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02-24-2006, 07:11 PM #1
MACHISMO COWARDICE - Attack Children
http://www.humaneventsonline.com/blog-d ... p?id=12678
Illegal Immigrant Allies Threaten Children of Border Security Group
By: Amanda B. Carpenter
Posted 02/23/06
05:32 PM
Casa de Maryland, a taxpayer funded group that assists illegal immigrants, has made a public threat to the children of the grassroots Minuteman Civil Defense Corps that have made headlines since last fall monitoring day labor centers in the Washington DC area.
An article published yesterday by the Sean Sands of Maryland Community Newspapers Online quoted Casa de Maryland’s Executive Director Gustavo Torres saying “We are going to picket their houses, and the schools of their kids and go to their work. If they are going to do this to us, we are going to respond in the same way, to let people know their neighbors are extremists, that they are anti-immigrant. They are going to hear from us.”
The Minutemen have been photographing contractors picking up illegal aliens for work at the Wheaton day laborer center in Maryland spurring conflict with the illegal immigrant supporters.
Casa de Maryland, according to their own website, was “designed to address the multiple conditions of poverty and disenfranchisement that control the lives of many Latino immigrants and refugees“ and “achieves its goals through programs in areas such as leadership, organizing, women's empowerment, tenant support, employment, legal services, health, education, social services, and immigration assistance.”
Casa de Maryland offers an email and phone number where someone can coordinate potential employers with “experts in construction, carpentry, landscaping, babysitting, housekeeping, painting tiling, moving, odd jobs and more.” Casa de Maryland claims to have placed approximately 5,760 men and women in different daily, temporary and permanent job settings in 2004.
The group's website states Casa de Maryland has partnered with Clark Construction, Allentuck Landscaping Company and AFL-CIO to provide those seeking employment with jobs.
From Casa de Maryland’s 2004-2005 annual statement the Minuteman Civil Defense Press Corps found 51% of the groups $2.7 million came directly from grants issued on behalf of Montgomery County.
In response to the threats, Minuteman Civil Defense Corps President Chris Simcox said, “Threatening children like this is outrageous. Casa de Maryland’s funding should be pulled and its contracts cancelled. It is beyond belief that taxpayer dollars are funding this thuggish behavior."
Miss Carpenter is Assistant Editor for HUMAN EVENTS.http://www.soldiersangels.com Adopt a Soldier
"This is our culture - fight for it. This is our flag - pick it up. This is our country - take it back." - Congressman Tom Tancredo
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02-25-2006, 12:07 PM #2
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Here is another one to report to Wehirealiens.com- all the info is here- Need to hire workers?
CASA has experts in construction, carpentry, landscaping, babysitting, housekeeping, painting, tiling, moving, odd jobs, and more!
Call CASA's Center for Employment at 301.431.4177 or email at mescobar@casamd.org.
Click here to fill out contractor form.
Please fill it out and email it to mescobar@casamd.org
or fax to 301.431.4179 to Attn: Employment.
Center for Employment and Leadership Mission
The employment program provides low-income Latino and African immigrants with essential job placement services and contact with companies and contractors. The program also provides the community with CASA identification cards, which are accepted in different public places, with the eventual purpose of creating a membership organization. The program provides skill development for the workers in conjunction with the education department by providing life skill trainings, thereby improving workers’ access to better jobs. The program also provides workers with opportunities to participate in different collective actions to bring better life conditions to the community in general.
The Employment Program collaborates with the legal program to educate workers about their rights as workers. The Program also works in conjunction with the health program to educate workers about healthy life styles and ways to prevent serious illnesses. The employment program works very closely with the organization department to find leaders to be community speakers and represent the workers in different actions related to the growth of the community.
Day Laborers and Workers at CASA
Day laborers are women and men without full-time jobs who seek temporary work to support themselves and their families. This type of employment activity has always existed, but the number of people forced into day labor has increased in recent years as employers seek to replace permanent workers. Day labor pick-up sites at street corners, vacant lots and shopping centers have proliferated and are now common in urban communities.
For more than 10 years, unemployed men have gathered at dawn in a Silver Spring parking lot, hoping to find a day's work. In recent years their numbers have grown to 150 or more on a given day. The majority are immigrants and refugees from Latin America, but some are born in the U.S. All look for jobs with fair wages and employers who treat them with respect.
Unfortunately, the majority returns each day home without finding work. And often those lucky enough to get a job are cheated of their promised wage after days or weeks of hard work. For some employers, day workers are an easily exploitable labor force, without the knowledge or ability to protect themselves.
Program Schedules and Services
For a schedule of services at CASA's CEL, please click here.
Looking to Hire?
For employers looking to hire at CASA, please call 301.431.4177. This line is answered Monday - Friday from 6am to 12 noon.
Contact:
Silvia Navas
Employment Program Manager
Phone: 301.431.4185 ext. 202
Email: snavas@casamd.org
How CASA helps
CASA's Center for Employment and Leadership (CEL) staff members organize workers according to profession and skill level. This process ensures employers that they're hiring a worker with the requisite skills for a specific job. Employers can leave paychecks with CASA to be distributed to workers. In addition, staff members advertise CASA's services to increase the number of employers who use the center.
In 1991, CASA established the Center for Employment and Leadership (CEL) to assist day workers. The CEL has three primary objectives:
Create an organized hiring hall with an equitable system for the selection of workers
Ensure that workers are paid and protected from exploitation.
Ensure that employers are able to hire workers with requisite skills
The center is located on 1.25 acres at 734 University Boulevard E., between Carroll Avenue and Piney Branch Road.
Accomplishments
In FY04 (July 1, 2003- June 30, 2004) CASA's employment project:
¨ Worked with the national Day labor campaign and groups of day laborers from Culmore, Herdon and other organization in different states to introduce and lobby for the Day laborer Protection Act.
¨ Organized a Soccer league with 8 teams to get day laborers involved in sports in order to avoid addiction to alcohol and drugs. This also improved the image of CASA and the Day Laborer Center.
¨ Provided more than 3,500 IDs to community members.
¨ Received the Annie E. Casey Foundation/NCLR Award – Family Strengthening Award for providing high-quality services that meet the needs of Latino families.
¨ Provided approximately 5,760 jobs to men and women in different employment positions (daily, temporary and permanent) during FY04.
¨ Held worker “town-hall” meetings each month where workers suggested better ways to improve the process of obtaining employment and bringing employers to the center.
Employer Participation Information
CASA actively seeks partnerships with area employers to provide quality labor for full time and part time positions. Our workers receive English language classes, industry-specific skills trainings, and computer skills. Some of our partners include:
Clark Construction
Allentuck Landscaping Company
AFL-CIO
If your company is seeking dedicated, quality workers or if you or your company can provide skills trainings to workers, please CONTACT US.
If you would like to volunteer with CASA to give skills training, to work in our CEL, or to work with any of CASA's programs, please click here.
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02-25-2006, 03:49 PM #3
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This is the home page for Casa De maryland- which turns out to be The university of Maryland- so a taxpayer funded University is not only breaking federal law by promoting the hiring of illegals they are also engaged in promoting harrassment against the children of Mintute Men! Office of
EXECUTIVE PROGRAMS
301-405-6362 (phone) spaoep@umd.edu (email) 301-405-3737 (fax) University of Maryland School of Public Policy Office of Exec. Programs
Search
You are here: Home > Research > CASA de Maryland
CASA de Maryland
OEP is working with the non-profit organization CASA de Maryland on several projects, including helping to develop a strategy for shaping local community development plans, assisting in the development of national day laborer legislation and in a state legislative campaign to assist low income workers, and developing foundation funding to support assistance to CASA.
top ^
Office of Executive Programs
University of Maryland - School of Public Policy
2101 Van Munching Hall, College Park MD 20742-1821
Questions, comments about this web site?
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02-25-2006, 03:51 PM #4
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http://www.casademaryland.org/Volunteers_md.htm
Donations can be sent by mail to:
CASA of Maryland, Inc.
310 Tulip Avenue
Takoma Park, MD 20912
Questions? Call 301.270.0142.
To be added to our mailing list, please send your name, address, and contact information to mmaldonado@casamd.org.
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02-25-2006, 04:06 PM #5
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Okay to tie it up - the Casa de Maryland has decided to harrass The children of Minute men- while receiving funding and support from two organizations that are funded by taxpayers; the university of Maryland and La Raza- I am sure they have many more-
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02-25-2006, 08:02 PM #6
Thank you so much for that research, Thelma. What is your understanding of our best action concerning this?
http://www.soldiersangels.com Adopt a Soldier
"This is our culture - fight for it. This is our flag - pick it up. This is our country - take it back." - Congressman Tom Tancredo
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02-25-2006, 08:25 PM #7
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well- that there should be a focused - nation wide- expose of them - which is already in the works it seems-
and that their supporters - such as the university should also be targeted
they crossed a line- something that the minutemen have not done
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02-26-2006, 02:47 PM #8
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This is how politics are done, South of the border.
Intimidate and threaten those with whom you dis-agree, and if you think you can get away with it.. kill them.
That's part of what they are doing...building dossiers on people and their families, so they can be murdered later.
My paranoia suspicions are not intended to make anyone on our side "step over the line".
Minutemen are heroes, but need to be prepared for what may be coming their way.
Once the invaders reach critical mass, they will make a move against the Minutemen.
Picketing elementary schools is a risky move, if they so much as step one foot on school property, legally they could be bashed over the head.
Lunatic ,illegal aliens intimidating elementary school students would make for a good video for us.....although the media would likely refuse to air it, for being to truthful.
The University of Maryland should be sued, again and again until they cease funding that group. Tie them up in court as long as possible.
Make them explain to students and parents that they have to raise tuition because they must fund this hate group at all costs.
Sue the University out of existence ,if necessary.
note: Somebody who is a student, or a student group at the Univ. should start an information campaign on campus, detailing how much of their money is spent on these thugs.
Set up a booth with posters of ranting screaming illegal aliens, and captions, or play recordings of their racist, hate filled diatribes. Embarrass the university, or force them to debate this funding. Make them defend their support of these goons.
-pa
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02-26-2006, 03:49 PM #9Picketing elementary schools is a risky move, if they so much as step one foot on school property, legally they could be bashed over the head.
Of course if they start actually picketing, they would need permission to do that and I don't know of even the most sympathetic city council who would give protestors permission to picket schools while children are in them.Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)
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02-26-2006, 11:48 PM #10
Here is a link I just found about the poor girls being forced into prostitution. They are kidnapped and brought to work in southern California. A govrnment funded clinic in San Ysidro sends workers out there to the prostitution camps to give the girls condoms but refused to get involved in the girls cases as child abuse.
http://www.loscristeros.org/englishindex.htm
We are dealing with some true beasts. This is the slavery market that the minutemen are interfering with with their border watches.http://www.soldiersangels.com Adopt a Soldier
"This is our culture - fight for it. This is our flag - pick it up. This is our country - take it back." - Congressman Tom Tancredo
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