List Suspected Illegal Aliens And Illegal Alien Employers Online
Portland, Oregon, 8/2/2010 Repeated hostile legal action by the federal government
of the United States against the state of Arizona has required me to take the gloves off of the International Illegal Alien and Border Security Threat Tracking System to allow for the online posting of suspected illegal aliens and illegal alien employers in 19 countries. The system previously directed users to report all suspected illegal alien activity directly to law enforcement and reserve use of the publishing service for retroactive documentation and tracking purposes.
Under the new policy users are still instructed to contact law enforcement first to report suspected illegal alien activity, but are permitted to publish their suspicions if they determine law enforcement to be an inadequate resource. All reports of suspected illegal alien activities must contain a valid argument that does not violate the sites policy against racial profiling.
Publishers will remain in control of their work unless proof is provided that they are in breach of contract. In order to prove breach of contract the accusing party if a listed individual must contact law enforcement and request a check of their immigration status. Companies listed must request a check of the immigration status of every employee at the company and fire any employees who fail to comply with the checks.
This new screening feature is designed to decrease the number of illegal aliens in supported countries while tracking suspected, past, and present day illegal aliens using a search engine friendly design that will help Google, Yahoo, and Bing users learn about them. Negotiations are under way to move the server to an overseas location that will make in immune to any local, state, or federal legal challenge just like The Pirate Bay and Wikileaks.
A key factor in this decision came after seeing businesses parade suspected illegal alien employees around on national television with no fear of consequences and learning just how much the illegal alien problem differs from state to state. I believe that Arizona is the first in a series of dominos that if allowed to fall will knock over its neighbors and eventually the rest of the country.