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Arizona
Republic -- Phoenix
Gatekeepers
deserted immigration policies
Our immigration policy is not "failed."
It is as sound as it was 100 years ago. -- The failure is that
the collective people in Washington, charged with the responsibility
of enforcing the policy, have a near-fatal deficiency of brains,
guts, backbone and morals. They have failed the policy. And us,
the taxpayers.  |
Steve
Sailer |
VDare.com
The
Sailer Strategy: Graphic Evidence From California
Did Arnold Schwarzenegger win the California
governorship because he captured three out of every ten Latino
votes, as much post-election chatter has implied? -- Of course
not. Republicans performed strongly in the California recall
because they did what Republicans must always do to win: earn
lots of votes from that enormous but apparently unmentionable
bloc-whites.  |
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Deseret
News
Hatch
delays illegal alien reward scam
Because of opposition by fellow Republicans,
Sen. Orrin Hatch (shown at left) had to delay a bill he is pushing
to allow illegal aliens
[criminals] to receive federal grants and loans for college
- and to ensure states may give them instate tuition rates. --
"It sends the message that America has immigration laws,
but we don't intend to enforce them," complained Sen. Jeff
Sessions, D-Ala.  |
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San Diego
Union-Tribune
Lockyer
says 'No' to Cruz, admits crossing aisle for recall vote
Attorney General Bill Lockyer, one of
California's most venerable and partisan Democratic politicians,
stunned a political conference yesterday by saying he voted for
Republican Arnold Schwarzenegger in the recent recall election
[and not for Cruz 'BustaMEChA']. -- Lockyer made it clear that
he regarded Bustamante
as an unacceptable alternative to Davis...  |
Lou
Dobbs |
New York
Daily News
Time
to tackle huddled masses
...Our population growth, driven in part
by unchecked immigration, is already straining our health care
and educational systems and, less noticeably but far more important,
putting a heavy burden on our land, food production, water supply
and the quality of the air we breathe.  |
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Arizona
Republic -- Phoenix
Cameras
track stolen cars at Arizona border
Police are taking direct aim at Arizona-to-Mexico
stolen-vehicle traffic with cameras that are recording the license
plates of cars crossing at border points. --- U.S. Immigration
and Customs Enforcement, which operates the surveillance program,
sends the data to the Arizona Department of Public Safety, which
stores and analyzes the information....  |
Hasta
la Vista! |
The Iowa
Channel
Judge
says Mexican invader can't stay in Iowa
A three-judge panel of a federal appeals
court rejected a West Des Moines woman's battle to remain in
the United States. -- Federal authorities said Alma Castro must
be deported because she crossed the border illegally in April
1997, a week after a previous attempt that involved a fake stamp
in her legitimate Mexican passport.  |

Invasion |
Houston
Chronicle
Economic
refugees flooding America unabated
...With the help of a coyote, or smuggler,
the Trochez family crossed the Rio Grande near Matamoros and
went directly to U.S. immigration offices, where members received
temporary visas because they are from a region devastated by
Hurricane Mitch in 1998. --- Trochez has found a job painting
cars and earns about $200 a week, a huge increase from the $15
to $30 a week he earned as a taxi driver in Honduras.  |
Robert
Klein
Engler |
ChronWatch.com
"Another
War With Mexico?"
...Mexican culture is also different
from American culture. An example of one important cultural difference
between Mexico and the U. S. is religion. Mexico has Roman Catholic
traditions, while the U. S. mainly has Protestant traditions.
There were cultural reasons why Texas did not want to remain
part of Mexico and first seceded and then became part of the
United States...  |
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Arizona
Daily Star News Briefs
Coyote
charged with murder -- Mexicans allegedly drug kids
Two Mexican men have been charged with
drugging two children and smuggling them into the United States,
the U.S. Attorney's Office announced Friday. -- Antonio Gozalez-Garduno
and Sergio Martinez-Ramirez were indicted Tuesday. The U.S. Bureau
of Immigration and Customs Enforcement received a tip Sept. 30
that two children...  |
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