Wednesday, September 6, 2017

DACA WAS UNCONSTITUTIONAL AND HAS TO END.

ICHEOKU says the fact of the matter is that the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program is unconstitutional; so the latest action taken by President Donald John Trump's administration to end it, is an effort to right one of the wrongs of the previous President Barack Obama's overreaching actions. It is a move to reinstate a Congressional power to legislate and make laws which was previously hijacked by President Barack Obama by the executive order which authorized DACA. The elected representatives of the people make laws while the executive enforce and implement the laws and therefore an encroached executive must be reined back in and this is what happened with the DACA rescission. President Donald John Trump merely acted to protect separation of powers.

It is the Constitution stupid. So if the people of America wants to allow any changes to be made to their immigration laws, they should say so through their elected representatives  who has the sole power to make laws including to change or amend already existing laws in the books. Sympathy or empathy does not and should not be allowed to override duly enacted laws and this is fundamentally what the latest action seems to reiterate as it redresses an existing malady. ICHEOKU says the President Donald John Trump government also acted in good faith and showed a magnanimous goodwill by not outrightly canceling the program, but allowed a six months window of grace during which the Congress can right the wrong with a legislation backing up the program or have themselves responsible for whatever becomes the fate of such Dreamers going forward thereafter; and thus  basically leaving the fates of Dreamers in the hands of Congress.

ICHEOKU agrees with Attorney General Jeff Sessions that in order to have a lawful system of immigration that serves the national interest, that America cannot admit everyone who would wants to come and live in the United States of America. According to the AG, the decision to terminate DACA was not lightly reached but in the interest of constitutional laws governing the country, it is a painful pill that must be swallowed for the sake of upholding the laws of the land, regardless. DACA conflicts with existing Immigration Laws and only the Congress can make, amend or change already existing laws in the books and they can as well do so with what DACA intended to accomplish, but not otherwise. 

Ending DACA or sending the program back to Congress is a good policy and ICHEOKU hereby commends the government for being bold and courageous in keeping to the letters of the Constitutional separation of powers. Laws of the land are laws of the land and any changes thereto must be by the body duly authorized to vary or change or even repeal and replace them. The over eight hundred thousand beneficiaries thus far granted protection under DACA are actually victims of Barack Obama political machinations and has nothing on President Trump, who is merely acting to save laws guiding the United States of America. President Obama went outside the ambits of his powers as president by usurping legislative authority of the Congress through the backdoor of executive order and should therefore not be heard to now complain about cruelty or morality. 

There is nothing cruel in insisting that laws of the land including bar against executive overreach be maintained. Anyone looking for cruelty should ask President Obama why Libyan Moummar Gaddafi has to die or why Nigerian government was not allowed to purchase weapons with which to fight terrorists Boko Haram at the height of that insurgency, during the presidency of Goodluck Jonathan. This two examples is what being cruel indeed really looks like, as people died; and not just enforcing laws of the land which has not killed anyone. Therefore, former President Barack Obama looking for who is cruel should look into the mirror and he will see the face of cruelty starring back at him. Calling President Donald Trump cruel simply because he is trying to redress what President Obama screwed up is to say the least a bifurcated double speak, which is both baseless and fallacious. Let Congress do their job and if not, let the separation of power rule prevail. 

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