Please find below a special message from MinutemanHQ.com. They have some important information to share with you.
No National Minuteman Group has endorsed Mike Huckabee.
One individual Minuteman has personally endorsed him.
For the sake of clarity, it is important to note that the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps (MCDC), the nations largest Minuteman organization, is a 501(C)4 non-profit organization and cannot and does not endorse any candidate for public office. MCDC is not associated with Mr. Jim Gilchrist, who today endorsed Mike Huckabee for president.
Jim Gilchristâs erstwhile Minuteman Project is itself an organization which by its own representations as a non-profit civic group cannot legally endorse candidates. It does not have any volunteers who observe illegal border activity. It has no border fence building projects. Jim Gilchrist here speaks only for Jim Gilchrist, he does not speak for the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps, nor is he nationally representative of most patriots in the Minuteman movement â who under no circumstances could ignore the failed record nor endorse the duplicitous âplanâ recently rolled out by candidate Mike Huckabee. The national media needs to recognize that Jim Gilchristâs endorsement is his own personal statement, nothing more.
The Minuteman Civil Defense Corps emphasizes policy dealing with national border security. The only plan to ensure border security that is acceptable to our constituency would be a candidate policy statement declaring that his first act as President will be to hold a press conference and announce to the American people an executive order to immediately deploy and fund 30,000 National Guard personnel to the U.S. Borders (25,000 to the southern border and 5,000 to the northern border) to complement a massive increase in U.S. Border Patrol Agent field personnel, and a bilateral effort to secure our frontiers, smash the drug cartels, shut down the human smugglers and protect the public safety of the citizens who reside along the borders on both sides of our national boundaries.
Unlike this last-minute opportunism attempted by Huckabee, many of the other GOP presidential candidates have actually helped push the issue of national border security forward for some time. ...
Sincerely for these United States,
Chris Simcox, President
Minuteman Civil Defense Corps
NOT SO FAST!!!
SIMCOX/MCDC Supports Education for Children of Illegal Aliens
http://www.azstarne t.com/sn/ related/215865. php
ARIZONA DAILY STAR
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 12.12.2007
PHOENIX Talk about strange bedfellows. Consider Barry Goldwater
Jr.; Minutemen founder Chris Simcox; Democratic State Rep. Pete Rios;
and Carlos Flores, head of the Mexican General Consulate, together at
a table to talk immigration over sandwiches.
What on Earth could this group agree on?
As it turns out, a lot.
Even the participants, who often land on opposite sides of the hot
immigration debate, were surprised.
At the tail end of a daylong immigration symposium in Phoenix
sponsored by the California-based Communications Institute, the
Arizona Daily Star and several other state organizations including
the University of Arizona, interests as polar opposite as those of
Simcox and Rios were able to find common ground.
“When I sat down at the table and saw the makeup, my first question
was: Why did they put me at this table?” Rios said.
“I had pretty much written him off,” Rios said of Simcox.
Rios and Flores were willing to concede the border needs to be
secured for a guest-worker plan to work.
And earlier in the day, Simcox, a controversial figure who is
credited and criticized for being the first to organize a citizen
border patrol, made what some found to be stunning statements: He
supports public education for the children of illegal immigrants and
sees the fix as not just an issue of enforcement, but of reforming
Mexico’s economy and basing the number of U.S. visas on the nation’s
labor supply.
“People have never really listened to the entire scope of what our
organization stands for,” Simcox said.
The day, filled with panel discussions and retorts from county
sheriffs and lawmakers from around the state, was not devoid of
disagreement.
Some questioned the accuracy of academic studies portraying
immigrants as a net gain for the economy not a drain. Others
wondered whether those who want to stem the flow of illegal
immigrants are really standing behind the rule of law or are just
scared about the “browning of America,” as Rios put it.
While this group of about 70 was able to find consensus, there was an
acknowledgment of political reality: Congress has failed to institute
federal immigration reform.
The location downtown Phoenix was fitting. Less than six miles
away the immigration debate is unfolding in a vivid way at M.D.
Pruitt’s Home Furnishings. The Phoenix store has attracted national
attention because of a standoff among immigration activists,
sheriff’s deputies and the store owner, who has hired off-duty
deputies to catch day-laborers.
“That’s not the way to go about it,” Simcox said, admitting he’ll
take flak from border activists for standing against the action.
“My followers end up criticizing me because I’m too soft,” he said at
one point in the day.
Arizona Daily Star Publisher and Editor John Humenik stressed
immigration is a local issue, pointing to the impact it has on the
Tucson economy and culture.
“I think our role here in Arizona and as communicators with the
newspaper is to help the rest of the country understand what is a
very local issue,” Humenik said. “It can’t be done in Washington. It
has to be done in groups like this. It has to be done in communities
like Tucson and Phoenix.”
Some of the recommendations out of the forum included asking
legislators to form a bipartisan immigration caucus, and one break-
out group suggested “eliminating the word amnesty from the
dictionary.”
But bridging the gap from a policy meeting controlled by moderators
to the partisan halls of government either Congress or the state
Legislature is a challenge.
“It’s very concerning to me the rhetoric,” said State Rep. Kyrsten
Sinema, a Phoenix Democrat. “Our discussion around the issue of
immigration has never been able to be focused on real pragmatic and
practical solutions. We really need to have a well-rounded set of
options on the table.”
? Contact reporter Daniel Scarpinato at 307-4339 or
dscarpinato@ azstarnet. com.