freediver wrote on Jan 14
th, 2009 at 8:04pm:
Quote:Now, now. I did not.
Yes you did, right here:
Soren wrote on Jan 14
th, 2009 at 2:17pm:
freediver wrote on Jan 14
th, 2009 at 1:25pm:
So there should be second class citizens who are at risk of getting turfed out? What if the country they used to be a citizen off refuses to let Australia dump our criminals on them? Should we drop them off at the embassy, ring the doorbell, then run away?
Not second class. Naturalised people are given citizenship in return for a promise, an oath. If they break their promise, their citizenship should also be 'broken'.
And no need to run, just ring the bell, say g'day and hand over the perjurer. Yeah, maybe there'd be a few people living in airports for a while but airports are good, they smell of adventure.
Quote:Don't tell me that everyone given citizenship was a stateless person before.
No, but they will be if you deport them and their old country doesn't want them back. Tell me, how do you think England would feel about us taking in a heap of Emglish immigrants, then returning all the ones that turn out to be criminals? This is the bit you fail to grasp. Other countries don;t particularly want our muderers, rapists, thieves etc. Once they have Australian citizenship, they are our problem.
Sometimes the simplest thing is insurmountable...
Knock, say g'day, hand over the perjurer - so they can book the flight because the perjurer has been cleared for departure, that is, has become an 'unlawful non-citizen', to use Ruddock's immortal words.
I am sorry if I indulge in the occasional ellision. I feel it is condescending to spell everything out for ostensible equals.
I was not talking about returning any or every criminal, although the possibility should be available. Breaking a solemn promise is not the same kind of thing as breaking a nose.
I was talking about revoking citizenship for perjury, lying under oath. This would apply to people who take an oath, covering the kind of details raised by calanen - accepting the principles of Australian society. Jailing them would be also good but the possibility of revoking citizenship should also be available.
Bebrinka and his bearded students would have to go.
I would not make citizenship available to anyone who cannot prove continuous employment for last 5 years. And would make citizenship revocable for for crimes commited in the first say 10-15 years of citizenship if they carry more than a certian minimum penalty (anything over, say, 5 years).
Gaining citizenship is an increasingly corrupt process. It shoudl be made less bent. As to how England would feel if criminals were returned? They would welcome the precedent, believe me.i