corianderstem
Blue Crack Distributor
Thanks, martha. I was assuming the "AZ only" thing had to be wrong.
Thanks, martha. I was assuming the "AZ only" thing had to be wrong.
I was hoping, because it's rare, but Steve's been harassed by cops before.
Stop the presses. The police in America "harassed" a white man.
Imagine.
Was it dark outside? Was his face covered with road grime? Was this a rookie cop? I mean, how does this happen in your Amerika The Racist?
See, this is the problem. These experiences give us something you lack: empathy. We know it actually happens to people, no matter what some idiot commentator told us.
For the last several days I keep hearing from talk radio that this law "only enforces the existing federal law", if that is the case then why not just execute a state memorandum?
Can some of you supporters explain this to me? And what precautions or wording is put in place so that this doesn't give free reign on racial profiling?
What do you honestly think will be gained by this law?
I hear all the Tea Partiers commenting on Obama's 'if the family went out for ice cream' quote, and they all say this scenario is false, but have you read the law?
Surely they accept driver's licenses from other states?
I was hoping, because it's rare, but Steve's been harassed by cops before.
We don't have anti biker laws in Az.
Thank you
AZ driver licensing requirements identify 5 states "that do not verify lawful presence" in the U.S.: HI, IL, NM, UT, and WA (WA verifies only for credentials labeled as "enhanced").
Well, it happens I guess, but I don't think it happens with the vast majority of police officers. Most of them want to do their job in good faith and go home at the end of the day.
So hospitals, clinics, insurance companies, government aid agencies, pharmacies and doctors can ask for your "papers"... but not policemen in the coarse of their normal duties.
Of course not. But it does happen. Darryl Gates just died. Anybody who lived in SoCal during his tenure knows what can happen.
So hospitals, clinics, insurance companies, government aid agencies, pharmacies and doctors can ask for your "papers"... but not policemen in the course of their normal duties.
...Airlines, rental car companies, liquor stores, the DMV, the Royal Canadian Mounties, etc, etc.
I'm personally offended when these institutions ask for my papers.
...Airlines, rental car companies, liquor stores, the DMV, the Royal Canadian Mounties, etc, etc.
I'm personally offended when these institutions ask for my papers.
...Airlines, rental car companies, liquor stores, the DMV, the Royal Canadian Mounties, etc, etc.
I'm personally offended when these institutions ask for my papers.
so because another state did something not remotely similar, this is ok?Indiana is one of the few states that requires a state issued picture ID to vote.
And yes, that was called unconstitutional (until it was upheld).
And yes, it was called racist by Democrats and the professional victim industry. But no surprise there.
Indiana is one of the few states that requires a state issued picture ID to vote.
Sure. Not disagreeing.
It was my point that it was a lot more common years ago- say right around the long, long tenure of Daryl Gates as LA Police Commissioner.(late 70s, 80s, early 90s, correct?)
Government just needs to stay out of white people's lives. If you're not white, you need to prove you're truly an American citizen.