Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Black AMERICANS & RABID MEXICAN RACISM - LA RAZA "THE RACE"

MEXICANOCCUPATION.blogspot.com


Go to http://www.MEXICANOCCUPATION.blogspot.com and read articles and comments from other Americans on what they’ve witnessed in their communities around the country. While most of the population of California is now ILLEGAL, the problems, costs, assault to our culture by Mexico is EVERYWHERE. copy and pass it to your friends.



On the inherent racist mentality of the Mexican invaders.

You may ask yourself why Obama is hell bent on AMNESTY for 38 million racist Mexicans. It’s not that he cares about the exploitation of illegals. He doesn’t give a fuck for the millions of Americans, in particular Black Americans that have fallen into poverty due to the invasion and occupation of millions of “cheap” labor Mexicans. Obama services Wall Street! Wall Street worships one god. “PROFITS CAN NEVER BE HIGH ENOUGH! WAGES CAN NEVER BE LOW ENOUGH!”

There is a reason why most of the FORTUNE 500 are LA RAZA donors and push for amnesty, open borders, no enforcement of laws prohibiting the employment of illegals, no I.C.E., and chain migration to assure millions more illegals hop our borders right into our jobs, welfare lines, and prisons.

Just as OBAMA sold us out to his bankster donors the entire first year of office, he’s now on to the LA RAZA AMNESTY.

LA RAZA…. “The Race”… one of the most powerful political parties in the United States. A party for the expansion of the Mexican occupation. A party virulently racist party for Mexican supremacy.

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ZOGBY POLL

“In Mexico, a recent Zogby poll declared that the vast majority of Mexican citizens hate Americans. [22.2] Mexico is a country saturated with racism, yet in denial, having never endured the social development of a Civil Rights movement like in the US--Blacks are harshly treated while foreign Whites are often seen as the enemy. [22.3] In fact, racism as workplace discrimination can be seen across the US anywhere the illegal alien Latino works--the vast majority of the workforce is usually strictly Latino, excluding Blacks, Whites, Asians, and others.”

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Ethnic cleansing of Anglos & blacks by illegal alien gangs in LA


Illegal alien gangs such as MS-13, the 18th Street Gang, LA Surenos, and many more now control large areas in Los Angeles. According to the LA Times, they have set up ethnic cleansing zones where Anglo and black Americans can be murdered just for entering these areas.



The Los Angeles County population is about 10 million. 5 million are illegal aliens.



According to the Los Angeles Times, 29% of inmates in federal prisons are illegal aliens, 75% of the people on the Los Angeles most wanted list are illegal aliens, and 95% of warrants for murders in Los Angeles are for illegal aliens. The Federal Bureau of Investigation reports that half of all gang members in Los Angeles are likely illegal aliens. These statistics are just the tip of the iceberg.

The Face of Illegal Immigration, Human Events : May 8 , 2007 -- by Armstrong Williams



ALIPAC, Americans for Legal Immigrations: http://www.alipac.us/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=2247


Latino leaders' silence is killing blacks

L.A. is headed for a racial meltdown unless the two groups form a coalition.

By Kerman Maddox



KERMAN MADDOX, a board member of the African American Summit on Violence Prevention, a group dedicated to reducing violence in the African American Community, is the managing partner of a public affairs.



March 21, 2007



I WILL SAY PUBLICLY what many people are whispering privately in barbershops, soul food restaurants and church parking lots in South Los Angeles. If relations don't improve between African Americans and Latinos in Southern California, we are headed for a major racial conflict.



Sure, this is multicultural Southern California, where coalition politics is supposed to rule. However, anyone paying attention to what is happening here knows the accuracy of this assessment. Why are Latinos committing violent crimes targeted against African Americans — especially in one neighborhood in the Harbor Gateway area — and why aren't Latino leaders speaking out against them?



According to The Times, police statistics show that from 1994 to 2005, there were nearly five times as many homicides, assaults and other violent crimes committed by Latinos against African Americans in Harbor Gateway as by African Americans against Latinos.



One example of how out of control race relations have been in Harbor Gateway is the case of the 19-year-old African American man with no known gang affiliation who was killed by a Latino member of the 204th Street gang because the gang member was upset that an African American had defeated a Latino in a boxing match.



Three Los Angeles members of a Latino gang known as the Avenues were convicted and sentenced to life in prison in November for hate crime violations, including killing African Americans in an effort to run them out of predominantly Latino neighborhoods.



This escalating violence between Latinos and African Americans defies logic in so many ways. The two racial groups have had many similar struggles in Southern California and have coalesced around issues such as affirmative action, livable wages, justice for janitors and police misconduct.



Clearly, African Americans are committing violent crimes against Latinos as well, but there is little evidence that those crimes are based on race as much as they are for control of turf. And the notion that Latinos are killing blacks in an effort to "ethnically cleanse" their neighborhoods is extremely troubling. Many African Americans are especially perplexed because they remember that when we had the numerical advantage, African Americans did not target Latinos for murder to rid them from our neighborhoods. It would have been unthinkable.



African Americans throughout South Los Angeles have been asking: When are Latino political leaders going to speak out against these hate crimes? If a political coalition between Latinos and African Americans does exist, now's the time to show some muscle and make something happen. Yes, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa went to Harbor Gateway and encouraged residents to get along, and he offered assistance from the city to help solve some of the socioeconomic problems that plague the area. And City Atty. Rocky Delgadillo proposed tougher penalties for gang members who commit hate crimes. But other Latino political leaders have been silent.



I suspect that if these hate crimes were being committed by the KKK against Latinos or African Americans, both communities would come together and condemn the violence as racist. Why not now?



Let's have House-Senate hearings sponsored by the Congressional Black and Hispanic caucuses, and special legislative hearings in Sacramento on the rise in targeted hate crimes. Let's have community meetings convened by the L.A. County Board of Supervisors, like those held about the crisis at the former King/Drew medical center. A few African American officials and some well-intentioned pastors and community activists cannot solve this problem; it also requires some heavy lifting by Latino political leadership. After all, what's the point in having a coalition if you can't coalesce and solve problems that are killing your constituent members?



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Black, Latino Inmates Separated

Violence Feared At Pr. George's Detention Center

By Ruben Castaneda

Washington Post Staff Writer

Saturday, March 24, 2007; B01

Corrections officers are separating black and Latino detainees in the lockdown unit of the Prince George's County Detention Center in Upper Marlboro to try to prevent violence between members of the two groups, according to an internal memo and jail officials.

Escalating tensions between the detainees prompted the March 6 memo, which directed officers to keep Latinos' recreation time separate from that of other detainees. The memo, written by Acting Lt. Col. Jerome R. Smith, chief of security at the detention center, said a "recent escalation of gang violence" prompted the changes.

"Special precautions are to be taken when inmates are out for interviews," Smith wrote. "If a Latino inmate is being interviewed, no other inmates are to be out."

The lockdown unit is for detainees who are accused of an infraction -- such as fighting -- in other parts of the facility. Inmates in the unit are confined to their cells 23 hours a day. It is designed for 96 detainees and typically holds 50 to 60 inmates.

The separation is unusual inss Washington area jails. D.C. and Montgomery and Fairfax County corrections officials said this week that they do not separate their inmates by ethnicity or race.

The memo said nothing about whether black and Latino detainees should not be assigned to the same cell. However, corrections officers in the lockdown unit are assigning black and Latino detainees to separate cells, said a supervisor at the detention center, who asked not to be identified because he had not been given permission to be interviewed.

"There's too much conflict and fighting," the supervisor said. He said officers in the unit are adhering to "jailhouse law" -- assigning black detainees to the same cells as other blacks, Latinos with Latinos, and whites with whites. "It's nothing written, but you try to keep the calm," the supervisor said.

Vicki D. Duncan, a spokeswoman for the county Department of Corrections, confirmed the authenticity of the memo. She said corrections officers consider several factors when assigning cellmates, including tensions along racial or ethnic lines.

Douglas T. Lansing, a correctional consultant and former federal Bureau of Prisons official, said keeping detainees separate temporarily could be the right thing to do in the short term. "If there is something happening that threatens the safety of inmates, it may be a smart move," he said, emphasizing that he did not know the details in Prince George's.

But he added that officials who separate detainees by race must tread carefully. "Generally, you try not to give any one group recognition that gives it authority over another group, real or imagined," Lansing said. "You have to be careful to avoid the appearance of favoring or punishing any group."

The Prince George's detention facility is designed for 1,500 detainees and is often at capacity or overcrowded. About 80 percent of the inmates are awaiting trial; most of the rest are waiting for sentencing.

About 10 to 12 percent of the detainees in the jail are Latino. Almost all the rest are black, with a sprinkling of non-Latino whites, Asians and detainees of other ethnicities rounding out the population.

Black and Latino detainees have found themselves in conflict over relatively minor issues.

For example, on March 3, two black detainees and two Latino detainees in a medium- to maximum-security section of the jail had a shouting match over the use of a television. Two hours a day are allotted for detainees to watch Spanish-language programs, and the conflict started when black detainees who were watching videos brushed off a request by the two Latino detainees to watch a program in Spanish, the supervisor said.

In October, a dozen detainees -- six black, six Latino -- were sent to the lockdown unit after brawling. That fight began when a Latino detainee accused a black detainee of stealing food.

Although the number of Latino detainees is small, some of them -- specifically members of the violent street gang MS-13, or Mara Salvatrucha -- are well-organized, the detention facility supervisor said. Made up of immigrants from El Salvador, Honduras and other Latin American countries, MS-13 is believed to be responsible for dozens of homicides and other attacks in the Washington region in recent years.

In the Prince George's jail, as many as 70 percent of the Latino detainees who are teenagers or in their early to mid-20s are members of MS-13, while most of the older Latino detainees are not, the supervisor said.

Nonetheless, some black detainees believe that every Latino detainee is a member of MS-13, the supervisor said. Both MS-13 and black gangs, including the Bloods, recruit inside the jail.

Violent clashes between black and Latino detainees have broken out elsewhere in the United States.

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