1. US-Mexico and citizenship
    These pictures remind me of a recent discussion I had with a US Immigration supervisor about citizenship. In theory, given the fact that the fence is three
    Jun 13, 2001 @ 18:02 - Dallen Timothy (Dallen Timothy <dtimothy@...>)
  2. Re: US-Mexico and citizenship - walls & borders
    This reminds me of something I brought up here some time ago. I was arguing that some boundary markers are actually walls, like the Berlin wall. I think it was
    Jun 13, 2001 @ 18:53 - Peter Smaardijk ("Peter Smaardijk" <smaardijk@...>)
  3. Re: US-Mexico and citizenship
    I m not a constitutional lawyer (I don t even play one on TV), but I can see why this raises some interesting federal-state questions. Presumably, the US INS
    Jun 13, 2001 @ 22:35 - Bill Hanrahan ("Bill Hanrahan" <hanrahan@...>)
  4. RE: [BoundaryPoint] Re: US-Mexico and citizenship
    I agree Bill. In the case of the Arizona Department of Transportation, you are absolutely correct. If pavement is any indicator of legal limits, which it is,
    Jun 13, 2001 @ 23:08 - Dallen Timothy (Dallen Timothy <dtimothy@...>)
  5. RE: [BoundaryPoint] Re: US-Mexico and citizenship
    Just another case of the locals being smarter than the Feds! Bill
    Jun 13, 2001 @ 23:39 - Bill Hanrahan (Bill Hanrahan <hanrahan@...>)
  6. Re: [BoundaryPoint] Re: US-Mexico and citizenship - walls & borders
    Hadrian s wall, Antoinine Wall... And the longest fence in the world, the austrlaian vermin fences (anti rabbit and anti-dongo) which follow sttate boundaries
    Jun 14, 2001 @ 00:40 - Brendan Whyte ("Brendan Whyte" <brwhyte@...>)