Posted on 11/25/2002 10:55:49 PM PST by STARWISE
Edited on 04/22/2004 12:35:13 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
WASHINGTON
(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
There is a difference between being a bigot on issues and being a racist, as you insinuated. A person can be opposed to illegal immigration without being prejudiced against a particular race.
You make a blanket accusation and then call us whiners when we call you on it. And then try to downplay your statement by saying you are a bigot on many issues.
Really? Read the "TANCREDO FOR PRESIDENT" threads and get back to me.
The Director of Policy at INS is still libertarian idealogue Stuart Anderson. Director of Policy is the "power behind the throne" job.
Prior to his appointment to the Director's position, Anderson was an aide to then Senator Spencer Abraham. He is given credit for destroying the Foreign Student Tracking System authorized by Congress in '96. It is almost 2003 and we still have no tracking system.
A new bureau for fanning fears
By O. Ricardo
Pimentel
Republiccolumnist
Nov. 26, 2002
The Homeland Security Department is a done deal.
Now we have to make sure that whatever humanitarian impulses still exist within our immigration policies are not undone.
Into this new department, the Immigration and Naturalization Service will be divided into two renamed bureaus - one dealing with citizenship and immigration affairs and the other with border security.
Immigration advocates have been proposing a similar division for a while. They noticed that the INS' functions too often worked at cross purposes. So, you might think these immigration advocates would be happy.
They aren't, and they shouldn't be.
One reason is that both bureaus will still be under a single-agency umbrella that has the word "COPS" written all over it.
Think about this a moment. Homeland Security Department.
Security. Immigrants.
Homeland. Immigrants.
Immigrants in this reorganization will have been clearly and unequivocally labeled as threats to our security and to our homeland.
Immigrant advocates - the National Council of La Raza, for instance - fear that policy flowing from this new agency will substantively reflect that fearful view no matter how the immigration functions are divided in the new department.
A groundless fear? Please note that Michael Garcia, the gentleman President Bush appointed on Monday to head the INS while it devolves into the Homeland Security Department, is described by the attorney general as "one of America's top terrorism prosecutors."
The National Immigration Forum says that the reorganization raises the specter of less emphasis for services and less coordination between the two functions.
Yes, Sept. 11 demonstrated the need to get a better handle on who comes in and who gets to stay in this country.
By and large, however, immigrants are not the terrorist boogeymen that the rhetoric from the anti-immigrant fringe would have us believe.
Two words: Sacco and Vanzetti.
They were the Italian-Americans convicted and executed for killing a paymaster and guard during a $15,000 robbery in 1920.
Both were anarchists, 1920s-speak for terrorists. There was virtually no evidence against them at trial. That's OK. They were anarchists.
Similarly, in the Sept. 11 hijackers we see evidence that immigrants pose threats to our security. These hijackers, were, however, only 19 among millions of immigrants in this country, legal or otherwise.
Back in the 1920s, it was wrong to equate all immigrants with anarchists. It's just as wrong now to automatically equate immigrants with terrorism. There wasn't a single Mexican immigrant among those terrorists, though there were several among the dead in the twin towers.
The best model for INS division was in legislation proposed a while back by Sens. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass., and Sam Brownback, R-Kan.
This bill would have created an Immigration Affairs Agency, divided into service and enforcement functions, each run by a deputy director.
It would also have created an office to protect the rights of immigrant children. (Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., introduced better legislation in this regard.)
OK, but the Homeland Security Department is indeed a done deal. We can insist, however, that the service portion cling to such venerable notions as less red tape, less torturous backlog and liberal immigration policies for the sake of family reunification, asylum and refugee relief.
Perhaps any division under any umbrella is better than no division at all. Our mania about security at the moment does not inspire confidence, however. All of sudden, such things as expanded domestic spying are suddenly accepted.
Let's not fool ourselves. Creating a new overarching bureaucracy will not ensure absolute security. And neither will feeding unreasonable fears about immigrants.
Better to make sure we don't codify that fear in the form of a new Homeland Security Department.
Reach Pimentel at ricardo.pimentel@arizonarepublic.com or (602) 444-8210. His column appears Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.
Additional info, anyone?From the Google cache of http://www.results.gov/leadership/bios/garciam.html:
Michael Garcia -- Department of Commerce Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Export Enforcement
Prior to his current appointment, Michael Garcia served as an Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York. He was a law clerk for the Honorable Judith S. Kaye on the New York State Court of Appeals from 1990 to 1992 and was with the law firm of Cahill Gordon & Reindel in New York, New York from 1989 to 1990.Michael is a graduate of the State University of New York at Binghamton.
He received his Master's from the College of William and Mary and his law degree from Albany Law School of Union University.
7/26[/2001]. The Senate Banking Committee held a hearing on the nomination of Michael Garcia to be Assistant Secretary for Export Enforcement at the Department of Commerce. Garcia is an Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, where he was involved in the prosecutions stemming from the World Trade Center bombing and the bombings of U.S. embassies in East Africa. Sen. Paul Sarbanes (D-MD), Chairman of the Committee, praised Garcia. Garcia stated that "I will work hard to ensure that any violations of U.S. dual use exports are detected, investigated and sanctioned."
Sen. Sarbanes said that he wanted the Committee to approve his nomination early next week, and the full Senate to approve it before it goes on its August recess.
The point is taken, however a precurser to that must be the whiney wails fror the INS staffers who have been transferred to the Alutian Island Telephone Book Copying Facility or the Thule Inuit Immigration Processing Center.
The Clinton vote getters in the INS must first be exiled before there can be any real change. These were the jobs Dashle was attempting to protect.
Prepared Remarks of
Michael J. Garcia
Commerce Assistant Secretary
of Export EnforcementBefore the United States-China Commission
January 17, 2002
Introduction
Thank you for the opportunity to testify today. I would like to offer a few prepared remarks on the Department of Commerce's activities with respect to enforcement of restrictions on dual-use items to China.Before doing that, however, let me introduce myself. I am the Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Export Enforcement, and I was confirmed to that post in August 2001. Prior to joining the Commerce Department's enforcement team, I was an Assistant United States Attorney ("AUSA") in the Southern District of New York where I focused on prosecuting national security-related cases.
As an AUSA, I prosecuted a number of terrorist cases, including the four defendants who were charged with conspiring, along with Usama Bin Laden and 17 others, to kill Americans overseas by bombing our two embassies in East Africa. Those four defendants were convicted in May 2001. While an AUSA, I also participated in the successful prosecution of four defendants in the first World Trade Center bombing trial and the successful prosecution of Ramzi Ahmed Yousef and two others who had plotted to cause 48 hours of "terror in the sky" by planting bombs aboard American jetliners flying from South East Asia to the United States.
These cases involved very real threats to our national security. I bring this experience, this background, to my work as Assistant Secretary of Export Enforcement...
more
Don't count on it, you may stereotype hispanics as being pro-open borders but those of us who know better know many want the borders closed as much or even more than the rest of us.
Of course ---and ignorant because the head of hispanic caucus in Congress was only elected to Congress by mostly hispanics because he attempted to close the borders with Operation Blockade and Operation Hold the Line. Only certain types try to make this a racial issue because it somehow serves their interests to do so.
The economy of the border states is already in shambles (the governors of CA, AZ NM, and NV plus the nearby states of UT, OR and WA are crying the blues and seem sure they are headed for economic ruin. It's time to agitate big time against the invasion! Come on Freepers! Get on Congress and the Prez and do all we can to stop the invasion and reverse it!
I wonder if Hugh supports La Raza ... LOL!!
The SEVIS system was initially deployed in July, and will be required for all schools Jan 30 2003.
The real problem is not the system. The INS doesn't have enough people to track down immigrants flagged by the system. One can hope that the coming reorg will address this but I am pretty cynical about govt reorgs.
INS launches online foreign student tracking - May 2002
INS implements foreign student tracking regulations
Foreign-student tracking lagging at INS (but SEVIS will be fully deployed by Jan. 1)
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