Sunday, November 6, 2011

PENNSYLVANIA SAYS NO TO BEING A ANOTHER MEX GANG INFESTED WELFARE STATE LIKE CA WHERE ALL THE JOBS GO TO LA RAZA!

PERHAPS PENNSYLVANIA FINALLY SEES WHAT LA RAZA ‘THE RACE” HAS DONE IN MEX OCCUPIED MEXIFORNIA!

CALIFORNIA PUTS OUT $20 BILLION PER YEAR IN SOCIAL SERVICE TO ILLEGALS, INCLUDING $1.5 BILLION TO BE MEXICO’S PRISON SYSTEM.

HOSPITALS, MANY IN MELTDOWN FROM BEING LA RAZA’S “FREE” MEDICAL AND ANCHOR BABY BIRTHING CENTERS, LOSE $1.2 BILLON PER YEAR.

LOS ANGELES COUNTY PUTS OUT $600 MILLION PER YEAR IN WELFARE TO ILLEGALS.

HALF OF ALL JOBS IN LOS ANGELES GO TO ILLEGALS USING STOLEN SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBERS.
ACCORDING TO CA’S A.G. KAMALA HARRIS, NEARLY HALF OF ALL MURDERS IN CA ARE BY MEX GANGS!

ONE-THIRD OF ALL “CHEAP” LABOR ILLEGAL FARM WORKERS IN MEXIFORNIA END UP ON SOCIAL SERVICES.

VIVA LA RAZA SUPREMACY? APPARENTLY NOT IN PENNSYLVANIA. GUESS THEY WILL ALL BE MOVING TO MEXIFORNIA!

(DO A SEARCH ON THE BLOG FOR ARTICLES ON THE LA RAZA OCCUPATION OF MEXIFORNIA!)
THE LA RAZA AGENDA

TAKEN FROM TRANSCRIPTS DATED 1995.

“WE WILL TAKE CONTROL OF OUR COUNTRY (U.S.) BY VOTE IF POSSIBLE AND VIOLENCE IF NECESSARY!”

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http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2011/11/la-raza-mexican-fascist-supremacist.html
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CALIFORNIA IS NOW HALF LA RAZA MEXICAN and breeding like bunnies.
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NEVADA IS NOW 30% LA RAZA MEXICAN and breeding like bunnies.
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COLORADO IS NOW 20% LA RAZA MEXICAN and breeding like bunnies.
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MEXICO ANCHORS THEIR OCCUPATION, AND WELFARE STATE IN OUR BORDERS BY SENDING PREGNANT WOMEN OVER FOR “FREE” ANCHOR BABY BIRTHING, AND THEN 18 YEARS OF WELFARE. THIS CHILD BORN IN OUR BORDERS WILL BE AN AMERICAN CITIZEN, AND ALSO STILL A MEXICAN CITIZEN!

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Agendas of MEChA, La Raza, MALDEF, and Southwest Voter Registration Projects These are transcripts of live, recorded statements by elected U.S. politicians, college professors, and pro-illegal alien activists whose objective is to take control of our country "by vote if possible and violence if necessary!"


Pennsylvania bills would crack down strongly on illegal immigrants


November 02, 2011

By CHARLES THOMPSON, The Patriot-News

View full sizeSEAN SIMMERS, The Patriot-News, 2010 State Rep. Daryl Metcalfe, center, R-Butler County, says his package of bills is designed to shred the economic cover he claims too many illegal immigrants use to grab public benefits and take jobs. He says his fight honors the role of the legal immigrant in American history.
It’s not every day that lawmakers in Harrisburg gird themselves for votes against illegal immigrants.

But that pervades Rep. Daryl Metcalfe’s ongoing fight against illegal immigrants in Pennsylvania — a battle over what demographers say is a relatively small slice of the state’s population.

Pollsters also say the matter grabs even less of the general public’s attention, but it seems likely to dominate the social justice agenda for the rest of this two-year legislative term.

Metcalfe’s “National Security Starts At Home” package includes bills requiring:
— Verification of legal status for anyone 18 or older applying for public benefits such as welfare or food stamps.

— Employers seeking public-works contracts to use the voluntary federal database “E-Verify” to authenticate employees’ Social Security numbers; and higher penalties for firms that have hired illegal immigrants.
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— Police to verify a person’s immigration status if that person is stopped for a crime and reasonably suspected of being in this country illegally.

Metcalfe, along with like-minded lawmakers from other states, has also proposed a special noncitizen birth certificate for the U.S.-born children of illegal immigrants to prevent their families from gaining privileges.

Only emergency medical treatment is spared.

“From one human to another,” Metcalfe said Tuesday, “you can’t allow someone’s life to be put at risk because they violated an immigration law.”

In part, the focus comes because of the new Republican majority in the state House, which has given Metcalfe — who has introduced similar bills for years — a platform to push them as chairman of the House State Government Committee.

But the fight also echoes a national trend that has seen lawmakers in several states acting on immigration issues in the face of rising costs and federal gridlock on meaningful reform.

Metcalfe said his package is designed to shred the economic cover he says too many illegal immigrants use to grab public benefits and take jobs.

The annual public cost from illegal immigration in Pennsylvania has been estimated at $1.4 billion by the conservative Federation for American Immigration Reform, which has applauded Metcalfe’s efforts.

“The states are paying an enormous price for the failure or refusal of the federal government to enforce the laws,” said Ira Mehlman, a spokesman for FAIR. “They shouldn’t have to roll over and endure millions, and in some cases billions, in annual costs.”

To opponents, the effort is at best a waste of time, and at worst courts economic suicide through a brand of de facto racism.

“Pennsylvania cannot afford new laws that show people that they’re not welcome here,” said Andy Hoover, state legislative director for the American Civil Liberties Union, citing a population growth rate of minorities in the state that is only about one-third the national rate.

“We need to welcome people as much as possible, and what [Metcalfe] is doing does not achieve that.”

It’s not just civil libertarians who are raising caution flags. Some in the state business community are worried the bills will force them into a police role and expose them to potential lawsuits if they incorrectly flag a potential hire.
Brad Hollabaugh, an orchard owner in Biglerville, Adams County, said he hires about 25 immigrant workers each summer. All are checked in accordance with federal requirements that require them to show a green card, work visa or other proof of ID.
“It’s not just fly in off the street, pick some fruit, get aid in cash at the end of the day and see you later,” Hollabaugh said. “If they don’t present the appropriate documentation, we can’t hire them, and we won’t.”

Hollabaugh acknowledged that some of the documents he sees might be frauds. But, he added, his family doesn’t have time to take on the role of investigators when the crop is in, and he has never turned away a local resident because of the migrants.
“American citizens aren’t coming to the farms to work. It’s just the reality,” he said.

Pennsylvania is an unlikely stage for this debate.

Fruit orchards not far from Harrisburg have relied on foreign-born labor for years to bring in the peach and apple harvests.

While there are large pockets of Hispanics in some towns and cities, the Pew Hispanic Center estimates there are 160,000 illegal immigrants statewide. The 110,000 in the workforce, the center adds, amount to 1.7 percent of the workforce; the national average is three times higher, at 5.2 percent.

On the other hand, Pennsylvania has always been known for a strong streak of social conservatism and difficulty in dealing with change. Local efforts such as those of former Hazleton mayor-turned-U.S. Rep. Lou Barletta against illegal immigrants there made national headlines.

Metcalfe, a Butler County Republican whose wife is a naturalized German, argues that his fight serves to honor the role of the legal immigrant in American history. He attributes his zeal for the issue to his fiscal conservatism and military service.
He takes poll results that show the economy as the top concern of Pennsylvanians and turns them into a tool, arguing that if people are worried about finding jobs, “then it’s our responsibility to find ways to see that there are jobs available for Pennsylvanians.”

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