I understand what the judges are saying and doing, I still don't agree with them.
All that is great but read the 14th amendment. It starts with "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside."
I realize that Naturalized can be a foreigner. However, I am talking about someone who has never been in this country, not people who live here legally or illegally.
edit: I agree that if they already live here, especially legally, that they should not be banned. But that isn't the issue.
Each of the three was addressing the rights of
people living here legally, each in different ways.
Remember, they're not even saying it is
definitely constitutionally illegal, but that it
might be.
The New York class action case on behalf of the two Iraqis who were here in the US legally working with the military:
According to court papers, both Darweesh and Alshawi were legally allowed to come into the US but were detained in accordance with Trump's order.
Darweesh, who worked as an interpreter for the US during the Iraq War, was released from detention early Saturday afternoon.
The lawsuit said the US granted Alshawi a visa earlier this month to meet with his wife and son, whom the US already granted refugee status for her association with the US military.
The lawyers for the two men called for a hearing because they maintain the detention of people with valid visas is illegal.
As already mentioned, the Massachusetts case was pertaining to two permanent resident college professors because she found that "the government could not "detain or remove" individuals who had arrived legally from the countries subject to Trump's order."
And the Washington judge ruled that the ban negatively impacted people and businesses legally residing in the state of Washington.