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  1. #1
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    Gang of Eight? More Like Gang of Snakes

    Gang of Eight? More Like Gang of Snakes

    By Mark Mayberry / 28 June 2013

    There is a lie that is permeating within recesses of our beloved Republican Party. It is a lie that is certainly going to end political careers in the very near future. What is this lie you ask? It is that if we swallow amnesty for illegal aliens that they are going to stop being big government minorities and vote for our guy.

    This supposed “Gang of Eight” bill is a nightmare and it is a nightmare for many reasons. The first is that it is being filled with an ever-widening amount of amendments that amount to nothing more than amnesty and money for young people and those who have disregarded our sovereignty and spit in the face of our rule of law.
    When this column is finished many of you will most likely comment below that I am a racist or that I am bigot and some of you may even cap it off with a nice liberal sentence like, “Mark, no human being is illegal.” So, instead of talking to each and every person who leaves me this comment this is what I am going to say: The facts in this column are solid and I encourage you to check them out. I don’t apologize for these facts or that I have told them to you; if you are waiting for me to cry and beg for forgiveness like Paula Dean, tune back in when hell freezes over.
    Let’s start by looking at this thing by the numbers. How many immigrants are we talking about here? Roughly 11million people will be given amnesty. To give you an idea: Latino immigrants hold a 50-1 advantage over European immigrants. We take in ten times as many people from El Salvador as we do from Australia. So the idea that wanting to seal the border in order to balance out our racial make up in this country isn’t racist, it’s just smart. We have more Latino immigrants than we know what to do with now, why would we welcome more?
    On to the Republican Party “expanding” it’s base to include Latinos. Well, first of all it’s important to understand that, in the last polling, Latinos made up a mere 8.4% of the electorate. Only 48% of eligible Hispanic voters turned out to the polls. So, I guess Marco Rubio and John McCain think we should sell our souls and our party down the river for eight percent of the vote? That’s eight percent if we got lucky and won them all over!
    Finally, there is a provision in this bill that would allow certain crimes to be ignored if committed by one of these illegal aliens. The crimes range from domestic violence to tax fraud to identity theft. If you or I were to commit these crimes we would be spending some time in the big house.
    Speaking of the big house, a lot of these “undocumented Americans” seem to have quite a persuasion for violent crime. According to Pew, forty percent of all persons sent to federal prisons in 2007 were Hispanics. Three quarters of them are here illegally. One third of these convictions were drug related offenses while close to ten percent were for other crimes, particularly violent ones.
    What we must not fail to miss is that these people are coming here illegally and undocumented from what is the most violent place in the Western Hemisphere. According to Stop The Drug War, since the drug wars began in 2006, 70,000 people have been killed in Mexico, a number matching the civil war zone in Syria. Yet the Gang of Eight thinks that only the nice Mexicans are sneaking into America.



    Read more: http://clashdaily.com/2013/06/gang-o...#ixzz2XcNCxzzx
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    There are many who are in that camp and I prefer to call them all gang of traitors

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    Rush Limbaugh: ‘Wait Until the Republican Party Hears About This’

    Jun. 28, 2013 10:00pm Jason Howerton



    A caller from Lubbock, Texas, on Friday told conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh that some illegal immigrants in his area don’t want amnesty because it means federal income tax and fiercer competition for cheap labor.
    “Today I went out and was doing some ag’ work on some of the farms out here and got to talking to some of these guys, asking them about what they think about this. And they’re very, very concerned,” the caller said. “A lot of them were telling me, ‘Well, we really don’t want to become United States citizens.’”
    He went on: “There’s two things that they brought up that really scared me. They do not want to become United States citizens. I said, ‘Why not?’ They’re afraid that the United States government is going to take so much taxes out of their paychecks once they have to pay into the federal income tax.”
    “Are you kidding me on this?” Limbaugh replied.
    “I am dead serious. They do not want to become American citizens,” the caller said.
    The Texas caller said the illegal immigrants are also concerned that immigration reform will lead to a surge of immigrants, forcing them to “compete against cheaper labor.”
    “You’ve got to be kidding me,” Limbaugh reacted. “This is the theater of the absurd. So we have illegals worried that more of them will cause wages to fall and maybe jobs to be lost?”
    “Correct. Now these guys are very, very concerned about this,” the caller said.
    Limbaugh then launched into this diatribe about the GOP:



    You know, wait until the Republican Party hears about this. They’re doing all of this to be loved by the Hispanics. Wait until the Republican Party finds out that a lot of the illegals currently here don’t want any more! You know, I’d like to be in the room with Steve Schmidt or some Republican walks in to Rubio and says, “Hey, you know what? We may have a problem here.”
    “Yeah? What’s that?”
    “A lot of the illegals here don’t want amnesty and they don’t want it for anybody not yet here in the country.”
    “Oh? Why?”
    “Because they don’t want to become citizens and they don’t want competition for their jobs. They don’t want their wages to fall.”
    The Republican will say, “You mean we’re doing this and the Hispanics are going to get mad at us?”
    “Yes, it’s entirely possible.”
    Oh, it’s a fantasy, but wouldn’t it be funny if it were true?
    Now of course, the caller’s claims are purely speculation — but it at least makes sense.

    http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013...rs-about-this/

  3. #3
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    Florida Moves to Recall Marco Rubio

    Posted on June 28, 2013 by Tim Brown

    Earlier in the week, we told you how Arizona has had it with Senators John McCain and Jeff Flake over their persistent push of the Senate’s amnesty bill and began petitions to recall them.
    Well it looks like the people of Florida have had their fill of Senator Marco Rubio. A petition has been set up to recall the Florida Senator following his vote on Monday concerning the Senate’s amnesty bill.
    The petition has already received 800 signatures at the time of this article. However, it should be noted that the petition is to be signed only by Florida residents, though many from other states have not only signed, but expressed their outrage along with their signature.
    William May sponsored the petition and stated that “Marco Rubio in his own words previously while serving in the state legislature; during his campaign for office and his recent rhetoric on TV, Talk Radio, commercials, emails and surveys sent to his constituents stating that the border must be secured first then path to citizenship. The senator now has changed his promise to suit what he decides is in his best interest and not honor his own commitment to his campaign, voters and supporters thereby disenfranchising them.”
    “Had the Senator expressed his true beliefs on illegal immigration over his term in the state legislature and during his campaign it is doubtful that he would have acquired the nomination to run as the republican candidate for Senator from Florida and most assuredly the election results would be in doubt for his favor,” May added.
    May then concludes, “Due to his own words and actions Senator Marco Rubio has nullified the votes cast for him by disenfranchising voters with glib and false rhetoric corrupting the good faith and will of the voters whose recourse now is to recall the Senator and force him to reveal the factual representation of himself and allow the voters to now judge him based on his true beliefs, values not on false and misleading campaign rhetoric statements.”
    Indeed Rubio has not held up his oath on the immigration issue. In fact, one can truly wonder if Rubio ever was a conservative. In fact, I previously wrote about Rubio’s endorsement of Karl Rove’s anti-Tea Party PAC and cited my friend Joel McDurmon’s article in which he allowed Rubio to speak for himself in regards to what he is and what he attempts to cause voters to perceive him as. McDurmon wrote:

    Rubio still teaches a class at Florida International University, and one recent morning he was telling his students—almost all Hispanic immigrants or children of immigrants—how politics really works. His topic was the Florida House of Representatives, and he didn’t need notes to explain why the legislative body he once led is so partisan and polarized. “If you know the only way to lose your seat is to get out-conservatived in a primary, you’ll never let anyone get to your right,” Rubio said. He’s clearly a political animal. “I’m not telling you this is how it should be,” he said with a grin. “But it’s how it is. This isn’t a good-government class. This is a politics class.
    Rubio’s detractors, and even some admirers, suggest that his career so far has been less about good government than politics and self-promotion. His autobiography recounts virtually no substantive achievements beyond a hometown tree-planting project. In the class, he devoted much of his time to recounting the machinations that persuaded his colleagues to elect him speaker: “You raise money for them. You befriend them. You make sure your kids are friends with their kids. And then you cut the best deal you can.” He didn’t mention that the deal he reportedly cut to secure North Florida support for his candidacy revised funding formulas at the expense of his South Florida constituents. . . .
    Rubio’s numbers have dropped since February. According to Rasmussen, in poll dated June 24, 2013, 58% of Republican voters view him favorably. That’s down 15 points since February. Sixteen percent said they viewed Rubio as unfavorable and 25% said they were undecided. This came as many see Rubio as a 2016 presidential candidate, even though he is ineligible to be president.
    Rubio also voted on Thursday to pass the Senate amnesty bill that he helped to author and promote, though he was incredibly deceptive about what was in it, such as these six things and the $5,000 penalty for hiring American citizens over legalized aliens that Texas Senator Ted Cruz pointed out. Yes, I think Florida would make the correct move in recalling Senator Rubio.

    Tim Brown is the Editor of Freedom Outpost and a regular contributor to The D.C. Clothesline.
    Follow The D.C. Clothesline on Facebook

    http://dcclothesline.com/2013/06/28/...l-marco-rubio/

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