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MEXICO INVADING THE U.S. |
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Conquering the southwest using demographic warfare Latino babies thrive "In 1848, Mexico lost the war," said David A. Lopez,
a sociologist at California State University, Northridge, who
studies Latino issues. "But in 2050, Mexico will have reclaimed
what was rightfully theirs." |
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| See where we are headed: Order "Conquest of Aztlan" today! |
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Glenn Spencer on the Bob Price Show WPZZ - News Talk 96 - Indianapolis, Indiana |
| Pioneer
Press Report: Assist rural Latinos ...High dropout rates among Latino youth was cited as one of the most pressing problems in the communities. Researchers found that some high schools had not graduated a single Latino despite having dozens or hundreds in lower grades. "We really need to target our Latino high school youth because many of them are dropping out in the ninth and 10th grade," said Gloria Contreras Edin, director of the Todd County Hispanic Liaison Office. "I think it would be great to have some kind of school liaison..." |
Charlotte
Observer Problems at Tyson's N.C. plants alleged in probe Some Wilkesboro residents say they can't believe Wilkes County's largest employer, Tyson Foods Inc., has been indicted on charges of smuggling illegal immigrant workers into its plants and giving them bogus work papers. -- Tyson, the nation's largest meat producer, has been a good neighbor, employing 3,000 in the county and sponsoring blood drives, said Wilkesboro Mayor Norman Call. -- "I wouldn't think they would do anything like that," he said. [More info] |
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Tucson Citizen Appellate judge denies documents in Spanish An appeals court judge has upheld a ruling that denied a defendant's request for Spanish language translations of all courtroom documents related to his case. -- Jose Calderon- Palomino, a Mexican citizen accused of first- degree murder, asked a Superior Court judge to provide translations of the documents so that he might participate in his defense. |
| Boston Channel
- WCVB 19 Arrested In State's Largest Cocaine Bust An investigation that began with a discarded cellular phone resulted in the arrest of 19 people in four states Friday in what authorities called the biggest cocaine bust in Massachusetts history. -- A phone number programmed into the telephone's memory was allegedly for ringleader Rafael Yeje-Cabrera, of Westport, Mass., who has ties to a Mexican drug cartel, prosecutors said. -- On Friday, authorities executed search warrants in Atlanta, New York, Rhode Island and Massachusetts, resulting in 19 arrests.. |
Reuters U.S. Gives Mexico a Win with Lift of Drug Appraisal A sore point in relations between Mexico and the U.S. was removed when Congress suspended a deeply resented official annual appraisal of drug-producing countries. -- Congress has suspended for one year the so- called certification process by which the U.S. determines if nations such as Mexico and Colombia are doing their share to combat the trafficking in illegal drugs. -- In place of certification, Bush will now compile a list of countries that have "failed demonstrably'' to crack down on drug trafficking. |
| Fox News More on the defeat of 245(i) Immigration reformers on extra high alert following this fall's terror attacks succeeded Thursday in stripping a border security bill of a provision that would have extended the deadline for hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants to apply for residency without leaving the country. -- Rep. Tom Tancredo, R-Colo., who chairs the Congressional Immigration Reform Caucus, helped lead opposition to the measure. He said the U.S. government needs to do more to keep out illegal immigrants and shouldn't reward those already here. |
Norman Matloff
- Atlanta J-C Work visa program is inviting target for abuse For the past four years, computer industry public relations experts have been blanketing the media with shrill claims of a computer programmer shortage. They demanded that Congress remedy this by allowing the industry to import an increased number of foreign workers under the H-1B work visa program. -- Given these shortage claims, one would expect that in this year's economic turndown, H-1B usage would be down from last year. |
| Atlanta
Journal-Constitution Probe of Tyson could grow Investigators say they have more work to do in what they describe as one of the nation's largest immigrant- smuggling cases involving a major corporation. -- Authorities in Chattanooga unsealed a 36-count indictment Wednesday outlining charges against meatpacking giant Tyson Foods and six current and former executives and managers. -- Prosecutors say Tyson "cultivated a corporate culture in which the hiring of illegal alien workers was condoned." They say the company sent smugglers to Mexico and gave immigrants fake documents needed to work. [More info] |
San Diego
Union-Tribune Bush OKs U.S. power lines from 2 Mexico plants, Imperial Co. seeks to block Rejecting claims that two Mexican power plants will foul Imperial County's air, the Bush administration has issued presidential permits to allow the plants' transmission lines to be built across the border. -- The plants that Sempra Energy and InterGen are erecting near Mexicali are expected to spew more than 3,000 tons of emissions into the air each year. But in granting the permits, the Department of Energy said the projects will not "significantly affect the quality of the human environment." |
| Las Vegas
Sun Visa revocation of student from Pakistan called unfair A Pakistani man had his student visa revoked in Las Vegas last week in a case immigration experts say is unfair and may set a precedent, making it harder for thousands of foreign students to enter the United States. -- Najeeb- Ul- Hasnain, from Karachi, entered the United States Nov. 4 at McCarran International Airport with a student visa, which allowed him to study in Texas beginning in January.... |
Chicago
Tribune Attack fund offers millions in payouts [including to illegals] The federal government, taking on the role of insurer of last resort, will offer families of people killed in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks an average of $1.6 million in tax- free compensation, the program's administrator said Thursday. -- Keith Feinberg said the families of non- Americans and undocumented immigrants are entitled to compensation on the same basis as U.S. citizens. Same-sex partners can also apply for compensation. |
| Herald News
Drug ring: 8 suspects from Joliet, Illinois A two-year investigation of a major Mexican- based cocaine ring ended with the arrest of 17 men on federal drug and immigration charges. -- Local police agencies, specialized drug squads and the FBI teamed to take down the crew of alleged coke dealers, rounding them up for the better part of the last month. -- Fourteen of the arrested were charged with conspiracy to possess a controlled substance with intent to distribute. |
Sun-Sentinel Jamaicans discuss unifying community into political force Since the 1960s, Jamaicans have been settling in South Florida in large numbers, but as a group, they have not secured significant political power. -- That is a mistake that's debilitating Jamaicans' grasp at representation in Tallahassee and Washington, D.C., says WAVS (1170 AM) Radio talk show host Bevan "Duke" Earle. -- "Unlike [people from] other countries, we have no common voice speaking for us," Earle said... |
| CNS News
Service Congressmen Call For Creation of National Border Security Agency Colorado Republican Tom Tancredo, chairman of the [Immigration Reform] caucus, is satisfied with the U.S. efforts to root out terrorists and the governments that support them overseas. -- "But what have we done here? What have we done to secure our own borders in those 100 days? What have we done to make sure that we don't have people like these coming into the United States again, or living here now?" he asked. "Essentially, nothing." |
| Tennessean Shelbyville struggles to accept immigrants (Tyson bust sob story) A federal investigation into accusations of widespread smuggling of illegal immigrant workers has been centered in this town of 16,105 people, about an hour's drive south of Nashville. -- Here, federal authorities say, three Tyson Foods managers smuggled illegal workers from Mexico to work at the chicken plant, as part of a companywide conspiracy involving 15 such plants in nine Southern states. [Discuss] |
Juan Mann EOIR -- The missing link of immigration reform Have you ever heard of the Executive Office for Immigration Review? If you're unaware of the crushing bureaucracy of the EOIR, you're not alone. In surveying recent developments in the immigration reform debate, it appears that United States Attorney General John Ashcroft, INS Commissioner James Ziglar, and many reform- minded columnists including Linda Bowles and Thomas Roeser have never heard of the EOIR either. |
| Star-Tribune New families bring Latino cultures to rural Minnesota ...Some landlords don't want to rent to Latinos, Perez said, but "they should see that we are hard workers." -- Others complain that they are treated differently from Anglos at work, school, government offices and businesses. Delia Fernandez said her husband, Jose, was questioned extensively when he opened a savings account. "That was uncalled for," she said. "We do give back. We pay taxes." |
N.Y. Times
(Free Registration) Illegal immigration driving meatpacking wages to the bottom The New York Times focused on the Tysons Food conspiracy indictments to depict the trend in meatpacking and related industries, where the use of illegal workers has been used to bust unions, drive down wages and increase profits. According to a U. of Missouri professor, "It's the race to the bottom... Companies started breaking the unions, moving the plants to rural areas and hiring immigrants a long time ago." |
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On C-Span
This Morning Anaheim Mexican ID attack exposed by caller Yes, good morning, I'm calling from New York but I'm actually calling about something that happened in Anaheim, California and that is the Mexican ID attack. Now I have two points. Point number one is; American citizens are being attacked coast to coast by illegal aliens. |
| Washington
Times Congress adjourns without immigration- reform bill A bill to tighten the screening of legal immigrants to the United States and to restrict student visas stalled in the Senate yesterday, and Congress adjourned without passing any immigration reform in the wake of September 11. -- Reform legislation passed the House by voice vote Wednesday, but when a senator tried to raise the bill yesterday, Sen. Robert C. Byrd, West Virginia Democrat, objected. |
KGTV News Chase Suspects Celebrate Escape To Mexico A driver in a van led authorities on a 100 mph chase from the East County to San Ysidro Thursday before bailing out and fleeing into Mexico along with a passenger, where the men seemed to dance in celebration, according to 10News. -- The California Highway Patrol began getting reports shortly after 12:30 p.m. about a dark-colored Chevrolet Astro with Baja license plates traveling on the wrong side of the road on Interstate 8, near Pine Valley, a dispatcher said. |
| Larry Elder
/ Townhall.com Rocky Mountain Bigot? NBA Denver Nuggets coach Dan Issel, after another tough loss at the buzzer, walked off the court toward the locker room. A fan, however, taunted the white coach, calling out, "Issel sucks." -- Issel angrily fired back, "Hey, go buy another beer. Go drink another beer, you f---ing Mexican piece of s---." (The fan denied being drunk, but admitted to drinking a "few beers.") Unfortunately for Issel, a tape captured the exchange, and the fit hit the shan. |
| Ha'aretz
(Israel) Tourism Minister: If they lose war, Arabs will be expelled Tourism Minister Binyamin Elon of the far-right National Union said Tuesday that if the Palestinians continue their violence against Israel and are defeated, they will ultimately be expelled from their homes, adding that he personally was aiding "Judaization" in aiding Arabs in East Jerusalem and elsewhere to emigrate to the United States. |
Arizona
Daily Star Accused drug lord arrested One of the biggest names in drug trafficking along the Arizona border walked into the hands of Mexican and American agents Thursday morning. -- Miguel Caro Quintero was arrested in Los Mochis, Sinaloa, about 540 miles south of Tucson, U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration spokesman Jim Molesa said. -- But his arrest had its roots in Tucson. It fulfilled an arrest warrant originally issued here 13 years ago... |
| Sun-Tentinel
LTE Time has come to close our borders ...But, it is my belief that the time for open borders is past. We should not admit immigrants except under extreme hardship, and then only if they have family in America to care for them. The future of our world increasingly depends on the strength of other nations. If we continue to rake off the cream of society, the richest, the best educated, or the most adventurous, then what hope do the "emerging" nations have of emerging healthy? |
L.A. Times Town Not Surprised by Tyson Charges ...Wadsworth and others here said they were disappointed--but not surprised--that Tyson managers had been implicated in a human smuggling ring that included the Ashland chicken plant. According to an investigation by the INS, Tyson managers helped recruit undocumented immigrants and provide them with false Social Security cards so they could work the grueling, low- wage chicken line jobs that most locals won't do. |
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