http://www.federalobserver.com/archive.php?aid=10612



Did Americans see what REALLY happened?



By S. J. Miller
[] 

Most Americans saw video footage of mass protests, demanding "rights" for 
illegal aliens in major cities like Chicago, Atlanta, Phoenix and Los Angeles. 
From 12,000 in Phoenix to 500,000 in Los Angeles, illegal aliens converged and 
put centers of major cities into gridlock for hours.

Americans were shocked to see law and order defied, with the consent and even 
encouragement of local officials and the police. But did they really see what 
was happening? Probably not!

Americans didn't see what they don't know what to look for. Despite the 
touchy-feely, "we're all the same under the skin" human-rights rhetoric, 
Mexicans and third-world Latin American politics are much different than in the 
US, and not what Americans want here. While their distateful political habits 
and behavior are increasingly common in the US, Americans must recognize the 
tactics when they move from El Salvador or Mexico City to Kansas City or 
Atlanta.

To be blunt and politically incorrect, recognize third-world behavior as well 
as its source. when it appears in our back yards.

Mass Protests don't "just happen"
Despite what illegal alien advocates and their pandering politicians and media 
would have you believe, these mass protests weren't spontaneous gatherings 
prompted by mass emotional support for illegal aliens. Such operations require 
planning, time and most of all $$$$$$$$$. Big money. Luckily, the "illegal 
alien rights" movement has plenty of everything.

While benevolent-appearing entities like the Catholic Church, the 
Presbyterians, Episcopalians, Methodists and Quakers ("Friends") ally with 
ethnic groups like LULAC, MALDEF, National Council of LaRaza, Humane Borders, 
No More Deaths, present a sympathy-generating and politically correct "front," 
don't be fooled.

Use the same strategy the FBI uses to identify terrorists: Follow the money.

These groups receive their primary money from two sources: foreign governments 
(like Mexico) and wealthy open-borders groups like the Ford Foundation, 
Rockefeller Foundation, US Chamber of Commerce and the like.

100,000 illegal aliens didn't converge on Chicago and shut down the Loop at 
afternoon rush hour by depending on the Chicago Transit Authority busses and 
the El Trains. They came from 8 surrounding states, and were moved there with 
the express purpose of protesting. The fleet of busses needed would put Ray 
Nagin's New Orleans school busses to shame.

Those of us old enough to recall the anti-Vietnam War protests and civil rights 
marches of the 1960s era learned that organizations prepared these operations 
months in advance to deposit thousands of bodies in to demonstrate. While the 
30s and 40s age group are too young to remember, we're available to educate 
them.

Immediately after the passage of HR 4437 last December, Mexico and other 
countries whose economies depend on illegal alien wage remittances were 
planning to counteract Americans' demands of Congress for tough immigration law 
enforcement and elimination of illegal immigration. On Valentine's Day, foreign 
ministers of Mexico, Colombia, Panama and El Salvador flew to Washington to 
meet with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and voice alarm over the bill. (2)

It's both appalling and hypocritical that these countries so blatantly and 
arrogantly interfere with the American democratic process, particularly in view 
of Mexico's strict laws against foreigners' involvement or even commenting on 
Mexican internal affairs. In "Mexico's Undiplomatic Diplomats," Heather 
MacDonald comments on Mexico's hypocrisy:


"Mexican officials here and abroad are involved in a massive and almost daily 
interference in American sovereignty. The dozens of illegals milling in the 
consulate’s courtyard as Velázquez-Suárez speaks, and the millions more 
radiating outward from Los Angeles across the country, are not a naturally 
occurring phenomenon, like the tides. They are there thanks in part to 
Mexico’s efforts to get them into the U.S. in violation of American law, and 
to normalize their status once here in violation of the popular will.



Mexican consulates are engineering a backdoor amnesty for their illegal 
migrants and trying to discredit American immigration enforcement­activities 
clearly beyond diplomatic bounds.



Mexico’s governing class is not content simply to unload the victims of its 
failed policies on the U.S., however. It also tries to ensure that migrants 
retain allegiance to La Patria, so as to preserve the $16 billion in 
remittances that they send to Mexico each year. Mexican leaders have thus 
tasked their nation’s U.S. consulates with spreading Mexican culture into 
American schools and communities. Given the American public’s swelling anger 
about illegal immigration, it’s past time for Washington to tell Mexico to 
cease interfering and for the Bush administration to start enforcing the law." 
(3)



MacDonald's comments only validate what Americans see every day - Mexican 
consulates issuing their government's fraudulent matricula consular cards to 
their illegal aiens, and then urging state and local government to accept these 
cards as "identification." Mexican interests commonly lobby state and federal 
legislatures to pass laws favorable to their illegal aliens. Mexico won't 
tolerate such interference in their internal affairs.

But as usual, our wrath should be directed at American politicians who allow 
foreign governments to interfere. US laws against foreign political 
contributions are easily evaded, particularly since McCain-Feingold campaign 
legislation.

Violence and intimidation is part of "south of the border" politics.
Political change in Mexico requires mass protests and often violence. There's 
no history of peaceful change there, and every Mexican knows it. Nowhere is 
there a better example of "might makes right." "Taking to the streets" is their 
first resort, not the last resort as has been true in America. We all recall 
the stories of angry campesinos (farmers) who rode horseback into the Mexican 
Senate immediately after the passage of NAFTA put them out of business.

The recent success of former Mexican braceros in collecting from their 
government their long-overdue wages earned during the 1942-1962 work in the US 
required them to mob the private ranch of President Vicente Fox. 
Hypocritically, Fox was so angry that he spoke of prosecuting these Mexicans 
for criminal trespassing to protect his private property rights. The San Diego 
Union Tribune story bluntly told what led to success: "the bitter product of 
years of angry, sometimes violent protests, on both sides of the border 
demanding that the former workers get what's owed them." (1)
[] 

Although hushed up for years, news stories of kidnappings and murders in Mexico 
routinely appear in newspapers. Such violence is rife not only in border towns, 
but throughout Mexico.

Avoiding violence is the primary motive for Mexican government officials to 
grant popular demands. We all recognize that avoiding such violence is a strong 
motive for Mexico's ruling class to promote illegal immigration to the US - 
unemployed Mexican workers aren't in Mexico to protest and riot, and their US 
wages return to bolster the Mexican economy.

Americans who think this Mexican "custom" hasn't entered the US should "get a 
clue" and fast. Last Wednesday, I attended a Town Hall held by my Congressman 
(J.D. Hayworth of Arizona) for his constituents. The topic of illegal 
immigration was addressed, and Congressman Hayworth openly opposed the current 
"guest worker amnesty" legislation being debated in the Senate Judiciary 
Committee.

A Mexican stood and told everyone of the need for Americans to "show 
compassion" to illegal aliens in the demands for amnesty. When he saw that the 
audience wasn't buying his sales pitch, he switched his tactic to threats of 
violence and intimidation by warning of the "tension" in the US caused by 
American opposition to illegal alien amnesty, and said that it could produce 
violence.

While most citizens present didn't pick up on his threat, Congressman Hayworth 
wasn't fooled for a minute. "J.D." quickly told the man in no uncertain terms 
that Americans would not be threatened or intimidated into granting illegal 
aliens amnesty, and the citizens' loud applause showed that the "Mexican" 
tactic had backfired.

My reference to the man as "Mexican" is recognition of his national loyalty and 
the agenda he follows, not his citizenship. He may well have been a native-born 
US citizen. Congressman Jim Kolbe of Arizona is another that I'd call a Mexican 
- where he was born is totally counter to his loyalty and the agenda he 
promotes.

Wolves in "multicultural" clothing.
Many educational bureaucrats promote the Mexican/illegal alien agenda as 
ardently as the businesses who profit from dirt-cheap wages that fatten 
corporate wallets.

As with greedy, cheap-labor corporations and pandering non-profit groups, 
educational bureaucrats are adept at ignoring the huge public costs and 
negative impact generated by illegal immigration.

Do these supposedly well-educated people approve of the violence and 
intimidation that the illegal alien influence has added to the American 
political process?

Brenda Dean, Assistant Director of Hamblen County (TN) Schools recently 
commented of the effect of huge numbers of illegal aliens in their schools, 
burdening the local taxpayers: "I think that cultural diversity adds to the 
richness of our community," says Dean. Does that include the violence, 
intimidation and corruption brought to the US political process by people who 
demonstrate contempt for law and order? I'm sure Ms. Dean would tap-dance 
around the question and evade the issue with five-dollar educational words, as 
such people are so adept at doing.

Give me an airsick bag.

Resources:


(1) Allen Wall, Memo From Mexico, Vicente Fox & the Braceros: Hypocrisy & 
Fraud, VDARE.com, March 23 2004,


http://www.vdare.com/awall/the_braceros.htm



(1) Migrant Pay Decades Late - Mexico to compensate for long-forgotten fund, 
San Diego Union Tribune, January 3 2006,


http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/mexico/20060103-9999-1m3braceros.html



(2) Protests over immigration bill, Newsday, February 23 2006,


http://www.newsday.com/news/local/longisland/ny-liimmi0223,0,1059099.story?coll=ny-top-headlines



(3) Heather MacDonald, Mexico's Undiplomatic Diplomats, The City Journal, 
Autumn 2006



(4) (I>Senator: Newspaper 'Crossed Line', WXIA News, March 23 2006,


http://www.11alive.com/news/news_article.aspx?storyid=77664



(5) Hamblen politician critical of spending on education for immigrants, WBIR 
News, October 10 2005,


http://www.wbir.com/news/news.aspx?storyid=29253



~ About the author ~


S. J. Miller is a former veteran of the IT industry who sought another career 
rather than "follow the jobs" abroad, and a lifelong resident of border states, 
California, Texas, Arizona, and Nevada.



(c) S. J. Miller, 2006. All Rights Reserved

"Published originally at  <http://www.federalobserver.com/> 
FederalObserver.com: republication allowed with this notice and hyperlink 
intact."



 



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