Dilbert_X wrote:
FEOS wrote:
There have been multiple cases/threads here where this very argument has been used, but those against it have decried it as a violation of personal rights, police state, slippery slope and whatnot.
Arizona's immigration law comes to mind...
I don't disagree with the proposal. I'm just noticing a comparison and a distinctly different reaction.
Its very different requiring everyone prove their ID compared requiring brown people to prove they're not criminals.
This law applies to anyone with a face covering of any kind, not just muslims with burkas IIRC.
See, this is the very type of reaction I'm talking about.
The Arizona law wasn't applicable only to "brown people," it was applicable to all illegal immigrants.
However, I think if someone were to try to put forth a law like this in the US, they would have the ACLU on them like stink on shit, tbh. Even though it makes perfect sense (the motorcycle analogy, for example), because it deals with an ethnic group, lawyers would turn it into a bowl of sensitivity bullshit.
Jaekus wrote:
This law only works though if it can only be enacted during the course of police work. It should not be used to "check" on people at whim.
Arizona's immigration law is/was the same.