Wednesday, April 26, 2006

BOYCOTT SEABOARD CORP!

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Seaboard Corp. said it will close its Guymon, Oklahoma, pork plant on Monday to allow workers to attend rallies planned for that day in support of immigration reform, the company said.

The plant has a daily hog slaughter capacity of about 16,000 head, the company said.
On Tuesday, Cargill Inc. said its five beef plants and two hog plants will be closed on Monday for the rallies.
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Pork Division Seaboard Foods9000 West 67th Street, Suite 200P.O. Box 29135Shawnee Mission, Kansas 66201Phone: 1-800-262-7907 or 913-261-2600Email: info@seaboardfoods.comWeb Site: http://www.seaboardfoods.com/ http://www.prairiefresh.com

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To whome it may concern,

My family and friends will not be purchasing any more Sea Board Foods products. You company's support of ILLEGAL immigration will not be tolerated by all American consumers. I intended to do everything in my power to stop people from purchasing your politically tainted Pork....

Regards,

Wake up and smell the Jewry!

Let's call the Israel lobby the Israel lobby
Kooky lobby deniers pretend Israeli influence in U.S. is a myth

AUSTIN, Texas -- One of the consistent deformities in American policy debate has been challenged by a couple of professors, and the reaction proves their point so neatly it's almost funny.

A working paper by John Mearsheimer, professor of political science at the University of Chicago, and Stephen Walt, professor of international affairs at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard, called "The Israel Lobby" was printed in the London Review of Books earlier this month. And all hell broke loose in the more excitable reaches of journalism and academe.

For having the sheer effrontery to point out the painfully obvious -- that there is an Israel lobby in the United States -- Mearsheimer and Walt have been accused of being anti-Semitic, nutty and guilty of "kooky academic work." Alan Dershowitz, who seems to be easily upset, went totally ballistic over the mild, academic, not to suggest pretty boring article by Mearsheimer and Walt, calling them "liars" and "bigots."

Of course there is an Israeli lobby in America -- its leading working group is the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC). It calls itself "America's Pro-Israel Lobby," and it attempts to influence U.S. legislation and policy.
Several national Jewish organizations lobby from time to time. Big deal -- why is anyone pretending this non-news requires falling on the floor and howling? Because of this weird deformity of debate.

In the United States, we do not have full-throated, full-throttle debate about Israel. In Israel, they have it as matter of course, but the truth is that the accusation of anti-Semitism is far too often raised in this country against anyone who criticizes the government of Israel.
Being pro-Israel is no defense, as I long ago learned to my cost. Now I've gotten used to it. Jews who criticize Israel are charmingly labeled "self-hating Jews." As I have often pointed out, that must mean there are a lot of self-hating Israelis, because those folks raise hell over their own government's policies all the time.

I don't know that I've ever felt intimidated by the knee-jerk "you're anti-Semitic" charge leveled at anyone who criticizes Israel, but I do know I have certainly heard it often enough to become tired of it.

And I wonder if that doesn't produce the same result: giving up on the discussion.
It's the sheer disproportion, the vehemence of the attacks on anyone perceived as criticizing Israel that makes them so odious. Mearsheimer and Walt are both widely respected political scientists -- comparing their writing to "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion" is just silly.
Several critics have pointed out some flaws in the Mearsheimer-Walt paper, including a too-broad use of the term "Israel lobby" -- those of us who are pro-Israel differ widely -- and having perhaps overemphasized the clout of the Israel lobby by ignoring the energy lobby.
It seems to me the root of the difficulty has been Israel's inability first to admit the Palestinians have been treated unfairly and, second, to figure out what to do about it. Now here goes a big fat generalization, but I think many Jews are so accustomed (by reality) to thinking of themselves as victims, it is especially difficult for them to admit they have victimized others.
But the Mearsheimer-Walt paper is not about the basic conflict, but its effect on American foreign policy, and it appears to me their arguments are unexceptional. Israel is the No. 1 recipient of American foreign aid, and it seems an easy case can be made that the United States has subjugated its own interests to those of Israel in the past.

Whether you agree or not, it is a discussion well worth having and one that should not be shut down before it can start by unfair accusations of "anti-Semitism." In a very equal sense, none of this is academic. The Israel lobby was overwhelmingly in favor of starting the war with Iraq and is now among the leading hawks on Iran.

To the extent that our interests do differ from those of Israel, the matter needs to be discussed calmly and fairly. This is not about conspiracies or plots or fantasies or anti-Semitism -- it's about rational discussion of American interests. And, in my case, being pro-Israel. I'm looking forward to hearing from all you nutjobs again.

Using Term Illegal Alien Racial Slur?

By Sher Zieve – Appearing on KLIF Radio’s Gregg Knapp show, attorney Domingo Garcia said that using the terms illegal alien or illegal immigrant is a “racial slur”. Garcia said that those who use it, in reference to Hispanics, are racist.

Knapp advised Garcia that using the term “illegal aliens” or “illegal immigrants” is an accurate term applied to [their] legal vs. illegal status in the country and a true depiction of the fact that they are illegal. Garcia said: “Using words like illegal alien is like calling people derogatory names…like calling people nigger!”

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Dear Illegal Domingo,

I wanted to let you know, Mexican attorneys like you that try and play the race card reaffirm my belief that we must purge America of every last Mestizo. My suggestion, keep opening your big fat Mexican mouth and let other Americans see your true colors.

P.S."illegal aliens” - “illegal immigrants” , I hope my racist comments have offended you... :-)

John

Tuesday, April 25, 2006

More Jews in the White House...


Top Two White House Posts go to Jews


AS KARL ROVE goes into a lower-visibility mode, President Bush has placed two Jews in charge of White House daily policy planning -- making the Jewish presence there more open than ever before, though heavy Jewish influence on Bush has long been known to be a fact. Joshua Bolten was recently named as the White House chief of staff, and today Bush nominated Joel Kaplan (pictured), another Jew, to serve as Bolten's deputy. The Jerusalem Post reports on the reaction of Jewish leaders in the U.S.: '"He is simply appointing the best people for the job," said Nathan Diament, who heads the Washington office of the Orthodox Union. Another Jewish activist added that he "wouldn't read too much into it."'Bolten (pictured, left, with Bush) and Kaplan will probably be the most prominent Jewish members of the Bush administration, but not the only ones. Apart from Bolten, there is another Jewish cabinet member, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, and there are other Jewish senior staff members, including Deputy National Security Adviser Elliott Abrams and White House staffer Jay Lefkowitz. In the past year, several Jews who were holding senior posts in the administration have left, among them deputy secretary of defense Paul Wolfowitz, undersecretary of defense Doug Feith, Vice President Dick Cheney's chief of staff Lewis "Scooter" Libby and political adviser Ken Mehlman, who now heads the Republican National Committee.' The Jerusalem Post wildly downplays the impact of Jews on the Bush adminstration, and completely fails to mention the hugely influential and ubiquitous neocons -- almost entirely Jewish and all slavishly devoted to Israel's interests -- who have led the charge for war in the Middle East and even managed to create their own bogus "intelliegence agency" -- the Office of Special Plans -- to feed the White House cooked-up figures on Iraq's WMDs, and other topics, when CIA data didn't sufficiently jibe with their drive for war. The Republican Jewish Coalition's Executive Director, Matt Brooks, was ecstatic over Bolten's accession to power, saying: "It gives us a special sense of pride to have Josh, a fellow Jewish

Republican, in such a vitally important role, serving at the side of the President." The Washington Jewish Week emphasized Bolten's strong awareness of his identity as a Jew: "When Josh Bolten walked into his first meeting as a member of President George W. Bush's Cabinet in the summer of 2003, he was asked to lead the president and the Cabinet in prayer. He chose to pray for the welfare of the American government, both in Hebrew and English, a sign of his strong Jewish identity." The Week added that, with Bolten's help, Jewish leaders get special treatment not afforded to other Americans: "[Bolten has been] a quiet advocate for Jewish concerns, say Jewish organizational officials, sometimes bringing issues past the White House bureaucracy and straight to influential leaders...." William Daroff, a vice president at United Jewish Communities, seemed to contradict the Jerusalem's Post's take on things when he said "Since the beginning of this administration, he [Bolten] has been a senior-level force for making sure the Jewish community had a voice at the very highest levels of the administration. Josh Bolten as chief of staff to the president will open up great opportunities for the Jewish community to make sure we are heard...."

Stop wasting my money!

Over the past week there has been a media blitz, attempting to show a crackdown on illegals. Any pea brain knows that these beaners land in their homeland and board the next illegal bus to the states. "YOU ARE NOT FOOLING ANYONE MR. BUSH"

Feds arrest 183 fugitives, illegal immigrants in one week statewide (NOT ENOUGH"
Associated Press Posted April 24 2006, 2:45 PM EDT

MIAMI -- Federal immigration authorities arrested 183 fugitives and other illegal immigrants across Florida last week, the largest total ever in a single week in the state, officials said Monday.Those arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement included convicted people convicted of sex offenses, child abuse, cocaine trafficking and weapons violations. They were originally from 26 countries and most will eventually be deported back to those countries.

Anybody who is a fugitive from justice is a danger to the community,'' said Michael Rozos, the field director in Miami of ICE's ``Operation Phoenix'' effort to find and deport fugitive illegal immigrants. ``These operations have been going on for years, but they have become more focused.''Of the 183, 130 were fugitives who had already been ordered deported by an immigration judge. The remaining 53 were also illegal immigrants who happened to be present when one or more of the fugitives were taken into custody, Rozos said.The fugitive operation is separate from another ICE-led crackdown on employers who hire and harbor illegal immigrants. But Rozos said both are part of the Secure Border Initiative, a Homeland Security Department plan intended to beef up enforcement of existing immigration laws inside the U.S. and toughen border security.Ninety-five of those arrested were in South Florida, with 35 arrested in Tampa, 30 in Jacksonville and 23 in Orlando, according to ICE.

Hidden from you....

Data on illegal immigrants kept secret (-Keeping Secrets From Americans, It Can't be True)

2 agencies cite privacy in denying info to prosecutors

Knight Ridder Newspapers

Two federal agencies are refusing to turn over a mountain of evidence that investigators could use to indict the nation's burgeoning work force of illegal immigrants and the firms that employ them.

The Internal Revenue Service and the Social Security Administration routinely collect strong evidence of potential workplace crimes, including names and addresses of millions of people who are using bogus Social Security numbers, their wage records, and the identities of the bosses who knowingly hire them.
But they keep those facts secret.
The two agencies don't analyze their data to root out likely immigration fraud, and they won't share their millions of records so that law enforcement agencies can do that, either.
Privacy laws, they say, prohibit them from sharing their files with anyone, except in rare criminal investigations.

But the agencies don't even use the power they have.
The IRS doesn't fine even the most egregious employers who repeatedly submit inaccurate data about their workers. Social Security does virtually nothing to alert citizens whose Social Security numbers are being used by others.
Evidence abounds within their files, according to an analysis by Knight Ridder Newspapers and the Charlotte (N.C.) Observer.
One internal study found that a restaurant company had submitted 4,100 duplicate Social Security numbers for workers. Other firms submit inaccurate names or numbers reports for nearly all of their employees. One child's Social Security number was used 742 times by workers in 42 states.
"That's the kind of evidence we want," said Paul Charlton, the U.S. attorney in Arizona. He regularly prosecutes unauthorized workers, but says it's hard to prove employers are involved in the crime.
"Anything that suggests they had knowledge . . . is a good starting point. If you see the same Social Security number a thousand times, it's kind of hard for them to argue they didn't know."
On Thursday, immigration officials announced a new push toward busting bosses who hire unauthorized workers.
Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff has asked Congress for access to the secret earnings files, a tool he says would help "get control of this illegal workforce."
The records at issue are the earnings reports, sent by employers along with money withheld for taxes and Social Security.
They contain workers' names and Social Security numbers, and when they don't match Social Security records, the information is set aside in what's called the Earnings Suspense File.
Typos and name changes can cause wage reports not to match Social Security records. But increasingly, officials cite unauthorized workers using bogus Social Security numbers as a driving force behind the mismatched files.
The incorrect worker files mushroomed during the 1990s, as migrants poured into the United States. Almost half of the inaccurate reports come from such industries as agriculture, construction and restaurants, which rely on unauthorized labor.
The IRS also receives the mismatch information. It tries to match workers involved to its records, then probes to see whether the workers are paying taxes.
To work lawfully in the United States, individuals must have valid Social Security numbers or authorization from the Department of Homeland Security.
But the law doesn't require companies to verify that workers give them names and numbers that match Social Security records.

Monday, April 24, 2006

Mexicans Urged to Rape America and Send a Piece Back for Fox.

ATOTONILCO, Mexico -- They name their babies Johnny and Leslie, so certain are they that their kids' future lies in the United States. Returning migrants sprinkle English into their speech as they talk knowingly about job markets in U.S. towns. America may want to stop illegal immigration, but most Mexicans accept it as a fact of life they can't imagine changing. Mexico's economy, society and political system are built around the assumption that migration and amnesties for undocumented migrants will continue -- and that the $20 billion they send home every year will keep coming, and almost certainly grow. In fact, the government is counting on continued cash from a Mexican-born U.S. population it predicts will rise from 11 million to between 17.9 million and 20.4 million by 2030. "There have been amnesties and reforms before, and they will continue to occur periodically," said Jesus Cervantes, director of statistics for Mexico's Central Bank. President Vicente Fox is one of many Mexican who considers the migrants "heroes," because they send money to their impoverished home villages, and in some cases risk death walking into America in pitiless desert sun. Many families give their babies "American" names, figuring it will help them fit in when they make the inevitable trip north. In one central Mexican village, men on a dusty side road knowingly discuss which Long Island towns are best for day-labor work. Cervantes avoids using the common metaphor of migration as an escape valve for Mexico's social tensions, but says the country of 105 million people would be in trouble if 11 million migrants returned en masse. On the ground, the lure of America is evident. Abelardo Gonzalez, an elementary school director in the southern state of Oaxaca, said of his students: "From the time they are little kids, they have this idea of going north." So many people have left the farming town of Atotonilco in central Tlaxcala state, 480 miles from the U.S. border, that a sort of U.S. job placement network has grown up. Migrants send word home of a vacancy for a gardener in Los Angeles, a carpenter in Houston or a dishwasher in Raleigh, N.C. "A lot of people who leave already have jobs lined up," said Daniel Escalona Garcia, who sells building materials -- largely for homes being built for absent migrants. When those homes will be inhabited is another question. Many remain half-built, or are finished but empty. It's common to see a well-built, two-story home being used to store hay. Skilled construction workers are scarce because most are in the United States. "All of the good houses belong to people who have emigrated," said Jose Contreras, whose five children live in the United States. Some of his grandkids were even given American names before they left. "They named one kid Johnny instead of Juan," the 79-year-old farmer said with a hint of disgust. "They thought it was a good idea." In the past, only adult men would go, said Escalona Garcia, "but now it's entire families, and boys as young as 14 or 15." Few in Mexico question the prevailing feeling that Mexicans have an inalienable right to go north, documented or not. A proposal in the Mexican Senate last year that would have kept migrants away from particularly dangerous border crossings when temperatures soared was denounced as doing the United States' "dirty work." It was withdrawn. Agustin Escobar, an immigration scholar at Mexico's Center for Research on Social Anthropology, is a maverick. He questions whether migration is good for Mexico, given that on average a migrant puts less money into the economy than a Mexican who stays here. But he doesn't get much of a hearing. "There is a great deal of resistance on the part of the government to even consider analysis of these issues," Escobar said. "The policy of not interfering with the flow of migrants has always been the easiest route."

Victory in Lansing!

















From the news reports I have read this morning, it sounds like everything went well in Lansing this weekend.


Sieg Heil!

Thursday, April 20, 2006

Pinko Lansing Judge refuses to Stop Law Enforcement Scare Tactics


Proof that the entire Judicial Branch has their head up their ass!

Judge Denies Neo-Nazis

News 10 Staff

Police will be allowed to use a chain-link security fence and metal detectors at Saturday's scheduled rally in Lansing by a white supremacist group.
Ingham County Circuit Court Judge Paula Manderfield made the ruling today after the security measures were challenged by an individual who has acted as spokesman for the National Socialist Movement, a Neo-Nazi group.
The Neo-Nazi group says between 100 and 200 of its supporters are expected to rally at the state capitol. Hundreds more could show up in opposition.
The city has planned an alternative diversity festival to try and keep counter protesters away from the Neo-Nazi rally.
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Judge Paula Manderfield - Her actions in court speak out! SPEAK OUT FOR AFFIRMATIVE ACTION..

A campaign to put affirmative action before voters this fall was dealt a major setback Thursday [25 March] when a Lansing [Michigan] judge said the petition wording violates state election law.
Ingham County Judge Paula Manderfield ordered the four-member Board of State Canvassers to rescind its December approval of the petition to ban racial preferences in college admissions and government hiring.

THIS JUDGE IS OBVIOUSLY FULFILLING HER OWN AGENDA OF MULTICULTURALISM

Zionist Jew Chertoff downplays Mexican military incursions


The BBC : "Mr Chertoff has been described as the driving force behind some of the most controversial initiatives in the war on terrorism.... Civil liberties groups have accused him of curtailing free speech and the rights of the criminal defendant."
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Chertoff's Zionist sympathies are well known. It was under Chertoff's direct orders that the largest foreign spy ring ever to operate in the United States -- the Mossad's over 200 "
Israeli Art Students" -- were released and sent back to Israel without having to face a single charge. This occurred not long before the revelation that the Mossad was assembling literal murder gangs -- death squads -- to kill enemies of Israel and Zionism worldwide, specifically including the United States. The Israeli hit squad announcements were not even mentioned, much less criticized, by "tough" "anti-terrorist" Chertoff and Bush.
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Michael Chertoff is a dual-citizen Israeli/American
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Chertoff's mother was a Mossad agent.
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INVASION USA
Chertoff downplays Mexican military incursionsHomeland Security chief insists reports of past 10 years 'overblown'

Posted: April 20, 20061:00 a.m. Eastern

© 2006 WorldNetDaily.com

Michael ChertoffHomeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff downplayed reports by the U.S. Border Patrol of more than 200 incursions by the Mexican military over the last 10 years, calling them "scare tactics."

While acknowledging the Border Patrol reports of crossings by uniformed troops, Chertoff told reporters in Washington yesterday he believes many of the incursions could have been innocent mistakes, according to the Inland Valley Daily Bulletin in Ontario, Calif.

"I think the stories are overblown," Chertoff said. "I asked the chief of the Border Patrol about it. The number has not increased; in fact, it had decreased a little bit."

In some cases, Chertoff suggested, it could be a matter of Mexican authorities crossing where the dividing line is unclear or criminals in camouflage are mistaken for soldiers.
T.J. Bonner, the president of the National Border Patrol Council, asserted Chertoff is uninformed.

"Were he to go out there on actual patrol with Border Patrol agents ... and experience what we experience – where you encounter a group of highly trained, very well-armed Mexican soldiers coming across our border, and your closest backup is an hour or more away – I think he would be a lot more concerned about it," he told the Ontario newspaper.

Some Border Patrol agents contend Mexican military officers have been colluding with drug-smuggling cartels.

The Border Patrol has tracked 216 incursions by Mexican military or police forces since 1996, the Daily Bulletin first reported Sunday.

The paper said the highest total was 40 in 2002, while last year there were nine.
Chertoff confirmed there have been about 20 incursions a year in the last decade.
The Homeland Security chief also acknowledged reports of corruption among Mexican troops were true, but didn't see them as significant.

"We do have instances where we have Mexican police or military who have deserted and become involved with criminal activity," Chertoff said. "But we've also had bad cops in the United States, too. It happens."

Emphasizing the collaborative relationship between the U.S. and Mexico, Chertoff called attempts to call the incursions a problem "scare tactics," the Daily Bulletin said.
A spokesman for the Mexican consulate, Rafael Laveaga, denies any Mexican military incursions have taken place.

Pointing out the few times U.S. Border Patrol has accidentally crossed into Mexico, Bonner insisted the incursions were not just innocent mistakes, and he criticized Chertoff for playing down the number.

"For him to say this is only a few hundred – come on," Bonner said. "One is far too many."
As
WorldNetDaily reported in February, an American law enforcement officer and news crew in Texas witnessed another armed incursion into the United States by men dressed in Mexican army attire, the second such incident in two weeks.

As before, several men dressed in Mexican military garb appeared to violate the international boundary, in Hudspeth County, Texas, some 50 miles east of El Paso, local affiliate KFOX-TV reported. There, the U.S.-Mexico border is separated only by a shallow stretch of Rio Grande River. The incursion was witnessed by a KFOX news crew and Hudspeth County deputy, photos of which are posted on the affiliate's website.

Mexican officials have said their military is forbidden from traveling within three miles of the border, though U.S. border residents repeatedly have spotted mobile patrols of Mexican military units traversing roads that run directly parallel to the international boundary. Mexico says the armed men crossing into the U.S. are paramilitary forces loyal to drug-smuggling cartels.

Lansing Communists complain that freedom of speech should only be offered to Jews and Hippies

Here is another article that insinuates that the Toledo riot was caused by the NSM and not a group of blood thirsty niggers that attacked police.

Fences, counter protests staged by the city, illegal searches, are all civil rights violations that the city of Lansing is trying to get away with. These Commies can complain all they want that “freedom of speech is only meant for Jews and Liberals", this will only strengthen the determination of the NSM. This is a prime example of a failing local, state and federal government that is turning a brighter shade of red everyday.

This is our country and we will not let it fall into the hands of neo con, uniracialist Jews. Those who are unaware of the ever tightening noose that the Zionists have thrown around the neck of white America will become aware! We continue to expose the Jew, his idea of America, of stupid consumers that have been cheated out of their heritage and left with no identity. WE SHALL RECLAIM OUR BIRTH RIGHT!

Sieg Heil!

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Toledo riot offers lesson to Lansing authoritiesIn Ohio, fences kept neo-Nazis, protesters apart

By Christine Rook Lansing State Journal
Toledo learned its lesson.

In October, just the threat of neo-Nazis marching through the mostly minority neighborhood of North End spawned a riot.
In December, when white supremacists returned, the city was prepared. There was no major violence.

Toledo's struggle offers lessons for Lansing, which on Saturday plays host to dueling rallies - one supporting neo-Nazism, the other supporting diversity.
"Don't do it on the cheap," warned Toledo police Lt. Tom Wiegand, who was the tactical operations commander during the October riot.

Toledo's December rally lacked the violence and volume of arrests - 20 versus more than 120 - in part, officials say, because fences kept neo-Nazis and anti-Nazi protesters away from neighborhoods and one another.

Checkpoints allowed police to search participants for weapons, and the downtown environment - unfamiliar to many - eliminated the easy escape routes that had emboldened rioters.
December also differed because law enforcement agencies made a strong showing from the start with about 500 officers on the ground, police said. In October the initial force was about a fifth of that.

The result was that in December, officials outnumbered protesters.
In October, the crowd of more than 400 had overwhelmed officials, rioting for two to three hours until officials had about 300 officers in place. Order was restored within a half-hour.
Anger turned on police
And there was one other lesson Toledo learned: A crowd's anger doesn't quell once instigators are removed.

Officials had canceled the march in October even before it started and escorted white supremacists away. The crowd, however, was already too aggravated.
"They turned their anger on the police," Toledo police Sgt. Richard Murphy said.
Rioters threw rocks, flipped cars, burned a bar and ransacked stores.
"Some of the gang members felt disrespected with the Nazis coming in," Wiegand said.
That disrespect cost the larger community more than $400,000, with most of the cost from police and fire department overtime and damage to property.
Tensions existed
What led to the situation? It appears there was racial tension in the city's North End before the neo-Nazis arrived.
The Associated Press in October reported a neighborhood squabble drew the National Socialist Movement into the community, and Murphy explained that a white man was upset a largely minority culture had overtaken his once Polish-American neighborhood.
Greater Lansing is not without racial tensions.
In March, a white Eaton County sheriff's sergeant accused a black man of shooting him. Authorities later charged the sergeant with shooting himself, and the situation angered some minorities.

As a result, the Pastors Conference of Greater Lansing, a largely black group, held a community forum so that people could vent.
Venting helps

Melvin Jones, a member of the group and pastor of Union Missionary Baptist Church in Lansing, believes venting is good. Lansing's history of dialogue may help it avoid Nazi-inspired violence.
"I don't foresee there would be anything," he said, "that would erupt in the Lansing area as did in Toledo."

Just as Lansing has a chance to learn from Toledo's experience, Lansing's ability to handle Saturday's dueling rallies will offer lessons for other cities.
The National Socialist Movement will gather near the Capitol.
The city-sponsored diversity rally will form about a mile east near Eastern High School.
Toledo's Lt. Wiegand may attend both.
"You're always gonna Monday morning quarterback," he said, "to see if there is something you can learn."

Wednesday, April 19, 2006

Rally to highlight failure of democracy for whites


Glad to see were already making a splash in Lansing! Heil Victory!

By Matthew Miller Lansing State Journal

On the Web site of the National Socialist Movement, the neo-Nazi organization that will rally Saturday at the state Capitol, there is a list of "things not to say to the media."
Among the forbidden statements are "We are rallying because we want media attention," "We are rallying because we want to bankrupt the city," and "We are rallying because we want a violent reaction from local blacks/Hispanics/Jews."

Bill White, a spokesman for the Minneapolis-based group, is the person whose name is signed to that piece of public relations strategy, and he held to it in an interview this week.
He said the group isn't looking for confrontation.

Rather, it wants to send the message that liberal, multicultural democracy "has failed the white working people of this country."

He said the current system - that would be the "Judeo-capitalist system," in his formulation - "deliberately strips white working people of their identity, their sense of history and their sense of who they are." (GO BILL!)

He blames Jews (and Bolsheviks and internationalists and capitalists and immigrants and minorities).
He says that most white people in America share his views, even if they've been cowed into silence by the powers that be.
Exaggerated numbers?

Just how many people do share his views is an open question. White, who was in Lansing on Tuesday, said the group has thousands of members.
Mark Potok, director of the Intelligence Project of the Southern Poverty Law Center, which monitors extremist groups, said the number is closer to 300. (WHATEVER)

Regardless of which version is closer to the truth, the National Socialist Movement is likely the largest white supremacist organization in the United States.

It has grown rapidly in the past few years as other groups - such as the Aryan Nations, National Alliance and World Church of the Creator (now the Creativity Movement) - have crumbled.
But the group doesn't seem to need significant numbers to provoke significant reactions.
In October, a planned demonstration by a few dozen NSM members in Toledo sparked a riot that cost the city more than $300,000. More than 100 counterprotesters were arrested; none of the group's supporters was.

The example is extreme, but the dynamic has played out in other cities. The NSM typically brings 30, 50, occasionally 100 protesters. They are invariably outnumbered by counterprotesters, who, in turn, are outnumbered by police.

Jeff Schoep, the NSM's commander, said the group expects to have 200 supporters in Lansing on Saturday.

But some who study such groups say that exaggeration of their support base is more the rule than the exception.

"These people exaggerate their numbers, so it can seem as if they really constitute some kind of threat," said Philippa Strum, author of "When the Nazis Came to Skokie: Freedom for Speech We Hate." (Thats becasue you a Pinko Moron)

"In fact, they don't, and they're well aware of that, and that's why they have to resort to a kind of in-your-face approach to what they want to do."
Immigration is key

Schoep said his group is coming to Lansing, in part, because "Michigan in particular has been hit hard by the illegal aliens."

He mentioned Michigan's foundering economy and the feeble state of the auto industry.
The idea that economic hardship makes recruiting for white supremacist groups easier is one he shares with some on the other side of the ideological spectrum.

Potok said the "most macro factor" fueling an increase in those groups' numbers is globalization.
That is, insofar as globalization has led to an uptick in immigration, insofar as globalization has brought about economic dislocations in white communities, it has led some to believe their ways of life are threatened.

"I'm not suggesting that simply because a car factory closes, people are going to go out and join a Nazi group," Potok said. "But it certainly provides an opening for right-wing ideologues to come in and organize."

Essentially, that is what Schoep says his group is doing. Counter-protests, he added, help more often than they hurt.
"Our enemies provocate and scream and yell and sometimes they throw horse feces," he said. "When they go out and do their demonstrations, we don't try to drown them out, because what they say is so ridiculous.

"If the politicians and these people thought we were just idiots," he added, "why would they spend their time and their money and their efforts to drown out our message?"

LCAN group threatens violence! NSM and Bill White Unafraid of Communist Threats

Bill White, spokesman for the National Socialist Movement, stands Tuesday beside a flier posted by the Lansing Coalition Against Nazis urging people to demonstrate against the neo-Nazi group this Saturday.

My advice to these morons would be to post bail before they head down.
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While city officials have decided to keep their distance from this Saturday’s neo-Nazi rally, others are planning to deal with the white supremacists up close and personal.

The Lansing Coalition Against Nazis plans to hold its own march and rally on April 22 in direct opposition to the National Socialist Movement, a Minneapolis-based neo-Nazi organization. LCAN organizers hope their presence at the rally will send a clear message to the neo-Nazis that they are unwelcome, while at the same time providing community members an alternative to the city’s plan to stay away.

“There aren’t a lot of other groups interested in a visible, vocal presence at the Capitol,” LCAN member Courtney Couvreur said. “But we think that it’s really important to let them know they’re not welcome and the hate they spew isn’t appropriate in Lansing.”

Bill White, spokesman for the National Socialist Movement, stands Tuesday beside a flier posted by the Lansing Coalition Against Nazis urging people to demonstrate against the neo-Nazi group this Saturday.

LCAN members plan to meet at Adado Riverfront Park at 12:30 p.m. before starting their two-block march to the Capitol.But that march could be illegal. Lansing police Lt. Bruce Ferguson said LCAN has not asked for a permit. Without a permit, counter-protesters will only be able to march on the sidewalks, not the streets, Ferguson said.
“I’m not sure they’re going to be allowed to get one,” Ferguson said.

They don’t want one, LCAN spokesman David Mitchell said Tuesday. He said the group plans to march in the streets without a permit.

“In the times that we have marched in the streets of Lansing without a permit, we have been able to so do,” Mitchell said. “We’d argue that to protest in our own city, we don’t need a permit.”

That could lead to a fight between police and counter-protesters — and if an incident that happened Tuesday is any indication, the fight has already begun.

A reporter was interviewing Lansing Police Capt. Ray Hall at the corner of Grand and Michigan avenues when an LCAN member told Hall and Police Chief Mark Alley, who was nearby, that there were Nazis at the Capitol. Alley and Hall proceeded to the Capitol to find NSM spokesman Bill White.

Alley and Hall, along with a third officer, formed a human shield around White to protect him from LCAN members while they escorted him back to his car, which was at a parking garage three blocks away.

During the walk back to the garage, protesters shouted profanities within inches of White’s face. At one point, a woman pushed Alley out of the way to get to White, prompting Hall to remove his handcuffs from his belt.

Police continued the protective stance until White safely drove off.
LCAN hopes to continue the disruption this Saturday. Once the counter-protesters arrive at their destination, they will create a “noise blockade,” Couvreur said. LCAN members are urging local residents to bring drums, trombones, cymbals, pots, pans and anything else to drown out the Nazis’ message.

LCAN members say they’re not worried about infringing on the neo-Nazis’ right to free speech — they say hate speech is not free speech. (COMMIE RED FUCKERS)
“You can’t just yell ‘fire’ in a public place — it’s dangerous and it promotes violence,” Couvreur said. “Free speech is protected to a degree. You can’t guarantee people aren’t going to react to it, and this is our reaction. We’re not saying they can’t gather, but these are the consequences of their gathering.”

NSM spokesman Bill White discredits the efforts of LCAN due to its affiliation with other local activist groups, including Direct Action. That organization was mentioned in an FBI document emerging from a January 2002 domestic terrorism symposium. “Obviously, as a legal and peaceful organization, the NSM has every right to be there,” White said. “We will not allow a violent terrorist organization to intimidate us or stop us from exercising our right to free speech.”

NSM leaders hope to draw at least 200 white supremacists to the rally, while LCAN hopes to match those numbers.
Couvreur said that the turnout from two recent community forums — March 16 at Foster Community Center and April 12 at MSU’s International Center — shows there is local interest in a counter-protest. She said she’s received responses from people as far away as Texas and Philadelphia who plan on attending LCAN’s rally.
An NSM rally in Toledo on Dec. 10 resulted in the arrests of 15 counter-protesters, including six from the Lansing area, while an Oct. 15 NSM march in Toledo erupted into a small riot causing $336,000 in damages and the arrest of 120 counter-protesters. No neo-Nazis were arrested in either incident.

The NSM and Toledo officials attributed the violence to black youth gangs, but LCAN members say police intimidation led to the riots.
LCAN representatives say that plans to construct a fence around the Capitol, as well as the city’s willingness to allow the Nazis at the diversity celebration, demonstrates a similar governmental attitude here as to the one in Toledo, which LCAN members say protected the neo-Nazis at the expense of the community.
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Tuesday, April 18, 2006

States Help Schools Hide Minority Scores


These fuckers don't have to pass tests, they don't have to speak English, and I am certain they will get a free college education.

States are helping public schools escape potential penalties by skirting the No Child Left Behind law's requirement that students of all races must show annual academic progress.

With the federal government's permission, schools aren't counting the test scores of nearly 2 million students when they report progress by racial groups, an Associated Press computer analysis found.

Minorities who historically haven't fared as well as whites in testing (what a crock of shit) make up the vast majority of students whose scores are being excluded, AP found. And the numbers have been rising.

"I can't believe that my child is going through testing just like the person sitting next to him or her and she's not being counted," said Angela Smith, a single mother. Her daughter, Shunta' Winston, was among two dozen black students whose test scores weren't broken out by race at her suburban Kansas City, Mo., high school.
Under the law championed by
President Bush'all public school students must be proficient in reading and math by 2014, although only children above second grade are required to be tested.

Schools receiving federal aid also must demonstrate annually that students in all racial categories are progressing or risk penalties that include extending the school year, changing curriculum or firing administrators and teachers.

The U.S. Education Department said it didn't know the breadth of schools' deliberate undercounting until seeing AP's findings.
"Is it too many? You bet," Education Secretary
Margaret Spellings' said in an interview. "Are there things we need to do to look at that, batten down the hatches, make sure those kids are part of the system? You bet."

Students whose tests aren't being counted in required categories include Hispanics in California who don't speak English well, blacks in the Chicago suburbs, American Indians in the Northwest and special education students in Virginia, AP found.

Bush's home state of Texas once cited as a model for the federal law excludes scores for two entire groups. No test scores from Texas' 65,000 Asian students or from several thousand American Indian students are broken out by race. The same is true in Arkansas.

One consequence is that educators are creating a false picture of academic progress.
"The states aren't hiding the fact that they're gaming the system," said Dianne Piche, executive director of the Citizens' Commission on Civil Rights, a group that supports No Child Left Behind. "When you do the math ... you see that far from this law being too burdensome and too onerous, there are all sorts of loopholes."

The law signed by Bush in 2002 requires public schools to test more than 25 million students periodically in reading and math. No scores can be excluded from the overall measure.
But the schools also must report scores by categories, such as race, poverty, migrant status, English proficiency and special education. Failure in any category means the whole school fails.
States are helping schools get around that second requirement by using a loophole in the law that allows them to ignore scores of racial groups that are too small to be statistically significant.
Suppose, for example, that a school has 2,000 white students and nine Hispanics. In nearly every state, the Hispanic scores wouldn't be reported because there aren't enough to provide meaningful information.

State educators decide when a group is too small to count. And they've been asking the government for exemptions to exclude larger numbers of students in racial categories. Nearly two dozen states have successfully petitioned the government for such exemptions in the past two years. As a result, schools can now ignore racial breakdowns even when they have 30, 40 or even 50 students of a given race in the testing population.

Students must be tested annually in grades 3 through 8 and at least once in high school, usually in 10th grade. This is the first school year that students in all those grades must be tested, though schools have been reporting scores by race for the tests they have been administering since the law was approved.
To calculate a nationwide estimate, AP analyzed the 2003-04 enrollment figures the government collected the latest on record and applied the current racial category exemptions the states use.

Overall, AP found that about 1.9 million students or about 1 in every 14 test scores aren't being counted under the law's racial categories. Minorities are seven times as likely to have their scores excluded as whites, the analysis showed.

Less than 2 percent of white children's scores aren't being counted as a separate category. In contrast, Hispanics and blacks have roughly 10 percent of their scores excluded. More than one-third of Asian scores and nearly half of American Indian scores aren't broken out, AP found.
Ms. Smith's family in Missouri demonstrates how the exemptions work. Shunta' and other black children in tested grades at Oak Park High School, which is in a mostly white suburban Kansas City neighborhood, weren't counted as a group because Missouri schools have federal permission not to break out scores for any ethnic group with fewer than 30 students in the required testing population.

In all, the tests of more than 24,000 mostly minority children in Missouri aren't being counted as groups, AP's review found. Other states have much higher numbers. California, for instance, isn't counting the scores of more than 400,000 children. In Texas, the total is about 257,000.
State educators defend the exemptions, saying minority students' performance is still being included in their schools' overall statistics even when they aren't being counted in racial categories.

Scott Palmer, a consultant for the Council of Chief State School Officers in Washington, said he hoped critics will focus on the 23 million children whose scores are being counted by schools rather than those whose scores aren't reported separately.
"There's a huge positive feeling for the notion" of making schools accountable, Palmer said. "It's a huge plus."

Spellings said she believes educators are acting in good faith. "Are there people out there who find ways to game the system? Of course," she said. "But on the whole ... I fully believe in my heart, mind and soul that educators are people of good will."

Bush has hailed the separate accounting of minority students as a vital feature of the law. "It's really essential we do that. It's really important," Bush said in a May 2004 speech. "If you don't do that, you're likely to leave people behind. And that's not right."
Nonetheless, Bush's Education Department continues to give widely varying exemptions to states:
_Oklahoma lets schools exclude the test scores from any racial category with 52 or fewer members in the testing population, one of the largest across-the-board exemptions. That means 1 in 5 children in the state don't have scores broken out by race.
_Maryland, which tests about 150,000 students more than Oklahoma, has an exempt group size of just five. That means fewer than 1 in 100 don't have scores counted.
_With one of the most diverse school populations in the nation, Florida has been allowed to create a special "provisional," or probationary, category for schools that are failing to meet the law's requirements. The deal helped reduce the number of failing Florida schools from 73 percent in 2003 to 37 percent in 2004.
_Washington state has made 18 changes to its testing plan, according to a February report by the Harvard Civil Rights Project. Vermont has made none. On average, states have made eight changes at either the state or federal level to their plans in the past five years, usually changing the size or accountability of subgroups whose scores were supposed to be counted.
Toia Jones, a black teacher whose daughters attend school in a mostly white Chicago suburb, said the loophole is enabling states and schools to avoid taking concrete measures to eliminate an "achievement gap" between white and minority students.
"With this loophole, it's almost like giving someone a trick bag to get out of a hole," she said. "Now people, instead of figuring out how do we really solve it, some districts, in order to save face or in order to not be faced with the sanctions, they're doing what they can to manipulate the data."
Some students feel left behind, too.
"It's terrible," said Michael Oshinaya, a senior at Eleanor Roosevelt High School in New York City who was among a group of black students whose scores weren't broken out as a racial category. "We're part of America. We make up America, too. We should be counted as part of America."
Spelling's Education Department is caught between two forces. Schools and states are eager to avoid the stigma of failure under the law, especially as the 2014 deadline draws closer. But Congress has shown little political will to modify the law to address their concerns. That leaves the racial category exemptions as a stopgap solution.
"She's inherited a disaster," said David Shreve, an education policy analyst for the National Conference of State Legislatures. "The 'Let's Make a Deal' policy is to save the law from fundamental changes, with Margaret Spellings as Monte Hall."
The solution may be to set a single federal standard for when minority students' scores don't have to be counted separately, said Ross Wiener, policy director for the Washington-based Education Trust.
The law originally created the exemptions to make sure schools didn't unfairly fail schools or compromise student privacy when they had just a small number of students in one racial category, Wiener said.
But there's little doubt now that group sizes have become political, said Wiener, whose group supports the law.
"They're asking the question, not how do we generate statistically reliable results, but how do we generate politically palatable results," he said.

Commie Liberals Continue to Help Illegals Rape Tax Paying Americans


"These are very bright students, some of them are at the top of their class."

Is this some kind of joke? Half of these fuckers don't speak English. I have had the wonderful honor to meet some of these fuckers getting a free ride here and they have the intelligence of a rock. I can't afford fucking community college! Between the Jewish led confrontation that is about to go down with Iran, the invasion from the south, and all the other shit that I could go on and on about, I sure am glad I own a firearm.
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Lawmaker wants in-state tuition for kids of illegal immigrants

By ANDREA FANTA Associated Press Writer

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — State representative Juan Zapata's appeal to his colleagues Monday about charging children of illegal immigrants in-state tuition for a college education had a personal tone.

Zapata, a Republican lawmaker from Miami, was born in Peru and raised in Columbia. His family moved to the U.S. when he was a child and earned American citizenship. Zapata later finished a bachelor's degree at Florida International University and, four years ago, entered state politics.

But some immigrant children aren't as lucky as he was, Zapata said. So he wants to give children of illegal immigrants a chance at success by charging them in-state tuition.
"This really is a bill about access and about kids who have done nothing wrong being able to earn a college education," Zapata said. "These are very bright students, some of them are at the top of their class."

This is the fourth time Zapata will try to pass the measure. Under this year's bill (HB 119), undocumented students who study at a Florida high school for three years and graduate could pay in-state tuition at public colleges and universities. At least nine other states have passed similar legislation.

"These have pretty much been raised here. They shouldn't be penalized for decisions their parents made...why should we force them to be valet parkers or other menial workers?" Zapata said. "Those kids who work that much harder, why should we shut the door on them when they finish high school — and to a certain degree, to our detriment?"

The concept has run into opposition nationally and locally, where opponents say the measure rewards parents for breaking the law and takes enrollment spots from other immigrant and American-born students who are here legally.

"I'm not really happy about it," said Rhoda Smith, an Orlando nurse who also volunteers with the Minutemen Florida Corps, an affiliate of the grassroots group that performs their own citizen patrols of border crossings in states like California.

"We have American citizens who would love to go to college," Smith said. "These people aren't even legal ... I don't believe that's fair. I am not racist, my friends are from everywhere. You come over here, you do everything right, I think it's fantastic."

Estimates about how many undocumented students are making their way through Florida's K-12 system are shaky, especially since the state's education department doesn't require officials to ask about students' immigration status.

The Pew Hispanic Center, which studies one of the nation's largest immigrant groups, estimates that nearly 4 million children have parents who are "unauthorized migrants." The organization estimates that nearly 3 million of those children are American by birth but belong to undocumented immigrant parents.
The bill must still clear a vote in the House Education Council before going to the floor for final debate. The Senate version of the legislation (SB 366) must still clear two committees.
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17 illegal immigrants got in-state tuition at Gainesville State

By HARRIS BLACKWOODThe Times

Why "would we not want them to continue their education? They want to attend college to prepare for productive careers, and they hold out hope of gaining legal status." --Gainesville State president Martha Nesbitt
The president of Gainesville State College said Monday that 17 illegal immigrants, all graduates of area high schools, were allowed to pay in-state tuition during the current school year.
Martha Nesbitt issued the written statement in response to a request by The Times for data on the number of illegal immigrants paying the lower tuition rate for Georgia residents.
"The only students who qualify for consideration (for in-state tuition) are those who are Georgia residents, have graduated from a Georgia high school and offer strong academic promise," wrote Nesbitt.
She defended the practice as being legal and approved by the University System Board of Regents. She said most of the students were from Hall County.
Her comments came on the heels of a letter by Sen. Chip Rogers, R-Woodstock, accusing the college of violating federal law.
"Federal law is quite clear on the issue of taxpayer-assisted tuition for illegal aliens," wrote Rogers in a letter to The Times. "Title 8, U.S.C. section 1621, requires that illegal aliens may not receive any post-secondary education benefits, unless an individually state specifically grants in-state tuition."
Rogers, who is not related to Rep. Carl Rogers of Gainesville, was the sponsor of the Georgia Security and Immigration Compliance Act, the sweeping state immigration reform bill that Gov. Sonny Perdue signed into law Monday.
He wrote that it was "illogical" to invest taxpayer dollars in a person who is not legally allowed to work upon graduation.
But in her e-mail, Nesbitt questioned why "would we not want them to continue their education."
"They want to attend college to prepare for productive careers, and they hold out hope of gaining legal status," she wrote.
Nesbitt hopes to talk with local lawmakers about the matter, saying she found it strange that members of Hall's delegation chose to take the case directly to the media.
She was referring to state Rep. James Mills published comments that funds to renovate the student center were in jeopardy during the budget process. Mills, R-Chestnut Mountain, said this was due in part to a March 6 forum on immigration that Rogers attended.
In an e-mail to The Times, Rogers wrote that he felt the forum was "loaded against me," but he wasn't upset.
"I attended the event at Gainesville, despite the 90-minute drive during the middle of a session week, and had no problem with it," he wrote.
Nesbitt dismissed talk about the forum as "an attempt to control academic freedom on a college campus." She said the community has spoken eloquently in defending the school.

Breaking News: Illegal Mexicans flock to temp agencies

Indictment says illegal workers were supplied to local employers
Thursday, April 13, 2006

CLEVELAND - Two temporary employment agencies with Canton offices and nine of their employees are accused in federal charges of sending illegal immigrants with false documentation to Ohio businesses seeking temporary workers, while scamming millions of dollars in fees from those businesses. (NO WAY!)

Among the businesses that used the illegal workers is Case Foods of Winesburg in Holmes County, according to a federal indictment. That company is said to have paid more than $2 million for their labor in 2000 and 2001.

The case illustrates the government’s effort to link money laundering to job agencies that illegally supply illegal alien workers, Dean Boyd, a spokesman for the Department of Homeland Security’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency in Washington, D.C., said Wednesday.

The federal indictment was unsealed in U.S. District Court in Cleveland on Tuesday. Federal agents arrested three people in Philadelphia, one in New York City and another in Columbus. Three people were being sought. Another was expected to voluntarily surrender.

The government accused the agencies, identified as HV Connect and TN Job Service, of a $5.3 million money laundering scheme. The agencies would place workers they said had U.S. work authorization and promise to pay payroll taxes and workers’ compensation premiums from fees paid by the employers, the indictment said.

The government accuses the agency workers of using the money instead to build a home, buy jewelry and liquor, and spend money at casinos. The undocumented workers were paid in cash.
The government said HV Connect has operated in Philadelphia and Canton and TN Job Service operated in Philadelphia, Pennsauken, N.J., Canton and New Philadelphia. There was no telephone listing in any of those cities for the two businesses.

According to the indictment, the operators of HV Connect and several similarly named operations were: Hon Vuong, Trung Q. Nguyen, An Quoc Nguyen and Mshenga Abdy Nasseb.
The Nguyens, Nasseb and Tai Van Nguyen ran TN Job Service, federal prosecutors say.
Dale Gherky, human resources director of Case Farms, which is part of Case Foods, said his company has never done business with HV Connect or TN Job Service in the 13 years he has worked there.

But federal prosecutors allege that on Sept. 27, 2001, HV Connect had at least 17 illegal aliens assigned to work at Case Foods.

The indictment also claims Case paid the defendants and their companies roughly $2.3 million in 2001 and 2002, far more than any other business mentioned.
According to the indictment, other area companies supplied alien labor by HV Connect or TN Job Service include:

L&W Egg in Millersburg; Custom Design Technologies/Nexxste of Canton; Renewable Energy Products of Canton; Gerber’s Poultry of Kidron; International Packaging Specialties of Millersburg; Waste Parchment of Millersburg; Cicchini/Avanti Corp. of Canton; Amish Door Inc. of Wilmot and Biery Cheese of Nimishillen Township. (LOL)

Amish Door Inc. President Joe Miller said his company was told the workers they received were legal. Amish Door tries to abide by all laws and has never again used outside hires, he said.
Investigators began scrutinizing the staffing companies after two men with former ties to Canton — Karim Koubriti and Ahmed Hannan — were charged in Detroit on allegations they operated a terrorism cell. Their arrests made national headlines as the first terrorism trial after the Sept. 11 attacks.

Monday, April 17, 2006

Hippie Libs to Use Illegals for Voting Fraud


Voter Registration Drives at Illegal Immigration Rallies

Some of the biggest pro-illegal immigration rallies lately have featured a disturbing phenomenon: Democratic Party operatives conducting voter registration drives.
After Sunday's massive illegal-immigration rally in Dallas, for instance, the Dallas Morning News headlined their coverage: "Activists sign up protesters to put them on road to polls."
The paper quoted Lena Levario, a criminal defense lawyer who's running as a Democrat to be a judge:
"I am so optimistic that I have 5,000 voter registration cards," she told the News.
By the day's end, the paper said - Levario had yet to tally the new voters she'd harvested from the massive - and largely illegal - crowd.

But the Democrat hopeful declared: "We are going to march to the end of the November election."
Also working the illegal immigration rally was David Hanschen, another Democratic candidate for judge. He handed out fliers that read: " Vota Democrata en 2006."
Elsewhere activists exhorted: "We march today, we vote tomorrow."
While no one involved in the voter drives would admit to knowingly registering illegals, the phenomenon wasn't limited to the Dallas rally.
The San Diego Union Tribune reports that organizers of that city's weekend march foresaw the potential to harness the energy present in the pro-illegal protests and convert it into Latino voting power.

"I think it is very clear that it has the potential for mobilizing both nonregistered U.S. citizen Latinos as well as pushing Latinos to naturalize," Harry Pachon, director of the Tomas Rivera Policy Institute, told the paper.
Organizers for San Diego's pro-illegal rally made a decision to focus more intensely than originally planned on registering voters, the Tribune said.
"In the process of planning this event, it became clear that we had to do more than get them in the street and make noise," said Matt O'Connor, a spokesman for Local 2028 of the Service Employees International Union in San Diego, which was one of the organizers of the march.
"It's going to be a missed opportunity if we don't do that."

Maine yanks online registry from Web after pair of degenerates gunned down

The person who is killing these degenerate sex offenders should receive a metal!

Two registered sex offenders in Maine were shot to death in their own homes this morning, prompting the state to take down its online registry of offenders from the Internet.
The removal of the Maine Sex Offender Registry website is being called a precautionary measure, as officials are not sure if it was used by the assailant in the fatal shootings. It contains the photos, names and addresses of more than 2,200 registered sex offenders in the Pine Tree State.
Authorities identify the victims as Joseph L. Gray, 57, of Milo, and William Elliott, 24, of Corinth. Both were listed in the registry.
Police are now searching for a 19-year-old Canadian man, whose last address was not far from the American border in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia.
Stephen A. Marshall, who has family in Houlton, Maine, is being called "a person of interest."
A small white pickup truck possibly connected in the shootings was located in Bangor, but there was no sign of Marshall, who is described as white, 5-foot-10-inches tall, weighing 130 pounds with brown hair and blue eyes.

Demonstrations on Immigration Harden a Divide

Come on, these people just want to be a part of America? Maybe, that's why they all shout "VIVA MEXICO" and "THIS IS OUR LAND". I sure hope these Beaners don't quit now, let em get under everyone's skin. Then we shall see if Americans will seek out a Pied Piper to lead these rats from our land....
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By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK
Published: April 17, 2006

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz., April 14 — Al and Diane Kitlica have not paid close attention to the immigration debate in Congress. But when more than 100,000 mostly Hispanic demonstrators marched through Phoenix this week, the Kitlicas noticed.

Representative J. D. Hayworth, Republican of Arizona, said he had seen "an incredible backlash" to the immigration demonstrations.
"I was outraged," Ms. Kitlica told J. D. Hayworth, the Republican who is her congressman, as she and her husband stopped him for 20 minutes while he was on a walk through their suburban neighborhood to complain to him about the issue.
"You want to stay here and get an education, get benefits, and you still want to say 'Viva Mexico'? It was a slap in the face," Ms. Kitlica said, adding that illegal immigrants were straining the Mesa public school where she teaches.
A few miles west, Gus Martinez, a Mexican immigrant who was moonlighting at a hot dog stand after a day installing drywall, said the protests had changed his perspective, too.
Mr. Martinez, who said he was a legal immigrant, said he also supported border security to curb illegal entry. But he had taken the day off to march earlier in the week because he believed that the foes of illegal immigration were taking aim at Hispanics as a group. The demonstrations, he said, had instilled in him a sense of power.
"It showed that our hands — Latino hands — make a difference in this country," Mr. Martinez said. "They see you are Hispanic and call you a criminal, but we are not."
As lawmakers set aside the debate on immigration legislation for their spring recess, the protests by millions around the nation have escalated the policy debate into a much broader battle over the status of the country's 11 million illegal immigrants. While the marches have galvanized Hispanic voters, they have also energized those who support a crackdown on illegal immigration.
"The size and magnitude of the demonstrations had some kind of backfire effect," said John McLaughlin, a Republican pollster who said he was working for 26 House members and seven senators seeking re-election. "The Republicans that are tough on immigration are doing well right now."
Mr. Hayworth said, "I see an incredible backlash." He has become one of the House's most vocal opponents of illegal immigration and is one of dozens of Republicans who have vowed to block the temporary-worker measure that stalled in the Senate.
The Kitlicas, who had been unaware of his views, decided to volunteer for his campaign. Mr. Hayworth, who has been singled out by Democrats in his bid for re-election, faces a challenge from a popular former Democratic mayor of Tempe, Harry E. Mitchell.
The immigration issue is cropping up in areas as far from the border as Iowa and Nebraska. In one House district in Iowa, Republican primary candidates are running television commercials competing over who is "toughest" on illegal immigration, said Amy Walters, an analyst with the nonpartisan Cook Political Report.
Representative Steve King, an Iowa Republican from another district, said his office had been flooded with angry calls about the recent marches. "It is one thing to see an abstract number of 12 million illegal immigrants," Mr. King said. "It is another thing to see more than a million marching through the streets demanding benefits as if it were a birthright." He added, "I think people resent that."
But Mr. King, who supported a House bill to restrict illegal immigrants without creating a guest-worker program, said he was also feeling new heat from the thousands of Hispanics in his district, many of whom worked in its meatpacking plants. Responding to a survey by his office, some Hispanics called him a racist for asking questions about building a wall with Mexico, or suggested a wall with Canada, he said.
The emotions around the issue are especially intense in Arizona, where thousands of illegal immigrants cross the border each month and more than a quarter of the population is Hispanic. In 2004, Hispanics accounted for about one in eight voters.
When voters approved a ballot measure that year to block access to state services for illegal immigrants, more than 40 percent of Hispanic voters supported it, according to some surveys of people leaving polling places.
But many Hispanics said opinions had changed dramatically in the past few weeks, partly because of the hostility they perceived in some proposals from Mr. Hayworth and other conservatives.
"When people are talking about shooting people who come across the border," said Harry Garewal, chief executive of the Arizona Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, "yeah, I think that causes some angst."
1

Run For The Border....

Mexican revolutionists are rushing to build their numbers in the American South West. Meanwhile, members of the Zionist regime have extended an invitation to all Mexicans, offering amnesty, holding America out like a large fruit ready for picking. How many more places can be set at our table by members of senate before someone stabs Mr. McCain or Kennedy with the salad serving fork?

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More children discovered crossing border illegally
Sunday, April 16, 2006
Associated Press

Copyright © 2006 AP Wire
MEXICO CITY -- The number of children deported from Arizona after U.S. agents caught them crossing the border illegally or found them in the desert more than doubled in the first three months of 2006, Mexico's Interior Department said on Friday.
Most deportees are simply released by U.S. authorities at border crossings, but children are handed over directly to Mexico's child-welfare agency, giving Mexican authorities a much more precise count.
From January through March, Mexican authorities took charge of 3,289 deported minors at border crossings in the state of Sonora, across from Arizona, more than double the 1,566 deported in the same period of 2005.
The Interior Department statement did not give a reason for the increase in deportations of the children -- who ranged in age from a few months to 17 -- many of whom were found crossing on foot, alone or in the company of non-relatives.
However, some border analysts say they have witnessed what appears to be a general migrant rush to reach the United States. They say the migrants appear to be motivated by immigration bills under discussion in the U.S. Congress that could legalize some illegal migrants and increase border security.
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In south-central Arizona, the busiest migrant-smuggling area, total detentions by the U.S. Border Patrol rose by more than 26 percent from Oct. 1, 2005, through early April, totaling 105,803 compared with 78,024 for the same period a year earlier. Along the entire border, arrests are up 9 percent in the same period.
Francisco Loureiro, the manager of an immigrant shelter in Nogales, Mexico, said that in March, 2,000 migrants stayed at the shelter -- 500 more than last year.
Loureiro said he has not seen such a rush of migrants since 1986, when the United States allowed 2.6 million illegal residents to get American citizenship.
One proposal before the U.S. Senate could legalize some of the 11 million people now illegally in the United States while tightening border security.
Some U.S. officials, however, say the rise in detentions may not necessarily mean more people are crossing, but that more are detained because of an increase in the number of Border Patrol agents.

Friday, April 14, 2006

Viacom (Jew Media Control)


Viacom.

With 2003 revenues of just over $26.5 billion, is Viacom, Inc., headed by Sumner Redstone (born Murray Rothstein), a Jew. Melvin A. Karmazin, another Jew, was number two at Viacom until June 2004, holding the positions of president and chief operating officer. Karmazin remains a large Viacom shareholder. Replacing Karmazin as co-presidents and co-COOs are a Jew, Leslie Moonves, and Tom Freston, a possible Jew. (We have been unable to confirm Freston's Jewish ancestry; he has done work for Jewish organizations and was involved in the garment trade, a heavily Jewish industry, importing clothing from the Third World to the U.S. in the 1970s.) Viacom produces and distributes TV programs for the three largest networks, owns 39 television stations outright with another 200 affiliates in its wholly-owned CBS Television Network, owns 185 radio stations in its Infinity radio group, and has over 1,500 affiliated stations through its CBS Radio Network. It produces feature films through Paramount Pictures, headed by Jewess Sherry Lansing (born Sherry Lee Heimann), who is planning to retire at the end of 2005. Viacom was formed in 1971 as a way to dodge an anti-monopoly FCC ruling that required CBS to spin off a part of its cable TV operations and syndicated programming business. This move by the government unfortunately did nothing to reduce the mostly Jewish collaborative monopoly that remains the major problem with the industry. In 1999, after CBS had again augmented itself by buying King World Productions (a leading TV program syndicator), Viacom acquired its progenitor company, CBS, in a double mockery of the spirit of the 1971 ruling. Redstone acquired CBS following the December 1999 stockholders' votes at CBS and Viacom. CBS Television has long been headed by the previously mentioned Leslie Moonves; the other Viacom co-president, Tom Freston, headed wholly-owned MTV. Viacom also owns the Country Music Television and The Nashville Network cable channels and is the largest outdoor advertising (billboards, etc.) entity in the U.S. Viacom's publishing division includes Simon & Schuster, Scribner, The Free Press, Fireside, and Archway Paperbacks. It distributes videos through its over 8,000 Blockbuster stores. It is also involved in satellite broadcasting, theme parks, and video games. Viacom's chief claim to fame, however, is as the world's largest provider of cable programming through its Showtime, MTV, Nickelodeon, Black Entertainment Television, and other networks. Since 1989 MTV and Nickelodeon have acquired larger and larger shares of the juvenile television audience. MTV dominates the television market for viewers between the ages of 12 and 24. Sumner Redstone owns 76 per cent of the shares of Viacom. He offers Jackass as a teen role model and pumps MTV's racially mixed rock and rap videos into 342 million homes in 140 countries and is a dominant cultural influence on White teenagers around the world. MTV also makes race-mixing movies like Save the Last Dance. Nickelodeon, with over 87 million subscribers, has by far the largest share of the four-to-11-year-old TV audience in America and is expanding rapidly into Europe. Most of its shows do not yet display the blatant degeneracy that is MTV's trademark, but Redstone is gradually nudging the fare presented to his kiddie viewers toward the same poison purveyed by MTV. Nickelodeon continues a 12-year streak as the top cable network for children and younger teenagers.
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What are the Jews over at Viacom Up to these days?

Comedy Central censors Muhammad imageBut 'South Park' episode depicts Jesus defecating on Bush, flag
Posted: April 13, 20065:54 p.m. Eastern
© 2006 WorldNetDaily.com

The Comedy Central television network barred its popular "South Park" series from showing an image of the Islamic prophet Muhammad in last night's episode but allowed a scene in which an image of Jesus Christ defecates on President Bush and the American flag.
Earlier today, conservative weblogs speculated about whether the episode's reference to censorship was part of the edgy cartoon show's gag, but a Comedy Central spokesman told Stephen Spruiell of National Review's
Media Blog the network itself made the decision to not show the image.
The network issued a statement, saying: "In light of recent world events, we feel we made the right decision."
In the second of a two-part episode, creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker played on the Danish newspaper's publishing of caricatures of Muhammad, which sparked widespread rioting by Muslims earlier this year who considered it blasphemy.
In last night's episode, "South Park" character Kyle tries to convince a Fox network executive to air, uncensored, an episode of "Family Guy" that includes an image of Muhammad.
"Either it's all OK, or none of it is," Kyle said. "Do the right thing."
A clip can be viewed
here, via Michelle Malkin's weblog.
The executive decides at the last second to show "Family Guy" uncut, but when the controversial scene arrives, the screen goes black with the message, "Comedy Central has refused to broadcast an image of Muhammad on their network."
Then comes the images of Christ, Bush and the flag.
The blog
TV Squad commented that this scene was "a clever way of saying that everything and everyone is fair game, not just Muhammad."
"South Park" actually
depicted Muhammad, without protest, in a 2001 episode.
Last month, outspoken Scientologist Isaac Hayes, an Oscar-winning singer heard by millions in recent years as the "Chef" character on "South Park," quit the cartoon four months after an episode spoofing Scientology.
"There is a place in this world for satire, but there is a time when satire ends and intolerance and bigotry towards religious beliefs of others begins," the 63-year-old soul singer said in a statement.
"Religious beliefs are sacred to people, and at all times should be respected and honored," he continued, never mentioning the Scientology episode, but citing the recent controversy over cartoon depictions of the prophet Muhammad. "As a civil-rights activist of the past 40 years, I cannot support a show that disrespects those beliefs and practices."

The creators, whose show won a prestigious Peabody award last week, struck back with an episode in which Chef appeared to be killed and then have his brains scrambled by the "Super Adventure Club," which turns members into pedophiles.
William Donohue of the
Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights took aim at Parker and Stone for allowing the network to censor their work in last night's episode.
"The ultimate hypocrite is not Comedy Central – that's their decision not to show the image of Muhammad or not – it's Parker and Stone," Donohue said. "Like little whores, they'll sit there and grab the bucks. They'll sit there and they'll whine and they'll take their shot at Jesus. That's their stock in trade."

Go Shawn! You Are The Man!


NSM Candidate Stuart is doing a fantastic job with the media in Montana.

True colorsby Jessie McQuillan Shawn Stuart, a Butte Republican running for the state House of Representatives, is also a Montana leader for the white supremacist National Socialist Movement. Meet Butte National Socialist Shawn Stuart Shawn Stuart is no ordinary Republican. The 24-year-old combat veteran, the only Republican running to represent Butte’s House District 76 in the Montana Legislature, also happens to be a state leader for the National Socialist Movement, which dubs itself “America’s Nazi Party.” News of Stuart’s affiliation, first reported April 1 by the Montana Standard, prompted a fast and furious denunciation by the Montana Republican Party, which denies it knew of his views or encouraged his candidacy, and whose spokesman told the Independent April 10 that it will throw its support behind the winner of the Democratic Party primary to cement its opposition to Stuart. For his part, Stuart doesn’t seem to understand what the big deal is all about. He says he shared his ardently anti-abortion, anti-gay and pro-gun views with Republican representatives in Butte, but that he didn’t see the need to tell them about his involvement with a group that’s also virulently anti-Semitic and envisions an America where only white people can be citizens and members of all other races, as well as Jews and homosexuals, would be classified as aliens without rights. Freedom of religion would be absolute in the National Socialist Movement’s ideal society, the group’s 25-point platform says, provided that the “moral feelings of the White race” aren’t offended. “Like anybody else, you can be part of one organization and part of another,” Stuart says. “I keep my political and religious beliefs to myself and don’t need to throw it down anyone else’s throat.” Besides thinking party leaders didn’t need to be clued in, Stuart says he’s not sure he even would have bothered to tell voters about his National Socialist links, and in fact, when he was first questioned by the Montana Standard about the issue, he denied any involvement with the group. Asked why, he responds with a curious analogy: “When Bill Clinton was caught up with Monica Lewinsky, do you think he talked to advisers before saying anything to the press?” Stuart, who was born and raised in Bozeman and joined the Marine Corps after high school, served two tours in Iraq for Operation Iraqi Freedom and was discharged in May 2005. After moving to Butte to attend Montana Tech on the GI Bill, Stuart says, he became involved in Republican politics through various local committees and the Young Republicans club. His political and social affiliations with the National Socialist Movement began in 2004 in Iraq, Stuart says, when he came to believe the United States was fighting the war on Israel’s behalf. (Recent press releases about Stuart’s candidacy from a National Socialist representative refer to the “lies of the Jew-aligned media,” and the group’s website is peppered with its logo, the swastika, and images of Adolf Hitler, as well as elaborate conspiracy theories about Jewish domination of the world.) The National Socialist Movement announced the creation of a Montana unit in December 2005, and Stuart says he’s one of two state leaders who holds meetings and plans to conduct rallies, though he won’t say how many members he’s enlisted. In an interview, Stuart resists being pegged as a white supremacist, saying that people unfairly label as racist those who merely support their own culture and race. As the conversation lengthens, though, he talks more about the differences between races and how it’s just natural for them to stay separate (“Do pelicans and crows hang out? No,” goes Stuart’s logic). Eventually, as his voice rises both in volume and vehemence, he expounds his belief that white people are superior: “We view ourselves as the master race. We’re number one and we don’t care what other races do.” Travis McAdam, research director for the Montana Human Rights Network (MHRN), which alerted the Montana Standard to Stuart’s affiliations and was subsequently called a cover for a terrorist network by National Socialist representatives, says the MHRN is interested in the attempted legitimization of extremist views via mainstream politics. In 2005, for instance, Kevin McGuire, recruiter for the white supremacist National Alliance in Bozeman, ran for a position on the local school board but lost miserably. By relaying anti-abortion and anti-gay-rights views to Montana Republicans while staying silent on his more radical views, McAdam says, Stuart initially managed to tap into the credibility that accompanies membership in one of the two major political parties. Stuart says he announced his candidacy to Republicans at the Butte Pachyderm Club’s Lincoln-Reagan Day Dinner in March and that the response was supportive. “When I said I was going to run, they said ‘That’s great.’ They said they’d help me out if I need them,” Stuart says. Chuck Butler, Republican Party spokesman, confirms that local party representatives did offer support, but says Stuart never had any contact with the state party, and clarifies that even local support was based on the deceptive impression fostered by Stuart. After all, Butler says, what Republican in his right mind wouldn’t support an eager young Marine who had just returned from serving his country, was attending college and appeared to fit the conservative mold? “He never told them he had this skeleton in his closet,” Butler says. “He made a nice appearance and got himself on the ballot and then he happened to say, ‘Oh, I represent some other interest.’ Had we known about it prior to the filing deadline, there would have been someone else, a person with true Republican values.” Once the March 23 filing deadline closes, candidates are locked into the primary race and so the Republicans couldn’t kick him off the ticket. Even so, Stuart says, he tried to change his party affiliation to “National Socialist” once the Republicans rejected him—a move denied by election officials. Regardless, Stuart says he’s determined to run the full race, and he claims that losing official Republican support won’t hurt his chances. Perhaps ironically, he cites Abraham Lincoln’s political persistence as a root of his hope. “Oh there’s always a chance. Lincoln went bankrupt twice, lost three elections and later became president—I can always have a chance,” Stuart says. Butte’s voters, now fully informed of Stuart’s views, will decide just what those chances are. jmcquillan@missoulanews.com

Thursday, April 13, 2006

Guest Workers = Murder


"Horrific" officer death recounted
By The Associated Press
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Raul Gomez-Garcia, 20, is accused of ambushing two uniformed off-duty officers providing security at a party in May. He faces charges of second-degree murder and attempted first-degree murder. (Raul Gomez-Garcia)
Prosecutors add two assault charges today against a man already charged with second-degree murder and attempted murder in the shootings of two police detectives.
Raul Gomez-Garcia is accused of killing Donald Young and wounding John Bishop nearly one year ago. They were working off-duty as security guards at a party.
Capt. Michael Calo testified at Gomez-Garcia's preliminary hearing today that he was working across the street from Young and Bishop when they were shot on May 8.
"It was horrific,"
he said.
"He (Bishop) looked like he lost his best friend," Calo said.
Gomez-Garcia was arrested in Mexico, where he had gone after the shooting, and was extradited to the U.S.

Mestizos call on more to come and Rape America

Mexicans Rush to U.S. Border Hoping for Passage
NewsMax.com WiresWednesday, April 12, 2006

NOGALES, Mexico -- At a shelter overflowing with migrants airing their blistered feet, Francisco Ramirez nursed muscles sore from trekking through the Arizona desert - a trip that failed when his wife did not have the strength to go on.
He said the couple would rest for a few days, then try again, a plan echoed by dozens reclining on rickety bunk beds and carpets tossed on the floor after risking violent bandits and the harsh desert in unsuccessful attempts to get into the United States.
The shelter's manager, Francisco Loureiro, said he has not seen such a rush of migrants since 1986, when the United States allowed 2.6 million illegal residents to get American citizenship.
Story Continues Below




This time, the draw is a bill before the U.S. Senate that could legalize some of the 11 million people now illegally in the United States while tightening border security. Migrants are hurrying to cross over in time to qualify for a possible guest-worker program - and before the journey becomes even harder.
"Every time there is talk in the north of legalizing migrants, people get their hopes up, but they don't realize how hard it will be to cross," Loureiro said.

South-central Arizona is the busiest migrant-smuggling area, and detentions by the U.S. Border Patrol there are up more than 26 percent this fiscal year - 105,803 since Oct. 1, compared with 78,024 for the same period a year ago. Along the entire border, arrests are up 9 percent.
Maria Valencia, a spokeswoman for U.S. Customs and Border Protection, said the rise in detentions did not necessarily mean more people were crossing. She attributed at least some of the additional detentions to an increase in the number of Border Patrol agents.
"We've sent more technology and agents there, and I think that's had an impact," she said.
But Loureiro, who has managed the shelter for 24 years, said the debate in the U.S. Congress has triggered a surge in migrants. In March, 2,000 migrants stayed at the shelter - 500 more than last year.
Many migrants said they were being encouraged to come now by relatives living in the United States.
One of them is Ramirez, a 30-year-old who earned about $80 a week at a rebar factory in Mexico's central state of Michoacan.
He spent an entire night walking through the Arizona desert with his wife, Edith Mondragon, 29. When her legs cramped, their guide abandoned them and the couple turned themselves in to U.S. authorities. They were deported.
But they said they would try again when they regained their strength.
"We want to try our luck up there," Mondragon said. "We can't go back to Michoacan because there is no future there."
Ramirez said the draw was not only the prospect of work in Minnesota, where two of his brothers milk cows on a ranch. He was also excited about the idea he might be able to do it legally.
"My brothers said there is plenty of work there, and that it looks like they will start giving (work) permits," he said.
Many of the migrants also are being driven by a desire to get into the United States before the likelihood that lawmakers further fortify the border.
Since the United States tightened security at the main crossing points in Texas and California in the 1990s, hundreds of thousands of migrants have turned to the hard-to-patrol, mesquite-covered Arizona desert, risking rape, robbery and murder at the hands of gangs and now facing armed U.S. civilian groups.
About 2,000 people a day pass through Sasabe, a hamlet of just a few dozen houses and a Western Union office west of Nogales, says Grupo Beta, a Mexican government-sponsored group that tries to discourage migrants from crossing the border and helps people stranded in the desert.
On a recent afternoon, at least 40 vans overflowing with migrants arrived in the desert near Sasabe in less than an hour. Migrants and their smugglers waited for nightfall before starting a desert trek that would involve up to a week of walking in baking heat during the day and biting cold at night.
Grupo Beta agent Miguel Martinez mans a checkpoint 20 miles south of Sasabe, where he warns of the dangers of the desert, such as bandits armed with knives or guns who order migrants to strip naked, rob them and sometimes rape them.
He also tells about the volunteer border-watch groups that have sprung up in Arizona.
"Right now there are migrant hunters who are armed, and you should be careful," Martinez told a group traveling in a rickety van missing some of its windows.
At Grupo Beta's office in Nogales, Raul Gonzalez, 44, said he walked in the Arizona desert for five days before turning himself in when the blisters on his feet started bleeding and his left leg swelled up.
Like most migrants interviewed for this story, Gonzalez said he was robbed at gunpoint just after crossing into the United States.
"The guides and the robbers are all the same," he said.
Gonzalez said the first time he sneaked into the United States, he did it through Tijuana, across the border from San Diego. He said he worked illegally at a printing shop in Chicago for 15 years but got homesick before he could settle the paperwork for legal residence.
Despite the robbery and his failed trek, Gonzalez said he would try again once his feet heal. His bricklayer's salary of about $60 a week in the western state of Jalisco simply is not enough to provide for his four children.
"It's hard to cross," he said. "But it's harder to see your children have little to eat."