American Patrol
Archives
2001
External links may
expire at any time.
Home Page


Sunday, October 28, 2001

 THE EDUCATION OF A GRINGO IN MEXICO
by Allan Wall on Vdare.com

Reconquista Traitor 'Almost'
"We are going to dominate this country."
Edward James Olmos and other leading Mexicans openly proclaim the coming the takeover of America. It is all in "Conquest of Aztlan." Click here to order.
A Message from Mexico
   "Samuel Huntington, a friend of VDARE.COM, has described it this way: 'Mexican immigration is a unique, disturbing, and looming challenge to our cultural integrity, our national identity, and potentially to our future as a country.'"

   "My own experience and observation here in Mexico have brought me along to the same point of view. The present mass immigration of Mexicans to the U.S., combined with multiculturalism, can only end in the disaster for the United States. Take it from me, 'Good fences make good neighbors'."
See entire piece in Vdare.com

Flashback to 1997 VCT Rally
Good Fences Make Good Neighbors

Past features

Coming Up Oct. 31 - Glenn Spencer on KPDQ - Portland - 3 PM Pacific
Coming Up Nov. 3 - Glenn Spencer Presentation at Chehalis, Washington
Coming Up Nov. 4 - Glenn Spencer Presentation at Gig Harbor, Washington

American Renaissance Conference Info - February, 2002 - Herndon, VA

Boston Globe
Latino candidates gaining in Salem, Mass.
The pending election of at least one Latino to the City Council is generating excitement within the city's Spanish- speaking community. -- Until now, no Latino had run for City Council in Salem, let alone won a seat. But this year, two Latinos, Claudia Chuber and Domingo J. Dominguez, are campaigning for Ward 1 councilor, while another, Nestor A. Grullon, is a candidate for councilor at large. -- Since Chuber and Dominguez are the finalists in Ward 1, one of them will claim the seat. Grullon is vying with seven others for four at-large spots.

Chicago Sun-Times
Latino students shortchanged, suit says
Spanish-speaking children in a south suburban school district are languishing in classrooms where some teachers have no certification or bilingual education training, a lawsuit filed Thursday by a Latino advocacy group charged. -- The suit filed in U.S. District Court by the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund alleges that the Calumet Public School District is discriminating against about 60 Latino students in need of bilingual education.
Alamance Independent
Weakest link in border security: Corrupt INS official pleads guilty
It's happened again - another weak link in border security called a corrupt INS official. -- Last week in Miami, former INS district adjudication officer Ricardo Scott pled guilty to an indictment charging him with shaking down at least four aliens seeking naturalization. Scott's job was to give - and score - the oral civics test that aliens seeking naturalization take regarding their knowledge of American civics and history.

CommonDreams.org
"Borderless" Corporations: Which Side Are You On?
A recent New York Times headline asked an insinuating question: "After the Attacks, Which Side Is the Left On?" The Times should find the nerve to put the same question to the major players of business and finance. Which side is Citigroup on? Or General Electric and Boeing? Where does loyalty reside for those American corporations that have rebranded themselves as "global firms"? Our resurgence of deeply felt patriotism...
Associated Press
31- million foreign-born Americans, 8- million illegal
Roughly 8-million illegal immigrants live in the United States, early estimates from the 2000 census show, swelling the country's total foreign-born population to more than 31-million people. -- More detailed figures are due from the Census Bureau in the next month, and a final count of the foreign born population will be released next year. -- If the estimates hold up, the numbers would be new highs, immigration experts said.

San Diego Union-Tribune
Exploited visas making 'a sieve' of U.S. border
...Despite more than a decade of reforms, manpower increases and new waves of technology, the nation's system for keeping track of foreign visitors remains full of loopholes that allow millions of them to live illegally in the United States -- They become invisible, staying for years. They can move from state to state with little fear of their references being checked or a phone call from an immigration officer.
L.A. Times
Clinic Aids a Surging Mixtec Population
Oxnard -- ...Once a month, dozens of peasant Indians from dusty villages in the Mexican state of Oaxaca jam the lobby at Las Islas Family Clinic, bound together by ties to their homeland and the troubles that come with being among the newest and most exploited immigrants to labor in California's fields. Many can't read or write and speak only their Indian dialect, Mixteco.

Various Comments
Illegal alien driver's licenses
INS fails to pick up detained illegals
Attorney urges deportation of illegals in Georgia

Los Angeles Times
Mexican Labor Filling Jackson Hole's Service- Industry Needs
The towns of Jackson and San Simeon appear to have little in common: One is a ski town where the average home is $1.25 million; the other is a village in central Mexico where indoor plumbing is a luxury. -- But their economies have been linked, some say inextricably, since residents of San Simeon and neighboring Hueyotlipan began coming to Jackson about 10 years ago...
Ottawa Sun
Report slams immigration
Canada's immigration system needs a huge infusion of cash to meet the additional demands created by the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, a scathing Senate committee report says. -- In its final report to the government on Bill C-11 -- the new immigration law -- the Senate's Social Affairs, Science and Technology committee said it heard several disturbing things about Canada's immigration system from a wide range of witnesses.

About Edward James Olmos' statement. This man knows better yet he wants to turn the U.S into another sewer. If the Mexicans were to take over, this country would cease to be what it is. I don't watch Jane Fonda's movies and I don't watch Edward J. Olmos' movies.

Chicago Tribune
Immigration keeps America working, but...
...Immigrant labor, both documented and undocumented, is responsible for much of the economic growth enjoyed by the nation over the past 20 years. In Texas, where immigrants make up more than one-fourth of the workforce, that labor has also helped the state withstand economic downturns. -- Immigration was a major negotiating point during September talks between President Bush and Mexican President Vicente Fox...
MaineToday.com
Attacks on U.S. imperil refugees' already thin hopes
...Today, one in 269 people on the planet are refugees or asylum seekers, according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. The UNHCR is charged with protecting the rights and well-being of refugees, helping them seek asylum, resettle in another country, or return to their own country. (Long sob story about Sudanese and other refugees, etc.)

BBC
Mexico 'hiding nothing' on activist killing
Mexican President Vicente Fox has rejected any suggestions of federal government involvement in the murder of the leading human rights lawyer, Digna Ochoa. [Also see this feature.]

Orange Co. Register
Identity-theft case ends in guilty pleas
Fullerton police and Secret Service agents announced in June that two Nigerian nationals were in custody on charges they bilked dozens of banks and credit- card companies out of $1.6 million by using the names of 1,500 people to obtain credit. Akinyemi Abayomi, 33, of Whittier and Olatejo Olabanji, 34, of Corona were brought before a federal magistrate judge, where they denied they were guilty. Fullerton police said the case was cracked.....
The News - Mexico City
Mexico plans to close 45 embassies and consulates
The Foreign Relations Secretariat plans to close at least 45 embassies and consulates worldwide including the embassy in the Vatican and consulates in New York,Washington, Philadelphia, New Orleans, and Orlando in response to expected budget cuts in 2002, the local press reported. -- In the U.S. alone, 20 consular offices assist approximately 23 million people of Mexican origins.


                                          Back One Day | Older Articles | Home Page