And why should they, when they are just enacting the will of the people?it's not like ICE hides it's atrocities well.
This seems cut and dry to me. The school has a policy. If you want to work for that school, you follow that policy. If you want to "take a stand" on something, you find somewhere else to work. The school's policy is to address trandgender students by their preferred name. It is not a violation of your first amendment rights to fire you for not following that policy. Why am I not surprised this is an Orchestra teacher, as he definitely doesn't understand what the first amendment is or what constitutes a violation of the right to free speech (hint, it involves jail at the very least).Teacher claims school made him resign for not using transgender student's preferred name
GOOD! Teachers who insist on using their student's legal name are assholes. I don't care if the student goes by their middle name, a nickname, or has changed their name to better reflect their identity. It's no burden on a teacher to call a student by the same name that everyone else in that student's life does.
Bullying a student is not exercising free speech. This teacher is a piece of shit for claiming that they were being forced to take a side on a highly controversial subject. A student's name is not a controversial subject. John Kluge, you are not standing up for free speech, you were just abusing your position of authority, using it to harass someone in your charge.
This piece of excrement has the gall to claim that the administration is bullying him.
I am surprised it’s an orchestra teacher, as the Arts traditionally have a more tolerant view of such things.Why am I not surprised this is an Orchestra teacher
One of my favorite conservative pundits to read. I don't always agree with him but he always has interesting things to say about whatever the topic is. He's been a staple in National political discussion for years, decades even.Charles who?
<Googles>
Oh.
—Patrick
As with many things there are many reasons people have issues with ICE, but I think one of the biggest issues is simply confusion about what it is, what it does, unfair comparisons to the criminal justice system, and the fact that it’s a political cat toy to be batted around vigorously and wildly each time congress or the presidency changes.I would appreciate the education if someone could kindly lay out to me in simple terms what exactly is the problem many people seem to have with ICE. You can have individual cases of misconduct, but what exactly is it that makes the whole agency a cancer on humanity?
For evidence of this sort of behavior, you need look no further than the very real dread you experience when you drive you and your license plate across the border into another state.ICE isn't the easy target. Immigrants are.
It's truly a kick-me sign. They know damn well you aren't going to show up to court to contest it.For evidence of this sort of behavior, you need look no further than the very real dread you experience when you drive you and your license plate across the border into another state.
--Patrick
When you do as much wrong as they do, yes. The bullseye is 11 miles wide.It’s an easy target.
And here we go. McConnell has now stolen the Supreme Court and they are starting to - on a strict party line - legalize voter suppression. Well done.Cool cool cool cool cool
Unavailable in the EU.http://www.latimes.com/politics/la-na-pol-sessions-asylum-20180611-story.html
GOP 1: Hey guys, it looks like we're getting shit all over for separating children of asylum seekers from their parents and then losing them.
GOP 2: Well, let's make it so they can't call themselves asylum seekers anymore.
Unavailable in the EU.
Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions has ordered immigration judges to stop granting asylum to most victims of domestic abuse and gang violence, a move that would block tens of thousands of people, especially women, from seeking refuge in America.
The decision, which immigration advocates are sure to aggressively fight, came as Sessions seeks to use the authority of his office to sharply change U.S. immigration law to make it less friendly to asylum seekers.
The attorney general has the power to issue decisions that serve as binding precedents for immigration judges. In this instance, he used a case involving a victim of domestic violence from El Salvador to rule that survivors of such “private” crimes are not eligible for asylum under U.S. law.
“Generally, claims by aliens pertaining to domestic violence or gang violence perpetrated by non-governmental actors will not qualify for asylum,” Sessions wrote in his ruling. “The mere fact that a country may have problems effectively policing certain crimes — such as domestic violence or gang violence — or that certain populations are more likely to be victims of crime, cannot itself establish an asylum claim.”
In a speech earlier in the day to a training session for immigration officials, Sessions telegraphed his position, saying that “asylum was never meant to alleviate all problems — even all serious problems — that people face every day all over the world.”
His anticipated “ruling restores sound principles of asylum and longstanding principles of immigration law,” he said.
Sessions emphasized at the conference that immigration judges will be required to follow his interpretation of the law. Under immigration law, the attorney general’s rulings are binding on immigration judges unless overturned by a federal appellate court.
The policy Sessions took aim at lies at the heart of an area of immigration law that has been hotly contested over the past two decades. During that time, advocates for victims of domestic violence have succeeded in winning cases that liberalized the law to protect victims of abuse or extortion whose home governments couldn’t or wouldn’t protect them. Many of the immigrants granted asylum as a result were fleeing Central American nations that offer little protection to victims of domestic abuse and gangs.
The government does not appear to keep statistics on exactly how many asylum claims fall into the categories Sessions is now excluding, but advocates estimate that domestic violence victims seeking asylum number in the tens of thousands each year. A large share of those requests have been successful, as a result of several administrative rulings and court cases during the Obama administration.
“There are many, many Central American women and women from other parts of the world who have been able to obtain protection,” said Denise Gilman, director of the immigration clinic at the University of Texas Law School in Austin. “Many women sitting right now in detention under these claims might lose their right to obtain protection and be deported to dangerous situations.”
Sessions’ action on Monday overturned earlier court decisions and a 2014 ruling by the Board of Immigration Appeals, which held that people trapped in domestic violence in Central American could qualify for asylum in the U.S.
The attorney general’s decision forms a key part of a broader Trump administration effort to restrict immigration and discourage asylum seekers from coming to the U.S. The administration has also stripped various legal rights from detainees, and has been separating families detained by immigration agents.
The United Nations High Commission on Refugees had urged Sessions against changing the asylum rules. It warned that such action would violate international agreements the U.S. has entered into concerned refugees and would subject victims to being returned to situations where their lives are in danger. The American Bar Assn. warned that ending the asylum eligibility for victims of domestic violence “would further victimize those most in need of protection.”
Way TOO MUCH of the last couple years feels like, “Let’s see how much shit we can get away with by calling it something else,” just like “convenience fees” instead of “money grab,” or “consolidation of services” instead of “redlining.”let's make it so they can't call themselves asylum seekers anymore.
The people voted for Hillary.so the people have spoken.
Well, not the ones in swing statesThe people voted for Hillary.
That exact same system kept democrats in control of congress AND the senate from 1933 to 1995, outside of a couple outlying years.Yeah, the system is explicitly set up soracist trashrepublicans get an inordinate amount of power in the US.
Pretty sure the narrative is that demo flip-flopped in the 60s, remember.You mean when the democrats were the party of racism and old racists still voted for them out of habit?