Rather than waiting for future trials to determine rules that will impact every citizen, Congress should step in and write a law that takes every American's rights into consideration.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
You let Congress make the laws. You work with the Congress as the president to make sure that those laws are accurate and to the best of our ability, but you don't turn it over to the federal judges to make those laws.
Maybe the Jefferson case will give members of Congress second thoughts the next time they get ready to legislate away the rights of ordinary Americans.
We must bring the rule of law to its full fruition in the United States, and when we do, we will have achieved the goals and rhetoric of our Founding Fathers.
Congress is the appropriate place to make laws about our country's immigration policy; it is not something that the president gets to decide on his own.
We want laws to be applied predictably.
Dealing with immigration should originate in Congress. The president should not act unilaterally.
Don't count on Congress. Laws come into being because people on the ground demand it.
What right does Congress have to go around making laws just because they deem it necessary?
The law, in our case, seems to make the right; and the very reverse ought to be done - the right should make the law.
Every American has the duty to obey the law and the right to expect that the law will be enforced.