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07-03-2014, 12:25 PM #1
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The Golden State Fades Into Mexifornia
The Golden State Fades Into Mexifornia
By Thomas Paine / 3 July 2014
It is a pathetic July Fourth.
Celebrating the birthday of the USA as it is under attack on several fronts, most prominently by the 20-30 million criminals/illegals, most from Mexico, who demand they are owed all the rights and benefits America's Founding Fathers bestowed upon their fellow Americans and posterity.
News reports portray hobbled American citizens pleading to retain some scrap of control over their country. The recent Los Angeles meeting of the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV), to frame the design of driver licenses for criminals/illegals in the USA, is just one example. The criminals/illegals have a plethora of demands. Especially that the card look like USA citizens' cards and that they not be inconvenienced in having to provide much identification.
USA citizens reject the notion of giving any license. Such action will not make roads safer. As soon as a card is available, fakes will be sold on every street corner and roads will be flooded with even more non-English speaking, ignorant of rules of the road, criminals/illegals.
This unrelenting assault on the Rule of Law and citizens' rights, conjures the need for a declared -
AMERICAN RESISTANCE.
As corrupt elected officials have abandoned the law in favor of allowing the chaos of repeated incursions by criminals/illegals, American Citizens must ramp up resistance on all fronts.
Millions hold there is no legal, moral, ethical imperative that requires Americans to cede their country to Mexico and other countries, which is what is happening. This must be protested to all elected officials and media.
California's legislature, dominated by Democrats, whose actions speak of loyalty south of the border and not to the country and state they are sworn to uphold, is tripping over itself to disadvantage USA citizens.
The favored are Mexican and other Latin citizens who have broken into the USA by stealth, deception or massive invasion, such as the current children overrunning the border.
American citizens are being economically and culturally raped by the concerted assaults by those who have no legal permission to be in the USA.
The arrogance of these criminals/illegals is stunning. American citizens are reduced to the plight of being supplicants in their own country to stem the tide of the rampant lawlessness, with the cooperation of politicians and law makers. The criminals/illegals bring with them their habits of crime, violence, greed, disrespect for law, and contempt for America, while retaining loyalty to the country that abused them. Terrorists and other dangers lurk within the hordes invading.
Mexico's 35 years of organized racketeering, exporting illegal drugs, guns and poor people into the USA for the purpose of psychological warfare, subversion and profit has been wildly successful.
Every year Mexico profits of $30-50 billion from the "poor" people exported into the USA where they take jobs from Americans, undermine education and medical delivery services, while fostering disrespect and crime in communities.
Some of these invaders announce their intention is to "reclaim" their territory. They are delusional and ignorant of history. Apparently, they wish to have the lands once under the control of Mexico in order to allow degeneration into the corruptive state of racist, elitist Mexico.
Virtually all of the regions south of the border show the effects of 400 years of corrupt Spanish Colonial policies unfavorable to the native populations. The history of the countries in that hemisphere are rife with strife, greed and disregard for the indigenous peoples.
The Spanish didn't conquer to bring administrative order, dignity and education to the people, but to harvest gold and silver to finance Spain's endless wars of hundreds of years ago.
Puzzled by the people encountered in Mexico and elsewhere, the Spanish Crown convened a commission to decide if those found were humans or animals. It was decided they were both and so they need not be given the dignity of education and other considerations. This has left the region in shambles, prey to racist, elitist rulers who have little consideration to the native population. Finally, the rampant corruption found in Mexico exported the worst of the region - drugs, crime, poor people - into the USA forcing it to submit to theft of all citizens.
THE AMERICAN RESISTANCE SAYS "NO."
Criminals/illegals are no different from the burglar that breaks into one's house to steal property for the purpose of improving the burglar's life. The Criminals/illegals' motto - "we only want a better life" - is no different from any thief who doesn't hesitate to steal whatever possible.
The other complaint of this group - not to separate families - is specious. There's no Berlin wall around the USA. The families can be united in their home country.
When Ellis Island legal immigrants entered the USA many left their families behind and never saw them again. What makes corrupt Mexico's citizens worthy of so much privilege at the expense of law-abiding USA citizens? Who is behind this invasion to strip American citizens of their country and their treasure?
The media has failed in its Constitutional duty to report the truth.
American Resistance must DEMAND ALL MEDIA TELL THE TRUTH.
USA citizens have the right to control their country, its borders, its culture, its treasure and communities. They are not expendable in the service of America-hating politicians.
A renewed determination to Save America as Founded is here. CITIZENS ARE PROTESTING.
Every citizen is a soldier in this fight.
There is no compromise. Only one side can prevail.
It must be America.
Thomas Paine
Saving America as Founded
Read more at http://eaglerising.com/7121/golden-s...ZAK4uQ722Q5.99
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07-03-2014, 12:46 PM #2NO AMNESTY
Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.
Sign in and post comments here.
Please support our fight against illegal immigration by joining ALIPAC's email alerts here https://eepurl.com/cktGTn
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07-03-2014, 01:20 PM #3
Darrell Issa (R-CA.) Calls For Obama To Restart Deportation Of Dreamers
@ http://www.alipac.us/f9/33-house-rep...9/#post1422067NO AMNESTY
Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.
Sign in and post comments here.
Please support our fight against illegal immigration by joining ALIPAC's email alerts here https://eepurl.com/cktGTn
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07-03-2014, 01:54 PM #4NO AMNESTY
Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.
Sign in and post comments here.
Please support our fight against illegal immigration by joining ALIPAC's email alerts here https://eepurl.com/cktGTn
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07-03-2014, 02:27 PM #5
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07-04-2014, 02:02 PM #6
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Murrieta protesters turn back Border Patrol detainees
Federal officials will appear at a town hall meeting in Murrieta this evening after buses carrying immigrant detainees were blocked by a wall of angry of protesters.
Matt Hansen, Kate Linthicum contact the reporter
PoliticsImmigrationDemocracyActivismU.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
Detainees on a bus turned back by activists, many of them women and children, had crossed the border in Texas
The detainees were bused to Murrieta for processing and supervised release through a religious volunteer group
Amid rising concern over a surge of young immigrants crossing the border illegally, flag-waving protesters blocked three busloads of detainees in Riverside County on Tuesday, preventing them from reaching a Border Patrol processing station in Murrieta.
The buses, carrying about 140 detainees, turned around and headed back to a San Diego-area Border Patrol facility.
------------
FOR THE RECORD
July 2, 8:07 a.m.: The online version of this article included a photo gallery that referred to "residents opposed to immigration." The reference should have been to "residents opposed to illegal immigration."
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Caption Murrieta immigration Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times
Protesters against illegal immigration stand ready at sunrise with their flags at the U.S. Border Patrol station in Murrieta July, 4, 2014. Protesters on both sides of the issue are waiting for the possible arrival of more busloads of immigrant detainees.
Caption Murrieta meeting Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times
A group supporting immigrant rights gathers outside the performing arts building at Murrieta Mesa High School during the town hall meeting.
Caption Murrieta meeting Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times
Members of the community arrive for a town hall meeting in the performing arts building at Murrieta Mesa High School to voice their concerns and listen to public officials over the proposed processing of immigrant detainees at the Murrieta Border Patrol station.
Caption Murrieta meeting Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times
Latin singer Lupillo Rivera is mobbed by followers and supporters after Rivera spoke during the town hall meeting at Murrieta Mesa High School on Wednesday.
Caption Murrieta Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times
Murrieta residents Carol Schlaepfer, left, and Beverly Trigilio boo when President Obama's name is mentioned during a town hall meeting at Vista Murrieta High School.
Police said about 100 to 150 people met the buses a few blocks away from the Border Patrol station, chanting "Go home" and "We want to be safe."
The detainees — many of them women and children from Central America — had crossed the border in Texas recently and were flown to San Diego by the Department of Homeland Security.
They had been bused to Murrieta for processing and supervised release through a religious volunteer group pending appearances in immigration court.
Though the day had been tense and loud, the protests were nonviolent.
The verbal sparring continued Tuesday night, with about 100 marchers supporting the immigrants on one side of Madison Avenue and 50 opposing them on the other, with police in the middle of the street.
NationObama's bid to deport children complicates immigration reform effortSee all related
In a City Council meeting following the protests, Murrieta Mayor Alan Long thanked the crowds for refraining from violence. "The people who live here are passionate about their community, and that's what you're seeing outside today," he said.
The incident came one day after Long urged residents to protest the federal government's decision to move the recent immigrants — the first of what he said was to be a series of arrivals — to the facility in his city.
"Murrieta expects our government to enforce our laws, including the deportation of illegal immigrants caught crossing our borders, not disperse them into our local communities," Long said Monday. The city had defeated two previous attempts to send migrants to the facility, he said.
Roger Cotton, 49, said he drove up from San Diego to wave a flag outside the Border Patrol station.
The people who live here are passionate about their community, and that's what you're seeing outside today. - Murrieta Mayor Alan Long
"I wanted to say that I as an American citizen do not approve of this human disaster that the government has created," Cotton said. He said he believes the migrants who were supposed to be dropped off at the station would be a burden on an already strained system.
"Who's going to pay for them?" he asked. "What kind of criminality will happen?"
Cotton said he decided to go to Murrieta on his own and was surprised to find other protesters there.
He stood with a group of them on the side of the road, chanting "USA" and arguing with a group of counter-protesters who had come to support the immigrants.
Lupillo Rivera, 42, of Temecula, said he was driving by when he noticed the protest. He said somebody shouted that he was an illegal immigrant and should go home.
Rivera, a well-known Mexican banda singer who is a U.S. citizen, went home and returned with several of his friends and bandmates to confront the protesters.
"Our people cook your food," he shouted at them.
"We didn't ask for them to come here," one protester shot back.
Rivera, who is the brother of the late Mexican singer Jenni Rivera, said anybody who would turn away a busload of children was "not human."
"It doesn't matter where a child is from," he said. "He deserves respect and help because he's a child."
Local leaders were critical of the federal government's communication throughout the process, and said after Tuesday's protest that they had been given little notice about the arrivals.
"We were never given sufficient warning by the federal government," said Kim Davidson, a Murrieta city spokeswoman. "When people are scared and don't have all the information, they have a right to react."
It doesn't matter where a child is from. He deserves respect and help because he's a child. - Lupillo Rivera, a well-known Mexican banda singer who is a U.S. citizen
Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials met with city officials in Murrieta and Temecula prior to the protests, said agency spokeswoman Virginia Kice, adding that ICE is aware of concerns in the region.
"We're sensitive to those issues and we're seeking to address them," she said.
At the City Council meeting, city officials and community members took turns addressing the expected arrivals.
"Murrieta is not El Paso, we're not Tucson. This is a small community. We do not have the facilities to feed and clothe people for an extended stay," Councilman Rick Gibbs said. He cited the basic accommodations at the local Border Patrol facility, which, he said, had metal benches and limited lavatories.
This year, Border Patrol agents across the Southwest have detained more than 52,000 unaccompanied minors, with a particular concentration along the Rio Grande border in Texas, according to federal records.
Because of this influx, officials are sending migrants to Border Patrol facilities in less heavily trafficked areas, such as Southern California, for processing and supervised release by ICE agents.
Riverside County Supervisor Jeff Stone said such plans were a surprise to local lawmakers.
"This caught us all by surprise locally," Stone said. "Most local governments are strained as far as providing services even to our local residents, and we're getting 140 traumatized people."
Times staff writer Mark Boster, in Murrieta, contributed to this report.
Follow @katelinthicum for news about immigration and @mtthnsn for news about Southern California
video at link below
http://www.latimes.com/local/la-me-m...702-story.html
JULY 4th 10:13 AM
Protesters gather at Murrieta to await buses of immigrants
Caption Murrieta immigration Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times
Protesters against illegal immigration stand ready at sunrise with their flags at the U.S. Border Patrol station in Murrieta July, 4, 2014. Protesters on both sides of the issue are waiting for the possible arrival of more busloads of immigrant detainees.
Caption Murrieta meeting Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times
A group supporting immigrant rights gathers outside the performing arts building at Murrieta Mesa High School during the town hall meeting.
Caption Murrieta meeting Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times
Members of the community arrive for a town hall meeting in the performing arts building at Murrieta Mesa High School to voice their concerns and listen to public officials over the proposed processing of immigrant detainees at the Murrieta Border Patrol station.
Caption Murrieta meeting Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times
Latin singer Lupillo Rivera is mobbed by followers and supporters after Rivera spoke during the town hall meeting at Murrieta Mesa High School on Wednesday.
Caption Murrieta Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times
Murrieta residents Carol Schlaepfer, left, and Beverly Trigilio boo when President Obama's name is mentioned during a town hall meeting at Vista Murrieta High School.
Tony Perry contact the reporter
PoliticsMigrationImmigrationActivism
Protesters ready in Murrieta, Calif., but it's unknown whether buses with immigrants will arrive
Protesters have gathered near the entrance to a Border Patrol facility in Murrieta on Friday to await buses of undocumented immigrants but whether those buses will arrive is unknown.
Unlike Tuesday when shouting, flag-waving protesters blocked three busloads of immigrants, Murrieta police Friday morning cleared the entry road.
The estimated 100 protesters, including those favoring the immigrants, are being restricted to a "safety zone" away from the road. Many had remained all night at the site, vowing a repeat of Tuesday's blockade.
More than rumors drive Central American youths toward U.S. Tracy Wilkinson
One protester has reportedly been arrested on suspicion of attempting to convince protesters to refuse to abide by police rules.
Earlier this week, federal officials had said that 140 immigrants would arrive Friday at Lindbergh Field in San Diego by charter flight from Texas and then be sent for processing to Murrieta, a community of 105,000 along Interstate 15 in southern Riverside County.
Texas governor calls for sending migrant children back quickly
But in the wake of Tuesday's blockade, officials have declined to announce the schedule. The result is that it is unknown whether buses will arrive at Murrieta or possibly are being rerouted to other facilities where there are few, if any, protesters.
On Thursday night, Murrieta City Manager Rick Dudley issued a "message to the community" calling for greater civility from those opposed to the government's approach to the mass influx of undocumented immigrants.
Tuesday's event, which brought unflattering national news coverage, "was a loss for the city of Murrieta, for the community that we live in and love," said Dudley.
http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/l...704-story.html
Last edited by kathyet2; 07-04-2014 at 02:13 PM.
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07-04-2014, 04:17 PM #7
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Murrieta protest over immigrant kids exposes political divisions
Carla Marinucci
Updated 8:10 am, Friday, July 4, 2014
1 of 3
- A supporter of refugee children joins a rally in San Diego on Wednesday. Photo: Gregory Bull, Associated Press
An immigration standoff in the Riverside County city of Murrieta - where hundreds blocked buses full of Central American child and adult detainees this week and chanted, "Send them back!" at a town hall meeting - threatens to reopen old political wounds in California as partisan forces gear up for the fall elections.
Republicans in particular are divided over how to react to what happened when federal officials tried to transfer 140 immigrants from Texas holding centers, which are overflowing with thousands of unaccompanied minors fleeing strife in their Central American homelands.
Flag-waving protesters outside a detention center in Murrieta, a city of 103,000 in southwestern Riverside County, succeeded in turning away three buses carrying the refugees Tuesday. The buses were diverted to another federal facility.
That may not be the last of it, however - city officials have been told to expect busloads every 72 hours.
GOP Assemblyman Tim Donnelly of Twin Peaks (San Bernardino County), a Tea Party favorite who finished third in the June 3 gubernatorial primary, announced plans to visit Murrieta to support the protests, which he said are bipartisan, and to pray at the border on Friday. He also called for the impeachment of President Obama, who he said has been "complicit in the trafficking of these children."
Meanwhile, Ruben Barrales, who heads Grow Elect - a political action committee focused on bolstering the number of Republican Latino elected leaders in California - called on his party to renew efforts at immigration reform.
The party's standard-bearer in the November governor's election, Neel Kashkari - the son of Indian immigrants who says he is strongly "pro-immigration" - tried to play it down the middle, saying the protests weren't partisan and that they dramatized the need both for immigration reform and increased border enforcement.
'Go home'
Democratic strategist Garry South said the images of conservative protesters waving "Go home" signs at child immigrants could infuriate Latinos in a state where the GOP has never won back the Latino voters who abandoned it over Proposition 187. The 1994 measure, barring undocumented immigrants from receiving public health care, education and other state services, was approved by voters but voided by the courts.
"It's another example of Republicans shooting themselves in the sombrero," South said.
"When you're in a city and you have busloads of undocumented people showing up ... (Americans) can sympathize and empathize" with the protesters, South said. "But when you strip that away and look at it in sheer political terms," he said, there could be a heavy price for Republican candidates who don't "strongly disavow" the tone of such protests.
"If they can't figure out a way to connect to Latinos, it will kill the party," South said.
Kashkari countered that the most vocal anti-immigrant protesters in Murrieta represent "an extreme minority of Californians," adding, "I don't think this is going to favor Democrats and hurt Republicans.
"I come at this as someone who believes immigration has a lot of value for our country," Kashkari said. But "we really do have to enforce the border. People are saying this cannot continue."
Donnelly, co-founder of the California Minutemen, a self-styled border patrol group, said the protests are a reflection of frustration from "the left, the right and the middle" about the exploitation, trafficking and in some cases sexual abuse of thousands of children coming across the border from Central America.
Donnelly's statement
"People all across the political spectrum have applauded my call to protect the children, and also to protect the sovereignty of this country, from our government in being complicit in undermining the rule of law," Donnelly said in a statement. "We need to send a signal that our borders are not wide open, and you can't use children as a human shield."
(Page 2 of 2)
Barrales, whose organization has worked to revitalize the connection between Latinos and the state GOP, said, "I understand people's frustration with the lack of immigration reform and with doing something on the bigger picture."
But he appeared with a bipartisan group Thursday that included representatives of Fwd.us - the immigration-reform political action committee founded by Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg - to underscore what he said should be the real takeaway of the crisis.
"What we need to do is take the long-term view - we need to make sure we get bipartisan immigration reform," Barrales said.
Reform blocked
For months, the main impediment to such reform has been House Republicans, who blocked action on immigration changes. Obama said this week that he was giving up on getting a bill through Congress this year.
Barrales said "surveys show there is overwhelming support" for immigration reform, including among a majority of Republican voters. He said he will continue to push that agenda and work to "keep building and identifying Latino leaders who can help the GOP grow."
Crisis conditions
Democratic Rep. Eric Swalwell of Dublin got a firsthand look at what the Murrieta protests were all about Thursday as the House Homeland Security Committee held a hearing at a Border Patrol detention center in McAllen, Texas. In a phone interview, he told of seeing hundreds of youths in "gut-wrenching" conditions, including as many as 40 children being housed in 300-square-foot rooms.
Swalwell said he spoke to some of the detained children, and that it's clear "politics is the farthest thing from their minds."
"They didn't come here because of policy or because President Obama sent them an Evite," he said. "They came here because they're escaping harsh conditions in their country; Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador have the three highest murder rates in the world."
He said that while protesters make their case in Murrieta, they must also understand that "if it was easy to send them back to where they came from, we would do that."
After seeing and talking to the children, Swalwell said, it's harder to suggest that the answer is only, "We have to put up higher walls."
Carla Marinucci is senior political writer at The San Francisco Chronicle. E-mail: cmarinucci@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @cmarinucci
http://www.sfgate.com/news/article/I...al-5599341.php
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07-05-2014, 10:54 AM #8
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ThePeteSantilliShow recorded live on 7/4/14 at 7:59 PM PDT
http://www.ustream.tv/channel/thepetesantillishow?utm_source=crowd-live-backend&utm_medium=visit-channel&utm_campaign=notifications
This is an update on yesterday from Pete Santilli. On the 4th of July they brought """busloads"" and ""airplane loads"" of Illegals to San Diego and points beyond...If that doesn't tell you to wake up I don't know what will!! Enforce the Laws, what part of illegal don't they understand!! It is very apparent we all do but our Government is working against the people of this Country!!!Last edited by kathyet2; 07-05-2014 at 11:07 AM.
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