If i have not yet made my stance clear, i will do so now. I have no problem with immigrants who want to come here legally, abide by our laws, work & pay taxes.
Are you entirely sure about that? When you complain about immigrants coming to UK to take the jobs of British citizens already living here or to deny those citizens jobs by accepting them in their stead, you are talking of people who, in the main, will be working and paying taxes and no doubt living in as law-abiding a fashion as those that are already here!
Illegals, criminals and those whose only desire is to live off the State should be deported.
But in many cases they can be; I do agree that certain recent legislation has on occasion made this more difficult than once it might have been, but it is usually possible as long as the culprits can be found, tried, convicted and made available for deportation in the first place. Furthermore, in order to deport immigrants whose "only desire is to live off the State" - even if British law permitted this, which it doesn't - would require a court to prove that each such immigrant came to britian with that intent and no other and it would make no due allowances for those who might end up "living off the State" not because they even intended to do so but merely because they get jobs here that they then lose through no fault of their own, just as often happens to British citizens that are already here. It would also be inconsistent (which is why the law does not permit deportation in such circumstances alone), in that would then be argued that British citizens should also be deported if they can be proved in a court of law to "desire to live off the State".
It is costing millions of pounds every year to keep foreign prisoners in our cushy jails whereas it would would cost much less if they were deported when convicted.
That is undoubtedly true, but it still costs quite abit just up to the point of conviction.
Similarly, deporting illegals immediately upon entry would save millions of pounds on hearings and appeals and trying to find them at a later date.
Indeed it would, but that would require every suspected illegal immigrant to be identified - or at least reasonably suspected - as being one, arrested and placed in custody subject to the laws applicable to UK citizens while on British soil and then tried and convicted - which itself doesn't come cheap.
In case it has escaped your notice, the rest of Europe seems to be out of recession whilst jolly old England is still in. Soon, immigrants will stop wanting to come here when this Country becomes worse than the craphole they came from.
It has come to my notice that certain pundits are trying to persuade us that this is so, but where the evidence is to support it I have no idea. Official unemployment figures for France, for example, have been between 7.5m and 10m for more than 30 years and, for a country with approximately the same population as UK, this contrasts strongly with the UK unemployment situation. Furthermore, "the rest of Europe" includes Bulgaria, Romania, Greece, Portugal and a host of other countries outside EC such as Moldova, Iceland, Albania and Turkey - so don't try to persuade us that Britain is lagging behind every other European country!
There is some light on the horizon though as it appears that Libya are assisting in closing down one of the routes into Europe and the Italians are stiffening their resolve against a flood of unwanteds, so hopefully, the numbers that arrive at Calais awaiting to infest our shores will decrease.
Britain has plenty of other entry points besides Dover - far more ports than many other countries and a good deal more airports than some. What will you think when Libya eventually gets EU membership and Libyans themselves will be able to come here? That's a long way down the line, admittedly, but once Turkey and Morocco join, It'll only be a matter of time before the rest of north Africa does, followed by Middle Eastern nations from Yemen to Afghanistan - and even perhaps an independent Waziristan and, by that time, all the old Soviet satellites will doubtless be on the membership application trail as well. Once again, when presenting your arguments, please do not forget those British citizens and immigrants in UK who are leaving of their own accord.
Best,
Alistair