American Patrol
Archives
2001
External links may
expire at any time.
Home Page


Sunday, November 4, 2001

 TERRORISTS COME ACROSS MEXICAN BORDER!!
Bill O'Reilly Blows Whistle Again

O'Reilly - 11/1/01
"I believe that the federal government knows that the Mexican is porous; it's a danger to the American people. And because they have refused to deal with this issue for more than a decade they are embarrassed, and that's why they are clamping down on these stories...."

BILL O'REILLY - 11/01/01
"The unresolved problem tonight, the porous and dangerous Mexican border. The Factor has been investigating the border for two years as you know, and listen to this. Hundreds of illegal immigrants from the Middle East were smuggled into the United States by an Iraqi named George Tijerian. He is currently serving 13 years on prison after pleading guilty to bringing in the Arabs from Mexico."

Listen

Jacoby and Stein - 11/1/01
Tamar Jacoby and Dan Stein
Stein criticized INS Commissioner Ziglar for distorting the truth about the legal status of the terrorists.
GUESTS: Dan Stein of FAIR and Tamar Jacoby of the Manhattan Institute
STEIN: The length and degree of alien smuggling from all over the world through the Mexican border, the apparent complicity of the Mexican government is (behind the Justice Dept's silence)
JACOBY: I think we should have a system to let them [Mexicans] in legally and then eventually get on a ladder to become citizens....You can't seal the border.
Reader Comment
Past features

Nov. 9 - Protect Our Borders Rally - Phoenix
American Renaissance Conference Info - February, 2002 - Herndon, VA

Action Alert

Bush pushing Congress to pass amnesty provision!
Your help is needed immediately.

American Patrol - Gig Harbor, WA
Successful meeting held at the Gig Harbor Grange
The meeting held at 1 PM today was very successful. Numerous highly motivated local residents were in attendance, including several lawyers and prominent businessmen. The new video, "Conquest of Aztlan", was a hot item. Another meeting is planned for early next year in the Gig Harbor - Tacoma area. -- For a first hand account of the unfortunate events in Chehalis on Saturday, and for a rundown on the meeting today, be sure to tune in to the Tom Valentine show on GCN (internet radio) at 7 PM Pacific, and sometime of the Terry Anderson Show this evening from 8 to 9 Pacific.

The Scotsman (UK)
Horror on the Rio Grande
Juarez is the fourth largest city in Mexico, home to the largest concentration of maquiladoras - foreign-owned component assembly factories that finish goods for sale in the United States - set up to exploit cheap Mexican labour (of which 70 per cent is female). The city is principally renowned for its bustling vice industry, coupled with regular and random waves of violence. Between the World Wars, Juarez became a highly alluring proposition to thousands....
Associated Press
Bush's effort to liberalize Mex. truck rules may be hard sell
President Bush wants to open more U.S. highways to Mexican trucks in January, but that could be a tougher sell now that law enforcement agencies want to tighten security on the border. -- The Teamsters union, which represents American truckers, said the terrorist attacks Sept. 11 reinforce the need to ensure that vehicles are thoroughly checked at the border and meet U.S. safety requirements.

O'Reilly Factor - November 1
Re: Sealing the border (Letter to Tamar Jacoby)
Usually when I listen to someone debate a topic I expect them to be somewhat rigorous in their use of statistics to bolster their arguments. Clearly you don't fall into that category.

San Francisco Chronicle
Taco Bell heir giving $1 million to last-minute-voter drive [Invitation to vote fraud]
A San Francisco philanthropist whose father brought Taco Bell to the world is financing an initiative to allow last-minute voter registration in California -- the same system that helped put former wrestler Jesse Ventura in the Minnesota statehouse. -- High-tech investor Rob McKay said he plans to spend at least $1 million of his own money to get the initiative on the November 2002 ballot. The measure was submitted last week to Attorney General Bill Lockyer, the first step in a process that includes gathering at least 419,260 signatures from registered voters.

Disruption of planned meetings in Chehalis, WA
Perhaps this American Patrol site can reach enough patriots in California and other states to bombard Ms. Blankenship with the following information.......

 Austin American-Statesman
Under fire, INS faces new challenges
President Bush last week set up an immigration task force with a mission to keep out foreigners "who come to hurt the American people," by taking more care in issuing visas and watching the behavior of visitors once they arrive in the U.S. -- In so doing, the president is charting a new course in U.S. immigration policy. -- As the Sept. 11 attacks showed, terrorists have had little trouble entering the country.
Alamance Independent
Korean gangs in California
California urban areas with lots of the "model minority" continue having lots of ugly problems with Asians - and many of those problems involve either Asian aliens or the ancestral homelands of Asian- descent felons. -- Last Monday, Hyun Gu "Eddie" Kang became the first person extradited from South Korea to the U.S. - after having fled to South Korea in 1999 to avoid a possible life sentence.

O'Reilly Factor - November 1
Re: Sealing the border
Ms. Tamar Jacoby: I live in Cochise County, Arizona and I am very curious as to where you are coming from when you say that we can't seal the border.

AZ Republic (Free Registration)
Bribe practice within Mexico is 'monstrous'
...The group surveyed more than 16,000 Mexican "heads of household" in June and July and asked them which public services, and some private ones, they had to pay bribes to receive. It asked about signing up children for public school, registering cars, garbage collection, water service, building permits and a range of other services.
AZ Republic (Free Registration)
Many say visa readers wouldn't ease border backups
All across the Southwest border, where tightened security since Sept. 11 has driven once-brief crossing times to three hours or more, Americans and Mexicans are learning to live with perpetual border backups. -- And although thousands of U.S. inspectors have been trying to minimize delays, the INS has come under new criticism.

The News - Mexico City
Tips available for U.S. Mexicans visiting south of the border
Mexicans living in the United States who plan to spend the holidays back home should take steps to avoid problems at the border, said Sergio Casanueva, national coordinator of a Mexican government project dubbed the Paisano Program. -- Nearly two million Mexicans traveled to Mexico during the Christmas holidays last year, official statistics show.
The News - Mexico City
California county may accept Mexican identification documents
Orange County may become the first in California to accept as valid identification a document issued by the Mexican Consulate. -- The Mexican consul in Santa Ana, Miguel Angel Isidro, said he had convinced the police chiefs of the cities in Orange County to accept a "consular registration" as valid identification for many purposes.


                                          Back One Day | Older Articles | Home Page