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  1. #1
    Senior Member Brian503a's Avatar
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    Minutemen influence claimed on scaring day laborers in TX

    http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mp ... an/3328057

    Aug. 28, 2005, 10:15AM

    Minutemen influence claimed
    Organizers close a meeting to the media because the day laborers are said to be fearful

    By EDWARD HEGSTROM
    Copyright 2005 Houston Chronicle

    The Minutemen aren't scheduled to patrol the streets of Houston for another month, but already they're having an effect among day laborers.

    A day labor organizational meeting scheduled for Saturday had to be closed to the media because the workers are afraid, organizers said.

    The leaders also say they have noticed that fewer contractors are picking up workers from the corners where day laborers, most of them undocumented immigrants, gather, which they also attribute to fear of the Minutemen.

    "They're very scared," Maria Jimenez, a leader of the Coalition Against Intolerance and for Respect, said of the workers.

    The coalition organized the meeting Saturday so that day laborers would have the chance to meet with Francisco Pacheco from the National Day Labor Organizing Network, a group based in Los Angeles.

    Jimenez said she could not estimate how many day laborers would be able to attend the meeting.

    The Minuteman Civil Defense Corps, an Arizona group calling for reduced illegal immigration, has announced that it will begin Operation Spotlight in Houston this October. Minuteman volunteers will observe day laborers and write down the license plate numbers of the contractors who pick them up.

    "The situation here is becoming more delicate," Pacheco said after touring day-labor sites Friday.


    Response to arrival
    He said Saturday's talks were to focus on educating workers on their rights, and coaching them on how to respond to the arrival of the Minutemen.

    "The correct response, of course, is nonviolent," he said.

    Having worked in areas such as Long Island, New York, where conflicts have risen between residents and day laborers, Pacheco said he thinks such tension hurts an area. "It divides a community," he said.

    In addition to a drop in contractors, Jimenez said she has noted that some day laborers have abandoned their usual corners, which she thinks is driven by fear. She and other organizers concede that it might encourage the Minutemen even more to hear they're already having an effect.

    "This is already starting," Juan Alvarez, another leader of the coalition, said of the fear. "We can't reverse it."
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  2. #2
    Senior Member steelerbabe's Avatar
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    Great job Minutemen Keep up the good work!

  3. #3
    Senior Member Richard's Avatar
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    Just as in Mexico day laborers without the legal right to work are supposed to be scared. In Mexico the government arrests and deports people who try to work there without first getting a work permit. In Mexico the employer is the one to obtain the work permit and it is not automatic. A lot of the applications are turned down. In the United States we have this warped situation where the legal order is weighed for compliance against demands on us made by the illegals.
    I support enforcement and see its lack as bad for the 3rd World as well. Remittances are now mostly spent on consumption not production assets. Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  4. #4

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    Just imagine the effect a few deportations would have!

    A deportation sweep once a month would have a great effect on clearing up this problem. If the authorities would just enforce the law.

    They like to pretend that it is such a difficult situation to control but it isn't. Old men in lawn chairs have proven that to us on the border.

    I know of a guy that owns property next to a day labor center. He actually has to shovel human feces off the ground! They have porta potty's in the labor center too but they don't always use it.

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