|
Archives 2001 External links may expire at any time. Home Page |
|
|
|
"THE MEXICAN ID ATTACK" |
||
![]() |
DECEMBER 4, 2001 Robert Una tells the Anaheim City Council that those opposing the acceptance of Mexican ID cards are racists. |
|
![]() |
DECEMBER 8, 2001 Robert Una tells a group of black Americans backing the pro-American rally that they ought to go back to Africa. |
|
| See this and much more incredible footage in "The Mexican ID Attack." Order your copy online now. |
|
|
| Associated
Press Law bars many foreigners from marriage or driver's licenses When Jessica Brazell tried to marry her Mexican fiance, who has been living in Alabama illegally for four years, they were stopped from tying the knot. -- Montgomery Probate Court workers told Brazell and her fiance they couldn't get married without a valid Alabama ID -- but he didn't have one, partly because of a 1997 state law that prohibits people without a Social Security number from getting a driver's license. -- Brazell's problem isn't uncommon among foreigners, illegal or not, and critics of the law say it is discriminatory. |
| Dallas Morning
News Some Mexicans in U.S. irate at Fox's reconquista fund cuts Falling oil revenue and a weak economy are putting a financial straitjacket on the Mexican government, and budget austerity could cripple a leading program for migrant workers in the U.S., Mexican officials said Friday. -- Vicente Fox's 2002 spending plan would slash funding for the Mexican Communities Abroad Program by nearly 70%, shrinking its budget from $6.9 million a year ago to $2.2 million, according to the Mexican Finance Ministry. |
U.S. News Coming to America Anyone looking for an explanation of why it was so easy for the September 11 terrorists to enter the United States need only look to the U.S. visa-processing program in Saudi Arabia. Of the 19 suspected hijackers, 15 were Saudi nationals who obtained visas at the U.S. Embassy in Riyadh or at the consulate in Jidda. And for three of them, it really required no sweat at all. -- An American official told U.S. News that the men arranged their visas through Visa Express, a new program..[Discuss] |
| U.S. News Coming to America Anyone looking for an explanation of why it was so easy for the September 11 terrorists to enter the United States need only look to the U.S. visa-processing program in Saudi Arabia. Of the 19 suspected hijackers, 15 were Saudi nationals who obtained visas at the U.S. Embassy in Riyadh or at the consulate in Jidda. And for three of them, it really required no sweat at all. -- An American official told U.S. News that the men arranged their visas through Visa Express, a new program designed to make it easier for qualified applicants to visit the United States. [Discuss] |
| Andres Oppenheimer Sept. 11 hurting Hispanics' 'American dream' Bad news for Hispanics in the United States: The Sept. 11 terrorist attacks seem to have taken an extraordinary toll on their "American dream.'' -- According to a new survey scheduled for release early next year, some of whose results were shown to me this week, Latin American- born U.S. residents have lost more jobs and suffered greater salary cuts than the rest of the U.S. population. |
San Antonio
Express-News Man claimed youth he shot trespassed A jury deliberated several hours Friday before finding a Vietnam veteran guilty on two counts of aggravated assault for shooting an unarmed Mexican youth near his riverfront property in June 2000. -- He was cleared of an attempted murder charge. -- The nine-man, three-woman panel said Patrick Bordelon shot Ivan Sepúlveda Méndezin the back and the ankle with two blasts of a shotgun. |
| Island Packet Legislator aims to amend license law State Rep. Edie Rodgers said she plans to sponsor a bill next year that would change state law to help legal immigrants obtain driver's licenses. -- Some foreigners living legally in South Carolina are unable to get driver's licenses because state law requires them to present documents they don't have, she said. -- "We have given these people the right to work, but they can't drive to their jobs," Rodgers said. -- The Beaufort Republican learned of the situation last week... [Message board] |
H. Millard Some groups missing from hate groups list? ...I also noticed that the SPLC doesn't list any Latino or Asian hate groups on their web site. Could it be, I wondered, that Latinos and Asians along with Jews are simply free of hate? I took a couple of minutes and did a quick internet search that turned up Jewish, Latino, and Asian versions of some of the European American groups listed. -- So,why are European American groups listed as hate groups while some Jewish, Latino and Asian groups, aren't? |
|
|
L.A. Times
- Unpublished Re: Don't Make the Police an Arm of the INS ...Failure to abide by our immigration laws, led to the worst terrorist act ever committed in America. Apologists like Ertll and Andrade make a mockery of these laws, which should be a protection for all Americans. |
|
|
Robert
Una Looks like Robert Una cooked his goose when he told black Americans to go back to Africa. And he calls American citizens racists? We don't want illegal aliens. He doesn't want whites or blacks around. As racism goes, he wins the trophy. We need that guy to keep on shooting his dumb mouth off! :-) -- H.P. |
| L.A. Times Day labor site sought Workers for hire are 'intimidating' ..."It brings down our city even more," Liza Morelli said. "It's intimidating. If they stand outside the doughnut shop. who's going to go in and buy doughnuts?" -- The city of Los Angeles has sites for day laborers to congregate, as does Glendale, but no existing none are close enough to serve the needs of Sunland- Tujunga locals looking for work. -- "There are a lot of contractors that live up here," BOAST's Ava Wrightsman said. "We have to provide a place for them, or it's not realistic." |
|
|
Associated
Press Truck hits undocumented immigrant near Texas border An undocumented Mexican immigrant died Tuesday when a truck hit him as he was crossing a highway to avoid Border Patrol agents. |
| Commentary
- L.A. Times Don't Make the Police an Arm of the INS INS Commissioner James Ziglar announced in early December that the names of more than 300,000 immigrants scheduled for deportation will be entered into an FBI criminal database. This is to facilitate the identification by the police. -- With this order, Ziglar not only deputized every police officer in the U.S. to collaborate with immigration officials, he classified these undocumented immigrants in the same category as convicted felons... [Discuss] |
Orange Co.
Register Illegal alien driver's license plan stalls The Legislature's plan to let undocumented immigrants get California driver's licenses while they are seeking legal residency has come up against an $8 million roadblock - during the state's worst budget crunch in a decade. -- At issue is a bill, which has passed but not been signed by the governor, that would allow about 1 million immigrants to obtain a driver's license while they wait out an INS backlog that is holding up their green cards. |
| Miami Herald Would-be illegals complain about tight border Edward Rivera paces anxiously through the courtyard and hallways at Casa del Migrante, a shelter for immigrants here, wondering how he will get back to his girlfriend and five children in Los Angeles. -- Deported from the United States three weeks ago, Rivera feels trapped behind a new wall of security that authorities have thrown up along the U.S.-Mexico border since Sept. 11. |
The News
- Mexico City "E-Mexico Community Plazas" to be inaugurated The Mexican Consulate in Denver announced that it will inaugurate two "E-Mexico Community Plazas" this weekend to provide educational alternatives and Internet access to Mexicans here. -- "The use of new technologies in education and labor training prevails in the United States, but our citizens do not always have access to those technologies", said Mario Hernandez... |
Back One Day | Older Articles | Home
Page