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  1. #1
    Senior Member
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    Quote Originally Posted by Kiara View Post
    "Miguel Guerra has a wife, three children and a house."


    A house? I guess America has been good to Miguel. I could never afford a house! "

    "He has business cards, but no immigration papers."

    And a business too? Wow! Illegals can do whatever they please.
    Mr. Guerra said he no longer risked taking his family on road trips to Disneyland in neighboring California.
    Wow-his kids even got to go to Disneyland! The only place like that we could ever afford to take our kids was the county fair and that was on bargain night or when they had a free or low cost grandstand show. Poor poor illegal-hope he gets caught doing his illegal business!

  2. #2
    Administrator Jean's Avatar
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    New York Times Reporter Again Advocates for Illegals Cowering in the 'Shadows'

    By Clay Waters | April 19, 2012 | 11:07
    Newsbusters

    Other than "climate change," no issue brings out the New York Times's liberal bias more than illegal immigration. Thursday Times reporter Fernanda Santos piled on the pro-illegal immigrant tropes in her story from Phoenix, "In Arizona, Immigrants Make Plans In Shadows." Santos claims an Arizona law "seeks to push illegal immigrants out of the state by making it hard for them to go about their lives and earn a living." The paper has used that sympathetic description in several purportedly objective news stories about illegal immigrants.

    Another beloved Times cliche: "shadows." The Times loves to call up the image of illegal immigrants cowering "in the shadows" -- the phrase has cropped up in several news stories, though it doesn't seem to jive with the massive pro-amnesty street demonstrations put on my immigrant supporters (and the photos of illegals that constantly grace the paper, like the one below).

    The rest of Santos's story is similarly by the numbers.

    Miguel Guerra has a wife, three children and a house. He has a car, but no driver’s license. He has business cards, but no immigration papers. He got into the habit of keeping his cellphone close when he drives so he can quickly call a cousin, the only legal resident among his relatives in the United States, in case he gets pulled over.

    If he does not call again within an hour, he said, the cousin knows to look for him at the county jail.

    Mr. Guerra, 36, moved here 13 years ago, before Arizona made illegal immigrants a target, turning once mundane tasks like driving to the grocery into a roll of the dice. Protesting the state’s strict immigration laws “hasn’t changed anything,” he said, so one recent evening he took a more pragmatic approach. He filled out an affidavit designating his cousin to care for his children, his money, his house and everything else he owns should he be arrested.

    The Supreme Court is set to hear arguments next week challenging the most controversial sections of an Arizona immigration law, known as SB 1070, which seeks to push illegal immigrants out of the state by making it hard for them to go about their lives and earn a living. Lower courts have prevented many of the most controversial provisions from taking effect, but that has not stopped a chill from seeping into the bones of the state’s immigrants.

    “Preparing for the worst is our best defense these days,” Mr. Guerra said.

    Here and elsewhere in Maricopa County, where one in three residents is Hispanic, illegal immigrants -- interviewed at car washes, outside dollar stores, in schools and at the offices of a grass-roots organization called Puente, where Mr. Guerra and others worked on their affidavits -- seemed almost indifferent to how the Supreme Court will rule on the constitutionality of the law. Having lived through years of relentless enforcement of the state’s anti-illegal-immigration measures by the hard-line sheriff, Joe Arpaio, they feel little can make life harder than it already is.
    New York Times Reporter Again Advocates for Illegals Cowering in the 'Shadows' | NewsBusters.org
    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at https://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  3. #3
    Super Moderator Newmexican's Avatar
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    Fernanda Santos - check out "Presidents Club" contributions and the agenda of the NAHJ and the Partity Project at theis link.
    2007 NAHJ Annual Report

    The Conference starts tomorrow ,
    RIDAY IS THE LAST DAY TO REGISTER. NOTE THE NOTE BELOW “Covering the New Southwest: Storytelling in the Heart of La Tierra” in New Mexico April 21

    NOTE: You must pre-register to attend. We cannot accept walk-in registrations on Saturday.
    Join the National Association of Hispanic Journalists for a regional conference April 21 on journalism, news gathering, writing and hot topics deep in the changing Southwest of Albuquerque, NM! DeeDee Garcia Blase, founder of the Tequila Party and an Arizona political organizer who helped recall the Ariz. State Sen. Russell Pearce, author of SB 1070, is be the scheduled keynote speaker. Also scheduled to appear is US Attorney Ken Gonzales and members of Homeland Security Investigations to talk about how reporters find untapped stories.
    Confirmed moderators

    • Gene Grant, host of In Focus NM, KNME
    • Floyd Vasquez, assignment editor, KOB-TV
    • Jeri Clausing, AP political reporter, Albuquerque
    • Inez Russell Gomez, editorial page editor, Santa Fe New Mexican

    Panels include

    • How to cover the drug war, immigration, Indian country, environmental issues.
    • Discussions on being a better writer and taking better photos.

    Top journalists from the Boston Globe, Associated Press DC, People Magazine, KRQE-TV, KNME-TV, Santa Fe New Mexican, the Albuquerque Journal will be attending. And YOU!
    The National Association of Hispanic Journalists regional conference will be held April 21 from 8:30 am to 6 pm.
    Conference Registration (You must pre-register for the conference by April 20)
    $25 for students/ $50 for NAHJ members/ $125 for non-NAHJ members (includes annual membership + member registration rate)
    For more information, please contact NAHJ interim executive director Anna Lopez Buck atalopez@nahj.org.
    Here’s the complete program:
    NAHJ NM Regional Conference
    Saturday, April 21, 2012
    Central New Mexico Community College–WTC
    9 a.m. – 10:15 a.m.
    “Enchanting Immigration: Writing about the immigration reality in New
    Mexico” — ROOM 104
    Marcela Diaz, executive director, Somos Un Pueblo Unido
    The Rev. Angela Herrera, assistant minister, First Unitarian Church of
    Albuquerque
    Sandra Baltazar Martinez, immigration reporter, Santa Fe New Mexican
    Rachel LaZar, executive director, El CENTRO de Igualdad y Derechos
    Moderator: Floyd Vasquez, assignment manager, KOB-TV
    10:30 a.m. – 11:45 a.m.
    “Water you doing? The coming battle over water and climate change” — ROOM 104
    Susan Montoya Bryan, environmental reporter, The Associated Press
    John Fleck, science reporter, Albuquerque Journal
    Erin Ailworth, business reporter, Boston Globe
    Moderator: Elaine Baumgartel, morning host, KUMN-FM
    “Capture this: Getting the right visuals for a story” — ROOM 130
    Roberto Rosales, photo editor, Albuquerque Journal
    Natalie Guillen, photographer, Santa Fe New Mexican
    Moderator: Chris Ramirez, features reporter, Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
    NOON – 1:30
    KEYNOTE LUNCHEON: DeeDee Garcia Blase, founder of the Tequila Party
    – CONFERENCE 101
    Interviewed by Inez Russell Gomez, Santa Fe New Mexican, editorial page editor
    1:30 p.m. – 2:45 p.m.
    “The Real Breaking Bad: Covering the drug war, arms smuggling,
    corruption & federal crime in NM”
    – ROOM 104
    U.S. Attorney Kenneth J. Gonzales:
    U.S. Marshal Conrad Candelaria
    Special Agent in Charge Dennis Ulrich, Homeland Security Investigations
    Assistant Special Agent in Charge Terry Wade, Federal Bureau of Investigation
    Assistant Special Agent in Charge Keith Brown, Drug Enforcement Administration
    Assistant Special Agent in Charge Carlos Carino, Bureau of Alcohol,
    Tobacco, Firearms & Explosives
    Supervisor Christopher Wajda, Internal Revenue Service, Criminal
    Investigations Division
    Moderator: Gene Grant, host, New Mexico in Focus
    1:30 p.m. – 2:45 p.m.
    “Socialized Medicine: Tips for some Sick Social Media Skillz” — ROOM 130
    Astrid Galvan, higher ed reporter, Albuquerque Journal
    Manuel De La Rosa, reporter, KRGV-TV
    Henry M. Lopez, owner, Lopez Webworks
    Moderator: Dan Mayfield, editor, Albuquerque Magazine
    3 p.m. – 4:15 p.m.
    “Election reporting: Digging through the sport of politics” — ROOM 104
    Michele Salcedo, weekend political desk editor, The Associated Press;
    NAHJ president
    Gwyneth Doland, executive director, New Mexico Foundation for Open Government
    Nancy Baca, former city editor, Albuquerque Tribune; former NAHJ president
    Moderator: Jeri Clausing, New Mexico supervisory correspondent, The
    Associated Press
    “Sovereignty is…What? Covering Indian country and covering it well”
    – ROOM 130
    Kevin K. Washburn, Dean & Professor of Law, UNM
    Sunnie Clahchischiligi, freelance journalist
    Erny Zah, director of communications, Navajo Nation
    Joycelyn Pegues Jackson, multicultural coordinator, Albuquerque Public Schools
    Moderator: Mary K. Bowannie, managing editor, the Dawn of Nations
    Today; UNM instructor
    4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m.
    FILM: Precious Knowledge: A Revolutionary Education — Conference 101
    Question & Answer Session
    Ari Palos, Director
    Curtis Acosta, Tucson teacher
    Interview by Elaine Aradillas, staff writer, People Magazine
    NAHJ

    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at https://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  4. #4
    Senior Member SicNTiredInSoCal's Avatar
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    Disneyland, a house of their own, driving with no license, business cards but no papers. Life is grand (and going by the woman in the above pics -WELL FED) when you are an illegal. My kids are entering their teen years soon and still have not been to Disneyland.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

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