Thursday, February 18, 2010

Hispandering OBAMA & the LA RAZA DEMS - Homeland Security = Pathway to Citizenship AND OUR JOBS

MEXICANOCCUPATION.blogspot.com
THE MEXICAN INVASION WAS NOT BY ACCIDENT OR AN ACT OF NATURE. IT WAS IS PERPETRATED DAILY BY THE AMERICAN GOVERNMENT. IT IS THE SELLOUT OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE FOR ENDLESS FLOODS OF THIS STAGGERINGLY EXPENSE “CHEAP” MEXICAN LABOR.
FOR MEXICO THE INVASION WAS MERELY A “CHEAP” WAY TO HAVE THE AMERICAN PEOPLE FOOT THE BILLS FOR THEIR WELFARE AND PRISON COSTS AS YEAR AFTER YEAR FOR DECADES, MEXICO EXPORTED THEIR POOR, ILLITERATE, CRIMINAL AND FREQUENTLY PREGNANT OVER OUR BORDER. IT’S WORKED OUT NICELY FOR MEXICO, WHICH HAS MORE BILLIONAIRES THAN SAUDI ARABIA OR SWITZERLAND. THE ECONOMY DOWN THERE REMAINS IN THE TIGHTLY IN THE HANDS OF THE CORRUPT RULING OLIGARCHY OF FAMILIES. ONE MEX BILLIONAIRE, CARLOS SLIM THAT OWNS THE MEXICAN PHONE MONOPOLY HAS $70 BILLION.
FOR THE AMERICAN PEOPLE THE INVASION AND OCCUPATION BY MEXICO IS A TRAGEDY OF STAGGERING PROPORTIONS. WE NOW HAVE 38 MILLION ILLEGALS, OVERWHELMINGLY FROM MEXICO WHO ARE RACIST, LOATHE AMERICANS, OUR LANGUAGE, FLAG, CULTURE, AND CERTAINLY LAWS. THEY ARRIVE WITH NOTHING IN THEIR POCKETS BUT THE ATTITUDE THAT THIS ONCE GREAT NATION, NOW OPEN TO TERRORIST, IS GOOD FOR THE PILLAGE. IN THAT RESPECT THE MEXICAN INVASION IS LIKE WALL STREET, WHICH IS WHY OBAMA !HE LIED! HAS WORKED FOR AMNESTY AS MUCH AS HE’S WORKED FOR HIS BANKSTER DONORS, AND WE KNOW HOW WELL THE BANKSTERS HAVE DONE WITH THIS HISPANDERING PRESIDENT!
BILLIONS SQUANDERED OVER THERE IN MUSLIM LAND ON PEOPLE THAT HAVE STONED EACH OTHER TO DEATH FOR FIVE MILLENNIUMS, WHILE OUR OWN BORDERS REMAIN UNDEFENDED AGAINST THE MEXICAN INVASION. EVERY DAY THERE IS 12 AMERICANS MURDERED BY ILLEGALS IN THIS COUNTRY. IN CALIFORNIA ALONE, THERE HAVE BEEN 2,000 AMERICANS MURDERED BY ILLEGALS THAT FLED BACK OVER THE BORDERS TO AVOID PROSECUTION, AND EVERY DAY THERE IS AN AMERICAN MURDERED IN COLD BLOOD BY A MEXICAN GANG MEMBER! WHERE’S THE OUTRAGE?
I READ THE BELOW AS MOSTLY OBAMA’S PROPAGANDA, LIKE HIS PROPAGANDA THAT AS SOON AS THIS BANKSTER DONORS PAID THEMSELVES BILLIONS IN BONUSES OFF THE “FREE” MONEY OBAMA HANDED THEM, WE HAD “RECOVERED” FROM THE MELTDOWN CAUSED BY THESE VERY BANKSTERS. WHO WILL HELP US RECOVER FROM THE MEXICAN INVASION? SURE AS HELL NOT THE LA RAZA DEMS!!!
IN LOS ANGELES, 47% OF THE JOBS ARE HELD BY ILLEGALS, THE COUNTY PAYS OUT $50 MILLION IN WELFARE TO ILLEGALS, AND THE TAX-FREE MEXICAN ECONOMY IN LOS ANGELES ALONE IS CALCULATED TO BE $2 BILLION A YEAR. BEING OCCUPIED MY MEXICO IS WORKING OUT QUITE NICELY FOR MEXICO! THEN YOU HAVE MEXICAN GANGS MURDERING PEOPLE IN COLD BLOOD DAILY. LOS ANGELES PAYS OUT LITERALLY MILLIONS JUST TO CLEAN UP MEXICAN GRAFFITI, AND YET THE CITY REMAINS DRENCHED IN IT!
HE LIED! OBAMA HAS NO INTENTION OF PROTECTING OUR BORDERS. HE KNOWS THAT AFTER HIS CON JOBS FOR WALL STREET NO ONE WILL VOTE FOR HIM WHEN RUNS AGAIN EVEN WITH HIS POCKETS STUFFED WITH BANKSTERS’ BRIBES. SO HE NEEDS THE VOTES OF ILLEGALS. THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY IS IN REALITY THE LA RAZA “THE (MEX) RACE” PARTY OF HISPANDERERS. THEY CAN’T STOP WORKING FOR ILLEGALS, AND CALIFORNIA’S MELTDOWN IS A PRODUCT OF THIS. BILLIONS PAID OUT YEARLY IN SOCIAL SERVICES TO MEXICAN FLAG WAVERS, AND SIGNS POSTED UP AND DOWN THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA, “NO LEGAL NEED APPLY HERE!”
AS OBAMA HAS SABOTAGED ANY EFFORT TO PROTECT OUR BORDERS, TAKEN HUNDREDS OF BORDER PATROL OFF OUR BORDERS, PUT LA RAZA DEM, NAPOLITANO TO HEAD THE HOMELAND SECURITY DEPARTMENT, WHICH IS NOW THE “HOMELAND SECURITY = PATHWAY TO CITIZENSHIP” DEPARTMENT.
CURRENTLY LA RAZA, THE MEXICAN GOVERNMENT, THE LA RAZA DEMS, THE 90 MEMBERS OF THE CONGRESSIONAL HISPANIC CAUCUS ARE DETERMINED THAT THE 2010 CENSUS WILL !NOT! COUNT ILLEGALS. THE GOVERNMENT WANTS TO MAINTAIN THE PROPAGANDA THAT THERE ARE ONLY 12 MILLION ILLEGALS IN THIS COUNTY WHILE MOST SOURCES PUT THE FIGURE AT 38 MILLION. HISTORICALLY THERE HAVE BEEN 1.5 MILLION ILLEGALS WALK OVER OUR BORDERS SINCE THE “AMNESTY” TO END THE INVASION OF 1986. YOU DO THE MATH.
WHAT WOULD THE AMERICAN PEOPLE DO TO THESE LA RAZA DEMS FOR SELLING US OUT AND TURNING OUR COUNTRY INTO A MEXICAN GANG INVESTED DUMPSTER? VOTE THEM IN AGAIN?
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latimes.com
Joint effort targets border crime
U.S. and Mexican forces, sharing patrols for the first time, take on drugs and migration. Corruption is feared.
By Sebastian Rotella
10:00 PM PST, February 17, 2010
Reporting from Nogales, Ariz.
In a politically sensitive operation at the Arizona- Mexico border, U.S. Border Patrol agents and Mexican federal police officers are training together, sharing intelligence and coordinating patrols for the first time.

The goal of the historic partnership: a systematic joint attack on northbound flows of drugs and migrants, and southbound shipments of guns and cash. It is part of a major, unannounced crackdown started in recent months involving hundreds of U.S. and Mexican officers in the border's busiest smuggling corridor.

The initiative appears likely to expand. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano and Mexican Public Safety Secretary Genaro Garcia Luna will sign a declaration Thursday in Mexico City agreeing to replicate the experiment. Eventually, officials say, joint operations borderwide could lead to the creation of a Mexican force serving as a counterpart to the Border Patrol -- an agency once regarded with nationalistic aversion in Mexico.

"We are planting a seed of binational cooperation that interests all of us," Mexican federal police Cmdr. Armando Trevino said Tuesday in Nogales. "We are fighting a common enemy. We are going to work together like friends, like comrades, like brothers."

Political urgency drives both sides. The Obama administration needs results on border security in its uphill campaign for immigration reform. Mexican President Felipe Calderon's government wants progress in its war on drug mafias.

But the unprecedented effort faces imposing obstacles: violent drug cartels, long-standing Mexican reluctance to interfere with illegal immigration into the United States and a legacy of corruption that has scuttled past enforcement efforts.

"There's so much potential for corruption," said Jennifer Allen, executive director of the Border Action Network, a migrant advocate group in Arizona. "It could be destined for failure. . . . Right now law enforcement in Mexico cannot compete with the trafficking networks. It can't compete with the money, the power."

In the 1990s, the Border Patrol worked closely with Grupo Beta, an elite Mexican police unit. After a promising start, the unit faltered under allegations of wrongdoing and functions today as an unarmed humanitarian agency.

Nonetheless, Tuesday's visit by Trevino was full of signs that times are changing. The 69-year-old lean, white-haired, retired army general leads the Sonora, Mexico, contingent of the federal preventive police, which conducts street-level enforcement involving major crimes and patrols highways and airports.

Trevino watched a training session in which green-uniformed U.S. instructors shouted directions as nine Mexican officers in blue uniforms, goggles and helmets roared through mud and water on all-terrain vehicles that the Border Patrol uses to chase border-crossers.

Mexican officers, who undergo U.S. background checks, also train in close-quarters firearms techniques and medical rescue skills. The Border Patrol plans to vet and train several hundred Mexican federal officers who also will learn behavioral analysis and ways to detect contraband concealed in vehicles.

Trevino and U.S. chiefs took a rattling hour's drive over a dirt mountain road to inspect a remote base housing a dozen live-in agents. Trevino plans to set up two "mirror" bases south of the U.S. outposts to interdict smugglers, who use horses and ultra-light aircraft in the rugged terrain.

Joint U.S.-Mexican operations got underway when a detachment of Mexican federal police arrived in the Mexican state of Sonora about two months ago. They began communicating daily with the Americans and responded to security threats, disrupting smugglers' hilltop lookouts and breaking up rock-throwing gangs who often clash with U.S. agents in melees that have resulted in injuries, shootings and diplomatic tensions.

"There has been a decrease in rockings after their deployment," said Al White, the Border Patrol agent-in-charge in Nogales.

The Mexican forces also have developed new southern barriers to smuggling drugs and people. Trevino has deployed five roving checkpoints in Sonora that have pushed marijuana traffickers west from traditional land routes to emerging, more complicated maritime smuggling efforts on the Sea of Cortez, officials say.

The Border Patrol will send two liaison agents to Trevino's headquarters in Hermosillo; two Mexican officers will work at the Border Patrol station in Nogales.

"The coordination will make our pursuits more flexible so we can stop criminals from ducking back and forth across the border," Trevino told his U.S. counterparts, adding that his agency "is most ready to seal the border to put an end to this organized crime."

However, Trevino said that while his officers aggressively pursue smugglers, they do not intend to interfere with Mexicans crossing north illegally if there is no evidence of other criminal activity. The policy is dictated by longtime Mexican political sensitivity and public opinion, experts say.

Nonetheless, Mexican Ambassador Arturo Sarukhan praised the Arizona-Sonora model as part of an enforcement "sea change" resulting from government cooperation and the rising frequency of drug traffickers who also smuggle people.

"Drug smuggling organizations have diversified their portfolio," he said in an interview. "As organized crime has developed its footprint, we have to do so as well and combat all kinds of trafficking."

Border Patrol officials say the Mexican anti-smuggling effort helps disrupt the flow of illegal migrants and is the most they can hope for at the present time. Smugglers have retaliated against the five-month U.S. crackdown, dubbed the Alliance to Combat Transnational Threats.

Gunmen with automatic rifles wounded a Border Patrol agent in December. A month earlier, a sniper on Mexican turf fired volleys at the U.S. port of entry, causing havoc but no injuries. Officials suspect it was payback for the seizure of $300,000 by U.S. inspectors.

In addition to the more recent cooperation with Mexico, U.S. border agencies have deployed extra personnel in the Tucson sector, which leads the southwest border in arrests and marijuana busts.

They have begun concerted scrutiny of southbound traffic and pedestrians, a rare practice at the international line. The checks have enabled inspectors to seize $2.2 million in smuggled cash and identify more than 3,000 illegal immigrants since October. Although U.S. officers have seized only five weapons in that period, Mexican customs inspectors found 41 assault rifles hidden in a vehicle a month ago.

Bolstered defenses have caused an odd reverse scenario: Smugglers based in Tucson and Phoenix occasionally try to smuggle people and goods south into Mexico, officials say.

Meanwhile, the Sinaloa drug cartel has launched an offensive to take control of Nogales, Mexico, from the Beltran Leyva cartel. January brought 40 killings in the city and a spate of attacks on police officials. There are fears that gangsters could target the Border Patrol's new Mexican allies.

"Yes, it could increase danger for us," said Capt. Eduardo Pena, a 23-year veteran, after the training session. "But we are not going to back down."

The cultural change resulting from the joint operation seems profound. For years, the Border Patrol had a negative image among many Mexicans and Latinos, fed by film stereotypes of sadistic, racist agents. The caricature obscured the reality that many U.S. border agents are Latino and that the Border Patrol has improved relationships with Mexican consulates and migrant advocates.

But U.S. and Mexican officers admit the alliance would have been hard to imagine not long ago.

"It's historic," Pena said. "I was based in Tijuana 15 years ago, and there were bad feuds between the federal police and the Border Patrol. There was a bad image, the old ugly image of the Border Patrol. But now there is a new partnership. Good citizens won't dislike this collaboration. Criminals will dislike it."
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Lou Dobbs Tonight
And there are some 800,000 gang members in this country: That’s more than the combined number of troops in our Army and Marine Corps. These gangs have become one of the principle ways to import and distribute drugs in the United States. Congressman David Reichert joins Lou to tell us why those gangs are growing larger and stronger, and why he’s introduced legislation to eliminate the top three international drug gangs.
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Lou Dobbs Tonight
Monday, September 28, 2009

And T.J. BONNER, president of the National Border Patrol Council, will weigh in on the federal government’s decision to pull nearly 400 agents from the U.S.-Mexican border. As always, Lou will take your calls to discuss the issues that matter most-and to get your thoughts on where America is headed.
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THE LA RAZA DEMS SABOTAGE OF OUR COUNTRY FOR CHEAP MEXICAN LABOR, GANGS, DRUG CARTELS, AND MEXICAN TERRORIST.

Virtual Fence Plagued by Technical Failures and Delays; Now Faces Budget Cuts
The future of the virtual fence is uncertain in the face of a new threat of slashed funding coupled with ongoing performance issues and implementation delays. The $6.7 billion virtual fence project was started in 2005 as a component of the Secure Border Initiative (SBInet), and consists of cameras, ground sensors, and radar aimed at stopping illegal immigrants, drug smugglers, and terrorists on our southern border. (USA Today, February 4, 2010). The program has shown little success over the years and is now in serious jeopardy following Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Janet Napolitano’s January decision to order a reassessment of the entire initiative and the president’s proposal for a significant cut in funding. (The Washington Times, February 4, 2010). President Obama’s recently released budget proposes a $225 million cut in border security funding for the virtual fence program. (USA Today, February 4, 2010; For more information on Obama’s proposed cuts to immigration enforcement programs see FAIR’s Legislative Update, February 9, 2010).
Since its inception, the virtual fence has been plagued with technical failures that continue to delay its completion. Boeing Corporation was contracted in 2006 to implement a series of nine security towers equipped with night vision cameras, radar and sensors, along with a variety of communications systems and software to monitor activities along large stretches of the border. The technology was supposed to have been in place by June 2007, but the software system failed to distribute the information gathered by the detection devices. But as one problem was solved, others arose, including a radar system that confused vegetation for humans in inclement weather and cameras that were too slow to respond. (The Hill, February 10, 2010). In February 2008, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) reported to Congress that the virtual fence had fallen short of expectations as it failed to meet the goals and strategic needs of U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP). (GAO Report, February 2008; See FAIR’s Analysis, April 2008).
This January, Boeing was supposed to turn over the first permanent segment of virtual fence to Border Patrol for testing, but that has been delayed by problems with the video recording equipment. (The Washington Times, February 4, 2010). After three years and over a billion dollars, Boeing is still working on the first 28 miles of the surveillance system. (CBS News, January 10, 2010). With 1,972 miles to go, the virtual fence is not expected to be completed until 2014 at the earliest.
As a result, on January 8, Napolitano ordered a reassessment of the whole project, saying that the delays are unacceptable and the government must consider more efficient and economical options. (The Washington Times, February 4, 2010). She stated, "Americans need border security now - not 10 years down the road." Id. A few weeks later, President Obama proposed cutting the funding for SBInet. To date, American taxpayers have spent more than a billion dollars on a virtual fence that has yet to become a reality.
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Obama soft on illegals enforcement

Arrests of illegal immigrant workers have dropped precipitously under President Obama, according to figures released Wednesday. Criminal arrests, administrative arrests, indictments and convictions of illegal immigrants at work sites all fell by more than 50 percent from fiscal 2008 to fiscal 2009.

The figures show that Mr. Obama has made good on his pledge to shift enforcement away from going after illegal immigrant workers themselves - but at the expense of Americans' jobs, said Rep. Lamar Smith of Texas, the Republican who compiled the numbers from the Department of Homeland Security's U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency (ICE). Mr. Smith, the top Republican on the House Judiciary Committee, said a period of economic turmoil is the wrong time to be cutting enforcement and letting illegal immigrants take jobs that Americans otherwise would hold.

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OBAMA’S HOMELAND SECURITY IS NOW “HOMELAND SECURITY = PATHWAY TO CITIZENSHIP”
Backsliding on National Security: The Immigration Connection

Executive Summary
In a public relations campaign that evokes the image of Orwellian “newspeak,” the Department of Homeland Security has announced a long list of accomplishments in improving national security while at the same time it has adopted a number of measures that represent a significant backsliding on national security. If only the rhetoric is heard, the public may think its safety is in good hands. If, however, recent actions concerning the illegal alien population and the flow of foreign nationals into and out of the country are examined, a very different picture emerges.
The areas in which rhetoric and action widely diverge include:
• A willingness to abandon progress on implementation of a secure identification system based on state-issued driver’s licenses using national standards for verification of “breeder” documents and electronic exchange of information among the states and the federal government.
• Restriction of federal-local cooperation in the apprehension of foreigners illegally in the country.
• Abandonment of a system to discourage further illegal immigration based on curtailing job opportunities for those in the country illegally.
• Pursuit of an amnesty for foreigners illegally in the country which will work at cross-purpose to efforts to gain greater border control by deterring illegal immigration.
While talking toughness on national security, the Obama Administration appears to give a higher priority to its relationship with narrow political interest groups that it courted in the last election than to reducing the nation’s exposure to the threat of international terrorism. And, while President Obama’s efforts to assure foreigners around the globe that Americans are their friends is commendable, it is no substitute for enhanced homeland security.
If the Obama Administration were seriously interested in advancing national security, it would:
• Reverse course and welcome the assistance of local jurisdictions that aggressively identify illegal aliens for deportation.
• Push for the E-Verify system to be adopted as a national requirement for all employers and all workers. In the meantime, implementation of the “no-match” letter screening system would represent a significant deterrent to the mass illegal immigration that compromises border security.
• Withdraw support for an amnesty for illegal aliens and, thereby, convey the message abroad that the United States is serious about enforcing its immigration laws.
• Rapidly pursue implementation of a comprehensive electronic database that matches entry and departure of foreign visitors, and expand the special tracking database for students to include all long-term visitors.
• Reverse the recent expansion of the Visa Waiver Program that allows the entry of nationals of 35 countries to enter without consular screening and gradually eliminate it.
• Tighten the criteria for admission of nationals of countries with active terrorist organizations in the refugee and asylum programs.



llegal foot traffic or other cross border migration of any kind obviously needs to be controlled. Particularly with the high level of violence and criminal activity, border security must be reestablished. But it doesn't really matter what the intent of these trespassers is. People who end up seeking expensive medical attention, require social services or take employment away from legal residents are exacting a high cost. Mexico simply needs to do a better job of attending to the needs of its own citizens, and maintaining law and order. Economic problems in the US require us to protect our own resources, as other nations do.
oldPSUguy (02/18/2010, 3:47 AM )

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