Monday, February 22, 2010

Should "Homeland Security" Really Be "PATHWAY TO CITIZENSHIP? Our Open & Undefended Borders

MEXICANOCCUPATION.blogspot.com
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AMNESTY IS A WIN-WIN SITUATION FOR THE LA RAZA DEMS, AND THEIR CORPORATE PAYMASTERS. CERTAINLY THEY WANT THE ILLEGALS VOTING BY QUICK NO-STRINGS AMNESTY (LIKE NO-STRINGS BANKSTERS’ BAILOUTS), BUT THEN THEY ALREADY ARE! JUST AS LA RAZA SISTERS LINDA & LORETTA SANCHEZ! BOTH WORKING HARD IN CONGRESS TO EXPAND THE LA RAZA OCCUPATION. BOTH PUT IN OFFICE BY THE VOTES OF ILLEGALS.

NANCY PELOSI HAS ALWAYS VOWED THE WALL WILL NEVER BE BUILT. SHE HAS LONG HIRED ILLEGALS AT HER NAPA WINERY.

EVEN WITH NO “OFFICIAL” AMNESTY, ILLEGALS WILL CONTINUE TO WALK OVER OUR BORDERS, INTO OUR JOBS, PRISONS, JAILS, AND “FREE” HOSPITALS FOR BIRTHING ANCHORS, WHICH WILL ENTITLE THE ILLEGAL WOMAN TO 18 YEARS OF WELFARE.
OBAMA IS LONG A HISPANDERER. HE ISN’T CONCERNED ABOUT THE STAGGERING UNEMPLOYMENT THIS NATION SUFFERS, HIS BANKSTER DONORS ALL HAVE JOBS AND HIS BONUSES, THINGS ARE FINE FOR HIM. SO, HE KEEPS TAKING BORDER GUARD OFF OUR BORDERS, AND SABOTAGES THE EASIEST AND CHEAPEST WAY TO END THE MEXICAN OCCUPATION !!! E-VERIFY !!! IF EMPLOYERS OF ILLEGALS WENT TO JAIL, WE’D WITNESS A VAST IMMIGRATION OF MEXICAN FLAG WAVERS BACK TO MEXICO WHERE THEY BELONG. (EXPOSE EMPLOYERS OF ILLEGALS BY POSTING THE INFO WITH I.C.E. NUMBER ON CRAIGSLIST)
THE PROBLEM WITH THAT IS EMPLOYERS OF ILLEGALS HAVE NO INTENTION OF PAYING LIVING WAGES. THEY DON’T PAY LIVING WAGES TO ILLEGALS, BUT THE ILLEGALS GET WELFARE, “FREE” MEDICAL, FIRST IN LINE FOR FREE HOUSING, AND A SPECIAL TAX—FREE MEXICAN UNDERGROUND ECONOMY TO MAKE UP FOR MISERABLE WAGES. ENOUGH THAT THEY ARE ABLE TO SEND BACK
$45 BILLION BACK TO NARCOMEX!
IN MEXICAN OCCUPIED LOS ANGELES COUNTY, ILLEGALS COLLECT $50 MILLION PER MONTH, EVEN AS THE COUNTY IS IN MELTDOWN FROM IT. IN LOS ANGELES, 47% OF THOSE WITH A JOB ARE ILLEGALS USING STOLEN SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBERS (THERE ARE ONLY 8 STATES THAT HAVE A LARGER POPULATION). NO E-VERIFY ANYWHERE! THE MEXICAN TAX-FREE UNDERGROUND ECONOMY IN THIS COUNTY IS CALCULATED TO BE $2 BILLION PER YEAR. AND THEN YOU HAVE THE MEXICAN GANG MURDERS. NEARLY 1,000 MURDERS IN LOS ANGELES ALONE BY MEX GANGS. 95% OF ALL ARREST WARRANTS FOR MURDER ARE ILLEGALS. PROSECUTING THE MEXICAN GANG MURDERER WILL COST THE COUNTY ONE MILLION EACH, EVEN BEFORE THEY’RE SENT TO PRISON. PRISONS ARE OVERFLOWING WITH ILLEGALS CRIMINALS FROM MEXICO ACTIVELY ARRANGING GANG MURDERS AND THEIR DRUG BUSINESSES.
CALIFORNIA IS IN MELTDOWN, DUE IN LARGE PART TO THE MEXICAN INVASION AND OCCUPATION.
FEINSTEIN, LOFGREN, PELOSI, BOXER, WAXMAN, BECERRA ALL WORK HARD TO EXPAND THE MEXICAN INVASION. THEIR CORPORATE DONORS DEMAND IT!
THERE IS A REASON WHY MOST OF THE FORTUNE 500 ARE GENEROUS DONORS TO LA RAZA “THE RACE”. THE MEXICAN FASCIST POLITICAL PARTY, WHICH IS THE FASTEST GROWING POLITICAL PARTY IN AMERICA!
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latimes.com
High-tech border fence is slow going
The radar, cameras and satellite signals, originally expected to be completed by 2011, will probably not be ready for at least seven years. 'It was a great idea, but it didn't work,' an official says.
By Richard A. Serrano
February 22, 2010
Reporting from Washington
An ambitious, multibillion-dollar project to hot-wire the new Southwest border fence with high-tech radar, cameras and satellite signals has been plagued with serious system failures and repeated delays and will probably not be completed for another seven years -- if it is finished at all.

The system, originally intended to be completed next year, languishes in the testing phase in two remote spots of the border in Arizona.

There, the supposedly state-of-the-art system combining sensor towers, communication relay systems and unattended ground sensors has been bogged down with radar clutter, blurred imagery on computer screens and satellite time lapses that often permit drug smugglers and undocumented workers to slip past U.S. law enforcement agents, government officials candidly admit.

"It was a great idea, but it didn't work," said Mark Borkowski, executive director of the electronic fence program at the Homeland Security Department.

"One of the kickers was that these radars had too many problems with clutter," Borkowski said. "Wind moving a tree shows up on the radar. And if you have too much of that, how do you find the person in the clutter? Same with cameras. The image is blurry."

The problems have prompted Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano to order a department-wide assessment of the technology project once billed as the capstone to the controversial 2,000-mile combined physical and electronic border fence.

Borkowski acknowledged in an interview that the government and its main contractor, Boeing Co., had made a series of mistakes since announcing in 2005 the plan to build sensor towers and radar scans alongside the new border fence.

Although they remain hopeful the problems can be fixed, he cautioned that the technology ultimately might not cover the entire border.

"It turned out to be a harder technological problem than we ever anticipated," Borkowski said. "We thought it would be very easy, and it wasn't."

He said the government was primarily to blame for not being more specific in its contract with Boeing. But, he added, "we have a border we've got to secure, and technology has to be a key part of the plan. It's not there. So what do we do in the meantime?"

Tim Peters, vice president of Boeing Global Security Systems, which is handling the project, said his company remained dedicated to correcting the problems, acknowledging that in the Arizona testing sites "our customer's and our expectations were not initially met."

Although the testing has taken longer than planned, costing about $20 million so far, Peters said a much-improved high-tech system would evolve.

"We have every reason to be confident," he said, that "future deployments will do exactly what they are designed to do -- provide the Border Patrol with an unprecedented level of situational awareness to enhance border security and improve agent safety."

But the delays and breakdowns have prompted critics on both sides of the border debate to call for fresh ideas to improve security along the frontier with Mexico.

Ira Mehlman, a spokesman for the nonprofit Federation for American Immigration Reform, said his group thinks that more and higher conventional fences and old-fashioned border agent surveillance are more reliable than the technology.

"Instead of spending a lot of time reassessing," Mehlman said, "they should get out there and do the sorts of things we know work effectively to get control of the border, such as double fencing and more manpower."

That thought is not lost on Napolitano, who in ordering the reassessment said that "a comprehensive border security strategy must include an effective combination of physical infrastructure, manpower and technology."

The Secure Border Initiative was once heralded as a sweeping plan to throw up a physical barricade and high-tech equipment to keep drugs, guns and undocumented workers away from what has for years been criticized as a far too porous border.

Borkowski said nearly all of the planned physical fencing was in place along about 620 miles of terrain "where we think we need it." He said an additional 30 miles still must be fenced in the Rio Grande Valley in Texas. The cost for the physical fence was $3.4 billion.

The high-tech phase, known as SBInet, carries a price tag upon completion of about $8 billion. It was initially envisioned for the entire 2,000 miles of the border.

The technological wizardry was designed to send signals and video images to Border Patrol command centers, much like an aircraft control center, so agents could be quickly dispatched to investigate border breaches.

But it still has not gotten out of the testing phase in the two Arizona sites, which cover just 50 miles of border. Borkowski said satellite communications, even sending signals at two-second intervals, were too slow because by the time cameras could fix on trouble spots, the people or vehicles passing the border were often gone.

"As it turned out, a few seconds is enough to lose the image," he said.

Borkowski and Peters, the Boeing vice president, said the company was trying to work out what Peters called the "bugs or issues." The government has not given up, Borkowski said.

"I have to know what's going on. I have to have good, accurate, timely intelligence. I have to have the ability to act on that knowledge," Borkowski said.

And either way, "technology usually helps with the surveillance part. A couple of towers frees up to 50 agents to do more response work. They really complement each other."

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Lou Dobbs Tonight
Thursday, April 9, 2009

Plus, outrage after President Obama prepares to push ahead with his plan for so-called comprehensive immigration reform. Pres. Obama is fulfilling a campaign promise to give
legal status to millions of illegal aliens as he panders to the pro-amnesty, open borders lobby. Tonight we will have complete coverage.
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Lou Dobbs Tonight
Monday, February 16, 2009
Construction of the 670 miles of border fence mandated by the Bush administration is almost complete. The Border Patrol says the new fencing, more agents and new technology
have reduced illegal alien apprehensions. But fence opponents are trying to stop the last few miles from being finished. We will have a full report, tonight.


Plus, even open border advocates agree that the most effective way of fighting illegal immigration is to crack down on the employment of illegal aliens. Yet, those same groups are
opposed to E-Verify, which has an initial accuracy rate of 99.6% making it one the most accurate programs ever. E-Verify was stripped from the stimulus bill but who stripped it out and who is opposed to verifying employment status is still not clear.

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“The president's straddling can work for the time being. But unless he wants to end up in the sawdust, acrobat Obama will eventually have to hop on one horse and lead the way. That would have to be the horse named "Enforcement First." CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR

According to the HERITAGE FOUNDATION.org, the Mexican invasion will cost us 3.7 trillion ABOVE what the illegals put into the economy.

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