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The Terry Anderson Show - LIVE! Amnesty Alert!
The Terry Anderson Show ^ | Dec. 13, 2009 | Terry Anderson

Posted on 12/13/2009 7:19:03 PM PST by AuntB

The TERRY ANDERSON SHOW.. Articulating the Popular Rage!

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A warrior in the fight against illegal immigration and those who promote it for over a decade! From the streets of Los Angeles to the halls of congress, Terry has been there. No one has the passion and common sense of Terry Anderson...He is A MUST listen!

The BEST one hour of radio you'll find anywhere.

Sunday Nights- Listen on the radio! 12-1 AM EDT, 11-12 PM CDT, 10-11 PM MDT, 9-10 PM PDT KRLA - 870 AM - Los Angeles -- KDWN - 720 - Las Vegas -- KFNX - 1100 - Phoenix

Who IS this Terry Anderson guy??

"Stupid People of America !!! If You Ain't Mad, You Ain't Payin' Attention!"

Call-In Number - (866) 870-5752


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: aliens; amnesty; illegalaliens; immigrantlist; immigration; nomoreamnesty; radio; sanctuarycity; sanfrancisco; talkradio; terryanderson
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Terry's show tonight features:

San Francisco inch by inch, foot by foot, "whether you like it or not!"

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HEADS UP!!! AMNESTY is being introduced in the House of Representatives this coming TUESDAY!!! Will the entire nation become a 'sanctuary' San Francisco ???

1 posted on 12/13/2009 7:19:04 PM PST by AuntB
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To: pinz-n-needlez; pissant; plan2succeed.org; processing please hold; RedCell; RightWhale; ...

A little over an hour until The TERRY ANDERSON Show starts!

Listen live on line or on the radio for the best hour in talk radio.

Comprehensive Immigration Reform for America’s Security and Prosperity” to be Introduced December 15

(ASAP....isn’t THAT special???)

(Washington D.C.) On Tuesday, December 15, Congressman Luis V. Gutierrez (D-IL) will introduce new legislation, the Comprehensive Immigration Reform for America’s Security and Prosperity Act of 2009 (CIR ASAP), to the U.S. House of Representatives. Gutierrez will be joined by members of many different faiths and backgrounds, including the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, Black Caucus, Asian Pacific American Caucus and Progressive Caucus.

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2405482/posts


2 posted on 12/13/2009 7:25:50 PM PST by AuntB (If Al Qaeda grew drugs & burned our forests instead of armed Mexican Cartels would anyone notice?)
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To: brushcop; 1COUNTER-MORTER-68; 2 Kool 2 Be 4-Gotten; 3AngelaD; alice_in_bubbaland; aligncare; ...

Join us for the live thread and the Terry Anderson show at 9pm pacific.

Today’s NAFBPO foreign news report.

El Salvador diplomats plan for US immigration reform

Posted: 11 Dec 2009 07:18 AM PST

NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF FORMER BORDER PATROL OFFICERS
Visit our website: http://www.nafbpo.org
Foreign News Report

The National Association of Former Border Patrol Officers (NAFBPO) extracts and condenses the material that follows from Mexican and Central and South American on-line media sources on a daily basis. You are free to disseminate this information, but we request that you credit NAFBPO as being the provider.

Friday, 12/11/09

El Financiero (Mexico City) 12/10/09

El Salvador wants integral immigration reform in the U.S. – [full art. transl.]

El Salvador today expressed its interest in the approval of an integral immigration reform in the United States, one which would allow legalizing thousands of Salvadorans in the Temporary Protection Status (TPS) program, which must be renewed periodically. At a press conference along with the Salvadoran chancellor, Hugo Martinez, who is in Washington on an official visit, the vice-minister (read: Undersec. of State) for Salvadorans abroad, Juan Jose Garcia, said that the promotion of a migratory reform “is the most important objective that has been outlined.” The official pointed out, “If that objective does not come about in the first three months of the coming year, (then) obviously El Salvador would propose an immigration relief for a major number of Salvadorans in irregular status,” by means of a new extension of the TPS.

The TPS, which is a temporary relief by the United States government for countries affected by natural disasters, and which was granted to Salvadorans after the 2001 earthquakes, “is a means which we already have and therefore would not want to let go of it,” said Garcia. Chancellor Martinez announced an accord with the Sub-Secretary of Internal Security (sic) of the United States, Jane Holl Lute, to form a work group to track deportations. That work group will be headed by John Morton, the deputy director of the Immigration and Customs Service (ICE) (sic) and vice-minister Garcia, who will hold their first meeting in El Salvador in February of 2010. Both officials agreed on the needs of the vulnerable groups, such as women and children, to lessen the impact of repatriations in families and to elaborate a newer version of the Salvadoran program “Welcome home.”

Garcia noted that his country seeks more information about deportees, social relief programs for families separated after deportations and reintegration programs for deportees into Salvadoran society. Other issues, he emphasized, also include people smuggling and organized crime. El Salvador also awaits a reply from the United States about a suspension of deportations as a result of hurricane Ida in that country at the beginning of November of this year.

——————————–

La Cronica (Mexicali, Baja Calif.) 12/10/09

Update on smugglers’ warehouse

The warehouse in Mexicali found with the 47 AK47 rifles (M3 Report of yesterday) also turned out to have $2,126,450 U.S. dollars, plus 868,580 pesos and also 421.6 kilos of cocaine (927.5 lbs.). The attached photo shows the twelve detainees and some of the cash, cocaine and firearms. All this, in a warehouse just five kilometers (approx. three miles) from Calexico, Calif.

———————————-

Cambio de Michoacán (Morelia, Michoacán) , El Diario de Coahuila (Saltillo, Coah.) 12/10/09

The work of obscene killers

The nude and mutilated bodies of four men were found this morning (Thurs.) next to a high school in Chilpancingo, the capital of the state of Guerrero. A message left with the bodies read: “Send better trained people. Sinaloans and Michoacánans, come to pick up your f—-n garbage. Respectfully, the chief of chiefs” [profanity censored.] Two of the bodies were totally dismembered and in black plastic bags. Severed body parts of the other two were strewn within a radius of some thirty feet around the entrance to the school. Classes were suspended.

—————————-

El Diario (Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua) 12/10/09

Juarez continues to make news

Yesterday, Wednesday, there were sixteen assassinations in Ciudad Juarez. A review of this article shows that all the victims died from gunfire at various times and points of the city. Many of the events’ descriptions also included an additional number of persons wounded. Also in the morning, yesterday, the chief of police of Ciudad Juarez “presented” the 2,400 city police to the governor of the state at a ceremony. The chief stated that armed robbery in Juarez is down over 50% since March; he added figures about firearm seizures (234) and ammo (10,614 rounds.) The Juarez police is the first in Mexico to be authorized to carry “long barrel firearms.”

—————————-

Excelsior (Mexico City) 12/10/09

Michoacán bubbling with violence

There have been seven attacks against federal police in various localities of the state of Michoacán in the last couple of days. At the time of this report, ten people have died: five federal police members, four thugs and one other civilian bystander.

—————————–

- end of report -


3 posted on 12/13/2009 7:29:36 PM PST by AuntB (If Al Qaeda grew drugs & burned our forests instead of armed Mexican Cartels would anyone notice?)
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To: AuntB

Thanks for the ping.

Good evening all.


4 posted on 12/13/2009 7:31:54 PM PST by c-b 1 (Reporting from behind enemy lines, in occupied AZTLAN.)
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To: SwinneySwitch; Fire_on_High; fkabuckeyesrule; flashbunny; FOXFANVOX; freeperfromnj; Fudd Fan; ...
NOT good news from Mexico....and crossing the border every day... Article forwarded by NAFBPO.

http://smallwarsjournal.com/blog/2009/12/this-week-at-war-mexicos-narco/

Mexico's drug gangs don't want to destroy the state, they just want to rent it

The U.S. Army War College's Strategic Studies Institute has published a disturbing research paper written by Professor Max Manwaring. Titled A "New" Dynamic in the Western Hemisphere Security Environment: The Mexican Zetas and Other Private Armies, the paper discusses how Mexico's drug cartels and the private armies they finance are systematically displacing legitimate state authority across Mexico and Central America. Those who follow events in the region will not find much new in that assertion. What is new is Manwaring's description of the untapped potential of Los Zetas - the private army associated with the powerful Gulf Cartel -- and why it will be especially difficult for either the Mexican or U.S. governments to counter the organization's power.

Los Zetas was born in the late 1990s when the Gulf Cartel began recruiting soldiers from the Mexican army's Airborne Special Force Group. The Gulf Cartel was able to provide the deserters with far more pay, prestige, and side benefits than the Mexican government could. The project was a huge success; the cartel used the organization, training, discipline, experience, and equipment the former soldiers provided to greatly expand its operating territory, smuggling routes, debt collection, and capacity to intimidate or kill opponents. Los Zetas went on to recruit soldiers from the Guatemalan army's special forces and from other militaries in the region.

According to Manwaring, Los Zetas is no longer merely an enforcer for the Gulf Cartel, but an independent military force that rivals the power of legitimate governments in the region. It has used the enormous cash flow it receives from drug smuggling to acquire state-of-the-art weapons and electronics technology and to build intelligence-gathering, logistics, and operational planning staffs that Western military commanders would not only recognize but envy.

So do Los Zetas's commanders aim to seize control of the Mexican state? Probably not, according to Manwaring -- at least not directly. Los Zetas (and other cartel leaders in the region) want to weaken but not completely destroy the traditional authority of the state. Los Zetas and cartel members need to travel outside the country, communicate, and conduct financial transactions. Most important, these transnational criminal organizations greatly benefit from the Mexican government's zealous protection of its sovereignty -- this keeps the U.S. government one step away from interfering with the cartels.

Viewed in this light, Los Zetas and other such transnational private military forces may be much more dangerous to stability and legitimate governance than al Qaeda or religion-inspired terror groups. The multi-billion-dollar drug-smuggling business seems to buy far more military capability, foot soldiers, high and low-level government officials, and neighborhood support than religious exhortation does. It is easy to organize against al Qaeda's highly unpopular vision of society. For Los Zetas, it's business, not political -- there can be a cut of the action for everyone. That might make Los Zetas and their private military cousins the more insidious threat to legitimate governance.

5 posted on 12/13/2009 7:35:44 PM PST by AuntB (If Al Qaeda grew drugs & burned our forests instead of armed Mexican Cartels would anyone notice?)
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To: c-b 1

Evenin’ c-b 1. How’s things down on the border these days?


6 posted on 12/13/2009 7:38:11 PM PST by AuntB (If Al Qaeda grew drugs & burned our forests instead of armed Mexican Cartels would anyone notice?)
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To: c-b 1; All

A note from our friends at NAFBPO:

Don’t miss the show on the Mexico drug wars on the National Geographic
Channel this Sunday, December 13th.

Go to the link for more information:

http://channel.nationalgeographic.com/series/explorer/4092/Overview

Narco State “

The reporter who did this piece spent months in Mexico and along our border was on radio this morning. She emphatically stated that the situation/terror/violence in Mexico and spilling over our border is worse than Afghanistan.

And how about Cancun...considered one of the ‘safer’ places in Mexico.

Seven women murdered in Mexico, one beheaded
Thu Dec 3 10:41:59 2009
Seven women were murdered in Mexico, including one who was beheaded in the southern beach resort of Cancun, authorities reported Monday. [snip]

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2399511/posts

Mordida, a common event in Mexico

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2375310/posts

Por Esto (Merida, Yucatan) 10/28/09 “Mordida”, a favorite extortion and bribe in Mexico In Cancun, Mexico, police stopped a driver, a visiting tourist, for an alleged “administrative violation.” Then they asked the tourist for up to $300 dollars so she could proceed without having a penalty issued to her. It turned out that the victim of this extortion was Michelle Fischbach, a state senator from Minnesota, who later presented a written complaint to the local authorities regarding the episode. Five Cancun “Tourist Police” officers are now under investigation for their personal attempt at extortion. “Mordida” (a “bite”) is a common...

Novedades de Quintana Roo (Cancun, QR) 10/16/09

Five abducted at market

A drug dealer suspected of stealing from his own gang was murdered in a market area in Cancun Thursday morning and 12 hours later, four people were abducted from the same area along with a hapless taxi driver who just happened to be there. The four apparent targets of the abductions were local venders who are believed to have been accomplices in the murdered man’s treason. A heavily armed group seized the five people without firing a shot and left in three vehicles.

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2369290/posts


7 posted on 12/13/2009 7:41:52 PM PST by AuntB (If Al Qaeda grew drugs & burned our forests instead of armed Mexican Cartels would anyone notice?)
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To: AuntB

If Obaba wants CW2, this will do it.


8 posted on 12/13/2009 7:43:46 PM PST by stephenjohnbanker (Support our troops, and vote out the RINO's!)
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To: AuntB

TANKS,AuntB,,,

I think this is the main reason they push O’Bammy Care,,,

30-50 million Mexicans/etc. from south of the border to

vote for the dems,,,

This country will turn into Juarez if we don’t fight this.


9 posted on 12/13/2009 8:04:24 PM PST by 1COUNTER-MORTER-68 (THROWING ANOTHER BULLET-RIDDLED TV IN THE PILE OUT BACK~~~~~)
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To: stephenjohnbanker

“If Obaba wants CW2, this will do it.”

You can bet there will be more bloodshed before this is over.
And it could have all been avoided, by just enforcing the laws and securing the border....along with some common sense at UCSIS. But instead, we get to deal with such as this...(sent in an article by Nafbpo.)

Getting back to U.S. tougher for deportees

SUSANA HAYWARD/SPECIAL TO THE EXPRESS-NEWS
Unauthorized immigrants from Mexico who are caught in Arizona are being bused to Texas and sent across the border.

http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/state/79112647.html

Six kids in Arizona

While family groups caught in Arizona usually are sent directly back to Mexico, men traveling alone may find themselves being released almost 600 miles to the east.

The long-distance repatriation program is limited to Mexican men between the ages of 20 and 60, who are traveling alone and haven’t committed any offense beyond illegally entering the United States, Brooks said.

Most are shipped out of Arizona the same day they are caught. Upon arriving in Ojinaga, the deportees are greeted by Mexican consular officials, and as needed, given clothes, food and medical attention. Each also is offered a ticket voucher for a trip back home.

“I always tell them, ‘You are welcome back in Mexico. You’re in Ojinaga,’” said Villa of the Mexican Consulate in Presidio.

“We tell them how difficult it will be to try to get back on this side. We tell them Ojinaga is a very small city, with no jobs. We tell them if they want to go back home, we will help them,” she said.

As Vargas and the other arrivals quickly learned, there was little time or opportunity to go astray. While the tired and dirty deportees were busy eating and replacing shoelaces taken from them by agents in Arizona, immigration officials already were handing out bus vouchers.

Idling just outside the immigration office was a sleek gray Chihuahuense bus.

Within an hour of arriving, most if not all of the deportees would be bound first for Chihuahua City, Chihuahua, and then to their hometowns.

Vargas, who was caught on his first attempt to enter the U.S., had no plans on returning.

“I’ll feel better to be back in my hometown. I was two days in the brush. I was suffering over there,” he said.

Other deportees, however, were grappling with far more complex situations, among them two other Mexicans who had arrived with Vargas. Unlike him, both already had deep ties in the United States.

“I’m a cook in Atlanta. I’ve been working there for seven years,” said Gilberto Diaz, 22, a lanky youth from Guerrero who said he was caught coming back through Arizona following his first visit home.

Diaz said he promised to pay a smuggler $2,000 to get him back to Atlanta, where his job in a Japanese steak house awaits. He was ambiguous about his future plans.

“I’ve already got my ticket and I’m going back home. After that, I don’t know what I’ll do,” he said.

Seated nearby on a blue plastic chair, wearing a donated winter coat and eating a bologna sandwich, was Israel Hoyos, 32, who didn’t plan to stay in Mexico.

A native of Mexico City, Hoyos said he’d lived in Arizona for eight years, rising to become a foreman in a framing company before being deported following a traffic stop.

“I can’t go back to Mexico City. I’ve got a wife and six kids back in Arizona,” he said, proudly displaying a business card with his name and company.

“I have to go back to Arizona, although I have no idea how.”[snip]


10 posted on 12/13/2009 8:09:00 PM PST by AuntB (If Al Qaeda grew drugs & burned our forests instead of armed Mexican Cartels would anyone notice?)
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To: 1COUNTER-MORTER-68

“This country will turn into Juarez if we don’t fight this.”

You are so right. They’re finding pockets all over the country that are directly taking orders from Mexico’s deadly drug cartels. Phoenix, Az is the kidnapping capital of the world, second only to Mexico.

‘La Familia’ North of the Border (Mexico’s Narcoterror is here)
Fri Dec 4
In an indictment handed down Nov. 20 ....accused 15 individuals of being involved in the trafficking of cocaine and other narcotics in the Chicago area. .... What is certain, at this point, is that there is now a precedent for Mexican DTOs to have a greater influence over their lower-level supply-chain operations in the United States. ....and prove that at least one, “La Familia,” is taking a very hands-on approach.
http://www.freerepublic.com/tag/aliens/index?tab=articles

_____
Officials: Meth ring smashed, 28 arrested

http://www.philly.com/philly/news/breaking/79055347.html?cmpid=15585797

The sales were part of drug dealing triangle connecting South Jersey, Ohio and Mexico that moved thousands of pounds of marijuana, methamphetamine and an occasional weapon, into the greater Camden area since 2008, officials said as they announced the arrest of 28 suspects today.

Sixteen defendants live in Hammonton, N.J., the self-proclaimed “Blue Berry Capital of the World.” But the drugs were sold throughout the South Jersey area, said Camden County Prosecutor Warren W. Faulk.

The marijuana arrived two to four times a week in 20 and 30 pound packages at post offices throughout South Jersey. It was grown in Mexico and mailed to this area from the Texas border town of McAllen. The crystal meth traveled by car from Ohio in a four to six pound packages every seven days.

“This was a consistent, organized operation,” said Faulk. Cracking it took the efforts of the FBI, ITS, state and local police and Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE.

Twenty of the defendants face state charges in New Jersey, and eight face federal charges. Of those eight, six are in the country illegally.....(AMNESTY CANDIDATES!!!)


11 posted on 12/13/2009 8:16:46 PM PST by AuntB (If Al Qaeda grew drugs & burned our forests instead of armed Mexican Cartels would anyone notice?)
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To: AuntB

“This country will turn into Juarez if we don’t fight this.”

“You are so right. They’re finding pockets all over the country that are directly taking orders from Mexico’s deadly drug cartels. Phoenix, Az is the kidnapping capital of the world, second only to Mexico.”
~~~
I gotta think that local LEO could take out most of these,,,

My sights are on the “Fort Dix Six.” with a nuke,,,

There’s this :

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2406806/posts

If somebody can haul truck loads of dope to the north,,,?

They can sure haul a nuke,,,or 2,,,or...?


12 posted on 12/13/2009 8:47:37 PM PST by 1COUNTER-MORTER-68 (THROWING ANOTHER BULLET-RIDDLED TV IN THE PILE OUT BACK~~~~~)
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To: All

Terry is ON THE AIR!

KRLA - 870 AM - Los Angeles — KDWN - 720 - Las Vegas — KFNX - 1100 - Phoenix

Or listen live on the net.

Call-In Number - (866) 870-5752


13 posted on 12/13/2009 9:05:47 PM PST by AuntB (If Al Qaeda grew drugs & burned our forests instead of armed Mexican Cartels would anyone notice?)
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To: All

San Franciso, criminal alien sanctuary city.

Here’s a story on what Terry is talking about.

Supe’s push on sanctuary law could backfire

[snip]

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Campos says his new law on arrested undocumented juveniles is nothing to worry about. He’d better be right. This has the potential to be legally challenged, which could undo San Francisco’s sanctuary city status and put some good people in danger of facing criminal prosecution.

The ordinance, which was enacted this week, looks like a looming legal train wreck, say probation officers. They feel obligated to report undocumented juveniles when they are arrested, despite Campos’ new law, which orders them not to.

“I think Campos may be beating a hornet’s nest,” said Gabriel Calvillo, president of the deputy probation officers association of San Francisco. “Federal law makes it illegal to ‘conceal, harbor or shield from detection,’ and those who do shall be punished. I don’t see that my people have a choice.”

Campos’ law, passed by the Board of Supervisors over a veto by Mayor Gavin Newsom, says that probation officers should not turn juveniles over to Immigration and Customs Enforcement until they are convicted of a felony, not when they are charged, which has been the practice.

Legal analysts in the city think that’s a huge change. In a confidential memo to Newsom, the city attorney said enacting Campos’ amendment was “likely to result in a federal legal challenge to the proposed amendment, and possibly the entire City of Refuge Ordinance.”

This has been the concern all along, that changing policy on reporting juveniles would endanger San Francisco’s status as a sanctuary city - meaning that city funds are not used to inquire about immigration status. U.S. Attorney Joe Russoniello has already convened a federal grand jury to investigate previous sanctuary practices in the city and is clearly no fan of the original sanctuary policy. More than one person has suggested this new ordinance could hand Russoniello the clout he needs to “sink the whole ship.”

Nonsense, Campos says.

“The U.S. attorney has been trying to get rid of this ordinance for 20 years,” said Campos, noting that it has been that long since San Francisco passed its City of Refuge law. “If he had a case, he would have brought it by now. I think it is an empty threat.”

City Attorney Dennis Herrera isn’t about to say whether he thinks the new law is legal, but his plan has been to work through the legal system.

“My job is to go to the mat and defend this policy,” Herrera said. “I plan on making a vigorous defense to a law passed by the Board of Supervisors.”

That would probably make a lot of sense in legal circles. But this is San Francisco. Advocates for the new law want this policy changed right now, damn it.

“When the mayor decided to grant same-sex marriage licenses, “ Campos said, “he didn’t say, ‘Let’s stop issuing those licenses until we find out if this is legal under California law.’ “

And that’s true. It was a gutsy political call for Newsom to continue to support issuing licenses, and I totally supported it.

But what was the result? It was a short-lived victory for same-sex couples, thousands of whom were married. But the rush to judgment energized opponents, who took Newsom’s “Whether you like it or not” victory shout, and turned it into rallying cry.http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/12/11/BAQ41B32EM.DTL&type=printable


14 posted on 12/13/2009 9:13:29 PM PST by AuntB (If Al Qaeda grew drugs & burned our forests instead of armed Mexican Cartels would anyone notice?)
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To: AuntB

It’s quiet here, I haven’t paid much attention to what’s happening in other areas.


15 posted on 12/13/2009 9:22:55 PM PST by c-b 1 (Reporting from behind enemy lines, in occupied AZTLAN.)
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To: stephenjohnbanker; Liz; All

AND...

The most Horriblest Clown of the Week is!!!

WISE Latino Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor for this boner....

Sotomayor Uses “Undocumented Immigrant” in Supreme Court Opinion; Never Happened Before

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/2404223/posts

“Undocumented Immigrant”

Sotomayor strikes again! Sonia...they are not any kind of immigrant! They are squatters, here illegally. As a legal ‘authority’ you should know the legal term is ‘ALIEN’.

Wise latino, my butt.


16 posted on 12/13/2009 9:23:02 PM PST by AuntB (If Al Qaeda grew drugs & burned our forests instead of armed Mexican Cartels would anyone notice?)
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To: AuntB

Mail Your Donation To.....

The Terry Anderson Show
3940 Laurel Canyon Blvd. #643
Studio City, CA91604


17 posted on 12/13/2009 9:25:36 PM PST by Pelham ("Badges?!! We don' need no stinkin' badges!!")
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To: AuntB

“Wise latino, my butt.”

Forgive me.

Should be ‘latina’.


18 posted on 12/13/2009 9:26:18 PM PST by AuntB (If Al Qaeda grew drugs & burned our forests instead of armed Mexican Cartels would anyone notice?)
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To: Pelham; All

Absolutely...stop donating to government funded PBS and NPR...

Mail Your Donation To.....

The Terry Anderson Show
3940 Laurel Canyon Blvd. #643
Studio City, CA91604


19 posted on 12/13/2009 9:28:35 PM PST by AuntB (If Al Qaeda grew drugs & burned our forests instead of armed Mexican Cartels would anyone notice?)
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To: Pelham; TerryAnderson; All

Leaders expect immigration debate to heat up

http://www.delmartimes.net/news/263627-leaders-expect-immigration-debate-to-heat-up
December 12, 2009 10:24 PM

Comprehensive immigration reform may once again come up for debate in Congress by early next year, but a polarizing debate over the measure could make it difficult, if not impossible, to pass the legislation.

Even the meaning of the term “immigration reform” can be tricky to pin down. On one side are those who want tougher border-enforcement measures to prevent illegal immigrants from working in the United States and deportation of immigration violators.

On the other side are those who argue for a path to citizenship for people in the country illegally, protection of workers’ rights and access to education.

Finding a middle ground on the issue may prove difficult, although Rep. Luis Gutierrez, an Illinois Democrat, announced in October that he intends to sponsor a comprehensive immigration reform bill in the House. A spokeswoman for Gutierrez said the bill is likely to be introduced by the end of this month.

Rep. Brian Bilbray, a Republican who represents California’s 50th District, including Rancho Santa Fe, Carmel Valley, Solana Beach, Del Mar and La Jolla, said the bill proposed by Gutierrez begins with amnesty for illegal immigrants already in the United States, which Bilbray believes is the wrong approach.

Instead, Bilbray said, immigration reform efforts should focus on making it harder for illegal immigrants to get jobs in the U.S. To do that, he proposes the requirement of electronic verification that job applicants are legally authorized to work in the U.S., called “E-Verify,” and establishment of a national identification card and tamper-proof Social Security card.


20 posted on 12/13/2009 9:50:19 PM PST by AuntB (If Al Qaeda grew drugs & burned our forests instead of armed Mexican Cartels would anyone notice?)
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