Quote:
Originally Posted by Chica Chaser
Its OK to have a different opinion Tim. Thats why we are all here to discuss.
I'm surprised you are in favor of this though.
Occasionally, I'm asked my citizenship. But no proof required, to date. The dog usually takes a sniff around the car but I guess they see my big ugly white ass driving and wave me through. Seems pretty pointless. I suppose if I were hispanic looking there would be more questions. Maybe they are profiling the motorist passing through. TSA can't do that but maybe Border Patrol can. Its all DHS departments so I would think the government would have standardized rules.
And it damn sure IS arbitrary. The temporary checkpoints are set up/taken down/moved quite often. The dots on the maps I showed are the permanent checkpoints, the tent looking ones are temporary.
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No, I mean it's not arbitrary in a constitutional sense. It's one of the standards a court looks at when making a determination as to the constitutionality of a law.
Do you think the police should be allowed to set up sobriety checkpoints to get drunks off the road? Some states allow it. Others have found it to be violative of the 4th Amendment. No probable cause, no police stop.
It's about law enforcement. If you think arresting people who come into the country illegally is a good idea, then as long as the enforcement mechanism isn't arbitrary, unreasonable or capricious, and there is a compelling state interest (stopping drunk drivers, enforcing federal immigration laws) the enforcement mechanism will pass legal muster.