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1 posted on 03/22/2005 12:00:14 AM PST by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

If Gov. Bush & Atty General Gonzalez save Terri from Murder
from these demons. YES, They Win..The Latino community
and the hispanic around the world is watching this event in Florida in Horror!

Whoever save her will win.


2 posted on 03/22/2005 12:13:12 AM PST by Orlando (THE PASSION OF Theresa Maria Schindler , DURING THE HOLY... Week!)
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To: nickcarraway

See that wall ? Someone has to guard it or 15 million Mexicans will invade. ooops they already did ...


4 posted on 03/22/2005 12:26:04 AM PST by John Lenin (What problem ?)
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To: nickcarraway
Can GOP count on Latino vote?

For those that think THAT way, I would imagine it depends on which party wants to promise the better goodies that day!

9 posted on 03/22/2005 12:50:59 AM PST by A CA Guy (God Bless America, God bless and keep safe our fighting men and women.)
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To: nickcarraway
The meeting will also give Bush another opportunity to practice his Spanish and call Fox “un amigo de mio y tambien un amigo de los Estados Unidos” (translation: a friend of mine and also a friend of the United States), as he did when the two men toured Ohio in 2001.

Just before it really hit the fan, and Fox disappeared for nearly a year.

When President Bush addressed Congress on 9/12, only one foreign head of government was in the gallery -- Tony Blair.

When the sky turns black and the armies of the night begin to howl, that's when you find out who your real friends are. And it was the prime minister of Great Britain who showed up to catch our backs, with John Bull's well-worn brass knucks bulging in his pockets.

The British saw trouble and ran toward it. Many others that we called "friends" just ran away.

I think Mr. Bush knows the difference now.

11 posted on 03/22/2005 1:11:52 AM PST by lentulusgracchus ("Whatever." -- sinkspur)
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To: nickcarraway
aBut in 2000, Bush increased that amount to 35 percent. And last year, exit polls showed him winning the support of 44 percent of Latino voters — although a later analysis by NBC News lowered that figure to a still-impressive 40 percent.

About 40% seems to be the top number both in Texas and nationally that Bush/Rove seems to have been able to pull, even with vigorous catering, pandering, and schmoozing -- and even with a Latin in the family.

Fact is, he's getting most of that lever-pull from non-Mexican Hispanics. He gets a rough 50/50 split with Central and South Americans; I should imagine he does a little better among Cubanos. But Mexicans in the U.S. and Mexican-descended chicanos are stuck pretty hard on a 70/30 split in favor of Democrats.

The Democratic bias among chicanos isn't quite as strong in Texas, where many of the immigrants are from areas of Mexico that have been somewhat influenced by the proximity of the U.S. w/ respect to work habits and attitudes and which tend to vote for Vicente Fox's business-oriented PAN. These voters are the ones Bush and Rove have been trying to reach, with some success, on "family values" and immigrant-friendly messages.

But Mexicans from central and southern Mexico are altogether another matter, and their voting patterns show strong PRIista patterns of following party leadership very conservatively and cohesively, rather like old-time "yellow-dog" Democrats. The grassroots chicano political organizations are all Democratic and tend to show MeChista influence around the edges: irridentism, ethnocentrism, etc. They are effectively immune to the Bush/Rove "big-tent" charm offensive.

In the next 10 years, Democratic politicians in Texas expect to win the state back, this time for good. The hitch will be that there won't be as much room in the Tejano-led Texas Democratic Party of the future for non-chicano Democrats. Exit polls and voting pattern studies have shown Mexican-Americans tend to vote ethnocentrically, and some of their political writers, such as Tatcho Mindiola of the University of Houston (who formerly had a column in the now-defunct Houston Post), have shown a strong interest in examining white Texans' voting patterns for signs of discouragement and reduced turnout (vote suppression) when chicano politicians manage broadly to defeat white candidates for public office, as they have done in a few Rio Grande Valley counties.

While Aztlanistas continue to think small, in terms of a partition of the United States, some bigthinkers at NALEO, the National Association of Latin Elective and Appointive Officials, has begun to think in terms of riding a bloc Latin-American vote, if it can be encouraged to cohere, to a kingmaker role in U.S. politics. The capture of the entire United States is a glittering prize, questionable for even a disciplined bloc amounting to (at present) about 14% of the total population, and rather less of the registered voter base. But given the continued flow of illegal immigrants and their attenuated desire to assimilate (compared to predecessor groups), it might not be such an impossible goal in another 25 years. Referring to American political history, another political faction, the Republican Party of 1860, managed to capture not only national office but the national agenda for the next 70 years in the first such factional triumph in U.S. politics. They accomplished this feat with about 40% of the popular vote, by consolidating their regional vote using the wedge moral issue of slavery and leveraging the swelling immigrant vote, to achieve an electoral-college majority that produced a "second American revolution", as the Civil War has sometimes been called.

In other words, "it's been done", and it could be done again.

16 posted on 03/22/2005 2:19:24 AM PST by lentulusgracchus ("Whatever." -- sinkspur)
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To: nickcarraway

This is just another in the never ending pile of rat droppings attacking Repubican rank and file morale. We will see more pieces like this, maybe something like : "Can the GOP keep the Evangelicals from registering as Democrats?"
or " Sure Utah looks like a safe GOP state, but....."
Look the Latinos who came over are not idiots. They came over because they saw their futures in the GOP. Let's not be side tracked by ratmedia bull shiite.


17 posted on 03/22/2005 5:02:01 AM PST by jmaroneps37 (In dealing with liberals remember When you wrestle with a pig, you both get dirty and he loves it.)
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To: nickcarraway

ABSOLUTELY! They came through for us in 2000 and even more so in 2004. VIVA BUSH!


18 posted on 03/22/2005 5:36:05 AM PST by ClintonBeGone (In politics, sometimes it's OK for even a Wolverine to root for a Buckeye win.)
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To: nickcarraway
Can GOP count on Latino vote?

No, obviously they're gonna have to fight for them. Morons.

22 posted on 03/22/2005 7:10:24 AM PST by JohnnyZ ("Thought I was having trouble with my adding. It's all right now." - Clint Eastwood)
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