HOW MEXICO OCCUPIED AMERICAN
legally!
SENDING HORDES OF PREGNANT MEXICAN
WOMEN OVER OUR BORDERS WITH THE PROMISE OF “FREE” BIRTHING AND 18 YEARS OF
WELFARE!
AND YET THESE CHILDREN ARE RAISED
BY THE MEXICAN MOMS TO BE MEXICANS. RACIST, AND LOATHING OF AMERICAN CULTURE,
LANGUAGE AND FLAG!
*
Stop anchor baby benefits /300,000 a
year born in US
Most countries don’t even allow
that many LEGAL immigrants per year into their country...
A proposition to stop automatic benefits to children of illegals (anchor babies) is coming soon.
The cost to California is 4 to 6 billion a year. This prop is not driven by racism, but by citizen-ism... to prevent people from taking dollars from legal taxpayers to give to another illegal group of non-citizen parents....
A proposition to stop automatic benefits to children of illegals (anchor babies) is coming soon.
The cost to California is 4 to 6 billion a year. This prop is not driven by racism, but by citizen-ism... to prevent people from taking dollars from legal taxpayers to give to another illegal group of non-citizen parents....
It will also help to prevent illegals crossing our border and having a baby for this purpose (and then later complaining about unfair/exploitation) This also will help stop Birth-Tourism.
Illegal immigration will never stop, as long our laws stay the same, are not enforced, and we act like idiots and give our hard earned taxes, freedoms and citizen rights away.
300,000 illegal babies a year are born here.
97 percent of anchor baby births are paid for by US taxpayers - your money that you need for your own kids.
Ted Hilton with the TAXPAYER REVOLUTION has launched a June 2010 ballot initiative to help solve California's budget deficit crisis. The laws address the problems of "birth tourism," welfare dependency and other benefits used by those here unlawfully which are draining U.S. citizens' tax dollars. Mail all petitions to POB 9985, San Diego, CA 92169.
go to this link to DOWNLOAD the petiton for the June 2010 Ballot initiative:
http://www.taxpayerrevolution.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=8&Itemid=20
thank you.
*
City Journal
Hispanic Family Values? Runaway illegitimacy is creating a new U.S. underclass. Heather Mac Donald Autumn 2006 |
|
Unless
the life chances of children raised by single mothers suddenly improve, the
explosive growth of the U.S. Hispanic population over the next couple of
decades does not bode well for American social stability. Hispanic immigrants
bring near–Third World levels of fertility to America, coupled with what were
once thought to be First World levels of illegitimacy. (In fact, family
breakdown is higher in many Hispanic countries than here.) Nearly half of the
children born to Hispanic mothers in the U.S. are born out of wedlock, a
proportion that has been increasing rapidly with no signs of slowing down.
Given what psychologists and sociologists now know about the much higher
likelihood of social pathology among those who grow up in single-mother
households, the Hispanic baby boom is certain to produce more juvenile
delinquents, more school failure, more welfare use, and more teen pregnancy in
the future.
The
government social-services sector has already latched onto this new client
base; as the Hispanic population expands, so will the demands for a larger
welfare state. Since conservative open-borders advocates have yet to
acknowledge the facts of Hispanic family breakdown, there is no way to know
what their solution to it is. But they had better come up with one quickly,
because the problem is here—and growing.
The
dimensions of the Hispanic baby boom are startling. The Hispanic birthrate is
twice as high as that of the rest of the American population. That high
fertility rate—even more than unbounded levels of immigration—will fuel the
rapid Hispanic population boom in the coming decades. By 2050, the Latino
population will have tripled, the Census Bureau projects. One in four Americans
will be Hispanic by mid-century, twice the current ratio. In states such as California
and Texas, Hispanics will be in the clear majority. Nationally, whites will
drop from near 70 percent of the total population in 2000 to just half by 2050.
Hispanics will account for 46 percent of the nation’s added population over the
next two decades, the Pew Hispanic Center reports.
But
it’s the fertility surge among unwed Hispanics that should worry
policymakers. Hispanic women have the highest unmarried birthrate in the
country—over three times that of whites and Asians, and nearly one and a half
times that of black women, according to the Centers for Disease Control. Every
1,000 unmarried Hispanic women bore 92 children in 2003 (the latest year for
which data exist), compared with 28 children for every 1,000 unmarried white
women, 22 for every 1,000 unmarried Asian women, and 66 for every 1,000
unmarried black women. Forty-five percent of all Hispanic births occur outside
of marriage, compared with 24 percent of white births and 15 percent of Asian
births. Only the percentage of black out-of-wedlock births—68 percent—exceeds
the Hispanic rate. But the black population is not going to triple over the
next few decades.
As if
the unmarried Hispanic birthrate weren’t worrisome enough, it is increasing
faster than among other groups. It jumped 5 percent from 2002 to 2003, whereas
the rate for other unmarried women remained flat. Couple the high and
increasing illegitimacy rate of Hispanics with their higher overall fertility
rate, and you have a recipe for unstoppable family breakdown.
The
only bright news in this demographic disaster story concerns teen births.
Overall teen childbearing in the U.S. declined for the 12th year in a row in
2003, having dropped by more than a third since 1991. Yet even here, Hispanics
remain a cause for concern. The rate of childbirth for Mexican teenagers, who
come from by far the largest and fastest-growing immigrant population, greatly
outstrips every other group. The Mexican teen birthrate is 93 births per every
1,000 girls, compared with 27 births for every 1,000 white girls, 17 births for
every 1,000 Asian girls, and 65 births for every 1,000 black girls. To put
these numbers into international perspective, Japan’s teen birthrate is 3.9,
Italy’s is 6.9, and France’s is 10. Even though the outsize U.S. teen birthrate
is dropping, it continues to inflict unnecessary costs on the country, to which
Hispanics contribute disproportionately.
To
grasp the reality behind those numbers, one need only talk to people working on
the front lines of family breakdown. Social workers in Southern California, the
national epicenter for illegal Hispanic immigrants and their progeny, are in
despair over the epidemic of single parenting. Not only has illegitimacy become
perfectly acceptable, they say, but so has the resort to welfare and social
services to cope with it.
Dr.
Ana Sanchez delivers babies at St. Joseph’s Hospital in the city of Orange,
California, many of them to Hispanic teenagers. To her dismay, they view having
a child at their age as normal. A recent patient just had her second baby at
age 17; the baby’s father is in jail. But what is “most alarming,” Sanchez
says, is that the “teens’ parents view having babies outside of marriage as
normal, too. A lot of the grandmothers are single as well; they never married,
or they had successive partners. So the mom sends the message to her daughter
that it’s okay to have children out of wedlock.”
Sanchez
feels almost personally involved in the problem: “I’m Hispanic myself. I wish I
could find out what the Asians are doing right.” She guesses that Asian
parents’ passion for education inoculates their children against teen pregnancy
and the underclass trap. “Hispanics are not picking that up like the Asian
kids,” she sighs.
Conservatives
who support open borders are fond of invoking “Hispanic family values” as a
benefit of unlimited Hispanic immigration. Marriage is clearly no longer one of
those family values. But other kinds of traditional Hispanic values have
survived—not all of them necessarily ideal in a modern economy, however. One of
them is the importance of having children early and often. “It’s considered
almost a badge of honor for a young girl to have a baby,” says Peggy Schulze of
Chrysalis House, an adoption agency in Fresno. (Fresno has one of the highest
teen pregnancy rates in California, typical of the state’s heavily Hispanic
farm districts.) It is almost impossible to persuade young single Hispanic
mothers to give up their children for adoption, Schulze says. “The attitude is:
‘How could you give away your baby?’ I don’t know how to break through.”
The
most powerful Hispanic family value—the tight-knit extended family—facilitates
unwed child rearing. A single mother’s relatives often step in to make up for
the absence of the baby’s father. I asked Mona, a 19-year-old parishioner at
St. Joseph’s Church in Santa Ana, California, if she knew any single mothers.
She laughed: “There are so many I can’t even name them.” Two of her cousins,
aged 25 and 19, have children without having husbands. The situation didn’t
seem to trouble this churchgoer too much. “They’ll be strong enough to raise
them. It’s totally okay with us,” she said. “We’re very close; we’re there to
support them. They’ll do just fine.”
As
Mona’s family suggests, out-of-wedlock child rearing among Hispanics is by no
means confined to the underclass. The St. Joseph’s parishioners are precisely
the churchgoing, blue-collar workers whom open-borders conservatives celebrate.
Yet this community is as susceptible as any other to illegitimacy.
Fifty-year-old Irma and her husband, Rafael, came legally from Mexico in the
early 1970s. Rafael works in a meatpacking plant in Brea; they have raised five
husky boys who attend church with them. Yet Irma’s sister—a homemaker like
herself, also married to a factory hand—is now the grandmother of two
illegitimate children, one by each daughter. “I saw nothing in the way my
sister and her husband raised her children to explain it,” Irma says. “She gave
them everything.” One of the fathers of Irma’s young nieces has four other
children by a variety of different mothers. His construction wages are being
garnished for child support, but he is otherwise not involved in raising his
children.
The
fathers of these illegitimate children are often problematic in even more
troubling ways. Social workers report that the impregnators of younger Hispanic
women are with some regularity their uncles, not necessarily seen as a bad
thing by the mother’s family. Alternatively, the father may be the boyfriend of
the girl’s mother, who then continues to stay with the grandmother. Older men
seek out young girls in the belief that a virgin cannot get pregnant during her
first intercourse, and to avoid sexually transmitted diseases.
The
tradition of starting families young and expand- ing them quickly can come into
conflict with more modern American mores. Ron Storm, the director of the
Hillview Acres foster-care home in Chino, tells of a 15-year-old girl who was
taken away from the 21-year-old father of her child by a local child-welfare
department. The boyfriend went to jail, charged with rape. But the girl’s
parents complained about the agency’s interference, and eventually both the
girl and her boyfriend ended up going back to Mexico, presumably to have more
children. “At 15, as the QuinceaƱera tradition celebrates, you’re considered
ready for marriage,” says Storm. Or at least for childbearing; the marriage
part is disappearing.
But
though older men continue to take advantage of younger women, the age gap
between the mother and the father of an illegitimate child is quickly closing.
Planned Parenthood of Orange and San Bernardino Counties tries to teach young
fathers to take responsibility for their children. “We’re seeing a lot more 13-
and 14-year-old fathers,” says Kathleen Collins, v.p. of health education. The
day before we spoke, Scott Montoya, an Orange County sheriff’s deputy, arrested
two 14-year-old boys who were bragging about having sexual relations with a
cafeteria worker from an Olive Garden restaurant. “It’s now all about getting
girls pregnant when you’re age 15,” he says. One 18-year-old in the Planned
Parenthood fathers’ program has two children by two different girls and is
having sex with five others, says health worker Jason Warner. “A lot of [the
adolescent sexual behavior] has to do with getting respect from one’s peers,”
observes Warner.
Normally,
the fathers, of whatever age, take off. “The father may already be married or
in prison or doing drugs,” says Amanda Gan, director of operations for Toby’s
House, a maternity home in Dana Point, California. Mona, the 19-year-old
parishioner at St. Joseph’s Church, says that the boys who impregnated her two
cousins are “nowhere to be found.” Her family knows them but doesn’t know if
they are working or in jail.
Two
teen mothers at the Hillview Acres home represent the outer edge of Hispanic
family dysfunction. Yet many aspects of their lives are typical. Though these
teenagers’ own mothers were unusually callous and irresponsible, the social
milieu in which they were raised is not unusual.
Irene’s
round, full face makes her look younger than her 14 years, certainly too young
to be a mother. But her own mother’s boyfriend repeatedly forced sex on her,
with the mother’s acquiescence. The result was Irene’s baby, Luz. Baby Luz has
an uncle her own age, Irene’s new 13-month-old brother. Like Irene, Irene’s
mother had her first child at 14, and produced five more over the next 16
years, all of whom went into foster care. Irene’s father committed suicide
before she was old enough to know him. The four fathers of her siblings are out
of the picture, too: one of them, the father of her seven-year-old brother and
five-year-old sister, was deported back to Mexico after he showed up drunk for
a visit with his children, in violation of his probation conditions.
Irene
is serene and articulate—remarkably so, considering that in her peripatetic
early life in Orange County she went to school maybe twice a week. She likes to
sing and to read books that are sad, she says, especially books by Dave Pelzer,
a child-abuse victim who has published three best-selling memoirs about his
childhood trauma. She says she will never get married: “I don’t want another
man in my life. I don’t want that experience again.”
Eighteen-year-old
Jessica at least escaped rape, but her family experiences were bad enough. The
large-limbed young woman, whose long hair is pulled back tightly from her
heart-shaped face, grew up in the predominantly Hispanic farming community of
Indio in the Coachella Valley. She started “partying hard” in fifth grade, she
says—at around the same time that her mother, separated from her father, began
using drugs and going clubbing. By the eighth grade, Jessica and her mother
were drinking and smoking marijuana together. Jessica’s family had known her
boyfriend’s family since she was four; when she had her first child by him—she
was 14 and he was 21—her mother declared philosophically that she had always
known that it would happen. “It was okay with her, so long as he continued to
give her drugs.”
Jessica
originally got pregnant to try to clean up her life, she says. “I knew what I
was doing was not okay, so having a baby was a way for me to stop doing what I
was doing. In that sense, the baby was planned.” She has not used drugs since
her first pregnancy, though she occasionally drinks. After her daughter was
born, she went to live with her boyfriend in a filthy trailer without plumbing;
they scrounged food from dumpsters, despite the income from his illegal drug
business. They planned to get married, but by the time she got pregnant again
with a son, “We were having a lot of problems. We’d be holding hands, and he’d
be looking at other girls. I didn’t want him to touch me.” Eventually, the
county welfare agency removed her and put her in foster care with her two
children.
Both
Jessica and her caddish former boyfriend illustrate the evanescence of the
celebrated Hispanic “family values.” Her boyfriend’s family could not be more
traditional. Two years ago, Jessica went back to Mexico to celebrate her
boyfriend’s parents’ 25th wedding anniversary and the renewal of their wedding
vows. Jessica’s own mother got married at 15 to her father, who was ten years
her senior. Her father would not let his wife work; she was a “stay-at-home
wife,” Jessica says. But don’t blame the move to the U.S. for the behavior of
younger generations; the family crack-up is happening even faster in Latin
America.
Jessica’s
mother may have been particularly negligent, but Jessica’s experiences are not
so radically different from those of her peers. “Everybody’s having babies
now,” she says. “The Coachella Valley is filled with girls’ pregnancies. Some
girls live with their babies’ dads; they consider them their husbands.” These
cohabiting relationships rarely last, however, and a new cohort of fatherless
children goes out into the world.
Despite
the strong family support, the prevalence of single parenting among Hispanics
is producing the inevitable slide into the welfare system. “The girls aren’t
marrying the guys, so they are married to the state,” Dr. Sanchez observes.
Hispanics now dominate the federal Women, Infants, and Children free food
program; Hispanic enrollment grew over 25 percent from 1996 to 2002, while
black enrollment dropped 12 percent and white enrollment dropped 6.5 percent.
Illegal immigrants can get WIC and other welfare programs for their
American-born children. If Congress follows President Bush’s urging and grants
amnesty to most of the 11 million illegal aliens in the country today, expect
the welfare rolls to skyrocket as the parents themselves become eligible.
Amy
Braun works for Mary’s Shelter, a home for young single mothers who are
homeless or in crisis, in Orange County, California. It has become “culturally
okay” for the Hispanic population to use the shelter and welfare system, Braun
says. A case manager at a program for pregnant homeless women in the city of
Orange observes the same acculturation to the social-services sector, with its
grievance mongering and sense of victimhood. “I’ll have women in my office on
their fifth child, when the others have already been placed in foster care,”
says Anita Berry of Casa Teresa. “There’s nothing shameful about having
multiple children that you can’t care for, and to be pregnant again, because
then you can blame the system.”
The
consequences of family breakdown are now being passed down from one generation
to the next, in an echo of the black underclass. “The problems are deeper and
wider,” says Berry. “Now you’re getting the second generation of foster care
and group home residents. The dysfunction is multigenerational.”
The
social-services complex has responded with barely concealed enthusiasm to this
new flood of clients. As Hispanic social problems increase, so will the
government sector that ministers to them. In July, a New York Times
editorial, titled young latinas and a cry for help, pointed out the elevated
high school dropout rates and birthrates among Hispanic girls. A quarter of all
Latinas are mothers by the age of 20, reported the Times. With the usual
melodrama that accompanies the pitch for more government services, the Times
designated young Latinas as “endangered” in the same breath that it disclosed
that they are one of the fastest-growing segments of the population. “The time
to help is now,” said the Times—by which it means ratcheting up the
taxpayer-subsidized social-work industry.
In
response to the editorial, Carmen Barroso, regional director of International
Planned Parenthood Federation/Western Hemisphere Region, proclaimed in a letter
to the editor the “urgent need for health care providers, educators and
advocates to join the sexual and reproductive health movement to ensure the
fundamental right to services for young Latinas.”
Wherever
these “fundamental rights” might come from, Barroso’s call nevertheless seems
quite superfluous, since there is no shortage of taxpayer-funded “services” for
troubled Latinas—or Latinos. The schools in California’s San Joaquin Valley
have day care for their students’ babies, reports Peggy Schulze of Chrysalis
House. “The girls get whatever they need—welfare, medical care.” Advocates for
young unwed moms in New York’s South Bronx are likewise agitating for more
day-care centers in high schools there, reports El Diario/La Prensa. A
bill now in Congress, the Latina Adolescent Suicide Prevention Act, aims to
channel $10 million to “culturally competent” social agencies to improve the
self-esteem of Latina girls and to provide “support services” to their families
and friends if they contemplate suicide.
The
trendy “case management” concept, in which individual “cases” become the focal
point around which a solar system of social workers revolves, has even reached
heavily Hispanic elementary and middle schools. “We have a coordinator, who
brings in a collaboration of agencies to deal with the issues that don’t allow
a student to meet his academic goals, such as domestic violence or drugs,”
explains Sylvia Rentria, director of the Family Resource Center at Berendo
Middle School in Los Angeles. “We can provide individual therapy.” Rentria
offers the same program at nearby Hoover Elementary School for up to 100
students.
This
July, Rentria launched a new session of Berendo’s Violence Intervention Program
for parents of children who are showing signs of gang involvement and other
antisocial behavior. Ghady M., 55 and a “madre soltera” (single mother), like
most of the mothers in the program, has been called in because her 16-year-old
son, Christian, has been throwing gang signs at school, cutting half his
classes, and ending up in the counseling office every day. The illegal
Guatemalan is separated from her partner, who was “muy malo,” she says; he was
probably responsible for her many missing teeth. (The detectives in the heavily
Hispanic Rampart Division of the Los Angeles Police Department, which includes
the Berendo school, spend inordinate amounts of time on domestic violence
cases.) Though Ghady used to work in a factory on Broadway in downtown L.A.—
often referred to as Little Mexico City—she now collects $580 in welfare
payments and $270 in food stamps for her two American-born children.
Christian
is a husky smart aleck in a big white T-shirt; his fashionably pomaded hair
stands straight up. He goes to school but doesn’t do homework, he grins; and
though he is not in a gang, he says, he has friends who are. Keeping Ghady and
Christian company at the Violence Intervention Program is Ghady’s grandniece,
Carrie, a lively ten-year-old. Carrie lives with her 26-year-old mother but does
not know her father, who also sired her 12-year-old brother. Her five-year-old
brother has a different father.
Yet
for all these markers of social dysfunction, fatherless Hispanic families
differ from the black underclass in one significant area: many of the mothers
and the absent fathers work, even despite growing welfare use. The former
boyfriend of Jessica, the 18-year-old mother at the Hillview Acres foster home,
works in construction and moonlights on insulation jobs; whether he still deals
drugs is unknown. Jessica is postponing joining her father in Texas until she
finishes high school, because once she moves in with him, she will feel
obligated to get a job to help the family finances. The mother of Hillview’s
14-year-old Irene used to fix soda machines in Anaheim, California, though she
got fired because she was lazy, Irene says. Now, under court compulsion, she
works in a Lunchables factory in Santa Ana, a condition of getting her children
back from foster care. The 18-year-old Lothario and father of two, whom Planned
Parenthood’s Jason Warner is trying to counsel, works at a pet store. The
mother of Carrie, the vivacious ten-year-old sitting in on Berendo Middle
School’s Violence Intervention Program, makes pizza at a Papa John’s pizza
outlet.
How these
two value systems—a lingering work ethic and underclass mating norms—will
interact in the future is anyone’s guess. Orange County sheriff’s deputy
Montoya says that the older Hispanic generation’s work ethic is fast
disappearing among the gangbanging youngsters whom he sees. “Now, it’s all
about fast money, drugs, and sex.” It may be that the willingness to work will
plummet along with marriage rates, leading to even greater social problems than
are now rife among Hispanics. Or it may be that the two contrasting practices
will remain on parallel tracks, creating a new kind of underclass: a culture
that tolerates free-floating men who impregnate women and leave, like the vast
majority of black men, yet who still labor in the noncriminal economy. The question
is whether, if the disposition to work remains relatively strong, a working
parent will inoculate his or her illegitimate children against the worst
degradations that plague black ghettos.
From an intellectual
standpoint, this is a fascinating social experiment, one that academicians
are—predictably—not attuned to. But the consequences will be more than
intellectual: they may severely strain the social fabric. Nevertheless, it is
an experiment that we seem destined to see to its end. Tisha Roberts, a supervisor
at an Orange County, California, institution that assists children in foster
care, has given up hope that the illegitimacy rate will taper off. “It’s going
to continue to grow,” she said.
*
THERE
IS NO ONE THAT WORKS HARDER FOR ILLEGALS THAN BARACK OBAMA!
*
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.
*
Report Illegals & Employers Toll Free... (866) 347-2423
INS National Customer Service Center Phone: 1-800-375-5283.
http://www.FAIRUS.org
http://www.JUDICIALWATCH.org
http://www.ALIPAC.us
*
INS National Customer Service Center Phone: 1-800-375-5283.
http://www.FAIRUS.org
http://www.JUDICIALWATCH.org
http://www.ALIPAC.us
*
*
Obama Quietly Erasing Borders
(Article)
CONTACT THE HISPANDERING LA RAZA PARTY PRESIDENT HERE:
You can contact President Obama and let him know of your opposition to amnesty for illegal aliens:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/CONTACT/
*
UCLA PROFESSOR CALLS FOR MEXICAN REVOLT IN UNITED STATES
http://video.yahoo.com/watch/7165215?fr=yvmtf
*
Wake up America!!! Illegal Immigration
has to be stopped. Take a look at this website and see where all your tax
dollars are going: http://immigrationcounters.com/
See: CFR’s Plan to Integrate the
U.S., Mexico and Canada
http://www.proliberty.com/observer/20050816.htm The Great Alien Invasion - What's Happening Now http://www.rense.com/general69/inva.htm
*
"Bush Secret Border
Wars" Mayhem and terror in Southern states to protect government drug
cartels
http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/august2005/140805borderwars.htm Mexican/Bush Crime
*
“Through love of having children,
we are going to take over.” AUGUSTIN
CEBADA, BROWN BERETS, THE LA RAZA FASCIST PARTY
http://www.aztlan.net/anchor_baby_power.htm
http://www.aztlan.net/anchor_baby_power.htm
*
206 Most wanted criminals in Los Angeles. Out of 206
criminals--183 are hispanic---171 of those are wanted for Murder.
Why do Americans still protect the illegals??
http://www.dailybreeze.com/ci_11255121?appSession=934140935651450&RecordID=&PageID=2&PrevPageID=&cpipage=1&CPISortType=&CPIorderBy=
*
Why do Americans still protect the illegals??
http://www.dailybreeze.com/ci_11255121?appSession=934140935651450&RecordID=&PageID=2&PrevPageID=&cpipage=1&CPISortType=&CPIorderBy=
*
TEN MOST WANTED
CRIMINALS IN CALIFORNIA ARE MEXICANS!
http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=53103
Did you know illegals kill 12 Americans a day?
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/1738432/posts FBI Crime Statistics - Crimes committed by illegals.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/1738432/posts FBI Crime Statistics - Crimes committed by illegals.
*
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2011/feb2011/mexi-f10.shtml
Pentagon official: US could send troops to fight Mexican “insurgency”
*
http://www.congressandimmigration.com/The_Dark_Side_Index.htm
Recent Heritage Studies
................HERITAGE.org