Retire to a warmer climate jews d in the continued from page 12 without leaving Novi! Also, what about social groups fearing persecution, such as LGBT people? Or people who fear persecution for race, nationality or for political opinions? “We should not discriminate,” she says. Even so, Peter Antone sees the situation this way: “Because the president has the right to limit the number of refuges admitted annu- ally, he probably has the right to designate which groups of refugees are the most vulnerable and thus prioritized for admission. Because refugees are neither U.S. citizens nor green card holders, and because they are not physically on U.S. land, it is unlikely they will be consid- ered to have any U.S. constitutional protection.” The main hope these refugees have, Antone says, lies in internation- al agreements. “As for refugees who have already arrived, returning them to their country of origin, assuming they could be subject to torture, might violate the Convention Against Torture and the United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, treaties that the United States has signed.” At Fox Run, senior living is warm and worry-free. We’re here to handle the winter hassles, while you relax and enjoy your retirement. * !$ #&##" # #! * JANE GAZMAN * #(%!&#!&# ##!&&(" #&(#&" %#! !"#$" * #!!!("&# !##(' "" Discover a winter-free retirement! Call 1-800-917-8169 !($! !$! &# !)! "! Novi 11796783 !" % 2138480 14 February 9 • 2017 jn MORAL, PRACTICAL EFFECTS Excluding refugees raises moral problems, says attorney Bradley Maze. The executive order is “antithetical to our values.” As a “by-product” of the order, “immi- gration officials have just stopped processing the applications from deserving Syrians and Yemenis. This is very troubling.” Antone agrees: “What is legal to do is not always the right thing to do.” The order may have negative practical consequences as well. “This act hits health care in America,” Maze says. “Hospitals in America draw huge numbers of workers from foreign countries.” And Mosko says, “The airline industry and the tourism industry in general have already started to suffer. People who are here are being told not to travel, and people who are abroad may not be able to obtain visas or may have their visas revoked. “Even people from other countries, not listed in the executive order, are discouraged from coming here because a country could get added to this list at any time.” Attorneys also question whether the executive order will actually protect Americans. Maze thinks it can endanger us. Because it “fuels the jihadi narrative of a clash of civilizations, the executive order will be used by our enemies to gather recruits,” he says. Maze also sees other problems: “From a humanitarian and a foreign point of view, the executive order is ‘nonsensical.’ It already has nega- tive effects on how our country views immigrants, influencing politi- cians, law enforcement professionals and ordinary citizens.” Attorneys who specialize in civil rights and immigration often cite their family history as an influence. ACLU Director Kary Moss, for example, says, “My grandparents were immigrants, and I grew up here in Michigan amidst a culture that valued tikkun olam.” Bradley Maze came to America as a young boy when “his parents, physicians in South Africa, did not want to raise their children in that atmosphere” under apartheid. Peter Antone says, “I happen to be an immigrant and consider fleeing Saddam Hussein’s regime to the U.S. the most important deci- sion of my life. In many ways, my real life with liberty started when I arrived in the United States and, therefore, I know what it is like for those fleeing difficult situations.” •