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Report from a Minuteman Project "Minutewoman" just back from the Front Lines
email | 9 April 2005 | A Minutewoman

Posted on 04/10/2005 12:03:51 AM PDT by Spiff

I was on the Naco, Arizona/Mexican border 6am - 2pm daily from Sunday to Wednesday, with two other Minutewomen and two Minutemen.

Below is the story a rancher's wife told me, who lives on 800 acres of land, in the family since the 1880s. Their ranch begins at the Mexican border.

Her name is Robin. She and her husband, Edward, have four children. They came to our Minuteman post requesting that Minutemen be stationed on their nearby property.

Robin said she hears gunshot every night on her ranch. Has no idea exactly where it is coming from.

Since the Minutemen arrived, she claims the gunshots have stopped.

Recently, a drunken illegal alien wandered onto their ranch at night. She was home alone with her children. The illegal alien pounded on their front door. Robin said she and her terrified children crawled on their stomachs to the back of their house to get away from him. While retelling this event, her pretty eyes were filled with both terror and humiliation.

The family's ranch is stampeded by illegal crossings. Years ago, they said their ranch was peaceful and safe. That it was rare to see illegal crossers.

The husband, Edward, said he was recently on his property and was astounded to count over 200 illegal crossers in a group nearby. He said he called the border patrol on his cellular phone.

He was told by the woman on the phone that it was not possible to see 200 hundred crossers because they would never cross in such a large group. As he was being told this, the 200 were crossing right before his eyes!

This ranching family thanked us profusely. They said if we needed anything - food, showers, rest - we were welcome at their home. The gruff rancher husband had tears in his eyes when he said goodbye, thanking us.

OUR MINUTEMAN TEAM

In our sector, teams of Minutemen from two to five set up on a hillside along a dirt road ten paces from the border of Mexico. I think we had a total of nine teams. Although too far to talk, you could see a Minuteman team on either side of you. We communicated with each team via walkie-talkie radios.

It was very well organized. We had a MMP supervisor driving by periodically. Each team was encouraged to fly their state flag.

A New York flag was flying from the team to our west and a Florida flag flying from the team to our east. Our team flew an American and a Californian flag combo.

For 8 hour shifts around the clock, Minutemen - a giant neighborhood watch - were armed with binoculars, cellular phones and handheld walkie-talkie radios. We set up lawn chairs and umbrellas. Posted a sign that read, "Californians for Secure Borders." In our spare time, we threw a boomerang, flew a kite. We played CDs.

In short, we were noisy and visible. Chris Simcox had said noise was a good thing at a Minuteman post to deter would-be crossers.

There was a showing of border patrol helicopters, border patrol SUVs, sheriff vehicles, border patrol on scooters. In short, there was a steady stream of law enforcement on this normally deserted stretch of border land.

We were told by local ranchers that they have never seen so many border patrol. That this show of force was for the MMP.

THE FENCE/the trash
The barbed wire border fence is a joke. It's about shoulder high.

Our team's section of fence, about a two block area, had four crossing areas. The barbed wire has been stretched and cut to accommodate crossers. On the Mexican side, trails through the desert shrubs lead up to the passage holes in the barbed wire fence.

Some of the holes are large enough to accommodate a pair of crossers walking hand in hand.

Our area was littered with many Gatorade bottles. Many, many plastic bags. Tins of foot fungicide. Deodorant cans.

There were endless numbers of cans, sweatshirts, a hair brush, razors, a cell phone, a little Spanish Bible, many backpacks, sandals, tennis shoes, blankets, a powder puff, tuna cans, Tequila bottles, beer cans, a well used address book in Spanish. We found three one dollar bills rolled up and covered in dirt. One of our Minutewomen found a black ski mask.

There were many toothbrushes and tubes of toothpaste.

It is heart breaking to see the beautiful desert literally covered in trash. The trash is just spread all over. If you walk a few steps there is some form of trash within view. Many, many plastic bags fly on trees and shrubs. The size of bags vary from those big, black outdoor trash bags down to the small postcard sized plastic bags.

Where the hell are the environmentalists on this issue of unbelievable trash? Is there anywhere else in the United States with such out of control environmental destruction that gets so little environmental attention? It is perplexing.

The Mexican side was desolate except for a train track and a highway in the distance. Desert foliage was crisscrossed with paths leading to the fence.

MEXICO BEEFS UP ITS FORCE
We read in local newspapers that the Mexican government had beefed up their forces where the MMP were stationed.

For example, a Mexican group on Mexican soil that supposedly rescues crossers, called Grupo Beta, was stationed to encourage crossers approaching the 20 mile MMP teams to return home. We were told military were also in the area.

The Grupo Beta wore bright orange shirts and drove new orange trucks. We usually had one to two trucks within our binocular vision, with several orange coats per truck.

The local ranchers told us that they had never seen these "orange coats" before. It was a first for them.

We watched the orange guys with our binoculars. From our lawn chairs, armed with walkie-talkie radios and bottled waters.

We watched them drive around in their orange trucks. They would park under trees and eat their lunches. Get out and walk around. Go under bridges where migrants camp.

We would from time to time see people who may have been migrants [translation: illegal aliens] get in the backs of their orange trucks.

One time we saw a group of about 8 single file coming over the horizon. Our entire 9 team section activated. We were radioing each other. All posted with binoculars. We were a-buzz!

Well, they turned out to be reporters! American reporters interviewing the Mexican national government workers. They all walked up to the fence, with the "humanitarian" workers and we talked for quite a while.

The humanitarian Mexican worker spoke no English. But interpreters said they wanted to show us a baggy they handed out to crossers with snack bars and water They offered to give us food and water.

Another Mexican national farmer approached us later on horseback and stated illegal crossers only want to work. Again, we had a peaceful conversation.

But what we can say is that while we were posted for 24 hours at our section not one illegal crosser traversed the well-worn paths. They did not walk through the openings in the barbed wire, as they normally do.

Our presence stopped illegal crossings in this area - normally commonplace.

On Tuesday, we did see a young man appear among the orange guys who had a huge rifle slung over his shoulder. The Minutemen in my group knew the rifle make and said it had a scope. This guy was in his 20s, in a tee shirt, black pants and baseball cap. No uniform.

Our entire line watched him through binoculars. He would zigzag around. Talk to the orange coats. Zigzag more. Our radio walkie-talkie info finally declared they thought he was police. He eventually walked out of view over a hill.

When I related the event to a local rancher who stopped by to talk with us, he told me that the guy was definitely a coyote. He also said anyone out there on the Mexican side is part of the bribery and smuggling even if they are government employees.

BORDER PATROL AGENTS
There were border patrol supervisors who would drive around and talk to the press. They would spin a line worthy of Bush and DHS.

But when there were no supervisors around, the rank and file border patrol would occasionally speak to us. It was brave of them as they wear name badges.

One border patrol agent told me that the Mexican humanitarian orange coat guys routinely shake down the crossers. He laughed when I called the Mexican orange coats humanitarians.

Another agent told me that the border patrol was very glad we were there. When we asked about the so called sensors Minutemen were setting off, he laughed and said the spokesmen were saying what they'd been told to say.

He gave us a thumbs up when he drove off. They also communicated that the illegal crossing activity is very well orchestrated and run.

RANCHERS and locals
Our arrival has been controversial among the locals.

I stayed at the Bible College and went to the Bible College church on Sunday. Two pastors focused their talks on their gratitude for the Minutemen. One pastor asked for Minutemen to stand. There were only about five us in attendance.

The pastor then told the church people to go to us and shake our hands. But the churchgoers approached us and hugged us! Some held onto me like I was a life safer! A line formed as mothers, children, old ladies, teens embraced the Minutemen.

We did have locals express discord about MMP, but they were the exception in my experience.

Our night shift had said that a rancher had pulled up in his truck, emerged from the darkness, holding the hands of his two small children and thanked the Minutemen over and over. The night shift Minuteman told me that that the rancher had tears in his eyes as he thanked them. The Minuteman who listened to the rancher and told me of the experience, is a tough, muscular, no-nonsense former military guy. But when he told me this story about the rancher, he said his eyes welled up with tears too when the rancher expressed his gratitude.

When a group of us were at a local cafe, a local guy came up and grilled us. Gave us his stories about his mother's property being ransacked by crossers. He then wrote down the name of a section where he asked the Minutemen to go to.

I told the locals that would give me suggestions that they should contact the leadership of MMP with their referrals. I was a peon just following the orders.

If you were a Minuteman, someone would inevitably request you patrol some section.

It absolutely makes my blood boil to think of government letting these hard working American citizens' ranches literally be invaded! I told them all that they are heroes. Most said they will never leave their ranches!

ACLU
The ACLU types showed up. They wore white tee shirts with orange letters that read "Legal Observers."

As we did a shift, it was always a treat to talk to anyone new. Locals. Reporters. Photographers. Minutemen wandering about.

It wasn't any different when you would come upon an ACLU person. I talked to all of them I saw. We would just chitchat about whatever. Most seemed to be college aged. I told a couple I spoke to that I was glad they were there. I said they didn't want violence and neither did we. I thanked them for being there watching.

After all, with them standing among us, they only made our numbers look bigger before the illegal crossers. In that regard, they made us appear larger in force.

Personally, I had no problem with the ACLU at the MMP. They would just stand around quietly in their matching tee shirts. As the week wore on, I noticed the number of ACLU observers diminished significantly.

It was apparent that where we stood illegal crossings stopped. The shift went by fast because there was always some rumor flying around. Like the day when the rumor went round that 12 rancher skinheads were going to attack the Bible College. There was always somebody new coming up to investigate our team.

Minutemen and ranchers would drive by with all sorts of comments. Reporters from London, Mexico, all over the US were constantly wanting to talk and be led around to see various sites.

And you could look through binoculars and watch the orange guys. Or birds. The media loved to film you looking through the binoculars. I would sometimes just be watching a bird or a butterfly when I was being filmed looking through my binoculars by the media.

I only regret I couldn't stay for the full Minuteman Project! It was awesome. I met some great people from New Hampshire, Massachusetts, New York, Kansas, lots of Texans and Californians. Most were just run of the mill, salt of the earth typical hard working American citizens.


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: aar; aliens; arson; borderinvasion; illegalimmigration; immigration; mexico; minuteman; minutemanproject; minutemen; mmp
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1 posted on 04/10/2005 12:03:52 AM PDT by Spiff
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To: HiJinx

ping


2 posted on 04/10/2005 12:04:29 AM PDT by Spiff (Don't believe everything you think.)
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To: Spiff

I thought MS-13 and the Mexican government were gonna wipe you guys out!


3 posted on 04/10/2005 12:07:01 AM PDT by Lazamataz (Cleverly Arranging 1's And 0's Since 11110111011...)
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To: Spiff

BTTT Go Minuteman! thanx for bringing national attention to this issue!


4 posted on 04/10/2005 12:07:07 AM PDT by Chani (If it isn't in Texas, you probably don't need it.)
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To: Spiff

Impossible. According to the Free republic contingent of Friends Of Illegal Immigration, the minutemen are nothing but a bunch of ingornant, racist, redneck males who are just waiting to shoot something that doesn't speak english.


5 posted on 04/10/2005 12:07:18 AM PDT by flashbunny (Every thought that enters my head requires its own vanity thread.)
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To: flashbunny
Impossible. According to the Free republic contingent of Friends Of Illegal Immigration, the minutemen are nothing but a bunch of ingornant, racist, redneck males who are just waiting to shoot something that doesn't speak english.

LOL! That was positivly Lazamatazanian.

6 posted on 04/10/2005 12:08:11 AM PDT by Lazamataz (Cleverly Arranging 1's And 0's Since 11110111011...)
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To: Spiff

I am so proud of you, and I thank you.


7 posted on 04/10/2005 12:09:22 AM PDT by cmsgop ( Don't Forget to check out Bea Arthur in the "Menopause Monologues"  coming on NBC this fall)
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To: Spiff

Thank you.


8 posted on 04/10/2005 12:14:29 AM PDT by kcvl
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To: Spiff; JohnHuang2; keri; international american; Kay Soze; jpsb; hershey; TomInNJ; dagnabbit; ...
The Gospel according to the MMP. (And man is the devil ever HOT!)

:~)

=========================================

"I stayed at the Bible College and went to the Bible College church on Sunday. Two pastors focused their talks on their gratitude for the Minutemen. One pastor asked for Minutemen to stand. There were only about five us in attendance."

"The pastor then told the church people to go to us and shake our hands. But the churchgoers approached us and hugged us! Some held onto me like I was a life safer! A line formed as mothers, children, old ladies, teens embraced the Minutemen."

9 posted on 04/10/2005 12:26:25 AM PDT by Happy2BMe ("Viva La Migra" - LONG LIVE THE BORDER PATROL!)
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To: Spiff

Nice job BUMP


10 posted on 04/10/2005 12:32:16 AM PDT by Texas_Jarhead (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1366853/)
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To: Spiff

so what is it going to take to get the Minuteman Project
extended indefinitely ? Until the Gov takes positive action
this should be a permanent fixture . Any talk of that?


11 posted on 04/10/2005 12:32:28 AM PDT by injin
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To: Spiff
"It absolutely makes my blood boil to think of government letting these hard working American citizens' ranches literally be invaded!"

The Government exists to collect taxes and do all it can to expand its size, perks and privileges. Now if you expect it to solve problems, you're drunk or on drugs. What a silly idea!

12 posted on 04/10/2005 12:39:01 AM PDT by Enterprise (Abortion and "euthanasia" - the twin destroyers of the Democrat Party.)
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To: Spiff
Thanks for your report. More importantly, thanks to you and your fellow minutemen and minutewomen for your sterling work - performing the duty our government has shirked.

How many are down there? This needs to continue beyond the one-month timeframe. If it could be positioned as a "patriotic vacation", with enough people and some minimal facilities, it could morph into a a perpetual presence. The line would, of course need to spread and migrate, as immigration patterns change in response.

13 posted on 04/10/2005 12:39:04 AM PDT by Lexinom (You can easily judge the character of a man by how he treats those who can do nothing for him.)
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To: Spiff; FITZ; Lazamataz; flashbunny; Happy2BMe; international american; Travis McGee; Squantos; ...
Good report, Spiff.
Ping: This one's for the Minutemen:

"In the beginning of a change, the patriot is a scarce man; brave, hated, and scorned. When his cause succeeds, however, the timid join him, for then it costs nothing to be a patriot." ~Mark Twain
14 posted on 04/10/2005 12:41:35 AM PDT by FBD ( "A society of sheep must in time beget a government of wolves." ~Bertrand de Jouvenel)
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To: Spiff

Thanks for doing this and for the report.


15 posted on 04/10/2005 12:45:56 AM PDT by Badray (Quinn's First Law -- Liberalism ALWAYS generates the exact opposite of its stated intent.)
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To: flashbunny

You mean the Freepers that employ them.


16 posted on 04/10/2005 12:47:35 AM PDT by BurbankKarl
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To: Spiff
Wow, I guess everybody at the Mexican border "welled up with tears."
Go Minutemen!

17 posted on 04/10/2005 12:50:04 AM PDT by billybudd
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To: FBD; Spiff; B4Ranch
#14 - Very true statement. History repeating itself before our very eyes with no more than a handful of patriots risking life and limb for the sake of justice and our Constitution and future as a nation.

Mr. Gilchrist and the MinuteMen and MinuteWomen will go down as true American heroes - much to the disdain and bitterness of the powers that be in Washington, D.C.

18 posted on 04/10/2005 12:57:44 AM PDT by Happy2BMe ("Viva La Migra" - LONG LIVE THE BORDER PATROL!)
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To: Spiff
Just two weeks ago we would be viewing this in a smoky back room somewhere.

Looks like a revolution has broke out.

It is hard to stop a flood.

19 posted on 04/10/2005 1:00:23 AM PDT by Happy2BMe ("Viva La Migra" - LONG LIVE THE BORDER PATROL!)
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To: Spiff

Thank you so much for your efforts. I think this is such an important issue. It upsets me that President Bush seems to misunderstand this issue so much.


20 posted on 04/10/2005 1:03:00 AM PDT by Constitutional_Republican
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