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  1. #1
    caasduit's Avatar
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    Angie Morfin Vargas her speech Sept 2nd

    Angie's speech Sacramento, CA Sept 2, 2008


    Good morning fellow Americans,


    I would like to start by thanking you for giving me the opportunity to speak before you today, on this very important matter of sanctuary cities.


    My name is Angie Morfin Vargas, I come before you from the Salinas Valley, which likes to be known as the “Lettuce Capitalâ€

  2. #2
    Senior Member vmonkey56's Avatar
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    Cold Chill! How terrible!
    As the years pasted we found out the person who killed him wasn't from Salinas. He was from Huntington Park in Southern California. He was in town visiting family for the holidays. He was an illegal alien. The police had stopped him two hours before he had killed Ruben, but because illegal aliens were allowed to have driver’s licenses back then they gave him a warning and let him go. Two hours later he was driving in my mother’s neighborhood and killed my son.
    Why would I want to eat in a restaurant with an illegal behind me?
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  3. #3
    Senior Member WhatMattersMost's Avatar
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    Latino immigration reformers: ignoring conventional wisdom, Americans of Hispanic descent are at the forefront in the battle against illegal immigration
    New American, The, March 20, 2006 by Michael E. Telzrow
    E-mail Print Link Lupe Moreno and Angie Morfin Vargas grew up the daughters of a bracero. Their father was one of the five million temporary contract guest workers who crossed the U.S./Mexican border between 1942 and 1964 to work in America's agricultural fields. Like many other braceros, Jesus "Jesse" Morfin periodically returned to Mexico, but ultimately settled in the United States. With his American-born wife and their four children, Morfin lived a dual life--publicly a hard-working immigrant, privately a smuggler of illegal aliens.

    Lupe Moreno helped her father run a safe house for illegal immigrants, in addition to attending school, running a household, and toiling in the fields. Today she lives in the same Santa Ana, California, house she grew up in, but in an unlikely twist of fate, she and her sister Angie now devote much of their time to campaigning against illegal immigration. As president of the 200-member Latino Americans for Immigration Reform, Lupe Moreno has emerged as one of California's most vocal Hispanic activists speaking out against the illegal immigration invasion.

    Forged by Adversity

    The second eldest of four children, Lupe Moreno spent her early years in the northern California town of Cottonwood. It was there during the mid-1960s that her father first started running his immigrant smuggling operation. Jesse Morfin, a paper mill employee, paid smugglers between $350 and $400 for each illegal delivered. At first, only family members were smuggled, but Morfin learned to avoid the smuggler's fee by expanding the pipeline to include non-family members. Upon delivery, he would then distribute the illegal workers to the ranches in Tehema or Shasta Counties. Smuggling was a profitable business, but the life of a coyote was filled with risk. The stress associated with the illegal operation eventually destroyed the Morfin family. Lupe's mother left her dad and kids when Lupe was only 10 years old, and relocated to Los Angeles, no longer willing to tolerate the constant flow of strangers and fearful of prosecution.

    Shortly thereafter, Mr. Morfin moved to Santa Ana, California, in a last-ditch effort to restore the broken marriage. His refusal to abandon the smuggling trade, however, doomed the reconciliation attempt to failure. Mrs. Morfin refused to reunite with her husband, and conditions worsened in the Morfin household after it became apparent that the marriage was irrevocably broken. Intimidated by a growing number of aggressive visitors, Mr. Morfin took long absences from the scene, visiting only occasionally to give Lupe money to pay the bills and purchase food.

    Lupe Moreno, an 11-year-old girl in a parentless household, now assumed the responsibility of caring for her siblings. Without a mother or father to protect them, the four school-aged Morfin children were physically and emotionally abused by illegal immigrants passing through the house. It was a brutal existence that would scar Lupe and her sister Angie for life.

    Jesse Morfin was eventually arrested by the INS in 1973. After serving three months in prison, he relocated to King City, California, where he found work in the fields. At age 16, Lupe dropped out of school and married Marcial Moreno, a Mexican national and illegal immigrant who had been living in the Morfin household. After giving birth to her fifth child at age 22, she finally earned her high school diploma. Afterwards, she secured a position in the county immunization department. It was there, while serving large numbers of illegal immigrants, that Moreno began to realize the true economic and social cost of the illegal alien invasion. The story might have ended there, but in 1990, an event occurred that profoundly altered the lives of Lupe Moreno and her sister, Angie Morfin Vargas, and compelled them to take action.

    An Activist Awakening

    Ruben Morfin, Angie Morfin Vargas' son, was just 13 years old in 1990 when he was shot in the head by Ezequiel Mariscal while walking home from a party. The killer, Mariscal, a gang member and Mexican national, fled to Mexico, where he was eventually apprehended by Mexican authorities with assistance from San Diego's Foreign Prosecution Unit. Mexico's fugitive-friendly laws prevented Mariscal's extradition, but he is now serving a 20-year sentence without parole in the state of Jalisco, Mexico.

    For Angie Morfin Vargas, her son's death was a brutal call to action. The former Chicana activist felt particularly wounded because Mariscal, an illegal alien, was the sort of person she might have befriended in previous times. "It was a slap in the face," Morfin Vargas told THE NEW AMERICAN. "For the first time in my life, I wasn't sure who I was." Once a proponent of unfettered immigration, Morfin Vargas now began to take a critical look at America's immigration policy. Sensing a link between illegal immigration and increased gang activity, she formed Mothers Taking Action Against Gang Violence and began to lobby for an end to the nation's de facto open border policy.

    ***********

    Interesting family history.
    It's Time to Rescind the 14th Amendment

  4. #4
    Senior Member joazinha's Avatar
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    During the May 2006 "Rumble at the Ranch" near Crawford, TX, Ms. Angie Morfin, her sister Lupe Moreno and I met for the first time. They are GREAT American patriots!

  5. #5
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    Angie and Lupe are great patriots and have done many good things with LAIR. I saw a video on YouTube of Lupe talking about Ruben's death sometime back. I'll try and find the link.
    ProEnglish:The English Language Advocates
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  6. #6
    miss_trixxi's Avatar
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    my daughter

    my name is Dianne and I have a daugther named Veronica her father is Roberto and he's also an illegal immigrant. i think it's very irresponsible of him to threaten me that he will change his name and move away if he have to pay more than $200 for child support. he complain that he want to see his daughter because he's in California and I'm in Texas, yet he doesn't make any effort to see Veronica.

    I don't know what to do at this point. All I know is that I don't want him to go back to Mexico and I'm scared that border patrols will send him back or something because he doesn't have any rights to be in America. I hate all the illegal immigrants who come to America and make children with legal citizen because they know that they can get away from paying for child support. if anyone have any suggestion of what i should do, please feel free to email me at {mod edit}

  7. #7

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    Re: my daughter

    Quote Originally Posted by miss_trixxi
    I don't know what to do at this point. All I know is that I don't want him to go back to Mexico and I'm scared that border patrols will send him back or something because he doesn't have any rights to be in America. I hate all the illegal immigrants who come to America and make children with legal citizen because they know that they can get away from paying for child support. if anyone have any suggestion of what i should do, please feel free to email me at {mod edit}
    First I want to say welcome to Alipac. It seems to me that the father of your baby will not help you no matter where he is. I think the best thing you can do is turn him in to the INS and move on with your life. You sound like a young lady that has her whole life ahead of her. Show your daughter love and make the best of this situation as possible.
    God Bless!!
    "Ask not what your country can do for you but ask what you can do for your country"-John F. Kennedy


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