But, when you look at the law, you have to agree with Token. There is no way in hell they REALLY expected this thing to be enforced statewide. Sure, you will have some sheriffs and whatnot that will grandstand and probably create task forces, etc and will run with it. But, for the most part, it's a bluff to illegal immigrants, and the federal government for that matter.
Oh, yeah, I agree that, as it's written now, it isn't enforceable. At all.
Based on this, I would
hope that legislators didn't intend for it to be enforced. Nonetheless, it would be stupid of legislators to pass a law that they don't want enforced.
The fact of the matter is that our government operates in such a way that, once a law is passed, it
can be enforced. And it's not enforced by the legislators who wrote it, so once it's passed, it's out of their hands; their intentions as to how or even whether they wanted it enforced no longer matter, at least not until a legal challenge is made and a court decides that it needs to look to legislative intent for guidance.
So now, you've passed a completely unenforceable law, and law enforcers are scratching their heads trying to figure out how they should enforce it. It's going to cause more problems and cost us more money than it should.
Which is why if you don't intend for it to be enforced, or otherwise foresee that it's not going to be able to be enforced constitutionally and with at least some efficiency, then why pass it?