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Saturday, November 1, 2003 |
Fox to Troll Phoenix
Hen House November 4
Come Welcome Him with Us
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Vicente Fox, shown in file photo
at left, will be visiting Phoenix on an invitation from Governor
Janet Napolitano as part of a trip across the Southwest to
try to peddle his illegal alien amnesty nonsense, among other
things. Glenn Spencer, President of American Patrol, has announced
that he and other concerned citizens will be attending a protest
at the Phoenix Civic Plaza to greet Fox. Rides from Sierra Vista
may be available for those who wish to attend. Call Billie at
(520) 803-7703 Mon.-Fri. from 9 to 5 MST for details. For ride
info from other areas of Arizona, contact Citizens
Against Illegal Immigration.
Click
for protest location, etc. |
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Howard
Foster |
VDare.com
Letter
From Yakima, WA: On The Fruit Front Line
...But look just a bit closer, and you
suddenly sense that border feel that is instantly noticeable
in El Paso. For Yakima, a good 1500 miles from the border, is
overrun with Mexicans. The vast majority are working in the area's
agricultural enterprises, picking and packing fruit....  |
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Orange County
Register -- Santa Ana, California (Free Registration)
Instant
immigrant job check in danger
A federal test program that allows employers
to instantaneously determine if a new hire has a legal right
to work in the United States is in jeopardy of being shut down
as Congress debates whether to make the service available nationwide.
-- The program allows employers in six states, including California,
to plug in a worker's Social Security number.... |
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Tucson Citizen
2
tons of pot seized near Tucson
Federal agents on Thursday seized nearly
4,000 pounds of marijuana from a home west of Tucson and a truck
disguised as a Tucson Electric Power vehicle. -- Five men were
arrested in connection with the seizure, which is the latest
example of smugglers "hiding in plain sight" by posing
as legitimate enterprises.  |
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Los
Angeles Times (Free Registration)
Paper
opines against local immigration law enforcement
Most police agencies in Southern California
long ago dropped the idea of doing the job of federal immigration
authorities. If victims won't report crimes because they're afraid
of being deported, how can investigators find out about crimes,
much less solve them? -- The Orange County Sheriff's Department
would be stepping back a quarter of a century...  |
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