Wednesday, November 18, 2009

NAPOLITANO ' "HOMELAND SECURITY" MEANS OPEN BORDERS WITH NARCOMEX & AMNESTY FOR MEX GANGS? It Does For Obama!

TELL ME, HOW DOES SO CALLED “HOMELAND SECURITY” DEPEND ON OPEN BORDERS WITH NARCOMEX, AND AMNESTY FOR 40 MILLION MEXICAN FLAG WAVERS? THERE AREN’T ENOUGH MEXICAN GANGS PROLIFERATING AROUND THE COUNTRY? THE MEXICAN DRUG CARTELS ARE NOT OPERATING FULL SPEED? WELFARE FOR ILLEGALS HASN’T GOTTEN HIGH ENOUGH? UNEMPLOYMENT FOR AMERICANS STILL NOT HIGH ENOUGH? WAGES FOR LEGALS STILL NOT DEPRESSED ENOUGH?
LA RAZA MINISTER FOR OPEN BORDERS = VOTES FOR OBAMA, JANET “RAZA” NAPOLITANO

Napolitano Affirms Amnesty Legislation is on the Agenda in Early 2010
On Friday, November 13, Janet Napolitano, the Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, gave a speech at the Center for American Progress (CAP). Napolitano used the speech to highlight the Obama Administration’s continued support for a mass amnesty for millions of illegal aliens, promising amnesty legislation in early 2010.
Napolitano – who has been designated as President Obama’s point person on the issue of immigration reform – described the administration’s vision of immigration legislation as consisting of a “three-legged stool.” This so-called “stool” consists of: (1) a mass amnesty for the approximately 12 million illegal aliens currently living in the United States; (2) “improved legal flows for families and workers” which means a dramatic increase in legal immigration; and (3) empty promises of “serious and effective enforcement.” (Secretary Napolitano’s Prepared Remarks, November 13, 2009). As for when the administration expects to see Congress take up an amnesty bill, Napolitano stated that she expected to see legislation move in “the first part” of next year. (CAP, November 13, 2009).
In addition to advocating amnesty, Napolitano utilized last Friday’s speech to dismiss concerns that legal immigration is adversely affecting U.S. workers. During a brief question-and-answer period following the completion of her speech, a member of the audience expressed concerns about foreign workers obtaining engineering jobs over equally-qualified American workers. With unemployment now over ten percent for the first time in 26 years (Bureau of Labor Statistics, November 6, 2009), Napolitano answered by alleging that the questioner had posed a “false dichotomy,” and added that she “think[s] there’s enough engineering jobs for everybody.” (CAP).

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