More. Faster.
Look for documents for Morton Halperin (former intelligence/foreign policy guy) turncoat against American internal security and foreign intelligence ops. He’s up to his red neck in stuff as a leader of the OSF. Connected to the Institute for Policy Studies, Center for National Security Studies, and other Marxist/far left organizations over time.
Vann Jones - old commie, one of Valerie Jarrett’s picks - ended up being the White House Environment Commissar (Czar) until exposed. Now on CCN. Once headed a Marxist revolutionary group named STORM. For more on him and Halperin, see www.keywiki.org and www.DiscoverTheNetwork.org
Then there is John Podesta, one of the slimiest little shits ever to walk this earth and his brother Tony isn’t much better.
OSF is loaded with reds, Marxists of all kinds, far-left ideologues, and educated nutcases.
With Soros’ billions, he has created the perfect Red Mole organization for destroying our legal system, economic system, foreign governments, and aiding our enemies.
During WW2 he was a KAPO, a self-hating Jew who helped the Nazis in Hungary in order to save himself.
I’m glad that someone is trying to bring him down. I would love to see his red ass in jail for the rest of his traitorous life.
Somebody is trying to show how really bad the democrats are for the country and how it’s being sold out by this subversive organization calling itself a political party.
Someone who should be hunted down and arrested on Trump’s first day in office.
Keep up the good work.
Soros is not an American citizen as far as I know.
He has been messing with our politics for decades and that is against the law.
He needs to be stopped, charged and prosecuted and deported.
Unless his crimes call for the death penalty.
In which case it should be carried out.
Many high level democrats have colluded with him ILLEGALLY and should also be charged.
But Hay, the Chinese gave B Clinton millions of dollars to get elected twice. That was the real reason for impeachment, but the cowardly congress decided to do it for perjury.
The Clintons had hundreds of FBI files on politicians so they were blackmailed.
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MEMORANDUM
To: U.S. Programs Board
From: Maria Teresa Rojas
Date: February 13, 2010
Subject: Comprehensive Immigration Reform Update
We are facing a decisive moment for immigration reform this year. The board dinner
conversation scheduled for Feb. 23 is designed to give you an opportunity to talk with the
leadership of the Reform Immigration FOR America Campaign (RIFA). OSI and its sister
foundation, the Foundation to Promote Open Society, have previously supported the work
of the Campaign and other organizations advocating for immigration reform strictly in
accordance with the regulations applicable to private foundations under the US Internal
Revenue Code. The information the RIFA Campaign leaders will present at the dinner will
give the Board context for the continuation of this work. I provide here some background
information for that conversation on the current prospects for immigration reform and the
work of the Campaign. As in the past, all support for the Campaign from OSI and related
entities will be provided in strict compliance with the regulations applicable to US private
foundations, and thus no such support will be earmarked for lobbying activities.
Status of Immigration Reform
Based on the best knowledge and analysis from respected sourcesboth at OSI and inside
the beltwaythere are strong indicators that immigration reform is still possible in early
2010.
Immediately after the Massachusetts special election, the outlook did not seem promising.
However, while some thought the President would stay as far away from the immigration
issue as possible in his State of the Union address, he did mention the subject, even if only
briefly, and Administration officials quickly reaffirmed their commitment following the
Presidents address.
Equally, if not more importantly, Senator Graham continues to work with Senator Schumer
on a bi-partisan agreement, and he continues to express his support for immigration
reform. Several of his fellow Senate Republicans, including Lugar, Voinovich, and likely
Snowe, Collins, and McCain are also prepared to support legislation. Schumer and Graham
are expected to introduce a bill that has strong bipartisan support by late March, with
hearings being held shortly thereafter. Rep. Luis Gutierrez has already introduced an
immigration reform bill in the House that is widely supported by immigrant rights
advocates. Their goal is to move a bill through both legislative bodies by the end of June.
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Another significant factor is the support from many businesses, particularly in the high- tech and agricultural sectors. Unlike climate change, health care and financial regulatory
reform, immigration reform has significant corporate support.
In addition, the threat of alienating the Latino community, and losing large swathes of their
votes, is influencing both Democrats and Republicans to support immigration reform.
Finally, there is a vast social movement powering the effort for reform. The immigrant
rights movement put millions of people on the streets in 2006, and plans are in the works
for major mobilizations this year. The intensity of support in immigrant communitiesand
the capacity to mobilize at scaleis greater than the support or mobilization capacity for
any other issue on the national agenda.
Immigration advocates and their supporters are not blind to the many obstacles that exist.
The RIFA Campaign leadership describes these as a crowded Senate calendar, the
challenge of positioning immigration as part of an economic recovery strategy rather than
as irrelevant or harmful to job creation, and not least the fear factor about doing anything
big that has swept through Democratic ranks in the wake of the MA special election.
There is a lot at stake here, as the RIFA Campaign recently reported: Through a
legalization program that would make all workers and employers taxpayers, the nation
would benefit from $1.5 trillion in additional GDP over 10 years and the creation of
750,000 900,000 jobs due to increased consumer spending. Without reform, mass
deportation will lead to $2.6 trillion in lost GDP over 10 years, not counting the cost of
actual deportation: a $4 trillion swing.
Based on information from the White House, Department of Homeland Security and
Congressional leadership, advocates have identified the following policy fault lines:
1. Legalization: Concepts have surfaced that would require immigrants seeking to
legalize their status to plead guilty to a criminal offense that would be expunged
from their record after payment of a fine and completion of community service.
There is strong opposition to this proposal on many fronts.
2. Family Immigration: In order to clear the current backlog of applications, tradeoffs
being considered include freezing family categories for several years. There
continues to be discussion of imposing a point or merit-based system in lieu of the
current family and/or employment-based visa categories, thus eliminating long- standing immigration priorities and values for family reunification.
3. Future Flow: The challenging economic environment immigration reform faces is
exacerbated by tension between organized labor and business interests. Labor
favors future flow of work-based immigration controlled by a commission that
would base visa numbers on labor market data. Business would like economic
needs to drive employment visa numbers, and is skeptical a commission would
include leadership friendly to their interests. Furthermore, the controversy of guest
worker visa programs remains an issue as many opponents believe all immigration
should be temporary, at best.
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4. Border and Interior Enforcement: Allies on the border (elected officials, law
enforcement, faith, business and others) have grown in strength and sophistication,
yet further militarization of the border is under consideration. Troublingly, interior
enforcement measures may build upon existing electronic verification systems and
concepts have surfaced that include national biometric identity cards.
5. Due Process: Scenarios may emerge where legislators trade moderate interior
enforcement measures for delayed restoration of judicial review and/or
discretionary waivers of removal.
Status of the Immigration Reform Campaign
With significant support from OSI and a number of other partner foundations, the
immigrant rights field is in the strongest position it has ever beenit has in place for the
first time a diverse coalition, a well thought out strategy, and the expertise and reach
necessary to achieve reform of the immigration system.
Over the last six months alone, the Reform Immigration FOR America Campaign, with
funding from multiple sources besides OSI, has achieved new heights:
Built a national infrastructure of 64 organizers in 39 states, bolstered by nearly
1,000 volunteers trained by the Campaigns unique Movement Building program.
Conducted frequent public opinion research nationwide with Latino and swing
voters to track support for comprehensive immigration reform as well as to test and
refine messages. The Campaigns polling shows that comprehensive immigration
reform consistently enjoys the support of 80% of voters nationwide and has
emerged as a litmus test issue for Latino voters.
Organized deep political support across labor, business, faith, law enforcement, local
elected officials, African American and immigrant constituencies at the local and
national levels.
Organized a national teleconference town hall with members of Congress that
engaged 1,000 house parties in 39 states, and dozens of radio markets, reaching
over 60,000 listeners.
Generated over a half million calls and faxes into the White House and Congress.
The RIFA Campaigns Plan
The Campaign has recalibrated its efforts to account for the political realities of the
moment. It has put in place a plan involving two phases. Phase I (between now and April)
will be focused on ensuring that bi-partisan legislation will be on the Congressional agenda
this term. Phase II will focus on building support for reform by the end of June.
Phase I activities consist of the following:
Dominate the Congressional recess with strategic large scale events and multi- constituency district meetings.
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A faith-led mass mobilization in Washington, DC in March and activism that helps to
build the immigration movement in general. For example, urging people to attend a
rally or write letters to oppose the anti-immigrant efforts of Joe Arpaio or workplace
raids.
Identify and amplify game changers: Mayor Bloomberg, law enforcement, business
leadership and other moderate/conservative and independent voices.
Use earned media outlets to get non-traditional spokespeople into mainstream and
new media.
Re-energize efforts to marginalize the opposition. Generate research and reports on
subjects such as analyses of the economic impact of immigrants, the cost to families
and society of separating families as a result of immigration policy, etc.
Recognizing that immigration reform increasingly needs to be viewed as a mainstream
issue, the RIFA Campaign also will intensify the work that has gone into cultivating and
deepening support from the faith community, law enforcement, local elected officials, and
from African-American leaders.
Regardless of the immediate outcome, the nature of the Campaign is such that all of these
activities will leave in place an infrastructure that will serve the immigrants rights
community for years to come.
Administrative Advocacy Developments
In closing, I would like to highlight that parallel to the legislative reform efforts, immigrant
advocates have been making progress in influencing administrative rulemaking at the
federal level. Significant changes include:
Right to Counsel: Attorney General Eric Holder recently overturned a Bush
Administration ruling that immigrants in removal proceedings do not have a right to
counsel at their own expense. This will make it much easier now for immigrants to
appeal their removal orders based on ineffective legal counsel.
Detention: DHS has announced a series of reforms, including expanding the use of
alternatives to detention, detaining immigrants in facilities that are appropriate to
the risk they represent, improving medical care for detainees, and increasing the
oversight of contracted detention centers.
No-Match Rule: The Obama Administration rescinded a regulation that directed
employers to take certain steps, including discharging workers, if they receive a
letter from the Social Security Administration stating that its records do not match
the information submitted by an employee.
Raids: The Administration has prioritized the investigation and prosecution of
employers who knowingly hire undocumented workers, and eliminated arrest
quotas that led to large-scale enforcement raids. Still, significant troubling practices
remain, such as the expansion of programs that utilize local law enforcement
agencies to help with immigration enforcement.
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Memorandum
To: George Soros and Aryeh Neier
cc: Ann Beeson, Steve Rickard, Mort Halperin, and Wendy Patten
From: Nancy Chang, National Security and Human Rights Campaign Manager, and Maria
Teresa Rojas, International Migration Initiative Director
Date: February 11, 2010
Re: Possible National Biometric Identification Card Proposal as Part of Comprehensive
Immigration Reform
We write to follow up on our December 17 Seize the Day call discussion concerning efforts that
are underway to block the institution of a national biometric identification card as a condition of
comprehensive immigration reform (CIR).
On November 6, the National Security and Human Rights Campaign and the Immigrant Rights
Initiative convened two dozen of the nations leading privacy experts and immigration advocates
for an off-the record moderated discussion at OSIs DC office. Our goal was to ensure that the
privacy rights community and the immigrant rights community two groups that receive
significant support from US Programs but rarely interface with one another share information
and strategies to avoid the loss of privacy and risk to information security that would result
should Senator Charles Schumer carry through on his plan to include a national biometric
identification card system as part of CIR legislation. In public and private comments, Schumer
has repeatedly stated that the path to earned legalization for the 12 million undocumented
persons currently in the United States depends on stopping future illegal immigration through the
enrollment of all U.S. workers, citizens and non-citizens alike, in a biometric-based national
identification card system, and then barring employers from hiring workers not enrolled in this
system.1
The convening participants were briefed by three privacy experts Chris Calabrese of the ACLU
Washington Legislative Office, Tyler Moran of the National Immigration Law Center, and Jim
Harper of the Cato Institute who sternly warned of the dangers that a national biometric
identification card system would pose:
Fingerprinting 150 million citizen and non-citizen workers would create both a political
and a logistical nightmare.
The infrastructure to build such a system does not yet exist. As a result, the combined
cost of a such a system to government, to the employees who would be required to take
time off from work in order to apply for cards and verify their identity, and to the
employers who would need to acquire access to specialized card reading equipment in
order to verify the identify of prospective employees, would be astronomical
1
This memo focuses on only one of a number of troubling provisions that Schumer views as central to
securing bipartisan support for CIR a biometric national identification card system. Of greater and
more immediate concern to the immigrant rights community is Schumers support for the imposition of
criminal penalties on undocumented immigrants as a condition of legalization.
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Nor does the technology exist to build a fool-proof system that can ensure the accuracy
and safety of the huge volume of private information such a system would collect, or to
guard against identity fraud. If a massive, centralized database were to be corrupted or
fail, the results could be catastrophic.
As was the case with the Social Security card, the uses for a national biometric
identification card can be expected to extend far beyond its original purpose and to serve
as a universal identifier. Because it will be digitalized, the card could be used to track in
real time the movement, activities, preferences, and religious and political leanings of all
American workers, and vast troves of personal information could be shared
inappropriately and improperly used as the basis for discriminating against specific
individuals and classes of individuals.
The system would lead to the marginalization of undocumented immigrants and citizens
who have fallen through the gaps.
A candid and constructive exchange of information followed these briefings. The immigration
rights advocates explained that the threat of a national biometric identification card was one of
several serious CIR-related concerns on their radar screen. While no consensus emerged on the
best way to move forward, both communities expressed appreciation for the opportunity to meet
with and learn from the other and in continuing the discussion.
As Congress decides the fate of health care reform in the wake of the January special senatorial
election in Massachusetts, advocates believe that Senator Schumer will wait until March to
introduce a bipartisan comprehensive immigration reform bill, and that the bill will likely include
a national biometric identification card provision.2
While the Senate will be taking the lead role
in shepherding immigration reform legislation through the Congress, a House immigration
reform bill that was introduced in December presents a potentially viable alternative to
Schumers vision. The Comprehensive Immigration Reform for America’s Security and
Prosperity Act of 2009 (CIR ASAP Act) (H.R. 4321), would expand e-Verify, the electronic
verification system currently used for federal employees, to all American workers. While a
national e-Verify system is not without risk to privacy and security, the degree of risk is
contained by virtue of the fact that e-Verify relies on neither biometric fingerprinting nor an
identification card.
At the request of the National Security and Human Rights Campaign, the Center for Democracy
and Technology (CDT), one of the campaigns grantees, has been reaching out to a number of
economists to determine what efforts are underway to study of the costs of a national biometric
identification card system. Last week, CDT was told on a confidential basis by a reliable source
in the Department of Homeland Security that the Office of Management and Budget has
completed a study that estimates the cost of implementing a national biometric identification
system at a staggering $1 trillion. CDT was told that the White House does not intend to make
this study public, but CDT expressed hope that the Administration would change its mind should
it become strategic to release the study. It should be noted that the OMB study was a quick and
dirty cost estimate, and not a fully developed cost-benefit analysis that comprehensively
2
Confidentially, our understanding is that the Administration is privately voicing objections to the
biometric proposal to key members of Congress, citing its enormous cost, as well as the controversy and
delay it would likely generate.
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evaluates and weighs the security threats posed by risk of breach, attack, and insider abuse and
misuse of information collected by the system, the cost of mitigating these threats, the potential
benefits of the system such as an improved ability to enforce immigration laws in the workplace,
and plausible alternatives such as the expanded e-Verify system per the CIR ASAP bill or a
hardened Social Security card or drivers license.
We will continue to monitor developments and provide updates as warranted. We would also be
happy to answer any questions that you that might have.
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Displaying tab-5-comprehensive-immigration-reform-memo-to-usp-board.pdf.
More good stuff. How they hide things from the people.