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  1. #1
    Senior Member mapwife's Avatar
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    The Chris Simcox Story

    http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/ ... x0601.html

    Minuteman leader found new calling after 9/11 attacks
    Dennis Wagner
    The Arizona Republic
    Jun. 1, 2006 12:00 AM


    THREE POINTS, Ariz. - Chris Simcox throws supplies into his car outside a southern Arizona ranch house and barks an order: "Follow me."

    He has just completed another daylong patrol with his Minuteman volunteers near the windblown Mexican line, searching for undocumented immigrants and announcing that his group will build a border wall if President Bush won't.

    Now, the 45-year-old in jeans and a purple T-shirt is late for a live appearance on Hannity & Colmes, the Fox Channel's conservative talk show. He waves to a unit of volunteers heading for the desert with binoculars and side arms, then hits the road to Nogales, chomping a stogie and revving his Jeep at nearly 90 mph.

    Such is the frenetic life of a former schoolteacher who has emerged as a lightning rod in the debate over illegal immigration. Since April 2005, when Simcox helped organize the first Minuteman Project, he has become a hero to those frustrated with U.S. policies that have allowed millions to enter the country illegally, have failed to remove violators and have taken virtually no action against employers who hire undocumented immigrants.

    Simcox concedes that his group's patrols, fence projects and cross-country caravans hardly deter illegal immigration. Rather, he says, they are a part of a propaganda campaign to shame political leaders.

    The strategy, he believes, is working: Last month, President Bush answered the Minuteman leader's longtime demand to post National Guard troops along America's 2,000-mile border with Mexico. And, this week, he announced support of a Senate provision that would fortify 370 miles of the line with a wall.

    "We feel that's a victory," Simcox says. "At least the president is making moves to do something. But it's not nearly enough. I think it's political placating and . . . pandering for votes."

    That kind of rhetoric has made Simcox a darling of right-wing media and a nemesis to immigrant rights advocates.

    Raul Yzaguirre, former chief executive at National Council of La Raza and now executive director for a civil rights center at Arizona State University, describes the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps as "part of a hate-mongering group from the lunatic fringe."

    U.S. Rep. Tom Tancredo, R-Colo., among the nation's most zealous anti-immigration politicians, says Simcox is a stirring example of citizen action: "I believe much of the success of our movement is a result of . . . the Minuteman Project. I give him enormous credit for what he has done."

    Will Marriott, a 59-year-old Phoenix medical-equipment salesman who has spent three years with Simcox, says his friend is relentless.

    "Chris focuses intently," Marriott says. "That's the power of his approach. He brings everyone together. . . . (And) he's not racist. I have never heard a single racist comment from him."


    The player
    Christopher Allen Simcox does not seem to fit a stereotype.

    At a Kentucky Fried Chicken near the border, he spills out a life story in rushed snippets: The son of a machinist and a cardiac-care nurse, Simcox spent his childhood shifting between households of divorced parents. His father, Paul, is a "Goldwater-type conservative" who raises the Stars and Stripes outside his Moline, Ill., home at 6 each morning and brags about European forefathers who waited five years in Canada before they could enter the United States.

    "We came to this country legally," the elder Simcox stresses.

    Chris Simcox says his personal politics always have been a combination of "rock-solid conservative values" and humanitarian ideals born of his admiration for the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. "The civil rights movement was a major part of my life growing up in the South," he says. "I've always felt that bigotry and discrimination were unacceptable."

    After graduating from a Kentucky high school in 1978, Simcox says, he tried out for a Cincinnati Reds minor league team, got cut and turned to his second passion: playing drums for a series of bands.

    In 1986, he moved to Los Angeles with his wife. Simcox soured on the Hollywood music scene and set out on a new career track, earning a degree in early education from Pacific Oaks College in Pasadena. His internship was at "a very bad high school in South Central LA, in the middle of Bloods-and-Crips warfare."

    He switched to the affluent, private Wildwood Elementary School, teaching for the next 13 years before becoming a private tutor. Simcox says he watched LA schools be overwhelmed by immigrant students who could not speak English and by Hispanic gangs.

    His experiences spawned a deep concern about America's future. "I fought for civil rights my entire life," he says. "I was the kid who stood up for Black kids and got my nose bloodied. . . . My second wife is Black. My son is biracial. So race plays nothing in this issue."

    Coupled with the unease about immigration, Simcox says, was a growing fear of terrorism: "You could see it coming. And then September 11 hit, and that was it."


    Turning point
    Immediately afterward, he made phone calls recorded by ex-wife Kim Dunbar. According to transcripts filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court, Simcox talked about stockpiling firearms. Court records describe a message left two days after the attacks: "I purchased another gun. I have more than a few weapons, and I plan on teaching my son how to use them. I will no longer trust anyone in this country. My life has changed forever." Dunbar sought sole custody and got it. His students quit as word spread about his apocalyptic diatribes.

    With no more family or job, Simcox made a clean break. It began with a weeklong trip to Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument on the southern Arizona border. There, Simcox says, he watched undocumented immigrants and smugglers stream across from Mexico.

    "At that moment, it clicked," he says. "The borders were wide open. It shouldn't take a kindergarten teacher to figure out that terrorists could come through."

    Simcox tried to join the Border Patrol but was turned down because of his age. Then began a 40-day retreat in the desert. During a visit to Tombstone, he found work as a cowpoke in mock gunfights. He quit after a few days and got a job as an assistant editor at the Tombstone Tumbleweed. In early 2002, he cashed in a retirement fund, bought the paper for $60,000, and transformed it into a chronicle on illegal immigration. (Sample headline: "Enough is enough! A public call to arms! Citizens border patrol militia now forming!")


    A handful of gun-toting volunteers signed up, and Simcox began leading missions under his Civil Homeland Defense banner.

    At one point, Simcox was arrested by a ranger at Coronado National Monument for possession of a firearm in a federal park. Convicted for a misdemeanor weapons violation, he was sentenced to probation.

    In July 2004, Simcox wrote a Tumbleweed article asserting that Border Patrol agents in Arizona had captured two large groups of Arabic-speaking undocumented immigrants, more than 75 in all. A Border Patrol spokesman scoffed at the tale. In April 2005, Simcox and California activist Jim Gilchrist teamed up on the Minuteman project that attracted worldwide attention. Simcox was at the forefront of a movement.

    In recent months, Simcox sold the Tumbleweed, got married for a third time and moved to Scottsdale. He says he subsists on his wife's income as well as speaking fees.

    Simcox expresses sympathy for undocumented immigrants. "If I were in another country and right across the border was a land of milk and honey, I'd be doing it too," he says.

    Still, critics paint him as rabble-rousing demagogue. An article written for the Southern Poverty Law Center, a liberal non-profit organization that monitors hate groups, describes Simcox as "a relentless self-aggrandizer who comes across with the smug egotism and fiery conviction of a former nobody." President Bush and Arizona's top federal prosecutor, Paul Charlton, condemned the use of border vigilantes.

    Simcox smiles, saying that "dog and pony show" helped ignite a grass-roots furor that is sweeping the nation.

    "The campaign has worked," he adds, "to the point where the president certainly understands that we're not going away. . . . And once the border is secure, the Minuteman movement will turn into a real political force."
    Illegal aliens remain exempt from American laws, while they DEMAND American rights...

  2. #2
    Senior Member nittygritty's Avatar
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    mapwife, thanks for posting this article about Chris, I enjoyed it very much and feel I know Chris a little more thanks to you! If we win on this illegal immigration, it will be because or people like Chris Simcox, who are willing to make it their calling in life, God, if we only had a hundred thousand more just like him.
    Build the dam fence post haste!

  3. #3
    Senior Member Dixie's Avatar
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    map,

    I enjoyed it too. Chris sounds a lot like me in some respects. We are about the same age and 9-11 also made me view the world differently. I knew several people that just lost it! Crazy stuff like yanking the satellite dish off the house for security reasons. We got scared and we all reacted differently. Sounds like Simcox had an epiphany in the desert and I'm glad he did.

    Also, Arizona and Texas have right to carry laws. The Minutemen are probably no better armed than other citizens in the state.

    Dixie
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  4. #4
    Senior Member Brian503a's Avatar
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    http://www.newsmax.com/archives/article ... 3800.shtml

    The Passion of Minuteman Chris Simcox
    Dave Eberhart, NewsMax.com
    Saturday, June 3, 2006
    The Southern Poverty Law Center once described controversial Minuteman Civil Defense Corps founder, Chris Simcox, 45, as "a relentless self aggrandizer who comes across with a smug egotism and fiery conviction of a former nobody."

    But after a couple of up-close-and-personal sessions with the man whose "Minuteman Movement" has spawned 34 chapters in 30 states, a political action committee, and what Simcox sees as the basis and impetus for a national third party, NewsMax found that the only two words in that line of vitriol that truly apply to the soft-spoken man are "relentless" and "conviction."

    That relentless conviction has deep and abiding roots that Simcox stated came to crystallization when he was privileged to know U.S. Park Ranger Kris Eggle, who served at southern Arizona's Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument.

    A hero to all who believe that securing the borders is critical to national security, Eggle was shot and killed in the line of duty on Aug. 9, 2002 while pursuing – in tandem with the U.S. Border Patrol - members of a drug cartel hit squad that fled into the United States after committing a string of murders in Mexico.

    It was Eggle who most inspired Simcox when he was still struggling to define the best way he could serve his country in the post-9/11 war on terrorism.

    "I guess the moment that really struck me was talking to a park ranger in Organ Pipe park, an astute dedicated young man who I questioned about all of these illegals and drug dealers coming through the park," recounted Simcox.

    That prescient park ranger was Kris Eggle.

    Simcox said he was dumfounded as he listened to the young ranger lament that the drug runners "just laugh at us; they run circles around us."

    Eight months later, Eggle was dead, gunned down in a hail of AK-47 fire when the outlaw Mexican nationals' vehicles got stuck in the sand and they bailed out with automatic weapons blazing.

    "We have terrorism in this country that comes across that border every day," Simcox warned.

    That's the message Simcox said he must hammer home to the American people – the hard, fast, gritty truth that the danger is clear and present.

    "Listen," he confided, "the park rangers in Big Bend and the park rangers in Coronado National Monument in Arizona - they wear full body armor and carry AR-15s. That is how dangerous it is. That is what it has become. Our border is an absolute war zone."

    Simcox's words are certainly not weak, but laughing, he explained how he apparently regularly disappointed the media.

    "I can't tell you how many interviews I have done that have never seen the light of day because they didn't get what they wanted. You know, they interview you, hoping that you are going to be a wild-eyed anti-government militia leader.

    "And then they find you to be very conscientious and logical and pragmatic about things, and that is not what they want to portray. They want the sensational story and information that they can malign the movement with.

    "Recently I did an hour-long interview for ‘Good Morning America' and it never saw the light of day because they didn't get what they wanted. There was another one with Geraldo [Rivera] recently that they canned."

    The fact of the matter is that Simcox just doesn't have the background that breeds a fanatic.

    His father is a no-nonsense Goldwater-Republican Navy veteran who still raises and lowers a flag over his home as if he were the ensign at the stern of the supply ship he once served aboard as a boiler man.

    Simcox said his father, Paul, was in boot camp when the Korean War came to an end. He went on to become a small arms machinist at the Rock Island Arsenal. "He built small arms for the government after that for most of his career."

    "He's one of the truest patriots you can imagine in this country, and that is where I got a lot of my values and ideals from," he proudly told NewsMax.

    Simcox earned a bachelor's degree in human development and education from L.A.'s Pacific Oaks College.

    He taught public school for one year and decided it "was a waste of time." He blames the initial raw experience on serving at a "very bad" high school in South Central L.A.

    Later, Simcox taught at a more safe and sane private school – kindergarten through third grade – for over a decade.

    His interest in education lingers. "I am passionate about fixing our broken education system in this country - as much as I am about broken border security," he said.

    He perhaps names his own poison as he talked politics with NewsMax: "I'm disgusted with both parties. This country is sorely in need of an independent third party and I see that movement growing around the country."

    He feels anger toward anyone who is for the immigration bill.

    "And they are all guilty -- any one of those 50 [senators] that voted ‘yes' for that horrible piece of legislation [the immigration bill]. They should all be put on notice that they better start making retirement plans because I think that the American people are going to respond with vengeance at the ballot box."

    Simcox was serious when he confessed that he thinks the Minuteman Movement could end up morphing or developing into that independent third party – which, in his opinion, a frustrated electorate is looking for in this country.

    But the man who describes his present occupation as "political activist" is a reluctant rebel: "I would rather see the Republican Party reform itself and get back to the business that it used to be known for: small government, individual rights, states' rights . . ."

    So just how did this mild-mannered school teacher make the journey to where he is now?

    In the immediate wake of 9/11, he felt compelled to serve his country in some context. He approached the Army, but at 40 years-old, they discouraged him from joining: "It was the first real hit to my self esteem as a male that I am told that I was too old to do something when I can still run circles around most guys half my age ..."

    About a week after Sept. 11, he went on a retreat to contemplate what had happened and to re-figure what he was going to do with his life.

    "It was right there," he recounted. "It was when I was camping in the Organ Pipe park. I was hiking one afternoon and I encountered a group of about 75 people trudging through the park, through the back country."

    It was his first contact with illegals.

    Within a three-day period he recalls encountering over 300 notorious trespassers – including, incredibly, vehicles loaded with drugs escorted by paramilitary-type soldiers carrying automatic weapons.

    ". . . if drug dealers can openly enter - cross our borders carrying automatic weapons to bring drugs and other contraband - it doesn't give you a whole lot of confidence that our government is going to be able to stop a resourceful terrorist," Simcox said.

    It was in this same period that Simcox had his profound conversations with the doomed Kris Eggle.

    Between Eggle and what he had seen with his own eyes, he made the fateful decision that he wanted to investigate this issue of illegals. That would be his calling. So he returned to Los Angeles, packed up his belongings and returned to the border - where he lived and observed for the next three months.

    "I toured that border from the Gulf of Mexico to the Pacific Ocean," Simcox describes. "I met with ranchers. I talked with local land owners. I talked with law enforcement. That is when I discovered that the border with Mexico was out of control. That it was absolutely a war zone and it was controlled by criminal cartels. I put two-and-two together and said this is the greatest threat to national security and we need to do something about it."

    The next step was serendipitous, albeit fateful.

    Simcox ended up at Tombstone, Ariz. "absolutely by chance." While sitting in a local café reading the local newspaper, he spied a help-wanted ad for an assistant editor for the local newspaper, The Tombstone Tumbleweed: "That is when I decided to go to work as a journalist so that I could begin at least writing about this. It would be way to get the message out . . ."

    Just three months later, he used his life's savings to purchase the newspaper and he settled into Tombstone life.

    It was then 2002, and for the first months of his newspaper enterprise, Simcox didn't write a word about illegal immigration: "I gave the town the best hometown newspaper that it has had since that paper started. That was my goal, first to give the town a good newspaper and to learn the trade and learn the profession. I didn't write my first article about illegal immigration until July."

    It was then that he created a section of the paper that he called "Borderline Politics."

    In that modest four-page pull-out section of the newspaper, he featured a series of editorials and began covering the local and national issues concerning the broken border.

    By October of 2002, six months into the newspaper adventure, Simcox developed the idea of a civilian border watch group. He worked with local law enforcement, contacted the FBI, consulted with military veterans and crafted the first model for his watchers.

    He used his newspaper to announce the formation of "Civil Homeland Defense," and he quickly recruited and trained about 400 volunteers to work exclusively in Arizona and in Cochise County.

    Civil Homeland Defense began assisting the U.S. Border Patrol: "I created the standard operating procedures, you know, the rules of engagement and the whole thing, and we worked quite successfully until October of 2004 . . ."

    Enter Jim Gilchrist.

    Gilchrist, a retired military man and accountant, approached Simcox with an idea about holding a 30-day protest on the border. Gilchrist wanted Simcox to supervise it, using the infrastructure that he had already built.

    After months of negotiation and planning, the new team named the protest the "Minuteman Project." Both men took to the field to recruit volunteers for this month-long political protest on the border. As planned, the Civil Homeland Defense served in support.

    It was a great success and at the end of April, Simcox and Gilchrist decided to join forces. "Minuteman" was added to the name and it became the "Minuteman Civil Defense Corps."

    The original idea was that Gilchrist would concentrate on going after the offending employers who were making the homeland attractive to the illegals in the first place.

    Gilchrist planned on using retired Immigration and Naturalization Service personnel and attorneys to unleash the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act on the employers. Simcox was to continue and expand the border watch operations. But in May of last year, the plans fell apart and the team broke up.

    "Jim disappeared," Simcox explained. "We didn't hear from him. He just went into hiding. He was tired; he was burned out; he wanted to go home and decide what to do next." But Gilchrist soon got a second wind and ended up running for Congress.

    The Constitution Party supported Gilchrist in 2005 when he ran as an independent to take over the seat of Rep. Chris Cox, R-Calif., who resigned to become chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Committee.

    Simcox came and helped out Gilchrist's campaign for a month. In the end, however, Gilchrist received 25.5 percent of the vote in the general election, losing to Republican John Campbell.

    Afterward, they agreed to incorporate their groups and share the name Minuteman, borrowed from the storied rapid response elements of the pre-U.S. Revolutionary War colonial militias.

    Gilchrist now heads the Minuteman Project, his own 501(c) (4) not-for-profit, tax exempt organization, which he says is "not a call to arms, but a call to voices seeking a peaceful and respectable resolve to the chaotic neglect by members of our local, state and federal governments charged with applying U.S. immigration law."

    In the latest development, Gilchrist announced that he is considering a run for president in 2008, again representing the Constitution Party – if Rep. Tom Tancredo does not run.

    Last month he met with the party's national committee.

    Enforcement against the employers never got off the ground, but the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps (MCDC) rapidly grew into what Simcox styled as "a huge national organization - beyond my wildest expectations."

    MCDC is officially a project of the Declaration Alliance - a public policy and issues advocacy organization that "aggressively addresses the intensifying assaults that the American Republic continues to endure - at home, and abroad." Declaration Alliance is also a not-for-profit, tax exempt organization.

    It is now 7,400 volunteers strong and growing.

    Simcox describes that over time MCDA has turned into much more than a citizens' border watch.

    "We have developed a PAC, a political action committee," he says. "We have really become a political movement, and we are continuing to develop."

    Simcox leaves no doubt where he stands on the recently passed Senate immigration bill: "The vote to give amnesty to millions of illegal aliens by the United States Senate, should it pass into law, would ensure that the status quo is maintained - the borders would remain wide open and the attractive nuisance of endless welfare and social programs at the expense of the American taxpayer would remain."

    In a nutshell, the Senate bill provides for enhanced border and workplace enforcement, a temporary worker program, and a pathway to citizenship for most illegal immigrants who have been in the United States at least two years. Those who came into the country after January 2004 would be ineligible for legal status - as would felons or those convicted of three or more misdemeanors.

    The House bill passed in December features no path to legal residency or citizenship for illegal immigrants. Furthermore, it contains no provision for any new temporary guest-worker program.

    "The U.S. Senate just left America vulnerable to a tsunami of migrants at the border . . ." Simcox said.

    Simcox said he and his organization will now focus their attention on the House of Representatives where he does not expect amnesty to pass.

    Meanwhile, Simcox savors each small victory.

    Last summer, he and team members met with Texas Gov. Rick Perry's staff: "It was a very productive sit-down meeting that led to easing the tensions and their concerns about us. We have much support from the governor's office in Texas now."

    Simcox was also pleased with the $10 million earmarked for hiring more State Police and basically developing a task force to assist the border patrol. But in the final game plan, Simcox wants tens-of-thousands of troops committed to the borders, "backed with a firm edict from the leader of the free world saying, ‘No mas,'" he said.

    Simcox also appreciates the support he has rallied: Rep. Tom Tancredo, R-Colo., recently endorsed MCDC, saying: "I think citizen groups such as the Minutemen are critical until the federal government assumes full responsibility for controlling our borders and eliminating illegal entry & residence in the USA."
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