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Bush a right-winger? No way [Mulshine]
Newark Star Ledger ^ | 6/27/04 | Paul Mulshine

Posted on 06/27/2004 11:22:40 AM PDT by Incorrigible

Edited on 07/06/2004 6:39:49 PM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]

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To: Commie Basher
No, the 15 foot high steel fence was built after 9/11/2001.
81 posted on 06/27/2004 9:54:47 PM PDT by Southack (Media Bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: Southack

Southhack, I am in AWE of your posts; you are FANTASTIC! Thank you for your eloquent, knowledgable defense of our President! God bless you!


82 posted on 06/27/2004 9:58:29 PM PDT by Kitty Mittens
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To: Southack
Also, how is building our current 15 foot high steel fence along our Southern border from the Pacific into Arizona leaving "our international borders wide open to illegal alien entry"??

Huh? There are a few sections of fence like that in populated areas like San Diego and Nogales. The remaining 99% is just 6-strand cattle fence. Guess which type of fence the illegals choose to climb over or under?

It ain't just Mexicans, Central Americans, and South Americans coming over the fence. They only make up about 94%. The first group I ever caught included four Chinese. Another group was 25 or so really lost and confused Haitians. The Border Patrol does catch Islamic types here; they blend right in with their Latino fellow travelers.

83 posted on 06/27/2004 10:09:20 PM PDT by JackelopeBreeder (Proud to be a loco gringo armed vigilante terrorist cucaracha!)
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To: JackelopeBreeder

In Calexico, California, each day, the runners tumble out of holes cut in the 15-foot-high steel fence in front of Noemi Parra's home on the US side of the border. The illegal immigrants race through her front yard, duck under the clothesline and hurdle her neighbours' bushes before disappearing.

When the Border Patrol is nearby, immigrants shake the doorknobs on her house, plead for help and sometimes try to burst inside uninvited.

‘’In the beginning I was scared. Now I'm used to being locked inside my house,” said Parra as she watched a group of men sawing noisily through the steel fence across the street. Parra's neighbourhood, which stretches three blocks deep along the border, is one of the most popular spots in Calexico for illegal immigrants to cross. Within seconds, a runner can melt into America.

Unlike other border cities that are separated by canyons or rivers, Calexico and Mexicali form a contiguous sprawl, only briefly divided by the six-mile border barrier. Calexico, known as the Gateway to Mexico, is trapped in the middle of an unusual drama as federal agents struggle to prevent the Imperial Valley city 120 miles east of San Diego from becoming a safe zone for illegal immigrants.
Increased border security in California – stadium lighting, surveillance cameras and more agents – has pushed many illegal immigration routes east to Arizona. In Calexico the number of fence jumpers has diminished in recent years. But the border remains porous, the streets chaotic.

Most residents lock their doors. Others in the city of 27,000 residents – 95% of them Latino – show compassion by offering water or food. And some, hearing the desperate knocks, have hidden immigrants in closets and back bedrooms. Still others have discovered a lucrative business in providing sanctuary.

“Residents are caught between compassion and coercion,” said Mario Lacuesta, a supervisory Border Patrol agent. “We wish we had more cooperation but we understand that some people, because of the retaliation factor, don't contribute.”
The effort can seem futile at times: A recent police meeting with residents to discuss the problem of illegal immigrants running across yards was interrupted by an immigrant running across the yard.

One 1st Street homeowner calls the pursuits “the never-ending story.” “The properties here get destroyed,” said the resident who refused to give his name. “The immigrants cave in our roofs. They climb our trees. If you don't lock your car, they get in your car. You don't need to get a movie because at night, life here is a movie.”

Human smugglers – who offer residents up to $300 to harbour illegal immigrants – have changed some attitudes. Because of their fear and disgust over the smugglers' profiteering, some residents who were once sympathetic now point agents to hiding places. And many who might have helped immigrants now turn them away. If smugglers learn that a person has an open-door policy, residents say the house gets mapped on escape routes.

“Some people feel sorry for them and try to help,” said Maria S. Mendez, who, like some residents, tells of finding an illegal immigrant hiding in her living room. “But you never finish. If you help them, they come back.”

The agents, peering through binoculars, keep watch day and night. Parked in SUVs or roaming on bicycles, they are stationed every 100 yards or so along the border. It can be boring work – sitting hour after hour in the searing sun – but a footrace can start at any moment. Last year, 40,000 illegal immigrants were apprehended along the 37-mile border from Calexico to Arizona. The smugglers, yelling taunts and threats through the fence, are defiant. Lacuesta said one asked for a little respect. He said, “I don't hate you: you've got a job to do. But so do I.”

For years, Calexico and Mexicali seemed like one city. The chain-link fence between the two was so flimsy that people would pull it aside and walk into the US. Agents were often nowhere to be seen, and immigrants could easily cross the border and hop on buses or take taxis north out of the city.

But with the erection of the steel fence, and bolstered security after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, illegal crossings became more difficult. Though the number of crossings decreased, activity surged in the area, and finding an immediate hiding place became key.

The immigrant paths into Calexico are marked by broken fences, snapped tree branches and trampled bushes. Border jumpers open backyard gates and slip into barbecues and quinceanIera parties. Some conceal themselves in green trash bags. Others run through elementary school playgrounds. An agent once found two men in the girls' restroom of the Calexico Adventist Mission Academy.
The pursuits can also turn deadly: One woman was found dead last year in a trash can outside the home of Alejandrina LarranIaga. Her granddaughter lifted the lid after hearing the pleas of a man yelling through the fence from the Mexican side. He said he hadn't seen the woman leave her hiding place. The girl tapped on the woman, but she didn't move. Authorities believe she'd been so fearful of capture that she suffocated from the heat.

Among the numerous entry routes for illegal immigrants along a four-mile stretch of Calexico's border with Mexicali, a favoured one starts across the street from Carmen Lazo's stucco house on 1st Street. Here, young men scale the barrier and slide down the posts like firefighters in a station house. Others use battery-operated saws and cut through the steel-post fence in minutes. Through the holes come fleet-footed young men, stooped grandparents, women and children.

The immigrants know the way: After crossing 1st Street, they slip through Lazo's narrow side yard. They cross the alley where 11-year-old Jonathan Parra plays kickball. The route – less than a football field long – is clear of obstacles. Every gate has been torn off its hinges, every fence has had its slats removed. Once the immigrants get to 2nd Street, they can stroll downtown and blend in with shoppers or escape in a getaway car. But the passage is known to agents. They often park in the alley, waiting for people to run by.


84 posted on 06/27/2004 10:14:21 PM PDT by Southack (Media Bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: Southack

Out here in the boonies it's a bit different. Usually about sunset we see a few scouts slip across. The seldom go more than a mile before scampering back to report whatever they can on where the Border Patrol and assorted lpcal loco gringos are positioned.

Just after dark we begin to pick up the night's first groups on infrared. These first groups are almost invariably healthy young males. Most will be caught before reaching Highway 92, but they will tie up the BP in a game of hide and seek for a couple of hours. The real kicker is that once they are caught, most of the BP agents in the area will be tied up transporting them back to the station for processing and deportation. That leaves several miles of border wide open and the coyotes know it.

Repeat this scenario every few miles east and west...


85 posted on 06/27/2004 10:38:04 PM PDT by JackelopeBreeder (Proud to be a loco gringo armed vigilante terrorist cucaracha!)
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To: Southack

Let me share a nightmare I've had to live with for about a year.

About a year ago, my friends and I were searching a load out area along what the Border Patrol calls OTM Alley. OTM means Other Than Mexican. Among other things, we found an international driver's licence with a good Irish name like Valdez or Gonzalez that had been issued that morning in Brazil. We found it before dinner time on the outskirts of Sierra Vista, Arizona.

Next to it was an airline ticket stub originating in Sao Paolo, Brazil. The upper left hand portion where the name would be had been carefully torn away and destroyed. This guy made it 6500 miles in 15 hours with split second precision and made it safely into the interior of the United States.

Now for the nightmare part. Get out a map of South America and look for the point where Argentina, Brazil, and Paraguay meet. In intelligence and narcotics circles it is known as the Three Points or Three Corners. It has a large known terrorist presence, to include Al Qaeda. While looking at the map, note that Sao Paolo is the closest city with major airline connections.


86 posted on 06/27/2004 11:40:11 PM PDT by JackelopeBreeder (Proud to be a loco gringo armed vigilante terrorist cucaracha!)
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To: B4Ranch

Ping to 83, 85, and 86.


87 posted on 06/27/2004 11:48:07 PM PDT by JackelopeBreeder (Proud to be a loco gringo armed vigilante terrorist cucaracha!)
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To: JackelopeBreeder

>>Also, how is building our current 15 foot high steel fence along our Southern border from the Pacific into Arizona leaving "our international borders wide open to illegal alien entry"??<<

Thanks for answering Southack's question about the "fence".


88 posted on 06/28/2004 3:03:19 AM PDT by B4Ranch
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To: Southack

>>http://www.csmonitor.com/2002/0124/p01s02-usgn.html<<

/2002/0124 means 2002, January 24

Your source is outdated by 2 1/2 years.


89 posted on 06/28/2004 3:04:20 AM PDT by B4Ranch
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