TC001 wrote:
Earl Purple wrote:
Why are immigration issues being brought into this? What's it got to do with anything? I'm sorry but I'm getting sick of hearing these immigration issues, which to me border on fascism. No, we don't want them to come here and drive dangerously, we don't want them to come here and stab our police officers to death, and we don't want them to come here to blow us up. Obviously, if they come here they have to keep to the law like the rest of us.
And the point from Peter E
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Therefore, while the case undoubtedly gave ammunition to racists, the facts just did not justify a long custodial sentence.
I've lived in a number of other countries both under the British system of justice and Spanish justice (also driven in >20). The treatment that would have been given to me in the circumstances of the case above =
1. First guilty of being there illegally.
2. Jailed immediately.
3. Then either deported or tried and given a long prison sentence.
4. Any local belongings/assets taken over to pay compensation/fines.
5. No Bail, No Legal Aid and certainly No Social welfare payments.
The other countries take the line that if you dont have a right to live there you are in breach of their laws and they will deport/prosecute you and will try and get compensation/fines from your assets. Anyone employing that person would also get heavily fined or worse.
Here we have a driver not trained to UK standards, he was under the influence of drink. He has therefore acted without care and attention and not in accordance with the law. The fact that our judicial system is unable to jail or deport him for this does make us unique from the other countries I know. One does wonder how much CPS and police effort went in instead of the waste of minor speeding cases.
But the principle for living in any country should be "when in Rome do as the Romans". This the driver did not do. He should not have been driving here at all.
Nothing I have said above could be considered rascist. Please consider the views of Trevor Phillips when he talks about the need for a single culture and following the rule of law. We need to place responsibilities along side rights or we will end up with a divided society.
To quote Trevor Phillips
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Our aim, let me repeat is not to make everyone the same, or to impose a single cultural pattern – rather it is the opposite - to liberate what the historian Simon Schama calls our glorious heterogeneity. That is the point of the integrated society – to detach the individual’s destiny from his or her origins and to make what you do and what you become subject only to your talents and your ambitions.
I think what Trevor Phillips would like to see is an integration of all ethnic groups into this nation's economic social and cultural framework, but recognises that this is not possible without tolerance and acceptability.
Phillips also said
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When Amir Khan’s dad thrilled the nation by wearing his union flag waistcoat, not many people noticed that his uncle also wore a Pakistan t-shirt. On the one hand the family was saying "We’re Khans and we’re winning it for Britain". On the other it was saying "We can’t let go of the old loyalties until we know that we’re secure in the new ones".
For most people from ethnic minorities these aren’t matters for revolution. For most of us most of the time, we swallow it. But how long can we expect people to live in the twilight zone? How many years do we sit around in the waiting room of national acceptability?
I think that Britain prides itself in its sense of tolerance and fair play. Unfortunately in recent years with the explosion of economic immigrants entering the country under the asylum banner, the systems in place have been overloaded, and have burst at the edges. This is something which needs to be addressed, but I don't think that these occasional horror stories about the driving abilities of illegal immigrants help maintain a balanced view on how best to deal with the problem.
They are individual driving offences and must be seen as that, and that alone.
All IMO.
