Category Archives: Immigration

Posts about the undefended US borders.

Hundreds Missing After Ike

Maybe now we’re going start seeing something on this in the media?

Nearly 400 people are presumed missing 12 days after Hurricane Ike slammed on shore. Calls flooded a Galveston County missing persons hotline at the Laura Recovery Center. People are terrified a relative was lost in the storm.

Also, we have the point that Rorschach made in comments:

This is third hand but I am told of a coast guard member that is saying that they are pulling bodies out of the bay on a daily basis and is suprised that it is not being reported in the media. I am also being told that many people on the Bolivar peninsula were overtaken by events. That Thursday evening many people got home form work and started packing up to leave Friday morning, but TXDOT stopped the ferry early Friday morning and that within an hour or so of the ferry stopping, the road through High Island flooded from the storm surge in seargent leaving them no way off the peninsula. I too am questioning the official body count.

The last part of Ror’s comment dovetails with accounts we’ve seen all along — hundreds of people were trapped on the Bolivar Peninsula, and the Coast Guard ran out of time to rescue them prior to the storm. Rumors continue to swirl about that there is a cover-up, and while I don’t have any sympathy for the tinfoil hat brigade, I would be remiss if I failed to note ABC13’s reports of rumors on the issue:

Viewer emails have come in claiming there are countless 18-wheeler trailers full of refrigerators with crews unloading boxes and boxes of bodies. Another viewer reported the recovery of at least 60 bodies, while another says 89 corpses are at UTMB.

And in Crosby, despite the four FEMA trucks outside the crematorium, owner Stanley Blackwell says his cemetery is in fact the regional storage site for area funeral homes in the event of a disaster.

When the power went out, FEMA sent the refrigerated trucks and powerless funeral homes sent over their deceased. He stresses the 100 bodies he currently has are not stacked inside. “We do not stack bodies,” he told us.

So where are all the bodies? Answers based on the official speculation so far…

1. In the marshes/small islands behind Bolivar. Significant debris fields exist there, and are difficult to reach, thus they haven’t been searched.

2. Out in the Gulf, washed there by the back flow off the islands, when the surge receeded.

3. Still in unsearched debris or buried in the sand. Sure they searched with cadaver dogs. They did in New Orleans too, and were still finding bodies in attics a year after Katrina.

4. They were all Scientologists and nobody noticed the giant comet stopping off to pick them up in the middle of the hurricane. (Ok, that one’s not official; I made it up.)

So the death toll is still pending, but at least it’s going to be a lot lower than it looked 5-6 hours before Ike landed.

A related rant.

And before I forget, lookie-look! The Chron’s back up to it’s old “Support the Illegal Aliens” schitck. “Cleanup spurs labor need: Undocumented workers will be linchpin in efforts.” Just goes to show that there’s no disaster so bad that the Chronicle can’t find a way to use it to push its agenda.

Homeowners have already turned to day laborers — many of whom are undocumented — to help clear brush, tent roofs and repair other storm damage. Contractors have hired them to rebuild or restore businesses and the city’s infrastructure.

And the major work of rebuilding small towns along the Gulf Coast or big homes in Galveston will likely be aided by undocumented workers.

And if they were here legally, they could pay taxes on their earnings, helping to fund the cleanup too, instead of sending all their money home to relatives in Mexico, so they can pay the coyotes to join the others here.

Quick Notes

The mayor announced in a voice mail to all employees today that an agreement has been reached with the pension system. Highlights: increased employee contributions, no loss of benefit for current employees, new plan for new hires beginning in 2008. I’m a little skeptical of that “no loss” part; I think the DROP plan is going away. I’ll know more once there’s an official press release and HMEPS informs us how they see it.

Lake Houston residents are still in an uproar over their fees for sewage service increasing by 10x in the recent Ch. 47 revisions. These residents are not allowed to have septic tanks/fields because they’re too close to Lake Houston. They have holding tanks from which their sewage was pumped at a nominal fee ($15). Collection of the fee was pretty haphazard if at all. Implementation of the charge has been pushed back to the beginning of August, and council may change it.

The council bowed to increasing anti-illegal sentiment and did not renew funding for a day labor hall popular with illegal aliens. It may soon close. There was no point in having a “hall” anyway, as everyone stood on the street for a couple of blocks around, waiting for trucks to pull over and someone to hire them.

Metro performs to standard, firing the train operator who followed orders to proceed onto the wrong track, and then phoned in to alert dispatchers and request orders.

A year after a major scandal broke in which city employees working in the mayor pro tem’s office gave themselves raises and bonuses, council members increase their budgets by 16%, partly to fund compensation for their staff.

The 14 council offices would see 16-percent increases in the next fiscal year, from $309,000 to $362,000. The overall budget for the council department, which no longer includes the famous Office of Mayor Pro Tem, is increasing by $566,000, or 13 percent. Councilman Ronald Green: “There are those of us who can justify the increase in our budget, because most of us are using every dime that’s there. Our team members are underpaid and overworked.”

Council voted against a halfway house that asked to be placed in a prohibited location.

Update: Text of a letter sent by Mayor White to all employees.

Representatives of the City of Houston and the Houston Municipal Employees Pension System have reached a tentative agreement on a plan to strengthen the pension system and continue to cut its unfunded liability.

Current employees will retain all of the benefits they have earned.

The municipal employees’ pension plan is healthier and more secure than it has been in years, as are the pension plans for Police and Fire. Since 2004, we have cut the unfunded liability in half. This agreement continues that type of real progress.

The agreement will mean no change in benefits for current City employees and will maintain the fiscal discipline in the newly adopted Fiscal Year 2008 budget. New hires who join the City workforce after January 2008 will have more options to choose from in how to structure their pensions.

The plan must be approved by the Pension System Board, which is scheduled to meet today, and the City Council.

Under the four-year agreement, the City would contribute $75 million to the system during FY ’08, which is already contained in the newly adopted budget. The City’s contribution would rise to $78.5 million in FY 2009, to $83.5 million in Fiscal 2010 and to $88.5 million in fiscal 2011.

Bill White,
Mayor

Update 2: Ok, so the radio is so badly jammed that the employee had to use her cell phone to call in and alert operators that she was on the wrong track. So it sounds like Metro either has poor radio discipline or needs to address communications bottlenecks which are placing riders at risk. It also needs to explain why the guy who waved the train through isn’t being disciplined also, for not insuring the switch was in the correct position.

“I Disagree With Your Right to Disagree With Me”

Anyone who is against illegal immigration is a violent, racist redneck. Really. See, I have the e-mail to prove it.

Patriots:

On Saturday, June 17th, Save Our State members participating in a protest/rally in Los Angeles were attacked by our rabid opposition. You will also be able to read the various other accounts of the events that transpired.

On video, we see the Los Angeles Police Department arresting the attacker. We will keep you updated on the status of this arrest. (Video courtesy of SOS Member “The_Bob”)

We are constantly referred to as racists, bigots, violent vigilantes, etc. Yet, time and time again, it is our opponents who resort to violence and temper tantrums. I am thankful to be surrounded by a group of hardcore Americans who are willing to risk personal injury to protect the sovereignty of this great nation.

Oh, wait. I guess I had that backwards, didn’t I? It’s the defenders of illegal immigration that are racist and violent. More on the happenings, which occured during an anti-illegal immigration rally:

Upon catching my breath, it occurred to me that I got through downtown L.A., in obvious support of anti-illegal immigration paraders, completely unscathed. I then wondered if the others with whom I had hooked up had also had such an easy run. I soon found out that they hadn’t. A young lady bearing a cell phone related to me that Sonar and Old Preach had been attacked by none-too-happy illegal supporters (they had both been on the opposite side of the street from where I was).

Apparently, some guy with a sign hit OP over the head, the cops then quickly moved in, and the guy was arrested. As for Sonar, some manner of altercation took place wherein his hand got cut up. Being pissed off and wanting to see the person who attacked him arrested, Sonar chased the guy onto a city bus and tackled him. When the cops arrived on the scene, apparently they made no arrest and, much to Sonar’s displeasure, allowed the kid/person/goon/illegal/A-hole to leave on the bus. I spent the next 20 minutes gathering info from various people who saw it (because I’d love to civilly sue people who are under the impression that SOS members are punching bags). Fortunately, it appears that no one got seriously hurt, however, Sonar’s camera was destroyed in the fracas.

There you have it folks — if you support enforcing the existing laws, you can be assaulted, cut, have your personal property destroyed, and watch as the police let the perpatrator go. Follow the link above to see the assault where the goon didn’t get the camera in time.

To donate via PayPal or credit card, please go to [this link]:

Or, mail checks or money orders to:

Save Our State
PO Box 91000
San Bernardino, CA 92427

Sincerely,

Joseph Turner
Executive Director
Save Our State

More Costs of Illegal Immigration

Lone Star Times and BlogHouston have both had articles on immigration costs recently, specifically the cost to Harris County. Ninety-seven million dollars. Then there’s the cost to the private sector:

Chris Baker was discussing this yesterday and one of his callers identified herself as an employee of a private, fourteen-hospital group here in the Houston area. She said they routinely write off anywhere from 40 to 60 surgeries each week, because the patients are here illegally and are unable to pay. She said the paperwork will often have Social Security numbers such as 111-11-1111, or 999-99-9999, and bogus addresses, but since hospitals are prohibited from turning anyone away, there is nothing they can do about it.

Let’s see, 40-60 surgeries a week written off, plus all the diagnotics, post-op care, nurses, doctors, medicines, etc. And the city’s portion of employee insurance costs has skyrocketed over the last several years (I recall a graph, but I can’t find it online at the moment–think about 2-3x if not larger). Meanwhile, although the city has absorbed the bulk of the increase, my (still fairly reasonable) insurance costshave also increased. That’s because the cost of the medical services the insurance has to pay for have skyrocketed. Maybe torts and malpractice insurance are just the whipping boys for people who’d rather distract us from the real cause of high medical costs, eh?

Oh and don’t forget those city clinics. See item #13, or would you rather look at the Health Department’s budget? Look at page 6: $17,000,000 budgeted for health services in FY 2007. How much goes to illegals? Well, I am fairly certain that the city doesn’t track it.

Then there’s all the costs to HPD and so on; that’s literally incalculable. The truth is, we can only guess at the primary costs. The secondary costs for things that have to be done (or can’t be done due to the diversion of effort) ripple outwards from that.

Considering that we’re “enjoying” record revenue, yet still can’t hire enough police and have to borrow money to make ends meet, I don’t think the city can afford to coddle illegals, let alone spend $100,000 to help them find jobs on which they won’t be paying taxes. (Maybe we could send this lady to make sure the illegals get a fair wage? )

In any case, we need to get this cost off the backs of Harris County and City of Houston taxpayers before we’re back in this boat again.

‘We’ve seen this economy stop and go, stop and go for two and a half years. There are some signs that things are improving. But we need two or three months of data under our belts before we can say we are on the right track.’
–Barton Smith, Director of UH’s Institute for Regional Forecasting, in 2003

And then there was this gem, from the same source:

At the June 18 [2003] City Council meeting, Councilman Gordon Quan openly wished he had a crystal ball to see future sales tax revenue figures.

Well Gordon, my patented Backwards Ball of Seeing(tm) says that the sales tax revenue will be great and yet a mayor who runs the city like a business still can’t balance the budget. (Funny how Ms. White isn’t really making much of that. Just let me remind you that borrowing money to meet pension obligations means you’re in the red.)

Sorta makes you wonder what’s going to happen when revenue is actually capped, or the revenue slides, doesn’t it?

Update: 6/19: Yet another cost of illegal immigration, this time on the federal and state level. Via.

Teaching Seperatism — on the Taxpayer’s Dime

Just in case you thought the idiots demanding their “due” and “rights” weren’t absolutely the opposite of what multi-cultural is and means, here’s an object lesson. This guy doesn’t look like a principal from a taxpayer-funded school, he looks like a thug from the barrio.

Listen dude, if you came here to escape your home country, stop trying to import it. And if you came here to import it, then you are an enemy of the United States. It’s that simple.

Are You Republican? Or a Jacksonian?

The prior article in this informal series was, in some ways, out of order, and it originally carried the same title that this one now does, as I changed directions on the fly, but didn’t catch the details. I discussed the general anger at both parties, but concentrated on the anger of the electorate with the Republican Party. In doing so, I referred time and again to a belief structure known as Jacksonianism. And while I’ve provided the links, not everyone wants to read a scholarly article of the length that Walter Russel Meade wrote. Nor does everyone have the time to read the nearly as lengthy (but thought provoking) writings of the first person to tell the two parties to take a flying leap. So, briefly, what makes a person a Jacksonian, then?

Well, never fear, because this article is here to summarize it for you.

Firstly, we’re warlike. I don’t mean that we’re war-mongers, or even like war. But we don’t shy away from smacking down someone (or spending 50 years standing guard) when it’s necessary.

An observer who thinks of American foreign policy only in terms of the commercial realism of the Hamiltonians, the crusading moralism of Wilsonian transcendentalists, and the supple pacifism of the principled but slippery Jeffersonians would be at a loss to account for American ruthlessness at war.

THOSE WHO prefer to believe that the present global hegemony of the United States emerged through a process of immaculate conception avert their eyes from many distressing moments in the American ascension. Yet students of American power cannot ignore one of the chief elements in American success. The United States over its history has consistently summoned the will and the means to compel its enemies to yield to its demands.

Secondly, while we like some federal programs, we really don’t like the government telling us what to do or how to raise our kids.

Suspicious of untrammeled federal power (Waco), skeptical about the prospects for domestic and foreign do-gooding (welfare at home, foreign aid abroad), opposed to federal taxes but obstinately fond of federal programs seen as primarily helping the middle class (Social Security and Medicare, mortgage interest subsidies), Jacksonians constitute a large political interest.

Lately, even that liking of Social Security has wavered, dragged down in part by the Medicare boondogle. A Jacksonian might feel guilty, having a relative on the “Plan D” prescription benefit, but knows in his or her heart that much of the problem is caused by one’s own failure to plan for retirement, since “social security will take care of it.” This is why some of the plans floated to end SS involve a graduated ending; reducing the benefits for people who are under 30 today until the whole program goes away. As Jacksonians don’t shy away from fights, it’s likely that pragmatic (as opposed to draconian) proposals along that line will resurface if a Jacksonian revolt takes place. These will, of course, be demonized by the existing parties.

Thirdly, Jacksonians see the Second Amendment, the right to bear arms, as the citadel of liberty. Every member of the NRA is, in some respects (if not many of those given here), a Jacksonian.

Fourthly, Jacksonians believe you can go to hell if you want to. It’s none of our business if you want to worship some other version of God, or Allah, or Budda, or even funky aliens. We believe in our own version, you worship yours, and we’ll both mind our own business. That works best. Now, we’ll draw the line if your religion involves sexual explotation, assault/murder, terrorism, or any other asocial activity that is a physical (or financial) threat to others, but by and large, we don’t give a damn if you want to do the nasty with your own sex or six of the opposite, or even change your own. It may seem creepy to some of us, but it’s your life. Gay marriage? Enh, marriage needs to be divorced from religion. Problem solved. Whomever you are and however you want to live your life, just don’t expect your hijinks to be held up as a positive example for our kids, ok? Or even respected, for that matter. (Yes, I’m talking to you Brittney. And you, Madonna. And… oh hell, half of the entertainment industry.) Your right to be an ass doesn’t preclude or prevent my right to criticize you. It’s this distinction that the press often always fails to note. But this sort of belief isn’t just domestic, it applies to foriegn policy as well.

Jacksonian chairs of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee are the despair of high-minded people everywhere, as they hold up adhesion to the Kyoto Protocol, starve the UN and the IMF, cut foreign aid, and ban the use of U.S. funds for population control programs abroad.

So why, if this resonates with you, and if you believe that you’re actually in the “silent majority,” do the Jacksonians not have a greater say in our government today? Simple. We haven’t had any well-known leaders in the media.

A principal explanation of why Jacksonian politics are so poorly understood is that Jacksonianism is less an intellectual or political movement than an expression of the social, cultural and religious values of a large portion of the American public. And it is doubly obscure because it happens to be rooted in one of the portions of the public least represented in the media and the professoriat.

But in the ’90’s, the “right” started being represented by talk radio, and now the internet is here. The only reason the right (including the Jacksonians) doesn’t have an influential bunch of lunatics like the DU’ers or Kossacks acting as a tail wagging the dog is that we’re a bunch of fiercely opinionated and independant people, who have yet to find their own rallying point. And one can be sure, if and when such a point appears, the media and professoriat will do their level best to discredit it/him/her. (Paging Juan Cole! Paging Juan Cole!) We can count on it.

Where do Jacksonians come from? To reach the fifth point, this must be examined. Jacksonianism started as a culutral meme of the rural Scots-Irish, a hardy people forged from a millenia of war. From there, it spread all across the demographics of America. It even ensnares people of other nations who come here because this nation reflects their beliefs, not just their opportunity. Such people are American in heart and soul even before they set foot on our soil.

Former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, among others, has said that the United States is unlike other nations because it is based on an idea rather than on a community of national experience.

Times have changed and the Scots-Irish were long ago outnumbered by other immigrants, but the belief hasn’t changed. Instead, it spread:

The new Jacksonianism is no longer rural and exclusively nativist. Frontier Jacksonianism may have taken the homesteading farmer and the log cabin as its emblems, but today’s Crabgrass Jacksonianism sees the homeowner on his modest suburban lawn as the hero of the American story.

To use a current controversy for a demonstration: It isn’t fear of immigration that drives Jacksonian opposition; it’s fear that the pace of immigration, the reason, and belief structures of illegal immigrants threaten the ability, already seriously endangered by the government and existing political parties, to hold on to that modest suburban lawn. Is it a vaild worry? In a word, yes. Because by entering illegally, the alien has challenged one of the core beliefs adopted from the Scots-Irish.

It’s one that hasn’t changed; one that’s key to the whole structure, and embodied in a word you don’t see much used anymore outside the military (a place Jacksonians are heavily overrepresented, unsurprisingly) and not at all in politics: Honor.

So, Fifthly: Jacksonians believe in honor and integrity. Your word is your bond and all that, so be careful about giving it on important things–like marriage. It includes things like following the rules, even if you don’t like them, not flauting them and then asking for special treatment. Honor is a life value to a Jacksonian, even if he or she professes not to understand the word in those terms.

The first principle of this code is self-reliance. That’s a polite way of saying those that won’t help themselves should be left to rot instead of sucking down our tax dollars, used by one or the other of the political parties to buy support. Give them adequate schools and a way out, but if they won’t take it, the hell with giving them my money to sit on their butts.

Real Americans, many Americans feel, are people who make their own way in the world. They may get a helping hand from friends and family, but they hold their places in the world through honest work. They don’t slide by on welfare, and they don’t rely on inherited wealth or connections. Those who won’t work and are therefore poor, or those who don’t need to work due to family money, are viewed with suspicion.

The second principle, Respect, builds on the first.

We give respect to those who earn it, either through ability, deed, or sometimes simply age (with wisdom). And according respect means according dignity; an insulted and disrespected Jacksonian is often a dangerous Jacksonian, and an enemy for life. (Extreme Jacksonians have been known to stuff and mount their grudges, passing them down to future generations. “War of Northern Aggression,” indeed.)
(Note: Meade treats Respect as a sub-point of self-reliance; I raise it to an independant point in this article, as I believe it should be. Other points have been similarly moved, to relflect their importance in the debate.)

Behind that comes the third principle: equality.

Among those members of the folk community who do pull their weight, there is an absolute equality of dignity and right. No one has a right to tell the self-reliant Jacksonian what to say, do or think. Any infringement on equality will be met with defiance and resistance. Male or female, the Jacksonian is, and insists on remaining, independent of church, state, social hierarchy, political parties and labor unions.
(Emphasis added–you need to read the “Unions Due” category for why, if you’re new here.)

The fourth principal of honor is individualism.

The Jacksonian does not just have the right to self-fulfillment–he or she has a duty to seek it. In Jacksonian America, everyone must find his or her way: each individual must choose a faith, or no faith, and code of conduct based on conscience and reason. The Jacksonian feels perfectly free to strike off in an entirely new religious direction.

Which brings us back to the fourth belief above, does it not? Meade thinks there are serious limits to the extent of such free-thinking, but I disagree, based on the traction “civil unions” and even gay marriage has gotten within supposedly conservative bastions. It’s not moderation of political and moral fiber; it’s gaining the recognition, if not support of the Jacksonians through appeal to their belief that everyone should live as they wish, within proper limits.

Although women should be more discreet, both sexes can sow wild oats before marriage. After it, to enjoy the esteem of their community a couple must be seen to put their children’s welfare ahead of personal gratification.

And there are some limits, especially for children. Jacksonian parents have the unquestioned right to set those limits for children, and woe betide anyone else who sticks their nose in to tell a them how to to it.

Corporal punishment is customary and common; Jacksonians find objections to this time-honored and (they feel) effective method of discipline outlandish and absurd.

And from there, we can move back to immigration and show why opposition to the current state of affairs (let alone any form of reward for flauting the law) runs counter to Jacksonian belief. Amnesty would be akin to rewarding a child with ice cream for throwing a temper tantrum because he was served broccoli.

Financially, Jacksonians are a mixed bag. If a set of wide parameters can be drawn around their belief structure, it the sixth belief would be in an open, loose financial policy personally, and a tight fiscal policy governmentally. In short, Jacksonians prefer that they have access to easy credit with low interest rates, allowing them to spend for luxuries far beyond the absolutely necessary, but that their government should excercise fiscal restraint, not borrowing money, nor wasting it on frivolous non-necessities. Most especially, not wasting it on supporting a permanent underclass–or “pork class” for that matter. Such funds were taken from the Jacksonian, and thus are entrusted to the government to be used as seen fit by the people from whom the funds were removed by force of law. Many Jacksonians would be happy if the government spent on nothing but national defense and enforcement of necessary laws — and what they deem necessary is usually somewhat less than what we have.

Lacking a home to call their own, and suspicious of government spending and governmental power, Jacksonian traditions get expressed in many ways and from both parties: Flat Tax; check boxes to direct funds to specific programs; cutting U.N. subsidies; and suggestions to abolish Cabinet-level offices like Energy, Education, and even Homeland Security. All of these spring from the Jacksonian thought mode.

To date, the party that has expressed a platform closest to their beliefs has been the Libertarian Party, but is has been fatally handicapped by its idealistic stands on foriegn policy and society in general. Jacksonians recognize that in today’s smaller world, simply withdrawing to our own borders is tantamount to national suicide. And worse, some limited government is a bargain with the devil, but it’s better than no government at all. “Communism requires that all men be angels for it to work; Libertarianism assumes that they are,” is how one person put it. Whether that was an original by the author who wrote me, or if he was quoting someone else, I am not sure.

So what does the future hold? Will the Jacksonian tradition find it’s own identity and political party, or will it continue to make a deal with the two devils we know? I don’t know the answer to that question, but I do know that continuing the path we Jacksonians have followed thus far will only result in more of the same. The Contract with America lies in ruins, and the constitution is tattered.

It’s time for Jacksonians to recognize themselves for whom and what they are. Only then can we advance our agenda, and it appears that a third party is a necessity for doing so, as the Republican party thinks it can continue to ignore the will of the masses, and the Democratic party has simply jumped off the deep end.

Enron? Dimestore. Get Ready for Fannie Mae

For two years now, a bigger scandal than Enron has been bubbling away quietly, almost ignored by the mainstream media. It certainly has not made the media the way Enron and Worldcom did. Why? Well, maybe because the culprits aren’t evil capitalists; they’re “good socialists” : i.e.: they work for an organization set up by the government and backed by taxpayer funds. Which is why we’ll have to bail out Fannie Mae to the tune of $11 BILLION if it fails. AHI has a good rundown on the events so far.

However, it’s based around all the things that did make it into the media, however obscure the reporting was. What it doesn’t address is this: What is the Fannie Mae’s Foundation’s connection with radical organizations like La Raza, MALDEF, the Lawyer’s Committe on Nuclear Policy, Human Right’s Watch? Well according to this, they help fund them. (Link takes 2-5 minutes to load).

Someone want to explain what a quasi-public entity, whose board is appointed by the president and whose solvency is guaranteed by taxpayer funds, is doing engaging in this sort of nonsense?

Piling it Higher and Deeper

I’ve got mucho work-o today, so no time to do a real post. Lots of news today: East End Polecat had City Employee running errands for her private consulting busineess (yes, the very same business I’ve pointed out as being highly questionable in the first place).

The House and Senate take a break from claiming they are above the law to argue about differing immigration bills. Go, House! Lose the amnesty provision; we did it 20 years ago and it didn’t work.

And in a piece of good news, both the day labor and red-light camera contracts were blocked for another week. If you shout loud enough, they will listen; we’ve just been letting the other side do all the shouting for too long. Keep the pressure on folks!

Update: Enron verdict is in. While Skilling skated out on a few of the charges, the two of them were found guilty on enough stuff to put them in the country club prison for at least two or three years. The Chronicle has had to go to a “high traffic edition” (no pictures) to cope.

The Big Speech

Yawn. Well, El Presidente Jorge Boosh spoke on immigration last night. Words, words, words. That’s all. Until I see some real enforcement of the laws we have now, I don’t give a damn how many troops are sent to the border. If they are just there to greet folks and hand out “Welcome to America� pins, I’d just as soon let them spend time at their bases. It’s cheaper that way.

US Gov’t Spying on Citizens!

No, I’m not talking about the No Such Agency and their monitoring of phone calls. I’m talking about the Department of Homland (In)Security. (With a h/t to the Rottie.) This is the kind of crap that persuaded me to leave the Republican Party. Update: This earlier post of Michelle’s is even more damning.

Michelle writes:

I remind you of the jaw-dropping directive issued in August 2003 by then-San Diego Border Patrol Chief William Veal directing local Border Patrol agents to ignore suspected illegal aliens on city streets and at worksites in San Diego. The order was made in response to–you guessed it–complaints by the Mexican Consulate over Border Patrol arrests of illegal aliens seeking to obtain Mexican identification cards. In admonishing his agents to look the other way at lawbreakers Veal wrote: “We have a continuing obligation to prevent any public perception that the Border Patrol may be conducting ‘neighborhood sweeps.'”

A continuing obligation to whom?

That’s bad enough, but to make it worse…

May 2005, a dozen Border Patrol agents told the Washington Times that they had been instructed to “stand down� from arresting illegal aliens near where Minutemen protestors had patrolled in April. The agents understood that an increase in arrests would prove the effectiveness of extra manpower on the border and would credit the Minutemen’s approach. Several sources, including the President of the National Border Patrol Council, confirmed the newspaper report.

Yet that is just failure to uphold the laws of the United States of America. It’s a far cry from what is now taking place: The U.S. Government is actively assisting a foriegn power in its efforts to avoid volunteers who are working to uphold and enforce those laws.

I had a perfectly nice chat last night with DHS spokeswoman Kristi Clemens, who insisted that the Border Patrol does not share information about the Minutemen with the Mexican government–and then confirmed, twice and plainly, that the agency does identify when and where civilian volunteers are involved with illegal alien apprehensions if border-crossers call their neighborhood Mexican consular officials to complain about intimidation or harassment while sneaking into the country. (For the record, her boss told NRO’s Andrew McCarthy the exact opposite! As usual, the spinners in CYA mode can’t get their story straight.)

In short, if someone complains to the Mexican Embassy that they were harrased, the DHS will tell them if the Minutemen were working in the area.

Telephone in Mexican Consulate: Ring-Ring. Hello?
Coyote (immigrant smuggler): “Hellow, I’m…. uh, call me Jose, and I just came over the border at Brownsville this morning, and there were these guys there that accosted me, and they weren’t like, in no uniforms or nothing. . . ”
Consulate Employee: “Well sir, we don’t have any information that the Minutemen are in that area. Though El Paso is –”
Coyote, to someone else: “Hey, Diego! Brownsville’s clear — take’em through there tonight! And call off the El Paso train run.”
Consulate Employee: “Ah, will there be anything else?”
Coyote: “Nah, thanks for the tips. I appreciate it.”
Consulate Employee: “Hey, no problemas, amigo, just send your appreciation to the usual bank.”

And the Rottie points out an even more damning fact:

And our obligations under the treaty do not explain how detailed information about the Minutemen and their organization in as far away places as Illinois and Utah show up on the Mexican Consular websites.

What we have here, is the longest, most blatant, and worst failure to defend our borders in history. If the government doesn’t “fall” (i.e.: the Republicans are voted out of power) for such an egrareous failure, it won’t be anyone’s fault but our own.

Or as Gringoman puts it: El Presidente Jorge Walker Boosh, the first Mexican President of the United States.

TXDoT & Dynamos: An International…something

So I was headed into town Saturday night when I noticed an odd sight, and I was wondering if anyone else had seen it. The TxDoT sign on I-10 had a message about a “futbol” game; I presume it had something to do with parking or shuttles. Yes, the message was in Spanish, butif it repeated in English before I passed it, I didn’t see. And me without my camera to snap a picture of yet more evidence that we don’t own this country any more.

And that us gringos aren’t the target audience for professional soccer matches, it’s just for the folks who still speak a language from south of the border. But then we knew that after the name was changed, didn’t we?

May One (won?) Live-blogging the video feed

Watching the Memorial Park illegal immigrant support rally on KHOU’s webcast. About the only english I can hear spoken is the camera crew. Hmmmm. and they suddenly cut the audio feed. More American flags than Mexican in the shots I’ve seen, so I suppose the message got out. Now they’ve cut the video.

In the one wide-angle shot I saw, it looked like 3-500 people, but this was only a portion of the crowd.

Now they’re showing a prepared clip about the boycott. OMG this is freaking hilarious! “This is to show the impact that not only Hispanics, but all illegal immigrants have on the economy.” I thought all supporters were supposed to call them “undocumented.” I guess she didn’t get the memo. Edit: the clip seemed to say that all the people staying home from work would have been serving all the other people staying home too. That’s even funnier.

“Si se puede” or “Si se pudo.” (Edit: “We can do it” or “we’ve done it.” ) Back to the crowd. Reporter commenting on the crowd. More technical stuff being said. Updates on the fly….

Update: they panned just a bit. Crowd may not be as big as I thought? hard to tell. “It’s funny that there’s this empty spot here. Is that good or bad?”

Reporter states several thousand people are there but traffic is light and businesses are closed so a lot more people must be staying home in support. “This woman’s shirt says, ‘Today we march, tomorrow we vote.'”

Update 2: “Hi, we’re from ACORN, and I never voted before, I’ve lived here 35 years and I just registered to vote in this election because of this issue.” The woman kept yelling something about the military, couldn’t catch it.

Update 3: Woman flying upside down American flag, when she’s not dragging it on the ground. New intro from reporter, “That 500 number has been exceeded, at least quadrupled, there are several thousand here now.”

Update 4: Hymie, from update 2, he was in the Air Force previously. They are registering people to vote at this rally. They’re chit-chatting over the question of how many of these new registrants will actually vote.

Update 5: what they’re doing is “local bits” for various affiliates. The cameras stay rolling and then the reporter (who is this guy, I don’t know the face) will say a couple of lines, and then it goes back to whatever studio.

Update 6: KTRK uses a wider shot and says “hundreds” are in attendence.

Update 7: “A walk and talk for 30 seconds for Belo.” It’s Reggie Aquila. A group near him decided to start chanting just as he went live. Doing it over without the wide shot. Really stressing “several thousand” present and all the extra people “sitting at home doing nothing for ‘a day without immigrants.'” KPRC also states hundreds, not thousands.

Update 8: Until you get to the article, then it says thousands.

Update 9: lost the video feed @ 12:30 while checking other sites. Looks like it was shut down from the field.

Tear Down the Monument

So much for that little battle 170 years ago. The barely-visible line at the bottom of the flyer is just adding insult to injury.

I’m really getting depressed.

Update:To quote Marvin the Parinoid Android, “I’m feeling quite depressed today.”

If you’re the last American out of Texas, don’t forget to take down the flag and turn out the lights. Be sure to scuttle the USS Texas too. A nation that can’t even try to defend its own borders has no business keeping monuments to past glories.

Update: for non-locals wondering if there’s a connection other than in my own mind, the USS Texas is moored near the monument.

Update 2: Oh, never mind about scuttling the Texas. That’s going to take care of itself.