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Citezens Update:
CititzensLobby.com ^ | CitizizensLobby.com

Posted on 02/19/2005 3:10:29 PM PST by Iam1ru1-2

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HOUSE PASSES REAL I.D. ACT

By a vote of 261-161, the House of Representatives last week passed The REAL I.D. Act (H.R. 418) which will help prevent illegal aliens from obtaining driver's licenses, tighten asylum abuse, seal a porous section along the Mexican border near San Diego, and expand the grounds for deportation in terrorism-related cases. Despite a few concerns raised over one "waiver" provision (and whether or not this bill could lead to a national I.D. card), Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-CO) and the vast majority of House Republicans voted in favor of its passage. Now the bill moves on to the Senate where a vote is expected in the next few weeks. Please help build momentum for this bill by contacting both your Senators today and urging them to vote "Yes" on the REAL ID Act.

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SAFER ACT REINTRODUCED IN THE HOUSE

Rep. Gresham Barrett (R-SC) has reintroduced the SAFER Act (H.R. 688) in the House of Representatives. This bill is comprehensive in scope and includes worthy provisions that will help expedite the deportation of alien terrorists and illegal alien criminals, secure our borders against terrorists and drug traffickers, and reduce visa and document fraud. Please help build support for this bill by urging your Congressman to become a co-sponsor of H.R. 688. _______________________________________________________________

NEW HOMELAND SECRETARY BACKS BUSH AMNESTY

The Senate recently confirmed the nomination of Michael Chertoff to be the new Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, replacing Tom Ridge who had previously announced his departure. The vote was 98-0. Mr. Chertoff served briefly as a federal judge on the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals where he denied asylum, ordered deportation or otherwise ruled against foreigners in 14 of 18 immigration cases. As a former Justice Department criminal division chief, Chertoff was applauded for his role in rounding up hundreds of foreigners on immigration violations who were deemed possible terrorist threats following the 9/11 attacks. However, despite this tough law-and-order record, Chertoff made clear during his confirmation hearings on Capitol Hill that he "strongly" supports President Bush's disastrous amnesty/"guestworker" plan for illegal aliens. Holding such a naive and dangerous position on illegal immigration, Secretary Chertoff offers very little reassurance to Americans that he can adequately protect our borders -- especially if the next 9/11 is traced to al-Qaida terrorists who have snuck into the U.S. from Mexico.

_______________________________________________________________

AG JOBS AMNESTY INTRODUCED IN SENATE

Sell-out Republican Sen. Larry Craig (R-ID) and ultra-liberal Sen. Ted Kennedy (R-MA) have reintroduced the AgJOBS Amnesty Bill (S. 359) which will grant amnesty to upwards of one million illegal alien farm workers in the U.S. and bring in thousands of new migrant workers under the H-2A agricultural visa program. In related news, Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX), another White House water boy pushing amnesty on Capitol Hill, recently stated in the Washington Times his intentions to introduce a new amnesty/"guestworker" bill that would fulfill many of Pres. Bush's proposals by creating new categories of seasonal and non-seasonal "visas" for illegal aliens already in the U.S. and new foreign workers. Citizens Lobby strongly opposes any and all amnesty bills! Help us continue to fight amnesty and the open-borders lobby by signing our Petition to Stop Amnesty.

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FBI, CIA WARN OF NEW AL-QAIDA ATTACKS

In recent testimony before the Senate Intelligence Committee assessing global terror threats, CIA Director Porter Goss bluntly warned that "it may only be a matter of time before al-Qaida or other groups attempt to use chemical, biological, radiological or nuclear weapons." FBI Director Robert Mueller reiterated his concerns over terrorist "sleeper" cells inside the U.S. who are poised to unleash a wave of terror attacks. And in written testimony to the committee, Adm. James Loy, deputy secretary of Homeland Security, described growing concerns over al-Qaida using the Mexican border to infiltrate the U.S. Apparently, President Bush does not share these grave concerns as he continues to push his dangerous amnesty plan for illegal aliens (which will only increase the flood of illegals and Arab/Muslim 'OTM' illegals). And the President still refuses one obvious solution --- placing U.S. troops on our southern border.

_______________________________________________________________

SAMUEL FRANCIS: CONSERVATIVE HERO & PATRIOT

Long-time conservative columnist and activist Samuel Francis passed away this last Tuesday night at the age of 57 following unsuccessful heart surgery. For many of us traditional and "paleo" conservatives, we will remember Sam for his eloquent writings on immigration, race and culture, and his courage to take on the neo-con establishment within the GOP. During his distinguished career, he was a legislative aide to the late Sen. John East (R-NC), editorial writer & editor at the Washington Times, published author of several notable books, regular contributor to Chronicles magazine, and a syndicated columnist for Creators Syndicate. He will be sorely missed. May his soul rest in peace.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 109th; smellingozone; teddy; wormhole
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To: bd476

However, no one noticed Sen. Ted Kennedy (R-MA)?


21 posted on 02/19/2005 4:27:39 PM PST by Just A Nobody
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To: Iam1ru1-2

22 posted on 02/19/2005 4:33:06 PM PST by Next_Time_NJ (NJ demorat exterminator)
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To: Justanobody; Brad's Gramma
Justanobody said: "However, no one noticed Sen. Ted Kennedy (R-MA)?"

LOL, that would be hard to miss. However, as I mentioned above, I have a difficult time getting past misspelled words, let alone trying to get into the article itself. I have a feeling I'm not alone.

23 posted on 02/19/2005 4:33:56 PM PST by bd476
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To: Iam1ru1-2

I am stuned!


24 posted on 02/19/2005 4:41:52 PM PST by Kate of Spice Island (When I was young we used to go "skinny dipping," now I just"chunkydunk.")
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To: MeekOneGOP

Aw man ~ no way are we up to reading thru that whole entire post.

Isn't there like a Reader's Digest verson of it on wav file somewhere ... ??

*Belch*

25 posted on 02/19/2005 4:42:08 PM PST by Zacs Mom (Proud wife of a Marine! ... and purveyor of "rampant, unedited dialogue")
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To: MeekOneGOP

26 posted on 02/19/2005 4:52:27 PM PST by SolidRedState (I can't think of a new tagline, so I'll just post without one.)
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To: mhking
Dyslexics of the world, UNTIE!"

Funniest post of the day. thx

27 posted on 02/19/2005 4:54:39 PM PST by zip (Remember: DimocRat lies told often enough became truth to 48% of Americans)
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To: Justanobody

28 posted on 02/19/2005 4:55:23 PM PST by SolidRedState (I can't think of a new tagline, so I'll just post without one.)
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To: Justanobody
However, no one noticed Sen. Ted Kennedy (R-MA)?

Hard to miss, ain't he?


29 posted on 02/19/2005 4:57:44 PM PST by SolidRedState (I can't think of a new tagline, so I'll just post without one.)
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To: MeekOneGOP
See the big lense on top of Pudge's "Mouser"? It's for getting up close to far away print to check for spelling errors! :-)

30 posted on 02/19/2005 4:58:48 PM PST by hiredhand (Pudge the Indestructible Kitty lives at http://www.justonemorefarm.com)
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To: Zacs Mom

ROFL! Great photo and sentiments!


31 posted on 02/19/2005 4:59:53 PM PST by bd476
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To: MeekOneGOP
Here's the latest update with your TROLL......LOL

32 posted on 02/19/2005 5:14:11 PM PST by Allosaurs_r_us (Idaho Carnivores for Conservatism)
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To: Zacs Mom

Is that VK Porn on the TV?


33 posted on 02/19/2005 6:43:15 PM PST by contemplator
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To: contemplator

rotfl.............good eye!!


34 posted on 02/19/2005 7:04:17 PM PST by Zacs Mom (Proud wife of a Marine! ... and purveyor of "rampant, unedited dialogue")
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To: MeekOneGOP

No kidding


35 posted on 02/20/2005 12:34:04 AM PST by SirLurkedalot (I'm back...with NEW and IMPROVED knuckle-dragging action.)
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To: mhking

"Dyslexics of the world, UNTIE!"

4:30am on Sunday morning - I'm up feeding the kitties, and headed back to sleep soon; maybe - and the best darned laugh I've had for the day, m!


36 posted on 02/20/2005 1:29:20 AM PST by 7.62 x 51mm (• Veni • Vidi • Vino • Visa• "I came, I saw, I drank wine, I shopped")
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To: Iam1ru1-2

Huked on fonics werks four mee.


37 posted on 02/20/2005 7:06:05 AM PST by b4its2late (Every time I think about exercise, I lie down till the thought goes away.)
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To: All

alz wel that endz wel


38 posted on 02/20/2005 7:57:28 AM PST by sully777 (It's like my momma always said, "Two wrongs don't make a right but two Wrights make an airplane.")
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The new grapes of wrath
San Diego Union Tribune: January 23, 2005 -- by Diane Lindquist
 
PARLIER – For the past century, raisins in California's Central Valley have been harvested in exactly the same way: a monthlong frenzy of hand picking that required more workers than almost any other crop.
 
Last season, many raisin growers turned to machines to do the work. Although they had long held out, they are now joining growers nationwide in embracing mechanization to fend off global competition.
 
But the switch to mechanical harvesting is taking a heavy toll on the Mexican migrants who fill most of the state's lowest-paying farm jobs. With machines picking more crops, the need for field hands is falling sharply. Where 50 men once were needed to harvest a field of raisins, five now suffice.
 
"I've been going all over the valley looking for work, but there isn't any. If I'm lucky, I get one or two days a week," said Fidel Rosales Rodriguez, who last spring paid smugglers $1,200 to sneak him from Mexico into California.
 
Even legal fieldworkers say they have never experienced such a tough year. There were more migrants, they complain, and jobs were all but impossible to find.
 
Mechanization portends big problems for a region strained in the past two decades by the arrival of impoverished rural Mexicans. They are widely estimated to be coming to the United States at a rate of more than a half million a year, with a quarter to a third of them entering California.
 
The challenge of absorbing so many newcomers is taxing the economic and social well-being of the valleys that produce fruits, nuts and vegetables for markets worldwide.
 
"We're adding a lot of poor people into what's already a pretty poor area. It's a dangerous path," said Philip Martin, a migration specialist at the University of California Davis.
 
California, the setting for John Steinbeck's "The Grapes of Wrath" and Cesar Chavez's historic farmworker union movement, is experiencing the emergence of a worrisome strain of rural poverty. It exists alongside the relative prosperity associated with the state's $25.7 billion agriculture business. If, for instance, the Central Valley were a state, it would rank first in the nation in agricultural production but 48th in per-capita income.
 
"People used to think California was divided between the north and south, but it's really between the wealthy coastal areas and the impoverished interior valleys," said demographer Hans Johnson of the Public Policy Institute of California.
 
The sheer magnitude of the influx of Mexican migrants is prompting tension and resentment that mirror anti-immigrant feelings in other parts of the United States. California's agricultural valleys have become Balkanized as numerous ethnic groups have reshuffled into separate communities.
 
"We risk falling into warring factions," said Assemblyman Juan Arambula, a former Fresno County supervisor.
 
Parlier, a small farming town 20 miles southeast of Fresno that is in the heart of raisin country USA, typifies the dilemma that confronts many rural California cities.
 
An unceasing arrival of migrants has transformed Parlier into one of the scores of communities known as "Mexican towns" that dot the Central Valley. Since 1990, Parlier's population has doubled to 12,000. Every year when field hands arrive for the harvest, the city has 4,000 more residents for a few months.
 
The community also is one of California's poorest. Unemployment hovers year-round at 30 percent. Per-capita income averages $5,300; family incomes are slightly more than $24,000.
 
Some families are struggling on less than $3,000 a year, the average wage in Mexico.
 
"We're transferring rural poverty from Mexico to rural California," Martin of UC Davis said, "and we don't have a game plan to get out of it."
 
The mechanization of the raisin harvest threatens to make the situation even worse. State officials believe two or three migrants are currently competing for each of California's 400,000 to 500,000 seasonal farm jobs. If machines pick the raisins, agricultural experts say, labor demand will drop to a tenth of the 40,000 to 50,000 workers typically hired today.
 
"I'm reluctant to say we don't want any more (workers)," Arambula said. "But to the extent we have more people than work, we need to slow it down."
 
The region is looking to U.S. immigration measures to control the flow.
 
President Bush has put the issue back on his agenda, vowing that Congress this year will implement a guest worker program and some type of provision to legalize undocumented people living in the United States.
 
Also expected is legislation that would increase border enforcement and impose enforceable sanctions on employers who hire undocumented workers.
 
Any immigration reforms could greatly affect the state's farm picture as well as areas nationwide that have attracted large numbers of Mexican migrants and increasingly are coming to resemble rural California.
 
Still, it's uncertain whether new measures would help.
 
For example, the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 spawned unintended consequences that contributed to the economic and social stress felt today. The legislation legalized 3 million undocumented immigrants, a third of them under a special agricultural provision. But it failed to halt illegal entries. Instead, it quickened the flow.
 
Once legalized, Mexican men secretly brought their wives and children across the border to join them. Meanwhile, fresh job seekers arrived to replenish the ranks as the back-breaking work drove older workers from the fields but not necessarily from California.
 
Such post-IRCA inflows have caused the population of farmworker communities to grow twice as fast as populations elsewhere in California.
 
Estimates of undocumented people living in the United States generally vary from 9 million to 12 million, with Mexicans accounting for about 5.4 million of the total.
 
"Every year, the numbers of undocumented immigrants flowing into the United States is higher than the year before," said Jeffrey Passel, a research specialist at the Urban Institute, a nonpartisan economic and social policy research group in Washington, D.C. "The number in the last decade is more than any other decade, and the statistics might be low."
 
Growers in Fresno County, home of the entire U.S. raisin crop, have long relied on workers from Mexico to collect the dried, wrinkly fruit they sell as a baking ingredient and snack.
 
"We couldn't have gotten the crop picked without them," said grower John Pabojian.
 
But Pabojian has stopped hiring from among the migrants who arrive each season. Instead of the 100 workers he once took on for the monthlong process, he now has six year-round workers and a machine that finishes the harvest in half the time.
 
The transition many of the state's 5,500 raisin growers are making is considered the most significant innovation in the raisin harvest since the industry was established in 1873. It's also happening faster than anyone expected. Last fall, the amount of raisin acreage picked by machine increased by more than 30 percent.
 
Harvests of most crops raised in California are already mechanized, from beans to nuts and some citrus. And experts predict that machines will soon pick more of the fruits and vegetables now routinely picked by hand.
 
By eliminating so many jobs, the raisin industry's mechanization is dramatically changing the overall job market.
 
"For a very traditional industry that always has been in the lead of fighting for hand laborers, it's revolutionary," said Martin of UC Davis.
 
Raisin harvesting machines were developed in the 1950s, but growers resisted them until economics forced the issue. They had argued that only humans were capable of the painstaking work of cutting grape clusters from vines, laying them on the ground in paper trays to dry, turning them once, rolling them and, once they've become raisins, collecting them.
 
Raisin growers, like those in the sugar and tomato industries, invested much political capital to convince lawmakers they needed a guest worker program to ensure an adequate supply of cheap labor.
 
And now that President Bush is promising one will be enacted, they are not backing off.
 
"We've got to have a guest worker program," said Manuel Cu×ha Jr., president of the Nisei Farmers League. The work force is rife with fraudulent documents, he said. With tightened homeland security laws and stricter enforcement, "it'll be all over" if the fields are raided.
 
U.S. immigration agents, however, routinely have refrained from pursuing undocumented workers in California's agricultural valleys. Last summer, the Border Patrol closed its Fresno County office.
 
Nevertheless, Cu×ha said, legalization would assure growers an adequate supply of stable, skilled laborers required for mechanization and, at the same time, offer workers the opportunity to move on to other, better-paying jobs.
 
For workers, mechanization and the drop in labor demand last season hit without warning.
 
"I've been coming here for 25 years. Back then it was the place to find work," said longtime field hand Simon Martnez of La Paz, in Baja California Sur. "This year has been the most difficult ever because there's been more people and a lot less jobs.
 
"I have to come back next year. My family is counting on it. I have 10 children, and I also help support my parents," he said.
 
It's too early to know how the permanent job cuts will affect the flow of migrants from Mexico.
 
"The assumption is they'll go someplace else to where there are jobs," said Roberto Suro, director of the Pew Hispanic Center.
 
 
Labor issues are not driving the transition to mechanization. Globalization is. Producers in Chile and Turkey are sending cheaper raisins into an already saturated U.S. market. As a result, growers in Fresno County are being forced to cut costs.
 
"The cause has been the basic economics of the industry," said Bert Mason, an agricultural economist at Fresno State University. "And because of that we've seen a rapid change in attitude toward mechanization."
 
Competition has forced daunting decisions on California's raisin farmers, most of whom are Armenian or Japanese immigrants or descendants of immigrants. Many are in their 60s and 70s.
 
While they once were able to make a decent living on less than 50 acres, foreign competition and four straight years of poor crops and low prices have made such operations big money losers.
 
Some growers have put their grapes into table wine. Others are shutting down. In the past two years, the amount of acreage devoted to raisins shrunk to 200,000 acres from 250,000. The remaining farmers have little choice but to mechanize.
 
"I'm going to switch over," Garvin Lane said. "You've got to convert or get out."
 
Easing the transition has been the development of harvesting machines, new grape varieties and planting systems. Professional harvesters, with their own equipment and crews, have materialized.
 
Although methods vary, all allow the fruit to dry on the vine, rather than on trays laid out on the ground. Machines fitted with big brushes then advance along the rows, gently knocking the raisins into bins. Because the fruit never touches the ground, the quality is higher.
 
"It's a huge challenge to learn how to do it," Mason of Fresno State said.
 
The shift is expensive.
 
A machine typically costs about $150,000. Even if growers hire a professional harvester, the expense of preparing for mechanization – planting vines, trellising and installing subsurface drip irrigation – can run initial costs to about $4,500 per acre, or $2,500 more per acre than conventional planting.
 
But yields more than double, boosting returns quickly enough to repay the investment.
 
The biggest saving is in labor costs. Field hands are paid by the tray, averaging 15 to 17 cents each, with workers picking an average of 300 trays a day. Machines can cut that expenditure by 80 percent.
 
"Everybody was looking for ways to survive and cut costs, and that's the way they found to cut costs," said grower Sohan Samran. "Even though we're mechanized, labor still is our biggest expense.
    http://www.numbersusa.com/index
39 posted on 02/24/2005 12:45:10 PM PST by Coleus (Brooke Shields aborted how many children? http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-bloggers/1178497/posts)
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To: sully777; JustAnotherSavage; Dan from Michigan


40 posted on 02/24/2005 12:46:05 PM PST by Coleus (Oppose Amnesty for Illegal Aliens http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-backroom/1335643/posts)
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