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To: JustPiper
Love it. It looks just great! Here is my first contribution.


We don’t need an ‘immigration’ bill. We need and want a border security and illegal aliens bill. An immigration/guest worker bill can come after that is done.

This is not about workers rights or fair immigration policies. It has to do with international communist/socialist orgs looking to gain the political upperhand in the U.S..

Posted by JeffHead Jeff links to Mexica.org's 'after protest' pic fest. You can see there what the marchers thought they were marching for.

A poster for Friday’s march. March 31. This poster lists the Latino orgs that are promoting the protests. They are all communist/socialist front orgs.

Here is my analysis of what is going on behind the scenes.

Here is some evidence that 'amnesty' increases illegal entries. These people knew before the demonstrations that the time was ripe.

Smith Act of 1940 This is the U.S. statute that ought to apply to the organized gathering of tens of thousands of foreign nationals calling for the overthrow of our country.

H.R. 4437 At this link you will find a good exegesis of the only bill that doesn't offer some type of amnesty/pathway to citizenship/excuses for illegal entry. It is harsh on employers but has reasonable protections for employers who verify documents that are later shown to be false. It explains that the databases necessary are already in place. It provides for border security.

Understand that the provision that the protesters say is 'racist,' that makes illegals felons, was inserted by the Dems a short time ago. That clarifies why Hillary happened to discover the immigration issue a week before the marches. Why she demonized Republicans as "making Jesus a criminal."

Keep in mind just who organized these protests. Who provided the tens of thousands of T-shirts, the thousands of professionally made signs, the hours and hours of promotion on Spanish language radio and TV stations. It has been noticed that Islamic orgs names and logos appear on some of these signs as well. Remember that NEA teachers and administrators are the ones who have assisted the march organizers by providing bussing for their students, hoisting Mexican flags at school and overlooking the truancy.

Don't forget that the last two Presidential elections were nearly 50/50. Think about how our Congress is looking for a way to appease these foreign nationals through legislation. No election necessary. The outcome of legalizing 11 million illegals and encouraging more to come will be a solid lock for the left forevermore in national elections.

Mexico is Rich- Mexican wealthy play American taxpayers for suckers

Good thread for any that missed it. It should really make you mad.

Every dollar spent in U.S. taxes for social services for illegal aliens frees up additional cash to be sent south as part of the annual remittances which provided $20 billion in 2005. According to the CNN news show Lou Dobbs Tonight (3/21/05), "Remittances, as they're called, are expected to become Mexico's primary source of income this year, surpassing the amount of money that Mexico makes on oil exports for the first time ever."

Mayans in Chiapas Region Convert to Islam

The bill that was just defeated in the Senate was an amnesty, plain and simple. But take a look at what these treasonous scumbags tried to hide in it. They will be back and we can expect more of this if we do not act decisively.

Hidden Bombs (Extremely Important Article on Immigration)

11 posted on 04/08/2006 9:54:03 PM PDT by TigersEye (Sedition and treason are getting to be a Beltway fashion.)
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To: TigersEye

You are just wonderful my friend! We got a groove going on! Yah!


20 posted on 04/08/2006 10:05:37 PM PDT by JustPiper (We will NOT be a COMPROMISE !!!)
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To: TigersEye

An immigration reform scenario

Small-time contractor Howard Bashford, needing a few men to pour and finish a concrete-slab foundation, drove slowly around the block near a building products store, somewhere in greater Los Angeles.

At a corner, he spotted a knot of men in rough clothing, chatting together amiably. He pulled his pickup truck to the curb beside them, and they approached the truck expectantly.

"You guys need work?" he asked through the open, passenger-side window. "I can use four concrete finishers."

"Si, senor," chorused the men.

"Well," said Bashford, "you decide which of you should come with me."

There followed some earnest discussion among the workers, then four detached themselves from the rest and again approached the truck.

"We're your men," said one of them.

"OK," said Bashford, "but look, I can only pay a dollar below minimum wage."

"That's all right," said one of the group. "We'll take what we can get."

"Great," said Bashford, "but first I must ask you: Are you all documented?"

"Oh, si, si," they answered.

"Then you decided to 'come out of the shadows' after the U.S. Senate's 2006 immigration reform bill?" the contractor asked.

Again came the answer, "Si! Si!"

The spokesman explained, "We were more than willing to scrape together the $2,000 fine specified in the new law, and to help the Internal Revenue Service calculate our back taxes, because we so wanted legal status.

"Of course, this was difficult for us to do, earning $5 or $6 an hour for hard labor – and occasionally getting stiffed by employers (present company excepted, of course) – but what's a few thousand hard-earned dollars compared to the right to become legal and to get on the road to American citizenship?"

"And this is true even though you had to go to the 'back of the line' for citizenship?" Bashford asked.

"Naturally," the spokesman said. "Why just last week, I was telling mi madre back home in Mexico – I mean, my former home in Mexico – I was so determined to become an American citizen, I didn't mind that it would take me 11 years."

"Say, that's fine!" exclaimed Bashford. "I'm glad you still call your mama. Shows strong dedication to family."

"I didn't call her. I was there," said the worker. "I'm building a new house down there."

"Swell," said Bashford. "Mexico is a great place to vacation, and I'm sure your commitment to pledge allegiance to the United States – eventually – is solid.

"By the way, can you show me your new, INS-issued, biometric identity card?"

"Uh, I left mine home today," said the spokesman.

"So did I," said the second worker.

"Me too," said the third.

"Yo tambien," responded the fourth.

"Oh, that's OK," said the contractor. "I'll trust you this time. Climb into the back."

As the workers jumped into the bed of the pickup, Bashford muttered to himself, "Our Congress sure knows how to draw people out of the shadows."



A serious note regarding the topic above: In his uplifting biography of Ulysses S. Grant, Jean Edward Smith quotes the great general, who, having served in America's 1847 war with Mexico, wrote of that nation: "She has more poor and starving subjects who are willing and able to work than any country in the world. The rich keep down the poor with a hardness of heart that is incredible."

Naturally, given such injustice, Mexico experienced revolution upon coup upon revolution. It would be undergoing such throes even now, but for the salutary development of the lands ceded to the United States under the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.

Successive Mexican governments have been exploiting the American welcome mat for generations, as it was easier to export its poverty-stricken masses than it was to reform. Vicente Fox (called a reformer by some) – like all his predecessors – recognizes what elimination of the U.S. border safety valve would mean for his country: A return to revolution.

President Bush, America's farm-state senators, and representatives of labor exploiters ranging from the fictitious Mr. Bashford to major industrialists, recognize that restricting the flow of illegals would mean higher labor costs. And deep down, the limousine-riding bleeding hearts who demand open borders recognize it would mean higher costs to them – for farm produce, for housing, for nannies and gardners.

So the Senate gets the message and passes 400-odd pages of legislation they call immigration reform, which will be about as effective in solving the border problem as a damp roll of cheap paper towels.

For both nations, it's a deal with the devil, and the United States is getting the short end while Mexico postpones its day of reckoning. Even now, Vicente Fox is having a Coke and a smile.

http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=49670


447 posted on 04/10/2006 2:14:06 AM PDT by JustPiper (We will NOT be a COMPROMISE !!!)
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