Art Vandely wroter:
I partially agree with you; for instance, they had no business suing to stop Prop 209 (which ironically enough, was a civil rights bill),..
I only partially agreed with myself so assuming we only partially agreed on the same parts we are in complete agreement.
I think the ACLU's opposition to proposition 209 is an excellent example of what I was talking about.
I think their opposition to caller ID is a good example also. This pitted the civil rights of telephone salesman, prank callers and other people who wish to be able to call somebody anonymously against the civil rights of the telephone owner to know who is calling him.
The ACLU has also opposed restrictions by states to limit welfare payments to non-residents. While it might be argued that this is a civil liberties issue in that it promotes the liberty of a resident of one state to move to another state to get the best welfare deal possible for himself, it also restricts the ability of a state to set up generous welfare plans for its citizens because if the state offers too many advantages over the welfare plans of neighboring states they will swamped with people moving in to take advantage of the better welfare plans.
The ACLU also argues against legislation like proposition 187 which would restrict state benefits to illegal aliens. While this could be seen as arguing for the civil liberties of illegal aliens it certainly serves to restrict the benefits available to native citizens as services are stretched to cover illegal immigrants.
Warning. Short thread digression follows:
Proposition 209
Proposition 209 was a California initiative designed to eliminate affirmative action based on race or sex.
I initially opposed it because I think some affirmative action programs are a good idea. I absolutely think that a reasonable goal of a police department is that it have an ethic mix roughly equivalent to the people it polices is a good idea and racial preferences that are designed to accomplish this seem like a good idea to me.
I also think that some affirmative action plans that work to get more lawyers and doctors of underrepresented minorities are a good idea.
In the end though, I voted for proposition 209 for two reasons:
1. It seemed clear that the idea of affirmative action was being abused by our universities. Minorities that were gaining entrance based on affirmative action were failing at very high rates. It seemed that the affirmative action plans were implemented were flawed and that the bureacracies behind them were doing nothing to fix the problems.
2. I listened to an hispanic activist go on about how essential affirmative action was and how it was going to be debilitating to eliminate it and how racist the people were that wanted to eliminate it. I saw this guy's attitude as a clear example of the problems and failures of affirmative action. Here was a young, seemingly healthy individual with nothing but opportunity in front of him and he had become so dependent on the idea that he would fail if he didn't have special preferences that he saw the end of those special advantages as a major disaster for himself and the people he claimed to represent.
End of the proposition 209 digression