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  1. #1
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    Illegal students look to 2012 after immigration bill fails

    By AMY TAXIN
    The Associated Press
    Sunday, December 19, 2010; 3:54 PM

    LOS ANGELES -- Emboldened by months of phone calls to lawmakers, hunger strikes and sit-ins, a group of college students and graduates in Los Angeles say they plan to take their fight for immigrant rights to the states and the 2012 election after Senate Republicans blocked a key piece of legislation.

    But it won't be easy.

    The Senate vote Saturday to toss the proposal that would have granted young illegal immigrants a route to legal status dealt a harsh blow to student activists who will face an even steeper uphill battle in the next Congress.

    Immigrants see rough times ahead in the next two years, with many Republicans vowing to push for tougher immigration enforcement, but they also say Latino voters are getting fed up with lawmakers at a time when they are accruing greater political clout.

    "This is a movement," said Nancy Meza, a 23-year-old illegal immigrant and college graduate who wore a University of California, Los Angeles sweatshirt as she watched the televised vote. "We don't have lobbyists and paid staff. It's a movement by students."
    Now the lamestream media just calls them "students"
    In the hours after the vote, Meza and about 50 other student activists who had gathered at the UCLA Downtown Labor Center said they would remind Latinos who stood by them - and those who did not - in the next election cycle. They will push for access to financial aid and drivers' licenses in states more friendly to immigrants like California.

    Few said the legislation, many called the Dream Act, had a chance in the next two years with Republicans taking control of the House of Representatives and a shrinking Democratic majority in the Senate. But they said that wouldn't derail the networks they had set up across the country to support illegal immigrant students and help them reveal their status and learn to live unafraid.

    Some at the UCLA center, including university student Leslie Perez, 22, wept as they watched the vote on a big screen.

    Minutes after it was over, many donned jackets and umbrellas to take to the rainy streets of Los Angeles, chanting "undocumented and unafraid."
    Republicans might consider some kind of measure to help the students, but it would probably be much narrower, said Mark Krikorian, executive director of the Center for Immigration Studies, which advocates stricter limits on immigration.

    "This has a real demoralizing effect," Krikorian said of the student activists. "There's only so long you can keep up these hunger strikes and all this political theater they've been engaging in, especially if there's no specific target."

    Another challenge is students could wind up feeling excluded when they can't work after graduation, despite their political activism.


    "It may alienate the group we most want to incorporate," said Louis DeSipio, a professor of political science at University of California, Irvine.

    Immigrant rights groups said they planned to turn up the pressure on the Obama administration to slow deportations, end local police enforcement of immigration laws and look out for the students, many of whom publicly revealed their immigration status over the last few months.

    Students also said they planned to fight for immigrant benefits - though it's not legalization - locally as they've seen anti-illegal immigration activists do to pass tougher enforcement measures in states like Arizona.

    "They're winning by state, they're winning by region," said Cyndi Bendezu, a 25-year-old University of California, Los Angeles graduate who was brought to the United States from Peru when she was 4 years old. "We have to win smaller victories."

    Bendezu, who had been an illegal immigrant when she started college, attained legal residency through a relative's petition. Now, she said she can't wait to become a citizen to be able to vote.
    Students said Saturday that momentum they had gained in recent months was bigger than the legislative defeat.
    The legislation would have provided a route to legal status for immigrants who were brought to the United States before age 16, have lived in the country for five years, graduated from high school or gained an equivalency degree and who joined the military or attend college.

    It targeted the most sympathetic of the 10 million to 12 million illegal immigrants living in the United States - those brought to the country as children, and who in many cases consider themselves American, speak English and have no ties to their native countries.

    Critics of the bill called it a backdoor to amnesty that would encourage more foreigners to sneak into the United States in hopes of being legalized eventually.

    The Mexican-born Meza said the vote makes it harder for her to finance graduate school to get a doctorate in education policy and become a professor.

    But Meza, who came to the country when she was 2, said she'll find a way - just as she did baby-sitting, tutoring and waiting tables to pay for college even though her degree now lies covered in dust in her living room, unused.

    "It's not going to stop my educational goals," she said.

    The legislation was proposed almost a decade ago. But it got its closest shot at getting passed this year after students stepped up their activism by making thousands of calls to lawmakers and leading marches and demonstrations. Several activists were arrested for refusing to leave Arizona Sen. John McCain's office.

    The House of Representatives passed the measure earlier this month, but the Senate fell five votes short of the 60 needed to win its enactment.

    Now, immigrant advocates who had touted the bill as a first push toward a broader legalization of immigrants will be working to deflect anticipated efforts by Republicans to ramp up restrictions on immigration.

    "All of us are definitely preparing for much more defensive work," said Marielena Hincapie, executive director of the National Immigration Law Center.


    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/co ... c-politics

  2. #2
    Senior Member thedramaofmylife's Avatar
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    Enough is enough, when will it get through their thick skulls that Americans don't want this and NEVER will?
    "Mother Sick of Sending Her Child to A School Overflowing With Anchors and Illegals!"
    http://the-drama-of-my-life.blogspot.com

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    Quote Originally Posted by thedramaofmylife
    Enough is enough, when will it get through their thick skulls that Americans don't want this and NEVER will?
    We have to tell Congress that we do not want Illegals walking their halls,and trying to Influence THE AMERICAN PEOPLES REPRESENTATIVES They should NOT be allowed there,and If they come,they should be arrested. They are growing bolder because we refuse to ENFORCE OUR LAWS. Congress MAKES THE LAWS THAT THEY THEMSELVES ARE NOT ENFORCING

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    The Mexican-born Meza said the vote makes it harder for her to finance graduate school to get a doctorate in education policy and become a professor
    Great! Just what this country needs...another la raza militant professor who hates this country because we have not relented on her demands for amnesty!

    No thanks!
    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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    We need another Eisenhour. Obama is a whimpy failure.

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    Senior Member LadyStClaire's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by NoBueno
    The Mexican-born Meza said the vote makes it harder for her to finance graduate school to get a doctorate in education policy and become a professor
    Great! Just what this country needs...another la raza militant professor who hates this country because we have not relented on her demands for amnesty!

    No thanks!
    THAT AND THE FACT THAT THEY THINK WE OWE THEM A FREE EDUCATION FROM GRADE K-12 AND THEN ON TO COLLEGE AND EVEN ON TO GRADUATE SCHOOL. A LOT OF AMERICANS HAVE WORKED THEIR WAY THROUGH MEDICAL SCHOOL AND SO ON. SO SHE AND OTHERS LIKE HER CAN DO THE SAME. IF SHE HAD GONE TO SCHOOL IN HER NATIVE MEXICO FROM GRADE 1-12, HER FAMILY WOULD HAVE HAD TO PAY FOR HER EDUCATION THERE. THEY NEED TO DEMAND A FREE EDUCATION FROM THE MEXICAN GOVERNMENT INSTEAD OF COMING HERE AT AGE 2 AND THINKING THAT THE AMERICAN PEOPLE OWE THEM THAT EDUCATION, BECAUSE WE DON'T DON'T BE A COWARD IN YOUR OWN COUNTRY. THEY OWE YOU SO MAKE YOUR DEMANDS OF THEM AND NOT US.

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    lingo

    I betcha Fox News starts with that lingo also because they already dropped the word "illegal" in their coverage and say "someone who was not supposed to be in the country" or "undocumented"

  8. #8
    Senior Member stevetheroofer's Avatar
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    But Meza, who came to the country when she was 2, said she'll find a way - just as she did baby-sitting, tutoring and waiting tables to pay for college even though her degree now lies covered in dust in her living room, unused.
    Yeah! how many Americans degrees are laying there with dust on them!
    Her degree will be an asset to Mexico.
    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at http://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  9. #9
    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
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    The Mexican-born Meza said the vote makes it harder for her to finance graduate school to get a doctorate in education policy and become a professor.


    Just what we don't need any more of, thank you but no thanks. Deport her and deport her now. She can go be an education professor on Mexico's payroll where she belongs.
    A Nation Without Borders Is Not A Nation - Ronald Reagan
    Save America, Deport Congress! - Judy

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

  10. #10
    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by NoBueno
    The Mexican-born Meza said the vote makes it harder for her to finance graduate school to get a doctorate in education policy and become a professor
    Great! Just what this country needs...another la raza militant professor who hates this country because we have not relented on her demands for amnesty!

    No thanks!


    Exactly, NoBueno.
    A Nation Without Borders Is Not A Nation - Ronald Reagan
    Save America, Deport Congress! - Judy

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

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