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Thursday, November 22, 2001
Happy Thanksgiving!

MEXICO MOVES TO CONTROL
ORANGE COUNTY CITIES

El Jefe de Santa Ana
"We'll be able to have a form of legal identification on these individuals." -- Santa Ana Police will accept Mexican-issued ID cards as valid.
Life & Times Tonight, Nov. 13, 2001 (transcript)
Jess Marlow: "Illegal immigrants cannot get a California drivers license but they may now be able to get by with a Mexican ID."
Listen
American Patrol Comment: Legal identification? Under whose laws? Mexico's. Acceptance of Mexican IDs by law enforcement is tantamount to official acceptance of illegal immigration by Mexicans. How will an officer verify validity? By contacting the Mexican consulate. The ultimate goal is Mexican jurisdiction. It is all part of the Conquest of Aztlan.
See "Abolishing America" -- If you oppose of the Mexican takeover of Orange county cities, please attend our rally on Dec. 8th. "Defending the Homeland."

Past features      

Upcoming Events
Protest at Anaheim City Council Meeting - Changed to 12/4
Protest Mexican ID Acceptance at Anaheim City Hall - 12/8

Fri., Nov. 23 -- Glenn Spencer on the Alex Jones Show - Time To Be Announced
Sun., Nov. 25
-- Glenn Spencer on the Ray Briem Show - 6 PM Pacific - LISTEN

Coming Monday, November 26 -- George Putnam Returns! - Noon Pacific
KPLS - 830 AM - Orange / Los Angeles, CA

NPR - "Justice Talking"
Amnesty for Undocumented Immigrants: Rights or Wrong?
This show aired 11/6/2001 and is worth listening to. Click on the above link to listen, or click here for a show summary. [1 hour]

Reuters
Italy, E. Europe Vow to Fight Illegal Immigration
Italy and its central and eastern European partners vowed on Thursday to crack down on illegal immigration and work together to fight terrorism and organized crime. -- Italian Foreign Minister Renato Ruggiero, part of a government team hosting the Central European Initiative (CEI) summit, said he and his counterparts had discussed bringing down international barriers, but also controlling them.

Miami Herald
Spanish is spreading northward
Nearly 500 years after the Calusa Indians chased off Juan Ponce de León, the language of La Florida's original conquista is making a vigorous comeback across the peninsula. -- As Hispanic immigration blazes a trail northward out of Miami, the Spanish language is making deep inroads into Broward County and the rest of Florida, estimates from a new U.S. Census survey indicate.
AZ Republic (Free Registration)
Church fighting to keep its day labor center open
...The place opened in April in answer to a town problem. Groups of Hispanic men had been lining Cave Creek Road, waiting for contractors to come by and offer work. Some of these men live in Cave Creek or in washes nearby. Some live in Phoenix but come up each day because it's where the work is.

Our wonderful California DMV
I just received a notice from the California Department of Motor Vehicles that my social security number doesn't match what the Social Security Administration has on file....

Re: Santa Ana tops in Spanish-speakers
...What this story did not include was any discussion of illegal immigration, I believe, in an effort not to upset "La Raza" activists.

El Paso Times
BP helps speed traffic (but who's watching the henhouse door?)
Border Patrol agents, more accustomed to stopping undocumented immigrants at unauthorized crossings, began inspecting commuters Wednesday at El Paso's international bridges as part of a plan to ease border traffic. -- At the Zaragoza International Bridge, Border Patrol agents helped the INS and Customs inspectors check vehicles and immigration documents of commuters traveling to El Paso from Juárez.
Arizona Daily Star
Mexican border in drug backfire
...Mexican cities along the U.S. border already lead the country's drug use as traffickers pay their transporters in drugs rather than money. -- Tijuana has the highest consumption of illegal drugs in the country - three times the national average, according to the government. The border cities of Ciudad Juarez and Matamoros are close behind. -- "We are watching what's happening on the border very carefully," said Edward Jurith, the U.S. drug czar, during his visit to Mexico last week.

AZ Republic (Free Registration)
Hispanics view Bush favorably, poll says
Nearly three-quarters of Arizona's Hispanic heads of household believe President Bush is doing an excellent or good job, according to a poll released Wednesday. -- The 73 percent approval rating in the Latino Poll, conducted by the independent Behavior Research Center, represented an increase from April, when only 37 percent of Hispanics interviewed rated Bush's performance as either good or excellent.
L.A. Daily News
Maps show 'Latino' Valley city
Latinos would form the largest ethnic group in nine of 14 city council districts proposed in the San Fernando Valley if it breaks away from Los Angeles, according to a report issued Wednesday. -- The county agency overseeing the cityhood study released the preliminary maps detailing the boundaries of Valley districts, each with less than half as many people as Los Angeles City Council members represent.

Associated Press
Drugs Piling Up in Mexico
As the United States tightens security at its borders in response to the September terror attacks, illegal drugs are piling up in Central America and traffickers are finding new consumers in what were once known as "producer" countries. -- Long a transit country where drugs passed through to an insatiable U.S. market, Mexico has seen addictions to hard drugs skyrocket over the past decade. Now addicts are congregating in border towns where drugs are widely available and law enforcement often looks the other way.
Seattle P-I
U.S. releasing seized property
Somali immigrants whose shared Rainier Valley store was raided by federal agents two weeks ago in the continuing war on terrorism will be able to retrieve property that was seized from them. -- The Columbia City shop owners received letters by fax from the U.S. Treasury Department yesterday evening indicating it was removing a block on retrieving the goods, including a personal computer and business records, that agents seized Nov. 7. The letter instructs the businessmen, however, not to destroy any of the records or remove data...

The News - Mexico City / EFE
Terror attacks affect U.S.- Mexico relations
The Sept. 11 terrorist attacks that seriously shook daily life and politics in the United States have also affected relations between this country and Mexico - a reality both nations would like to start changing. -- Toward that end, Tom Ridge, the U.S. director of homeland security, will travel to Mexico next month to strengthen the countries' mutual efforts to combat terrorism, government officials announced Tuesday in Washington.
N.Y. Times (Free Registration)
Police split on questioning Arabs
Police chiefs across the nation are torn between a desire to assist the investigation of the Sept. 11 attacks by following Attorney General John Ashcroft's request that they help interview thousands of Middle Eastern men and a concern that the plan seems like racial profiling. -- In Portland, Ore., the acting police chief has refused to participate in the effort, saying it conflicted with state laws that bar local police from questioning immigrants when they are not suspected of a crime.

Marin Independent Journal
Outrage over article on illegals
Reader Comment: Michael Savage was talking about this on his show (on 11/21) about how these La Raza idiots are giving student Andrew Smith a hard time for speaking the truth. --MK : ...Andrew Smith wrote that America provides opportunities to many outside its borders and in return asks that those seeking citizenship meet "reasonable requirements," including speaking English. -- [Also see: Free Republic Forum | Contact paper, Novato High School]
The News - Mexico City / EFE
31 Mexicans exploited by N.Y. employers to get $315,000
A group of 31 Mexican immigrants who were exploited at their jobs in three grocery stores in New York City will be compensated in the amount of 315,000 dollars, New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer said. -- In May, Spitzer filed a lawsuit alleging for six years their employers paid the Mexicans as little as 2 dollars and 61 cents an hour, though the federal and state minimum wage is 5 dollars and 15 cents.

Re: Utah sheriff says local police can enforce immigration laws
A big thank you for the posting about the going on's in St. George Utah. Now you and the rest of the country can see what we here in Utah are having to experience on a daily basis.

The News - Mexico City
National Guard to be placed on Texas- Mexico border
The state of Texas on Wednesday announced it will double the number of U.S. National Guardsmen working along its border with Mexico as part of ongoing security efforts following the Sept. 11 terror attacks. -- Texas Gov. Rick Perry said the additional soldiers would arrive Dec. 2 and be assigned to international bridges in Laredo and El Paso to help ease the burden on U.S. Customs officials, government news agency Notimex reported.
AZ Republic (Free Registration)
1 in 10 in Arizona lacks proficiency in English
Nearly half a million Arizonans, or about one in 10 people over age 5, don't speak English very well, a Census Bureau survey estimates. -- The number is nearly double the 276,000 residents who reported a lack of English proficiency in the 1990 census. -- The increase tracks almost exactly the growth of the Hispanic population during the decade, although speakers of languages other than Spanish are included in the total.


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