciplinary councils and tried for their membership.
Stop calling them criminals. THEY ARE NOT CRIMINALS. Is someone who was brought here as a two year old child a criminal.
Your pay is falling not because there are undocumented immigrants but because you have colaborated with the employers in deneying them regular immigrant status. If all immigrant were under regular status, than the minimum wage law would be enforceable and they would not fear to join unions, strike, or quit low paying jobs. You are blaming the victims of the exploitation for its existence. You have the exact same rhetoric flowing from your mouth that was used by anti-slavery people who wanted to keep slavery out of where they lived to keep wages high but had no problem with people having slaves elsewhere.
Remember that Elder Uchtdorf fled East Germany illegally. He never recieved legal permission to leave, so are you going to refuse to sustain him since he is obviously an illegal emmigrant, never having recieved an amnesty for his illegal emmigration.
This idea that all undocumented immigrants go around stealing people's identity is the type of devisive rhetoric that we do not need. We have a choice, the church can be an inclusive organization that will grow. Or we can take an attitude towards the over 10% of the US population that has undocumented immigrants in their family that will stop the church from having any ability to grow among such people.
If you are LDS and hold to your belief than why do you contradict the teachings of the church leaders? Why are you so unwilling to share the blessings you have with others? Why do you think you have such a claim on God's blessings to us that you can deney it to others? And how can you live with yourself exploiting the cheap labor of immigrants in what you buy but being unwilling to give them any rights?
To respond to the person who accuses church members of doing nothing to help those in under developed countries, what are these things called Church Humanitarian Services and the Perpetual Education Fund anyway?
And what about all the church members who continued to practice polygamy after laws were passed against us. Joseph F. Smith had the audacity to introduce two of his wives to President Taft, not only breaking the law in doing so but in the most public way possible.
Drinking coffee is breaking the laws of God, crossing international borders is breaking the laws of man.
I still wonder though how people know that there are undocumented immigrants in their stake.
Make all the laws you want, they ignore the present ones, why would they listen to new ones?
Go down to the border at say, El Paso Texas and look across. Why would anyone stay there when just on the other side they can see a better something that will never exist in Mexico.
Get Mexico to get it's collective head out of the sand. Quit supporting their drug cultivation, that money is killing Mexico. Get the Mexican government to allow foreign investment in Mexico. Make Mexico a place where jobs are created and not illiterate people are born with no hope.
Let's give free citizenship to criminals!
Let's not stop there!
How about American citizenship for people still in Mexico!
How about American citizenship for terrorists!
I'm John McCain, and I have to admit I approve of this sad message.
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The reason why it's hard to get permission for legal immigration is simple. There are already to many illegal people here. A country can only absorb so many before it affects the standard of living and workers rights.
MSM: That's not a majority of the senate and would not of passed.