Google Workers Demand Company Not Work With Border Agencies (bloomberg.com) 302
Some Google employees have called on the company to publicly promise not to work with U.S. immigration authorities, which they said are abusing human rights. From a report: U.S. Customs and Border Protection recently said it was looking for proposals from companies to supply it with cloud-computing services. Google is a leading cloud provider. Activists and politicians have accused the agency of human rights abuses along the border with Mexico. The agency has separated children from their families, and is detaining migrants for indefinite periods of time. The Google workers, who said Wednesday they have a petition with 70 employee signatures, want the company to commit to not bidding on the contract, as well as to refuse to work on projects for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Office of Refugee Resettlement.
Exactly what rights do illegal immigrants have? (Score:5, Funny)
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Illegals have more rights than actual citizens. If a citizen is arrested with a kid they will be separated *gasp*.
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Re:Exactly what rights do illegal immigrants have? (Score:4, Informative)
> will either be placed in foster care or they'll be kept with other members of the family.
You mean, what is being described as child separation on the border? Children placed in the custody of health and human services. And if no other members of the family they will be separated.
Wow. You sure showed me.
>a non-citizen doesn't commit a real criminal offense
They committed a crime by entering the country illegally. So an illegal can break the law and should not face repercussion. Got it. Can citizens do that?
>ICE has picked facilities to place the children in that it knows full well engage in torture.
Are there any other facilities available? No. All of them are full. All I could find about your "torture" was an ACLU lawsuit that claimed this has been happening since Obama. But the investigation was dismissed as baseless. I don't know if it was baseless or not and is rather besides the point that you even demonstrate.
If an American has a child and commits a crime, they will be separated. Perhaps, I should have been clear. People that scream "child separation and concentration camps" want the "deferred action" treatment. IOW, ignore the law. IOW, it's ok to break that law.
Re:Exactly what rights do illegal immigrants have? (Score:4, Insightful)
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>It's not a crime for someone seeking asylum to enter by crossing the border at any point.
It is a crime. They must apply for asylum at a port of entry not "at any point". That is the law. Unless you are saying they are above the law.
> swallowing the propaganda
Get informed before you call factual information "propaganda".
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>Can you, not like, you know, read?
Oh boy. Treating legalese as "like just read a book bro".
The law gives discretion to the government via the Secretary of Homeland Security and particularly the Attorney General.
8USC 1325:
"Any alien who (1) enters or attempts to enter the United States at any time or place other than as designated by immigration officers,"
If immigration officers say "go to ports of entry". Then that means "Any alien" must go through port of entry and any entry not through ports of entry
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Re:Exactly what rights do illegal immigrants have? (Score:5, Interesting)
That convention [unhcr.org] applies to "refugees [...] coming directly from a territory where their life or freedom was threatened" Not to people seeking better economic conditions so they can find jobs which pay more than in their home country. That's the entire reason there's a backlog in the detention centers. We're not just deporting them, we're questioning each of them at length to determine if they are fleeing because they feel their life or freedom was threatened, or if they're simply economic refugees.
In fact, the very act of these people fleeing their home country makes things worse in the country they leave. By attempting to flee, they've demonstrated they're the type of person willing to take action to improve their economic circumstances. That's exactly the type of people you need to participate in politics or lead a revolution which changes or overthrows the government and/or policies which are causing the poor economic conditions in their home country. If you make it easier for these people to leave than to institute the necessary changes in their home country, then their home country will never change for the better. Remember, the ultimate solution here isn't for first world nations to accept everyone fleeing the developing world. It's for the developing world to develop so that they enjoy the same benefits and lifestyle we in first world nations enjoy.
Re:Exactly what rights do illegal immigrants have? (Score:5, Informative)
It is a crime. They must apply for asylum at a port of entry not "at any point". That is the law.
Let's check what the law actually says:
8 USC 1158 (a) (1) Any alien who is physically present in the United States or who arrives in the United States (whether or not at a designated port of arrival and including an alien who is brought to the United States after having been interdicted in international or United States waters), irrespective of such alien's status, may apply for asylum in accordance with this section or, where applicable, section 1225(b) of this title. [house.gov]
Yep, you're talking out of your ass. Also I suggest that you read this document [unhcr.org], which outlines the reasoning behind it.
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They can apply anywhere. This is orthogonal from border crossing. So you can cross the border illegally, apply for asylum, and be booted out or detained while your application is processing because regardless of the asylum claim the border crossing was illegal.
Re:Exactly what rights do illegal immigrants have? (Score:4, Informative)
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They never report for their trial
92 percent of individuals who filed asylum claims attended their court hearings between fiscal years 2013 and 2017 [humanrightsfirst.org]
Asylum seekers released from detention to pursue their claims attend immigration court hearings nearly 100 percent of the time [humanrightsfirst.org]
Re:Exactly what rights do illegal immigrants have? (Score:5, Insightful)
Your links are old and focus on edge cases with a high percentage of positive outcomes for very specific populations (not surprising given the sources). DHS reported in June of this year -- two months ago -- that out of a sample of 7,000 people, 90% of recent asylum seekers received orders of removal in absentia [nationalreview.com] -- meaning they didn't show up to their hearings. This is because the Flores loophole requires them if traveling with a minor to be released after 21 days. 90% of these folks never show up for their hearing when they're released. So yeah, a huge problem is people traveling with a kid who say the word asylum, disappear into the US after 21 days, and never show up for their hearing. Your link even complains about how unfair removal in absentia is, and gives recommendations on how to slant it more in favor of the illegals.
Again -- legit asylum is possible under the law, as it should be. It is likely those people in the high-percentage cases cherry picked by the links you posted were credible asylum candidates because they actually SHOWED UP. But they represent a tiny minority of the people actually crossing the border. Of course any legit asylum seeker would absolutely WANT to show up in court and tell their story, don't you think?
That's the problem -- we can't even have an honest discussion about what's happening at the border because the facts get in the way of a good, heartstring-pulling story. And we can't have that the year before an election, right?
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Imagine you were fleeing for your life. Didn't have much time to gather evidence or documentation to support your asylum claim. Criminals or the government who are threatening to murder you tend not to leave much evidence of their crimes if they can help it anyway.
Do you think you are likely to get a fair hearing where it is genuinely determined if you were at risk or not? What basis would you have the court use to determine this?
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This is false, asylum seekers are not criminals (Score:2, Insightful)
That's the part that Fox News always likes to leave out. Technically correct is NOT the best kind of correct. It's a lie by omission.
Also, if I may digress, let's not forget these refugees are fleeing violence _we_ caused. It's like lighting a house on fire and shooting the parents and kids when they flee.
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1) It is ABSOLUTELY a crime to cross at ANY point other than a port of entry. For ANY reason. Period. Case closed.
The international treaties that the US ratified back in 1968 or so override this for asylum applicants. They literally require non-penalization of such cases from the signatory countries.
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>"They literally require non-penalization of such cases"
It is true that they can't be penalized, IF they apply for Asylum, but they still broke the law in the illegal crossing (crossing outside of a port of entry). Thus, technically, they still broke the law. I admit, it is a bit more murky that it should be.
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1) It is ABSOLUTELY a crime to cross at ANY point other than a port of entry. For ANY reason. Period. Case closed.
The law disagrees with you. Read the first sentence (actually, read all of it, but the refutation to your claim is in the first sentence): https://uscode.house.gov/view.... [house.gov]
2) Almost all of these "immigrants" that are seeking asylum are hitting the border with false motives.
That's for a court to decide.
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Re:Exactly what rights do illegal immigrants have? (Score:4, Informative)
Then why didn't they apply for refugee status before illegally crossing the border?
You have to be physically present in a country to apply for asylum. That's how it works pretty much anywhere. Since the international community has recognized in the 1950s that satisfying the usual entry technicalities may be impossible for many people fleeing from danger, a universal principle applicable to all asylum claimants has been adopted that asylum seekers are expressly not to be penalized for actions that would be otherwise illegal, as long as they're related solely to getting onto the soil of the country where they're applying for asylum. Said article literally says
The Contracting States shall not impose penalties, on account of their illegal entry or presence, on refugees who, coming directly from a territory where their life or freedom was threatened in the sense of Article 1, enter or are present in their territory without authorization, provided they present themselves without delay to the authorities and show good cause for their illegal entry or presence.
All participating countries have enshrined these principles into their local legislation differently, but for US purposes, legislators have apparently concluded that "without delay" means "within one year". They've also apparently enshrined the "coming directly" principle in form of the concept of a "safe third country", which is a status that has been denied to Mexico until now.
but does that mean America must now accept ANYONE who feels like coming to America regardless of whether they are refugees or not
Nobody says you *have* to *accept* them. You just can't have them undergo an asylum determination procedure that would violate international law. Apparently the US is in habit of doing that quite often, though.
Maybe because when you're fleeing violence (Score:2, Insightful)
Also, these people are literally fleeing violence _we_ caused. Meanwhile while you support Donald Trump putting the screws on actual violence fleeing refugees fleeing violence caused by _your_ government Trump's administration (with the help of right wing Democrats and the GOP) just passed a resolution making it easier to bring in Indian tech workers on top of several resolutions in
By the way we're talking 150k people tops (Score:3)
Seriously, everybody here on
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So, you put a parent in jail (where you send someone who's committed a crime), and you send their kid with them?
Children are marked legally as being special cases for good reason, and if parents are placed in custody for committing a crime, the child is placed in care.
That separates parents from children.
What is your proposal?
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Re:Exactly what rights do illegal immigrants have? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm genuinely curious where you see this trend going. Trump will be out of office (in 2020 or 2024 who knows) but either way due to US politics the pendulum will swing back way left.
We will be a first world welfare nation bordering a bunch of..not first world countries. We will effectively (if not literally, gotta worry about that $50 fine if you're caught!) have open borders.
Now please explain how you can have a first world welfare state with free health care and guaranteed welfare if you can get a food across a very porous border and not have people by the _millions_ flood in and eventually overwhelm the standard of living of those in the "first world" country.
Hint: You can't explain it, it's a natural and inevitable consequence.
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Re:Exactly what rights do illegal immigrants have? (Score:5, Insightful)
So, you put a parent in jail (where you send someone who's committed a crime), and you send their kid with them? Children are marked legally as being special cases for good reason, and if parents are placed in custody for committing a crime, the child is placed in care. That separates parents from children.
What is your proposal?
My proposal is to actually reunite them with their parents once the case is adjudicated instead of losing track of the children entirely. If the parent is released from custody pending court appearance? Kid goes with them. Parent gets deported? Kid goes with them. Parent granted asylum? They get their kid back too.
In a lot of cases they are reuniting parents with kids after a period of time, but let's not pretend it's not being done in the first place out of punitive dickishness. Stephen Miller [newsweek.com] admitted as much (that it was implemented for "deterrent" purposes).
So yeah, my proposal is to stop legally sanctioned kidnapping of children. Sound reasonable?
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Problem is, the cases NEVER get adjudicated. Due to the Flores decree, anyone with a kid (whether it's actually their kid or not) is released after 21 days. Guess what happens? They disappear into the US and never show for their court date. As of June 2019, 90% of asylum seekers received final orders of removal in absentia [nationalreview.com]. That means a judge ordered that they are kicked out because they blew off their asylum hearing. But they've already vanished. The illegals have figured out that having a kid with
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Re: Exactly what rights do illegal immigrants have (Score:2)
So do you propose sending the children to jail with their parents instead of into foster care?
Re: Exactly what rights do illegal immigrants have (Score:2, Insightful)
On several occasions ICE has picked facilities to place the children in that it knows full well engage in torture.
Prove it. Prove that ICE knowingly paces children in facilities it knows full well engage in toture. You can't, it's a lie.
For your claim to be true would require EVERY ICE agent to be complicit, either personally torturing children themslves, or overlooking when their co-worker engages in it.
Let me guess, the "torture" these children endure is thelihts staying on at night, so the guards can protect them from predators among the detainee population...
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Anyway.
Thank you for devolving a discussion and proving Godwin's Law [wikipedia.org] yet again.
Well done.
The fact is that Germany treated their prisoners of war rather well until they started running out of food, for themselves and for their prisoners. Can't say the same for the Vietnamese, but then you were invaders and you did your own fair share of raping and pillaging and erasing villages full of innocents. Agent orange, Napalm, depleted uranium shells, cluster bo
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How is this marked informative when there are hundreds of stories about kids getting actually abused in these facilities? Source 1 [nytimes.com]
Source 2 for those with issues with the NYT [aclu.org]
Source 3 [nbcnews.com] Honestly I can keep going but if you're going to call someone a sick fuck based on such spurious claims I'm not going to go into much effort feeding an obvious troll.
Ask yourself why we are treating refugees from a crisis that we as a country played a direct roll in causing so poorly? It would be far cheaper and humane t
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Then why aren't they staying in Mexico? Mexico is the first country they came to, if they're refugees, they HAVE TO (per UN rules) apply for asylum first in Mexico. Once Mexico grants them asylum, they can apply for immigration to the US or if denied, Mexico has to send them back. If they travel through Mexico to apply for asylum in the US, they legally have no standing for asylum since they didn't apply in the first country that doesn't "persecute" them for political (or whatever) reasons.
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Why would Guatemalans leave a country with universal health care and common-sense permit-only gun ownership
Have you been to fucking Guatemala? Even the photocopy shop has to employ someone to stand outside with a shotgun for security. Banks employ multiple armed guards, and that's in a town with armed police stood at every third junction.
Unless by 'permit-only' you mean they only permit gun ownership and lock up people that refuse to carry one?
Re:Exactly what rights do illegal immigrants have? (Score:5, Insightful)
Your case of Trump Derangement Syndrome has been noted.
What do you propose we do with people that have crossed the border illegally? People that do so have broken the law, and adults that break the law with children in their care will be separated from those children. This is because we don't put children in prison but we do detain adults that did break the law.
If a person is in a country that is honestly seeking sanctuary in the USA then why hire a coyote to cross the border? Why not go to a port of entry and declare refugee status? In my mind anyone that crossed the border anywhere other than a port of entry should not be able to make a claim for sanctuary. Why would I say this? It's for their own safety. People that cross the border with a coyote are putting themselves at risk of being left for dead, raped, murdered, robbed, kidnapped, or any of a number of crimes against them. If they cross the border this way with children then they should not be considered a person responsible enough to care for a child. What kind of sick fuck takes a child across a desert, where any of a number of hazards could lead to their death, when a claim of sanctuary at a port of entry would be far safer? This tells me that they are not responsible adults, quite possibly a criminal evading capture, and should be separated from any child in their care. On top of being irresponsible for putting a child through such dangers THEY BROKE THE LAW BY CROSSING THE BORDER OUTSIDE OF A PORT OF ENTRY. We will separate children from the accused adults charged with their care because that's what we do with any case of an adult being charged with a crime.
Again, what do you propose we do with people that crossed the border illegally with children in their care? Should we put the child in a prison cell too? Should we tolerate criminal behavior just because there is a child present? This is completely logical to separate a child from an adult accused of a crime because we detain criminals and not innocent children.
You want to debate inhumane behavior? Fine, let's talk about the irresponsible adults putting children at risk by crossing the border illegally when they should be declaring their desire for sanctuary at a port of entry. Let's discuss Congress not providing funds for proper enforcement against this behavior that is illegal, dangerous, and too often deadly for innocent children. Let's discuss Congress not funding the detention centers properly, denying them the necessary blankets, soap, staff, and so on they desperately need to process these people as quickly and humanely as possible.
Re:Exactly what rights do illegal immigrants have? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Just separating parents and children is so extreme that it qualifies as cruel.
No, it's really not. It is also what we do to US citizens who are arrested as others have noted. Just because it hits you and others in the feelz and you have a strong negative emotional reaction to it makes it neither cruel, nor illegal, nor unjust.
Re:Exactly what rights do illegal immigrants have? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Breaking the law has consequences.
What's the statute of limitations on that one?
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Keeping a toddler apart from his/her parent and holding them in a chain link enclosure IS torture. You might be surprised to learn that toddlers aren't adults with miniature bodies.
Re:Exactly what rights do illegal immigrants have? (Score:5, Insightful)
No, it is literally NOT torture. It isn't. And when you frivolously use words like "torture" and "concentration camps" you diminish the suffering of people that have actually, truly been tortured and put in such camps. You're not doing your tribe any favors.
"Think of the children," "kids in cages," and other emotional-based imagery like you're posting isn't going to fix the immigration situation. You are just distracting from the root causes and broken laws (which seems to be the intent).
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Sorry, yes it is. It creates a state of unrelenting anxiety and fear. Especially given the various reports of inadequate and barely adequate care.
Like I said, they're not adults in miniature.
Re:Exactly what rights do illegal immigrants have? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: Exactly what rights do illegal immigrants have (Score:3, Insightful)
By definition, they're not. Also, AOCs claims were investigated by several third parties and they weren't able to confirm any of it, save for a few details that omitted pertinent information. For example, that the plumbing for drinking water is the same plumbing used for toilet water is very common, in fact your house is probably designed that way. All of the water starts from the same water main and is disposed of to the same sewage pipe. The only difference is that here the plumbing isn't hidden behind wa
Re: Exactly what rights do illegal immigrants have (Score:4, Insightful)
The policies are the same policies as the last administration, these things have been happening since Obama, you can see the same 'overloaded detention centers' being criticized because that administration practically gave immunity to anyone illegally entering the country.
Those facilities weren't built for this, that's correct, but the Democrats also don't want to support expanding or funding the facilities properly. So what do those centers have to do? They are what they've been doing for the last decade, using them as a temporary holding facility until they can get their papers served to appear in front of a judge within a few years (during which time they are legal to stay in the US but not work). Currently processing these papers typically takes less than 2 weeks so few people are staying longer than a few weeks but these times are extending further and further as the caseload grows while the lawmakers refuse to fund or expand the system and then the person is released into the interior never to be seen again, 80% never shows up to the judge to have their case heard and continues to reside and work illegally.
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The hopefuls are not (in theory) being arrested since they have the legal right to present themselves at the border and request asylum. They are not being held awaiting a criminal trial. They are (in theory) awaiting an immigration status hearing and are not accused of any crime.
The equivalent for a citizen would be taking your kid with you to the DMV to renew your licence and having your child taken away as a result.
As others have pointed out, even if a citizen IS arrested and ends up awaiting a criminal
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"The hopefuls" -- Is that what we're going with now?
Man, they just want to live here. The answer might be no, sorry, please try again later, but they are regular people that just want to live here.
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Illegals have more rights than actual citizens. If a citizen is arrested with a kid they will be separated *gasp*.
Except that's not what's going on. Legal asylum seekers are being separated from their kids.
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Let's assume that the legal asylum seeker came through a port of entry and that their entry was lawful. Everything is peachy.
How do you know a child is a related to the claimant and not kidnapped?
How do you know that the claimant is not abusing, trafficking, or using that child as a shield to bypass border law?
Before the child separation agreement from the courts came in from the 90's (98?), children were kept with their families/claimants. Guess what happened. It was abused by criminals that took advantage
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Let's assume that the legal asylum seeker came through a port of entry and that their entry was lawful. Everything is peachy. How do you know a child is a related to the claimant and not kidnapped?
How do you know the guy entering the country on a visa is not a mass murderer?
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That's BS. Illegal immigrants have the rights guaranteed by the Constitution not explicitly reserved only for citizens. Citizenship grants additional rights and privileges.
You just don't like that there are protections for illegal immigrants due to HUMAN rights. Which they should have. Because they're human.
For what I wish was the last time (Score:4, Informative)
We can deny them asylum and ship them back where they came from, but until we do that (in full accordance with the law) we must treat them fairly and humanely. We cannot separate them from their children like criminals because they are not criminals.
And never mind that most of these refugees are fleeing violence that we caused. Seriously, look up the origins of MS-13 and go watch some videos from Beau of the Fifth Column on YouTube...
If you disagree get the US out of the treaties. Of course at the rate we're going you're gonna wish we stayed in when you're stuck fleeing the country yourself. You do realize this is EXACTLY how the Nazis got started, right? Again, look it up. Their concentration camps started out housing refugees. It took 20 years before they were shoving people into ovens. Better hope you and your family are "pure" enough to pass the test, and that you're not lumped in with the degenerates for some arbitrary reason.
So to summarize:
1. The only criminals here are in the current administration who are ignoring treaties we signed that have the constitutionally mandated force of law.
2. We are literally following a path laid out by Nazis that has every possibility to end in a genocide.
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2. We are literally following a path laid out by Nazis that has every possibility to end in a genocide.
I don't recall the Nazis enforcing hard borders with other countries to prevent immigration.
Can you cite examples of this?
You do realize this is EXACTLY how the Nazis got started, right? Again, look it up. Their concentration camps started out housing refugees.
There's a pretty fucking massive difference between "These sub-humans are homeless because we've stolen their property, we need to put them somewhere" and "These people are claiming to be refugees. Lets hold them somewhere secure while we investigate and ascertain whether they have a valid claim or are merely criminals, in which case we will deport them."
This is not how the Nazis got sta
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maybe the simple fix is to revoke EVERY tax exemption and deduction for any company that defies federal laws. Its amazing how these mega corps will fold when their money is threatened. Instead of 5 billion in taxes, now you owe 192 billion. Here's your bill.... "uhhh.... wait! here is everything you wanted. Also here is their porn history, their toilet routine, and their browser history too." Yea.... just revoke their tax shelters. If not, then I will have a new found respect. But my money is on an 'inc
THANX BUT NO THANX!!! (Score:4, Interesting)
IMHO, non-management employees/workers of a company have absolutely no right to tell their company what to do!!!
If they claim their company is doing anything illegal, then they should take their complaints to law enforcement etc!!!
If they claim USA government is doing human right abuses, then take your complaints to UN etc!!!
If they just do not like any business of their company, then they can just resign!!!
Not to mention, trying to prevent a USA company from doing business w/ USA government is very anti-patriotic!!!
Re:THANX BUT NO THANX!!! (Score:5, Insightful)
They have every right to tell the employer what they would like them to do. What happens next may depend on the response or lack of a response.
Pointless (Score:2)
So they want Google to refuse to contract with the government to do...stuff.
So what? This prevents nothing. Some other company will step in and fill the need.
You've done nothing but deny the company you're working for a good contract. There's no social justice to be had from this action.
Now if every cloud server provider did this simultaneously then that would have an effect. Otherwise this is just an empty action that does absolutely nothing.
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Nah. You'd have someone come along, rent a bunch of Google Cloud or AWS and setup the stuff for the government, anyway. Contracting with a subcontractor to contract to the cloud provider is where it would end up. No chance would it ever not get done. It just wouldn't be done "by Google" or whoever, instead would be done "by Universal Systems Corp (using Google Cloud)".
Nonsense (Score:4, Insightful)
>"which they said are abusing human rights."
That is absolute nonsense. The border control is not en-mass abusing anyone's "human rights". People trying to illegally enter the country and caught are being sheltered, fed, cared for, and protected. At at NO CHARGE to the detainees. No, it is not 3-star hotel accommodations, but it is not "concentration camps" either. Some arrive starving, dying of thirst, or hurt through absolutely no fault of the USA. They elected to make the trip, take extreme risks, and [in most cases] break the law. But there ARE people abusing those trying illegal entry- Mexican mules, drug gangs, and those involved in sex slavery.
>"The agency has separated children from their families"
Then change the law. It has been on the books for decades. It is not the "fault" of ICE, nor border control, nor the current administration. If you are, for example, arrested AS A US CITIZEN in a car for any reason and have minors with you, YOU WILL BE SEPARATED FROM YOUR CHILDREN.
>"and is detaining migrants for indefinite periods of time."
Not "migrants", we are talking about illegal, undocumented immigrants, almost all seeking economic opportunity. They are detained until they can be processed. The more the system is overwhelmed, the longer that time might be (and the more it costs, too). If we were better at PREVENTING illegal entry, then this wouldn't be a problem. But that is blocked. If we want to spend more money to make bigger facilities and hire more people to process them, that is an option too- but it has been blocked many times (and it is not by the party many people think it is).
Re: Nonsense (Score:5, Insightful)
Pretty sure detainees can opt to be retuned home/return to Mexico, but they prefer to stay in the 'concentration camps' - why?
Wanting a better life is not a reason to be granted asylum, that is why 90% of asylum seekers are deported (once a judge hears their case).
Re: Nonsense (Score:4, Interesting)
Not only do they prefer to stay, they decided to make a long, dangerous, and illegal journey in order to get into them.
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You are wrong [syr.edu] and should be ashamed of yourself for drinking such obvious koolaid.
Notice on the graph the jump in denials when Trump started to interfere with Obama's policies. You'll see a sharp rise and then when the administration cut off AID to countries like El Salvador you see the spike increase even faster. It is a problem he created. Many prefer to stay in the camps because they will quite frankly die if they get deported. Owner of the last company I worked for had a legal housekeeper from Guatema
Re:Nonsense (Score:5, Interesting)
>"This Is What Itâ(TM)s Like For Immigrants Being Held In A Pen Underneath An El Paso Bridge [buzzfeednews.com] Good to know that being kept in cages under a bridge is not, in your opinion, an abuse of human rights or concentration camp conditions."
It isn't.
Have you even read any ACTUAL information about what a "concentration camp" is? These are not people rounded up from their country and forced to live in conditions for years where they are starved to death and forced to work and then perhaps gassed, shot, or used for medical experimentation. The comparison is absurd.
âoeAs illegal aliens arrive at the processing facility, they are placed at the âtentâ(TM) to await their turn to be processed,â Maier said in a statement. âoeThis tent serves only as a transitional shelter and is not a temporary housing facility."
OMG- the article says that some people actually had to spend a COUPLE of nights there!!!! With food, clean water, and medical care. And yes, OMG, fences with razor wire so they could not continue their attempt to illegally enter the country. What exact conditions do you think most of them endured over the WEEKS of trying to get to and then through the border?
This is a sensationalist spotlight on what is not typical of most facilities. Even the article says:
"The portable toilets were clean, the walls around them disinfected, and the water at the plastic portable sinks to wash their hands was refilled."
Yes, the existing facilities are overloaded.
Yes, some of the temporary overflow measures are not great.
Yes, we apparently SUCK at preventing illegal immigration.
Yes, change is needed- both at PREVENTION and PROCESSING.
No, the example sited is not typical or even average.
No, there are no "concentration camps."
No, these are not "human rights violations."
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It is obvious that you haven't read about concentration camps either while projecting this ignorance on to someone else. Here's a hint, they didn't start out gassing people, they didn't start out starving people to death, they didn't even start out with the Jews. You probably think the Nazi's were socialist too because they called themselves a socialist party at the time as a way to garner publish interest. This despite the fact that none of their policies were at all socialist. You might also be surprised
Re: (Score:2)
“As illegal aliens arrive at the processing facility, they are placed at the ‘tent’ to await their turn to be processed,” Maier said in a statement. “This tent serves only as a transitional shelter and is not a temporary housing facility. It was established within the last month.”
It's a temporary (a few day, according to your own article) holding facility until they can be processed into a regular facility. Yes, it sucks - but you just broke the law, you have water, you have food, you have shelter - maybe you should think before you cross...
Re: (Score:2)
>"You are conflating two different issues. It is not illegal to cross at any point and seek Asylum. "
Your citation covers asylum law, only that they can LATER claim Asylum. I don't think that makes crossing outside an official port of entry legal, in and of itself.
https://www.pewtrusts.org/~/me... [pewtrusts.org]
"Ports of entry are locations where people legally enter or leave the country by land, air, or sea"
And I saw that repeated over and over in many places. Thus, if that is the LEGAL point of entry, then all othe
But they are OK helping China? (Score:5, Insightful)
Who is abusing more human rights? U.S. Border Patrol or China?
Project Dragonfly is what they should demand the company publicly promise to stop. Don't help build a George Orwell world.
Comment removed (Score:3)
OK (Score:2)
Employee Activists (Score:2)
Activist employees become former employees. News at 11:00.
Seriously though, what is it with all these employee activists lately? Getting riled up over stagnant or low wages, working conditions, weak benefits, inadequate paid vacation, workplace safety, harassment, and other things germane to the workplace are legitimate causes to get upset about. I get that. But employees have absolutely no say in who the company does business with. Maybe these idealistic dolts sincerely believe the company's ads about appr
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People think that because they work for google that their opinion carries more weight.
If that is not egotistical I don't know what is (well I could probably think of an example, but my ego is not big enough to bother).
All lonely 70 employees can go forth and multiply and will be replaced in about 70 seconds.
But seriously, only 70? I mean if google had only 120 employees I would say that the company felt that way, but 70, out of thousands?
So the 70 deluded idiots who suck up mainstream media managed
Google workers demand... (Score:5, Funny)
2020: Google workers demand company not work with companies without women in their boards.
2021: Google workers demand company not work with companies that do not publicly expose their personnel GLBT rate.
2022: Google workers demand company not work with pro-christian NGOs.
2023: Google workers demand company not work with non-vegan restaurants.
2024: Google workers demand company not work with the US Army.
Oh, no!! Actually, the last one was from last year [slashdot.org]!!
Only 70? (Score:4, Informative)
So the cafeteria staff, or the guys who do the carpet cleaning, all immigrants themselves. I mean fuck, 70 out of all those employees, did they write the article for slashdot as well? I bet you it was probably 7.
Shades of Atlas Shrugged (Score:2)
There's a reason we (and every other civilized country) have a legislative process.
Part of that reason is so we don't change nationwide laws based on who whines the loudest.
If "abusing human rights" is the standard... (Score:2)
If "abusing human rights" is the standard, then there would be almost no business for Google. Cherry-picking out one particular villain without applying the implicit principal universally is an act in the demented melange of white guilt, naivete, and unchecked vanity.
News Flash: The world will not be as idyllic as you THINK Palo Alto is and applying your honed principal of "abusing human rights" globally (as ethics should be imposed if they are truly held) would quickly reduce what is arguably the most impo
Re:Good for them (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Good for them (Score:5, Insightful)
The real problem is all this effort to impeach Trump, people get the idea that the correct way is to fight the state. You have the power to campaign, vote and run for office. If we get rid of laws then we don't have a country. If you have a strong political opinion good, just channel it the right way.
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
the real problem is they dont just have a policy of 'shut the fuck up about politics in the place of work' and then fire the motherfuckers that cross that line. Companies should be switzerland. These fucking snowflakes bitch about companies running the government and elected officials being beholden to special interest groups, and corporations. Then out of the other side of their big fat two-faced mouth, they make these demands. I say introduce those asshats to a soup kitchen line. In CA that should only ta
Re: Good for them (Score:3)
I am also a programmer, a pretty good one, and I'm still afraid because I have a very good job (less wage but much better conditions than Google) and I don't want to have to downgrade. Maybe googlers don't really like their job that much?
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You do of course understand that there are a LOT of top tier programmers. There's fierce competition for those roles.
If the programmers have done things such that they're the only ones that can do it, then they're not good programmers. The aim is to make damn sure that someone of suitable skill (of which there should be many) can pick up your work and carry it on.
If they never have to worry about unemployment, then good for them. I don't like seeing people fail, but all they're doing is bringing forth a
Re: (Score:3)
They apparently believe some very inaccurate and some debunked false claims designed purely to outrage people. So, they are're not so bright if they are so easily manipulated by the media. Heck, you probably want them out of the company so they don't end up sabotaging the product, or the company, or do something even more desperate "for the cause". Google should let them resign in protest - "We understand you are not willing to work for the company doing business with the US government. We respect your choi
Re: (Score:2)
For now
I'm clearly getting too fucken old. This has happened before, and then there is a flood of people joining the market and then there is a saturation of talent and only the really good developers get work while the shitty ones stand around going "I thought it would be a good career choice". And trust me, most programmers suck balls. Also most of these whishy washy programmers usually get out of codi
Re:Eating your own dog food (Score:5, Interesting)
Are these employees also going to advocate that Google not hire security guards for their buildings, and eliminate locks and key cards?
Don't we all deserve the benefits afforded to Google employees (if we can sneak in)?
Re: Eating your own dog food (Score:3, Funny)
70 employee signed the petition? Tht's huge, Amazon has what 100-125?
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As long as nobody sneaks in and steals my red stapler.
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It's rare to see someone get so much vicarious enjoyment out of the mistreatment of others, especially kids.
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Using anti-trust laws as a tool to punish companies you don't like is a horrible idea.
If anti-trust actions against Google are warranted then bring a case based on law, not one based on your dislike of the company.