the question is even if the law is passed how much do you think it will be enforced?
the question is even if the law is passed how much do you think it will be enforced?
"If you love something, let it go... If it comes back to you, you've just high sided!"
'01 GSXR 750~Scorpion Exhaust~Carbon rear wheel cover, chain guard, intake, mirrors and signals~Targa Windscreen
I don't have a link to prove it, but Colors were banned in Colorado in the '70's. Maybe it's been repealed since then but, in this day and age, since our federal search and seizure laws are different now, cops can pull bikers over all day long if they want to.
Of course public schools have had the ability to enforce dress codes for as long as I can remember. (No offensive t-shirts boys and girls.)
So while the ACLU would certainly say that Colors should be allowed, and I would agree, I think the status quo has been like this for quite some time. Whether anybody likes these people or not, people should be free to express themselves and wear what ever they want.
(obviously)
Announcer On Radio: Eyewitnesses say that the bees are yellow and black, and dress much the way Eli Wallach did in the movie "The Magnificant Seven". The bees are also overweight..
Chevy Chase: Wait a minute.. you must be..
Elliot Gould: That's right, gringo.. the Killer Bees.
I gotta think this is not only A) a hoax or paranoid rant, but B) if true, a HUGE First and Fourth Amendment issue. First Amendment because it reeks of prior restraint of the exercise of freedom of expression, and Fourth Amendment because of everybody's favorite new Hot Word:Profiling. My guess is that option A applies.
Thanks, Jim
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Calling an illegal alien an "undocumented immigrant" is like calling a drug dealer an "undocumented pharmacist"