ADVERTISEMENT

Rand Paul: Stop visas from 'high-risk' countries

cigaretteman

HB King
May 29, 2001
79,363
62,375
113
And the wingers continue to try and outdo themselves in their paranoid frenzies:

Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul has introduced legislation that would suspend visas for visitors, students and refugees from countries that have “significant jihadist movements” in response to last weekend’s terror attacks in Paris.

The Republican presidential hopeful called the move “dramatic” since it would not just exclude refugees from entering the United States, but said the halt in visas is needed until an entry-exit program is completed and until “we have a better handle on who is currently here and what we’re doing about those who have either illegally entered or overstayed their visas.” Paul said his proposal would block visitors from about 30 countries.

Visas would be suspended until the Department of Homeland Security certifies:

  • Immigrants from “high-risk countries” already admitted into the U.S. have been fingerprinted and screened;
  • enhanced security measures are in place to screen future applicants;
  • and the entry-exit program is 100 percent complete and a tracking system is put in place to catch those who overstay.
The proposal would also impose a 30-day waiting period for visas from all other countries. Travelers would be subjected to a background check, unless the applicant has been approved through the Global Entry program.

“When something like this happens, there should be a wake-up call,” he said in a phone interview with the Register. “The wake-up call shouldn’t be hey, let’s go get into another war in the Middle East. The wake-up call should be let’s defend our country from letting people come in who would attack us.”

Paul referenced the Boston Marathon bombing, which was executed by refugees linked to radical Islam, and an incident in his hometown of Bowling Green, Ky., where refugees from Iraq were caught trying to buy Stinger missiles from an undercover agent. “I think just calling someone a refugee doesn’t mean they actually are a benign individual and not a threat,” he said.

The program would be paid for through a proposed tax on arms sales to the same 30 countries, but Paul did not have an estimate on how much it would cost to implement.

U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, told CNN Monday that he plans to introduce legislation to block federal funding for refugee resettlement. The legislation would ban Syrian Muslims from entering the U.S., according to CNN.

A fellow 2016 presidential hopeful, Cruz has said on the campaign trail that the U.S. should not accept Syrian Muslim refugees due to terrorism concerns. The U.S. should accept Syrian Christian refugees, Cruz has said.

Unlike other GOP hopefuls, Paul said he is against sending United States troops to Syria to combat ISIS, which claimed responsibility for the attacks in Paris that killed at least 132. He said the United States can be an ally, can arm Kurdish troops and can provide air support, but the “boots on the ground need to be Arab boots on the ground.”

“Ultimately the real peace comes when civilized Islam rises up and says ‘This is an aberration. Islam is a peaceful religion and we don’t believe that beheading innocents and killing Christians is part of our religion,’” he said. “When that happens, that’s when there will be ultimate peace.”

http://www.desmoinesregister.com/st...paul-stop-visas-high-risk-countries/75930244/
 
  • Like
Reactions: IaHawk44
Weird, no threads about all the democratic leaders asking for the same (and there are many).
 
Perhaps it's time to stop lumping all "Muslims" together, and to start focusing on the actual sects/versions that really pose the problem:

Molenbeek provides a grim lesson of what is happening in other parts of Europe, according to Adam Deen, a former British radical who is now part of U.K. anti-extremist organization the Quilliam Foundation. Muslims are increasingly being offered a very narrow interpretation of Islam — Wahhabism, the strict sect aggressively promoted by Saudi Arabia throughout the world, he said.
"What this does is create a sense of alienation from the place you were born and brought up. You begin to hate the society you were brought up in," said Deen, who says he still practices Islam but has abandoned extremism. "Now what happens is that any Muslim who wants to be active within the Muslim community, the default position is Wahhabism or a varied form of it."
He added: "Wahhabism creates a binary outlook on the world. That kind of indoctrination [which preaches that] all non-Muslims are non-human make it is quite easy to put a bomb in a public place."
With no "counter-narrative," a small number of adherents find themselves at ISIS' door, Deen added. Indeed, there were believed to be around 1,200 French ISIS recruits in Syria and Iraq in by the end of 2014, according to a January study by the International Center for the Study of Radicalization and Political Violence. Belgium sent some 440, the report said — the highest per capita of any European nation. Germany and the U.K. both sent more than 500.


http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/pa...obe-centers-brussels-suburb-molenbeek-n464741

FWIW....it was the same 'doctrine' which sprouted the 9/11 attackers. And they all came with Saudi ties....
 
  • Like
Reactions: cigaretteman
Keep out all religious people.

How can you identify them, you ask? Well . . . if you think they are lying, get them to affirm that they are not believers and, as part of that affirmation, sign their soul over to Satan for eternity if they have lied.

How many actual believers would be willing to do that?
 
  • Like
Reactions: cigaretteman
I stand with Rand on this. Since most of the Paris attackers came from France, we better not let a single frog in just to play it safe.
 
  • Like
Reactions: cigaretteman
Keep out all religious people.

How can you identify them, you ask? Well . . . if you think they are lying, get them to affirm that they are not believers and, as part of that affirmation, sign their soul over to Satan for eternity if they have lied.

How many actual believers would be willing to do that?

I know you are being sarcastic, but this is a terrible post. Not every religion believes in the devil.
 
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT