Sunday, January 16, 2011

Wall St. & the Mexican Fascist Party of La Raza

MEXICANOCCUPATION.blogspot.com

*
“…We’re here today to show L.A., show the minority people here, the Anglo-Saxons, that we are here, the majority, we’re here to stay. We do the work in this city, we take care of the spoiled brat children… We’re here in Westwood… to show white Anglo-Saxon Protestant L.A., the few of you who remain, that we are the majority, and we claim this land as ours, it’s always been ours, and we’re still here, and none of the talk about deporting.”
– Fabian Nunez, California assemblyman

*
THE LA RAZA “THE RACE” AGENDA IS MEX SUPREMACY

“Back in 1969, Gutierrez said: "We have got to eliminate the gringo, and what I mean by that is if the worst comes to the worst, we have got to kill him." He has continued to promote the same hateful "reconquista" ideology ever since.”



CORPORATE CONTRIBUTORS TO THE MEXICAN FASCIST PARTY of LA RAZA

THEIR AGENDA IS DEPRESSED WAGES, ILLEGALS IN JOBS FIRST, NO E-VERIFY, OPEN BORDERS, NO REAL WALL, AND NO-STRINGS AMNESTY… OR AT LEAST CONTINUED OBAMA NON-ENFORCEMENT!

*
HOW MANY OF THE BELOW CORPORATIONS BENEFIT FROM THE INVASION OF 38 MILLION, HALF OF WHICH ARE IN OUR JOBS TO KEEP WAGES DEPRESSED?


About The National Council of The Race - La Raza


Corporate Board of Advisors
From: http://www.nclr.org/section/corporate_board_of_advisors:
Established in 1982, the Corporate Board of Advisors (CBA) is made up of senior executives from 25 major corporations, as well as liaison staff from each company. The CBA meets twice a year, and presentations and discussions keep the CBA updated on NCLR’s activities and provide opportunities for dialogue and decision-making about issues and programs of common concern. Throughout the year NCLR benefits from advice and assistance from these closest corporate associates. CBA members also assist NCLR and its network through financial, in-kind, and programmatic support.
Chair
Al Bru, President and CEO, Frito-Lay North America
Principal Members
Peter Debreceny, Vice President, Corporate Relations, Allstate Insurance Company
Sue Oliver, Senior Vice President, Human Resources, American Airlines
Connie Weaver, Executive Vice President, Public Relations, AT&T
Deval L. Patrick, Executive VP, General Counsel, Secretary, The Coca Cola Company
Hugo Patiño, Vice President, Research and Development, Coors Brewing Company
Jim Padilla, President, North American Operations, Ford Motor Company
Peter J. Capell, Senior Vice President and President, Big G Division, General Mills
Roderick D. Gillum, VP Corp. Relations and Diversity, General Motors Corporation
Wynn Watkins, Sr. VP, Director of Community and Public Affairs, J.C. Penney Company, Inc.
Russ Deyo, Corporate Vice President and Executive Committee Member, Johnson and Johnson
Terry M. Faulk, Senior. Vice President, Human Resources, Kraft Foods, Inc.
Joseph B. Gleason, Managing Director, Manning, Selvage and Lee
James Kallstrom, Senior Executive Vice President, MBNA America Bank, NA
Jim Johannesen, U.S. Senior Vice President, Cheif Support Officer, McDonald’s Corporation
Charlotte Frank, Vice President, Research and Development, The McGraw-Hill Companies
Mike Jones, Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary, Miller Brewing Company
Sharon C. Taylor, Sernior Vice President, Corporate Human Resources, Prudential Financial
Mary Jane Hall, Senior Vice President, HR for Control Systems, Rockwell Automation
Barbara Cowden, Executive Vice President, State Farm Insurance Campanies
Kathy Bushkin, President, Time Warner Foundation
Jovita Carranza , Vice President of Air Operations, United Parcel Service
Katherine Brown, Senior VP, Public Policy Development, Verizon Communications
Jay Allen, Senior Vice President, Corporate Affairs, Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.
Liaisons
Natalie L. Belisle, Communications Consultant, Corporate Relations, Allstate Insurance Company
Lourdes Hassler, Manager, U.S. Latin America and Development, American Airlines
Marie Long, Vice President, Constituency Relations, AT&T
Alfred J. Argüello, Senior Vice President, Bank of America
Luddy Hayden, Federal Relations Representative, Chevron Corporation
Ana Duarte McCarthy, Director of Global Workforce Diversity, CitiGroup
Rudy Beserra, Vice President, Corporate Latin Affairs Department, The Coca-Cola Company
Olga García, Corporate Relations Manager, Coors Brewing Company
Raquel Egusquiza, Director, Community Development, Ford Motor Company Fund
CeLois J. Steele, Senior Manager, Multicultural Community Relations, General Mills
Orlando Padilla, Director Public Policy Center, General Motors Corporation
Vicki Lynn Cartwright, Women’s and Multicultural Events, J.C. Penney Company, Inc.
José Sosa, Director, State Government Affairs, Johnson and Johnson
Carlos Abrams-Rivera, Business Director, External Development, Kraft Foods North America
Rudy Mendez, Vice President, Diversity Affairs, McDonald's Corporation
Luis Viada, Managing Director, Global Development,The McGraw-Hill Companies
José R. Ruano, Manager Corporate Relations, Miller Brewing Company
David Gonzales, Vice President, Community Affairs, PepsiCo, Inc.
Ron Harrison, Retired Senior Vice President, PepsiCo, Inc.
René O. Deida, Program Officer, The Prudential Foundation
Christine G. Rodríguez, Vice President, State and Community Relations, Rockwell Automation
Art Ruiz, Federal Affairs Director, State Farm Insurance Companies
Luis Castro, Director of Corporate Responsibility, Time Warner
Gerri Warren-Merrick, Vice President, Community Relations, Time Warner
Bernard Collins, United Parcel Service
Fred Fernández, Director, Corporate Relations, United Parcel Service
Emilio Gonzalez, Director, Public Policy and Strategic Alliances, Verizon Communications
José "Pepe" Estrada, Director, Hispanic Markets, Diversity Relations, Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.
Delia Garcia, Director of Diversity, Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

*

The National Council of La Raza (NCLR) is not only one of the wealthiest and most politically powerful militant organizations in the country, it is also notoriously racist and subversive. The group's name, "La Raza," means "The Race," by which they are referring to ethnic Mexicans, or more broadly to "hispanics" or "latinos." And it is quite clear from their decades of vitriolic rhetoric — both spoken and written — that the La Raza activists are trying to engender not only race consciousness amongst hispanic U.S. citizens and Mexican migrants, but also racial militancy and animosity toward "Gringo America."
The NCLR grew out of the La Raza Unida (The Race United) Party and the Southwest Council of La Raza in the late 1960s and early 1970s. The key leaders were Marxist-Leninist followers of Fidel Castro and Che Guevarra.
In 1970, the California Senate Fact-Finding Subcommittee on Un-American Activities said this about La Raza Unida: "Its president is Maclovio Barraza. Mr. Barraza has been identified by the Subversive Activities Control Board as a member of the Communist Party, and presides over the Council which recently received a grant of $1,300,000 from the Ford Foundation."

Maclovio Barraza was the NCLR Board of Directors' founding Chairperson, and the NCLR continues to honor this hardcore Marxist by awarding the Moclavio Barraza Award to its top activist each year.
One of the early founders of La Raza was Professor Jose Angel Gutierrez, whose violent, extremist rhetoric has caused NCLR some public relations problems. Back in 1969, Gutierrez said: "We have got to eliminate the gringo, and what I mean by that is if the worst comes to the worst, we have got to kill him." He has continued to promote the same hateful "reconquista" ideology ever since. But that didn't stop NCLR from bestowing on him their "Hero Award" in 1994.
The radical student group MEChA (Moviemento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlan), with which NCLR has been closely allied for several decades, is even more explicitly and militantly, having adopted the slogan, "Por La Raza Todo, Fuera de La Raza Nada," which translated means: "For the Race, Everything; Outside the Race, Nothing."
MEChA's founding documents and literature are replete with appeals to "La Raza de Bronce" (The Bronze Race) and condemnation of the "brutal gringo." MEChA, as its name suggests, is also a leading promoter of the radical "reconquista" (reconquest) movement, a plan of to take over the states of California, Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, and Texas — a region they refer to as "Aztlan" — which they claim was stolen from the "Aztecan" peoples. NCLR provides major financial support to MEChA and many of NCLR's leaders were MEChA leaders in their college days.
NCLR: Agents for the Government of Mexico?
Especially troubling is NCLR's leading role in the Fundacion Solidaridad Mexicano Americana (Foundation for Mexican-American Solidarity, FSMA), an organization founded and funded by the government of Mexico and directed by the Mexican Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Ministry of Public Education. Both of these ministries have been engaged in efforts aimed at demanding full political rights for illegal aliens in the U.S. and indoctrinating America's Hispanic population in radical, racist La Raza ideology.
Top members of La Raza, MALDEF, the National Immigration Forum and other leading immigration activist organizations also serve on the Council of the FSMA. As such, they are acting as agents for a foreign power that is actively seeking to influence our national, state, and local laws and policies, in ways that are inimical to the interests of our nation and our citizens. NCLR and these other participating groups should be investigated by Congress to determine if they are breaking any laws, especially since these organizations and/or their affiliates not only enjoy tax-exempt status, but even receive millions of dollars from federal and state government agencies.
New Stealth Federal Funding Bill for La Raza
Which brings us to an extraordinary matter of some urgency. Several weeks before the White House and its Senate allies announced their big "breakthrough" legislation (S.1348), radicals in the House quietly introduced legislation to pump $5 million directly into La Raza next year — and $10 million per year for "each fiscal year thereafter."

H. R. 1999, entitled the Hope Fund Act of 2007, should truthfully be labeled the "Perpetual Funding of La Raza Radicals Act."
It is being sponsored by Rep. Ruben Hinojosa (D-Tex.) and Rep. Rick Renzi (R-Ariz.).
Since the bill [4] is rather short, we include the entire text below:
To authorize appropriations for assistance for the National Council of La Raza and the Raza Development Fund.
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
April 23, 2007
Mr. HINOJOSA (for himself and Mr. RENZI) introduced the following bill; which was referred to the Committee on Financial Services
A BILL
To authorize appropriations for assistance for the National Council of La Raza and the Raza Development Fund.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the `Hope Fund Act of 2007'.
SEC. 2. ASSISTANCE FOR NATIONAL COUNCIL OF LA RAZA AND RAZA DEVELOPMENT FUND.
(a) Use- The Secretary of Housing and Urban Development shall, to the extent amounts are made available pursuant to subsection (b), make a grant to the National Council of La Raza for the purpose of providing technical and financial assistance to local non-profit organizations to undertake community development and affordable housing projects and programs serving low- and moderate-income households, particularly through organizations located in neighborhoods with substantial populations of income-disadvantaged households of Hispanic origin. Assistance provided by the Secretary under this section may be used by the National Council of La Raza or the Raza Development Fund to--

(1) provide technical and financial assistance for site acquisition and development, construction financing, and short- and long-term financing for housing, community facilities, and economic development;
(2) leverage capital from private entities, including private financial institutions, insurance companies, and private philanthropic organizations;
(3) provide technical assistance, training, support, and advice to develop the management, financial, and administrative capabilities of housing development organizations serving low-income households, including Hispanic households; and
(4) conduct such other activities as may be determined by the Secretary and the National Council of La Raza.
(b) Authorization of Appropriations- There is authorized to be appropriated for grants under this section--
(1) $5,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
(2) $10,000,000 for each fiscal year thereafter.
Although S.1348, the immigration bill, is far more important and will have a much larger and more dramatically harmful impact than H.R. 1999, nevertheless, the La Raza funding bill is such blatant pork-barrel pandering to an extremist, racist lobbying group, that it sends an unmistakable message about what the "stakeholders" behind the Kennedy-Bush amnesty are really after: more money, more power, more revolution — and the complete destruction of our borders and security.
With millions more tax dollars in their political war chest, they would become even more brazen in their demands. They know that this is a volatile issue that could rouse the wrath of American voters. Which is why none of the sponsors of the legislation have mentioned H.R. 1999 on their House web sites, and why the NCLR has also kept mum about this planned political payoff.
But their dirty secret is out. If it is sufficiently exposed, it can stir enough opposition not only to stop H.R. 1999, but also to defeat S.1348 or any other amnesty "compromise" that comes out of the White House-Congress immigration wheeling and dealing.

No comments: