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  1. #1
    Senior Member mapwife's Avatar
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    Slanted AP story perpetuates negative images

    Some of the following incident truly can be attributed to hate groups, but a lot of what is in this article is from sources like the President calling Minutemen "Vigilantes."

    http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/I/ ... SECTION=US
    Jun 5, 2:30 EDT

    Immigration Debate Stirs Racial Tensions

    By ERIN TEXEIRA
    AP National Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) -- As the fight over immigration reform drags on, an ominous undercurrent to the debate - racism - is becoming more pronounced.

    From muttered ethnic slurs to violent attacks, activists say an anti-immigrant backlash seems to be growing in America's neighborhoods and workplaces. A few political leaders have called proposed immigration measures before Congress "racist."

    "The climate has gotten demonstrably worse and it is racially charged," said Devin Burghart of the Center for New Community, which tracks anti-immigrant activity. "It's not simply a debate about immigration policy. ... It's about race and national identity and who and what we are as Americans."

    Some activists say the House of Representatives started it.

    When lawmakers passed a bill in December that would make illegal immigrants felons, many felt that was a swipe at Latinos, who make up 80 percent of the nation's estimated 11 million illegal immigrants. Former President Jimmy Carter has said the bill had "racist overtones," and that feeling helped push more than 1 million demonstrators to attend street rallies in recent months.

    Some reacted the same way after the Senate passed an amendment to its immigration bill last month that declared English the national language. Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, a Nevada Democrat, called that "racist" and "divisive."

    The amendment's sponsor, Oklahoma Republican Sen. James Inhofe, replied that Reid's statements were "ridiculous." Republican Rep. James Sensenbrenner of Wisconsin, who wrote much of the House bill, issued a study on six countries' immigration policies and found that five - including Mexico - make illegal entry into their nation a criminal offense.

    But Luis Valenzuela, of the Long Island Immigration Alliance in New York, said the measures feel hostile to many immigrants. The bills "set (an) overall climate which is quite racist," he said. "That elicits action by extremists."

    Mark Potok of the Southern Poverty Law Center, which has tracked hate crimes for decades, said that hate groups "consistently try and exploit any public discussion that has some kind of racial angle, and immigration has worked for hate groups in America better than any issue in years."

    The Anti-Defamation League, a nonprofit that fights anti-Semitism and other bias, put out a report last month that said "hateful and racist rhetoric" aimed at Latino immigrants had grown "to a level unprecedented in recent years."

    The report did not give an overall figure for hate speech and hate crimes, but detailed numerous examples including:

    - Two men in Tennessee who were sentenced to prison in December for shattering windows and painting Nazi symbols in a local Mexican market.

    - Internet video games, such as one called "Border Patrol," urge players to shoot characters drawn as Latino caricatures.

    - New Jersey Internet radio talk show host Hal Turner posted an "ethnic cleansing manual" on his Web site days after the massive May 1 protests.

    Near Houston, two white teenagers were arrested in April, accused of beating a Latino youth and sodomizing him with a pipe. Days later, on Long Island, a white teen was accused of threatening two Latinos with a machete and a chain saw. Police say ethnic slurs were used in each case.

    In Herndon, Va., opponents of a day laborer work site regularly picket it, taking photographs of workers and threatening to follow them home, said Bill Threlkeld, director of Project Hope and Harmony, a nonprofit that runs the site.

    When a man protesting the site wore a "Whites Only" T-shirt, a neighborhood controversy had become an ethnic issue, Threlkeld said.

    Sociologist Gonzalo Santos of California State University at Bakersfield said immigration is just the latest example of social policy issues taking on racial overtones in America.

    "People talk about immigration as if race doesn't matter, saying 'No, I don't have anything against immigrants or Mexicans, it's just the illegal part of it I don't like.' But those are code words," he said. "We experience race in this country through issues like welfare policy, anti-poverty programs and now immigration."

    Cecilia Munoz of the National Council of La Raza said it's important for immigration advocates not to slip into bias themselves. Most people on the other side are engaging in civil discussions focused on public policy, not ethnicity, she said.

    "The assumption is that we believe everybody who disagrees with us in this debate must be a racist but that's absolutely false," Munoz said. "But we are feeling the effects of what can only be described as racism and hatred.

    "We get letters with ethnic slurs. I've personally been called 'wetback' and a word beginning with 'n' that I don't like to say. This is in the last two months."

    Increasingly, security is a concern. For the first time at its annual conference last year, La Raza offered a program to community groups on how to stay safe amid harassment.
    Illegal aliens remain exempt from American laws, while they DEMAND American rights...

  2. #2
    Senior Member CountFloyd's Avatar
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    Cecilia Munoz of the National Council of La Raza said it's important for immigration advocates not to slip into bias themselves. Most people on the other side are engaging in civil discussions focused on public policy, not ethnicity, she said.

    "The assumption is that we believe everybody who disagrees with us in this debate must be a racist but that's absolutely false," Munoz said. "But we are feeling the effects of what can only be described as racism and hatred.
    The irony of a group that calls itself "The Race" complaining about racism is right out of George Orwell.
    It's like hell vomited and the Bush administration appeared.

  3. #3
    Administrator ALIPAC's Avatar
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    I knew this article was a complete load of crap as soon as I read the line ""The climate has gotten demonstrably worse and it is racially charged," said Devin Burghart of the Center for New Community"

    Devin Burghart finally got his name in a paper again.

    Burghart and crew have demonstrated they have no interest in fighting racism. They just want to spread lies about people and groups and use their willingness to be hatchet men for the Globalists to get their names in the media.

    And to label the fine people of Herndon that way. That is such a disgusting thing to do. Putting Herndon on the list with neo nazi murderers?

    And although these crime scenes are tragic, they are completely anecdotal compared to the thousands upon thousand of Americans being slaughtered by illegal aliens out there.

    What kind of sick puppy points their fingers at a handful of suspected cases like these while ignoring the bodies on Americans that you could stack into a stadium that would be alive today if it were not for the hard illegal immigration promoting behaviors of unscrupulous people like Devin Burghart.

    W
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