Category Archives: Illegal immigration facts

“Public Service” is “Good Bidness” farm subsidies & illegal aliens

Public Service” is “good Bidness”!

 

The Delta Duchess, aka Senator Blanche Lincoln stated she
supports scholarships for illegals “I think it’s really important to make sure
that we continue that investment (for illegal students) in a way that both
encourage their legality”.  How do you
encourage legality with illegality?

 

The Duchess voted against funding our border fence contiguous
with Mexico.   845 babies delivered in Benton County to
Illegals in 2006, 49% were unwed mothers. 
Illegals’ pregnancies produce “anchor babies” (welfare until 21), unwed
mothers, no visible support, produce again and again.   Estimates are 2-3 million illegals entering yearly–
insanity. Who pays?

 

The religious communities’ position on out-of-wedlock pregnancies?  Deafening silence. Fearful of losing unconstitutional
faith-based largesse?

 

The Duchess treats the illegal population as a static number.
She should examine the increasing numbers of illegals on prenatal care, and
ancillary costs translating to $10-15,000 per head, conservatively.  October, 2007 there were 7,000 Arkansas
illegals enjoying free prenatal care compliments of corrupt governors and a
feckless legislature.

 

Lincoln’s other favorite pastime—“Ag Bidness”.  She spoke on the Senate floor 11/14-15/2007
opposing a $750,000 yr Ag. subsidy cap.   The Whitehouse desires a $250,000 yr cap per
couple.  Why is the Duchess an agricultural
zealot?  Answer.  Lambert- Lincoln and her family collected
$715,000 from 1995-2005, most recent data available. Congressman Marion (Plantation)
Berry’s family, owners of 12,500 delta acres and purchasing more, collected
$2,357,094, same period.

 

 â€œDuchess” and “Plantation”
profit coming and going…who uses more illegal slave labor than agriculture and
poultry?

 

Joe McCutchen

Fort Smith

Leprosy cover up…Greenberg’s Schtick

 

Worn out Schtick by Paul Greenberg, editor Arkansas Democrat
Gazette

 

Paul,                                                                            February
15, 2008

 

For a Pulitzer guy, your public demands more. Your schtick
is much too transparent and worn out. 
This morning’s edition is a classic example. Your pathetic attempt to
deride the leprosy/TB threat with B grade comedy is a dead giveaway when you
are running a cover up.

 

The Tyson’s, et al have sucker punched Arkansans again with
the aid of government and shills such as yourself. 

 

No statements from the real medical community?  Most particularly the physician who made the
announcement?  A vile attack on her
credibility.

 

Just to be safe, why are the 8,000 Marshallese (all
carriers) and tens of thousands of illegal Hispanics (also potential carriers)
not subjected to physical examinations? 
Especially those working in the food industries!

 

This indeed can only be characterized as a “quick draw”
cover-up by the Arkansas Friendship Coalition, better known as the open-border,
cheap slave labor crowd.  

 

Kindest regards,

 

Joe & Barbara McCutchen

Fort Smith

 

 

 

 

Outbreak! Leprosy! Not!

How the news cycle works today-and doesn’t

By Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

LITTLE ROCK — WE HAVE this
thing against armadillos. And not just because they dig up pastures and
yards-or ruin a perfectly good squirrel hunting trip when somebody twists an
ankle in one of their holes. In their nocturnal raids, they’ve also been known
to ruin undercarriages of perfectly good trucks and cars. But mainly armadillos
spook us because every one of them can give you leprosy. At least that’s what
mama always said.

Okay, okay, so mama-even
mama!-could be wrong on rare occasion. But why take achance? Stay away from
armadillos! You may have only a one-in-a-million shot at getting leprosy-even
if you exchange hankies with Br’er Armadillo-but this is leprosy we’re talking
about. A nasty disease dating back to antiquity. Just saying the word “leprosy”
in the South is akin to shouting “Shark!” at the beach. People pay attention.
Maybe it was all those Bible lessons, but we’d still prefer not to get that
bug, thank you very much.

That’s why you’d be forgiven,
Gentle Reader, if you panicked, just a little, last Friday.

A television news station
somewhere in northwest Arkansas broadcast a story on Thursday that said
Springdale’s “medical community” was warning folks that a leprosy outbreak
“could blossom into an epidemic.”

Run for your lives!

Naturally, the story made it
onto Drudge. That website has a knack forpicking up strange stories from around
the world and blowing them up into panicky proportions. And the site is read by
so many people that a certain percentage of them were bound to take the Great
Leprosy Scare of ’08 all too seriously.

People were calling the state
HealthDepartment. Also the federal Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta. And
the governor’s office. And their congressmen. And Springdale’s mayor. Holy
panic attack, Batman.

Chamber types scrambled to
dispatch news releases denying the outbreak. Because, of course, there wasn’t
one.

The Arkansas
Democrat-Gazette’s story about the rumor/controversy/nonstory said that, on
Friday, the TV station had attributed its previous report on Thursday to bad info
from local doctors.

Our story ran Saturday.

On page 3B.

Inside the Arkansas Section.

After all the facts were in
and the Crisis had blown over.

If you can’t believe
everything you read, you can’t believe everything you see on Drudge, either.
Or, for that matter, TV reports that say some outbreak “could” happen. Of
course it could happen. Anything could happen. Aliens could land tomorrow to
steal our armadillos and stare luridly at our daughters.

Newspapers are far from
perfect, as you may have noticed. But they can restore some perspective. And
calm.

This
article was published Friday, February 15, 2008.

Editorial, Pages 20 on
02/15/2008

 

 

what kind of people keep electing traitors?

What kind of people continue to elect and reelect liars,
thieves, and immoral con-men who promise anything to anyone, as long as
financed with taxpayers’ money, not theirs?

This election cycle proves bankruptcy in morals, ethics, courage,
and intelligence in many citizens.  We
are surrounded and ruled by fools and tyrants.

The governmental agencies are bloated, incompetent, and
contemptuous of our Founding principles and citizens in their clawing for more
turf/funding/power, they have lost all ethics and humanity. They’ve joined with
Big Biz and Big Church factions to create Amerikan Fascism.

The politicrats are interested in their government check /benefits/power.
Corporations care only for the bottom line, which entails slave labor wages and
taxpayers paying for the slave’s education, welfare, healthcare, incarceration,
et al….but product prices NEVER go down, while profits skyrocket. Big Church
reaps billions in taxpayer sanctuary programs and faith-based funds.

Citizens are dumbed-down by the school indoctrination
centers, media, and entertainment, who eradicated concepts like individualism, honor,
merit, and freedom long ago.  Is it the
lazy looking for more unearned rewards? The decadent instant gratifiers?  A combination of all?

There is no admirable answer, another lost concept…planned
by design for our destruction.  History
is lost on the ignorant, and U.S. citizens who lost their knowledge of true
history turned us into a nation of cowards, unwilling to even protect our
own. 

Latest proof?  KFSM TV
broke a huge story on leprosy and TB in NW Arkansas and were immediately shut
down and the doctors impugned by the Fascists now in control…to hell with the
citizens and the rule of law.  Is our
best hope now that some of the elitists contract some of the dreaded diseases?  It could happen.

And look who we have running for president, save Ron Paul.

Listen, the dirge is playing loudly.

Barbara McCutchen

Fort Smith

Ark. poultry & others coverup leprosy & TB/illegals & foreign born

“Officials: Leprosy story false”                   “Leprosy,
TB Rumors Untrue”                                    February
10, 2008

Thursday February 7, 2008 Fort Smith/Fayetteville Ch. 5 KFSM,
reported Springdale’s “medical community” was warning the public that a leprosy
outbreak “could blossom into an epidemic”.

The story sent the chambers of commerce in Springdale, Rogers,
and Fayetteville into a frenzy, denying vehemently the existence of a leprosy
and tuberculosis outbreak in Springdale.  Why?

February 8th the Arkansas Health Department,
Branch Chief of Infectious Diseases, Dr. James R. Phillips said “there has
never been an epidemic of leprosy” and “Ninety-five percent of the population
are genetically resistant to leprosy”.

Dr. Phillips said “We have had leprosy in Arkansas since
forever”.

I am a native Arkansan, 50 year practicing pharmacist
involved in academic settings, involved in durable medical equipment, teaching,
continuing education and never has leprosy been mentioned in any medical or
pharmacy issues.  Regarding TB and polio,
both for the most part were wiped out in the 60’s and have been reintroduced by
foreign nationals.

Dr. Phillips stated “some people get the idea that leprosy
just came with the Marshallese. That’s not true”.  He later stated it came from Hispanics. Who
comprises the hundreds of thousands of illegal invaders in our state? 

Roughly 75% of leprosy cases in Arkansas and the U.S. during
the last decade have been among “foreign born individuals,” including Marshallese,
Hispanics and others who have entered our country.

In the matter of TB, more than 55% of cases are among
foreign born.  

Dr. Phillips also said that leprosy is a substantial issue
in the Marshall Islands.  Phillips stated
flippantly that both diseases are treated with antibiotics, but did not report
the outcomes.

KFSM’s story said they based their report on statements by
local physicians.  Note the word plural
regarding physicians.  Two stories appeared
2/9/8 in the Fort Smith Times Record & the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reporting
only the corporate/political point of view. 
None from the medical community.  If a serious investigation were intended, the
state and border states’ pharmacists would be consulted also.

Very serious questions arise from this gloss over.  A brief definition of Fascism: Fascism is a
nexus between corporations and governments, producing a symbiotic relationship.

Note that Dr. James R. Phillips responded the day after the
story broke that it was a hoax and there was not an approaching epidemic of TB
and leprosy. A protection racket reaction?  Chiming in at the same time were such renowned
authorities in Infectious Diseases as Perry Webb, Springdale’s Chamber
President, accompanied by Senator Bill Pritchard and his authoritative
statement, “everybody needs to take a deep breath and calm down.” “There has
been no outbreak.  I don’t know who put
that information out there, but there is absolutely no evidence of an outbreak
or epidemic”.

This is indeed assuring since it comes from a career N.W.
Arkansas politician.  Pritchard says who
put the information out there?  He should
be aware of the big picture before he runs his mouth.  Springdale physicians made the assertion, as
stated above.

Then comes Dr. Phillips, career bureaucrat, who the day
after the story broke said the false report “just makes people panic”.   My question to Dr. Phillips; without
consulting with the Springdale medical community, how do you know the report is
false?

The crucial thing to remember is both the TB and leprosy bacillus
are airborne and spread through the inhalation of infected particles from an
infected individual who is coughing. 
Think a line of Tyson’s poultry employees for example.

There are 6-8,000 Marshalleses living in Springdale, the
largest population outside the Islands. 
Who do you suppose these folks work for? 
Let me give a clue, one of the largest crime families in the U.S., the
Tyson’s and by all means, don’t forget the tens of thousands illegal Mexican
aliens who live in the crime infested cities of Fayetteville, Springdale,
Bentonville, and Rogers.  Home to the
Walton’s, the Tyson’s, the Hunt’s, the George’s, ad infinitum.   And Rogers’ resident Congressman John
Boozman.

Not one of these individuals, organizations, or politicians
has spoken to the involved medical community residing in NW Arkansas, yet in
less than 24 hours, politicians, bureaucrats, and corporations killed the story,
and are calling certain Springdale physicians liars.  This is the most significant story regarding Arkansas
health care that has broken in our state re: the legal immigrant and the
illegal Mexican and OTM invasion, which dramatically demonstrates the introduction
and reintroduction of diseases which never existed here or were eradicated
decades ago.

You are now privy to a vivid, cruel example of Fascism.

It also must be noted that Gov. Mike Beebe, Cong. John
Boozman, and the CDC have been informed of this event.

Do you really believe we will hear anything other than
political cover-up from these corporate and political shills?

Kindest regards,

Joe McCutchen

Fort Smith, Ark

 

Arkansas Times acknowleges illegals working for Tyson & others ….proudly…where is law enforcement?



 Don’t want to be lifted?  Get REAL.  We are sick and tired of
being pushed around/ down, stomped on, taxed to death, lied to – – – who are
you going to believe Arkansas Times or your tired old eyes??   
               
               
   
Sharon Stark, Little Rock

Arkansas Times

‘We’re
coming here to pick the country up’

But
some natives don’t want to be lifted.

Published
1/24/2008

Perceptions of The Immigrant vary, to say the
least. Merchant and restaurateur Eduardo Martinez of Little Rock
sees himself a few years ago — ambitious, hard-working, law-abiding, soon
to become a pillar of the community.

Mayor Stephen Womack of Rogers sees people
who drive up the crime rate, strain government services as well as the
patience of the natives, and generally bear watching.

A curious coalition of hard-nosed businessmen
and soft-hearted do-gooders sees someone who needs protection from
ill-informed and ill-intentioned elected officials.

A fair number of inhospitable Arkansans see a
brown-skinned, Spanish-speaking newcomer taking over a state that
rightfully belongs to white-skinned Anglophones.

Gourmets see one who’s given the state
something it lacked — good Mexican restaurants, even in small towns.

To some, The Immigrant who doesn’t have all
the papers he’s supposed to have is “undocumented.” To others, he’s
“illegal.”

All agree that The Immigrant is numerous and
growing in number, and that in one way or another, he’s changing the face
of Arkansas. That’s why he’s been chosen as the Arkansas Times’
Arkansan of the Year.

In Arkansas, most immigrants are Latinos.
According to the state data center at the University of Arkansas at Little
Rock, the Latino population of Arkansas as of July 1, 2006, was 141,000, or
5 percent of the total Arkansas population of 2.8 million. Some sources
estimate the Latino population as of Jan. 1, 2008, at 180,000 to 200,000.

The Winthrop Rockefeller Foundation provides
a statistical picture of immigrants in Arkansas. Half of them are from
Mexico and another 20 percent are from elsewhere in Latin America. About
half of them are undocumented (to use the gentler word), which means they
don’t meet the legal requirements for entry into the USA but they came
anyway. Most came to find work that pays better than what was available in
their home countries. They tend to settle on the western edge of the state,
and around Little Rock in Central Arkansas. Four counties — Benton,
Washington, Sebastian and Pulaski — account for almost two-thirds of
Arkansas immigrants. Forty-two percent of the immigrants work in
manufacturing — far more than in any other field of employment — and more
than half of those with manufacturing jobs work at processing poultry or
other meat. Many of them work for Tyson Foods, headquartered in Springdale.
Tyson is one of the founders of a new group formed to block anti-immigrant
legislation.

Cheap immigrant labor keeps manufacturers’
costs down, according to the Rockefeller profile. Latino immigrants make
less money than natives, an average of about $8 an hour compared to $11.
“[T]he state’s manufacturing wage bill would have been as much as $95
million higher [in 2004] if the same output were to be maintained without
immigrant workers,” the profile says. “These labor cost savings help keep
Arkansas’s businesses competitive and are passed on in the form of lower
prices to Arkansas and other U.S. consumers.”

Immigrant labor also keeps production up,
according to the profile: “[W]ithout immigrant labor, the output of the
state’s manufacturing industry would likely be lowered by about $1.4 billion
— or about 8 percent of the industry’s $16.2 billion total contribution to
the gross state product in 2004.”

Latino immigrants are substantially less
educated than native Arkansans; over three-fourths of those aged 25 and
older haven’t graduated from high school. Latino children have poverty
rates over twice as high as whites, but lower than blacks.

Immigrants (and their U.S.-born children)
have a small but positive net fiscal impact on the state budget, according
to the Rockefeller profile:

“The large and growing immigrant population
was reflected in a fiscal impact on the state budget of $237 million in
2004 (taking into account the costs of education, health services, and
corrections). Those costs were more than balanced by direct and indirect tax
contributions of $257 million, resulting in a net surplus to the state
budget of $19 million — approximately $158 per immigrant. Though education
is calculated as a fiscal cost in this report, expenditures to educate
immigrants’ children represent an important investment in Arkansas’s future
workforce that could pay substantial returns to the state through increased
worker productivity and economic growth.”

Eduardo Martinez came to the U.S. from Mexico
in 1985, invited by a brother who was already here. Asked the unavoidable
question, he says “I came in legal.” He spoke no English at the time — he
had only a third-grade education — but he’s learned it since. He came
alone, and now he has a wife and children. He started working in
restaurants, washing dishes and waiting tables, and he worked his way up.
Now he owns a grocery store, a taqueria and a bakery, and he can afford to
send his children to private, Catholic schools. “I learned everything from
you [Americans],” he says. “I watched what you guys do. I’m part of the
country now.”

He knows that some Arkansans have a low
opinion of Latinos, but “When Anglos see a guy working on the roof, they
change their minds. People are impressed by hard workers.” Latinos are
hard workers, he says, and “We like to own, we don’t like to borrow. Look
at how much money we bring to the state. We’re coming here to pick the
country up, not to destroy it.”

He says that he personally has not suffered
discrimination because of ethnicity, but he knows people who have. “I know
a person who can’t go to the university because he’s not legal. He’s
broken-hearted, talking about leaving the country.” He refutes the notion
that undocumented workers should be sent home because they’re taking jobs
from natives. “There’s a lot of open jobs. If the people without papers are
forced out, you won’t be able to find anybody else to do those jobs.”

Businessmen much bigger than Eduardo Martinez
fret about jobs going unfilled if immigrants are driven out. Alltel and
Stephens, Inc., joined Tyson Foods among those who announced in October the
formation of the Arkansas Friendship Coalition. Religious leaders and
liberal activists were other founders of the group. Rev. Steve Copley of
Little Rock, the chairman, fits in both those categories. He’s a Methodist
minister and he’s worked in many liberal causes, most recently a successful
movement to raise the state minimum wage.

The coalition’s base may be wide, but its
focus is narrow. The varied interests of the coalition founders probably
prevented any broader agreement. The coalition is opposed to the state
government and/or local governments enacting any immigration legislation.
“The Arkansas Friendship Coalition maintains that immigration is a federal
issue and that state and local money should not be wasted to fix a problem
that is ultimately a responsibility of the federal government,” the
coalition said in a news release.

Copley said in an interview that some states,
including Oklahoma, have passed “punitive” immigration laws. In some cases,
it’s said, such laws have driven immigrants from those states. The
coalition knows that there are state and city officials in Arkansas, mostly
in Northwest Arkansas, who favor the same kind of legislation.

“Reform is needed, but it has to come from
Congress,” Copley said. “Because that’s what the Constitution says, and
because it would be bad to have a patchwork arrangement, 50 states with
different laws governing immigration.” The Arkansas legislature won’t meet
again until January 2009, but coalition members are already arranging
meetings with individual legislators.

People who believe there are too many
immigrants in this country and that some should be shipped home often argue
that the debate is simply about legality. Why should “illegal aliens” be
permitted to stay here, they ask. The coalition pointedly avoids reference
to “illegal aliens.” Asked why, Copley said, “I use the word
‘undocumented.’ It’s not a crime per se to lack the documents. It’s more of
an administrative issue, like taxes. ‘Undocumented’ is a much clearer way
of describing it, and less inflammatory.” Besides, he said, “We feel that
if people are here, they should be treated fairly and with dignity,” with
documents or without.

Doubtless, Mayor Stephen Womack of Rogers
would have no problem with an Eduardo Martinez. Not all immigrants are like
Martinez.

Rogers is a city of 50,000. Latino immigrants
make up 30 percent of the population. “The immigrant population commits a
disproportionate number of offenses like stealing utilities, doing drugs,
and not paying taxes,” Womack said in an interview at Rogers City Hall.
“Seventy-five percent of the citations for no driver’s license go to Latino
people, and 80 percent of the citations for hindering government operations
[using false identification]. Now, when we catch these people we can send
them back where they came from.” He’s referring to a new program in which a
few designated Rogers police officers enforce federal immigration laws. The
Benton County and Washington County sheriffs’ offices participate in the
same program. Latino spokesmen say such programs entail “racial profiling,”
harassing people because they look like they might be illegal immigrants. These
programs also cause immigrants to be even more afraid of local police than
they already are, and thus to refrain from reporting real crimes, the
spokesmen say.

“We’ve never racially profiled and we won’t,”
Womack said. “That’s a lot of crap. The police don’t go out looking for
illegal aliens. But when they encounter a criminal act and they arrest
somebody, many of those arrested can’t show identification, can’t prove
they are who they claim. Then the police have a reason to detain them, to
determine the status of the person, to determine the removability of the
person.” He said he didn’t hear much from Rogers’ Latino residents, but the
natives support the program. “The comments I hear most are ‘I don’t mind
people coming here to better themselves, but I don’t want the illegality, I
want the law enforced.’ Some add that they want English spoken.”

He added, “I know the program also brings out
the worst in people who don’t like anybody who doesn’t look like them.
That’s unfortunate.”

He may get unwelcome praise from that
element, but, he said, he gets unfair criticism from another. “You can’t
discuss the immigrant problem fully without people painting you as biased
and intolerant. I think we should be able to talk about it.”

When the Mexican consulate at Little Rock
opened in April 2007, state and city officials were delighted, others not
so much. Reports of the opening that appeared in The Morning News, a
Northwest Arkansas newspaper, elicited more than 200 on-line comments,
almost all of them negative, many extremely so:

“Contact your state reps and demand this be
stopped.” “I am not glad to see [Governor Mike] Beebe is a spinless [sic]
advocate of illegal immigration.” “This is just one more nail in America’s
coffin.” “Polio was eradicated from the U.S., but now it reappears in
illegal aliens.” “Go Arkies go! Save your state from the Third World
invasion. It’s too late for mine.” “It’s time for a revolution.” “Have you
ever lived in Los Angeles? It’s a toilet.” “We need to deport all of them
and focus on the citizens of this country.”

Located behind a strip shopping center on
University Avenue, near the southwest Little Rock neighborhoods where
Mexican immigrants congregate, the consulate is an unimposing one-story
building, easy to miss before a sign pointing the way was posted on
University. Still, the mere idea of Little Rock having a consulate,
anybody’s consulate, would have astonished the city’s residents not too
many years back.

Mexican immigrants have poured into the U.S.
in recent years. According to Andres Chao, the Little Rock consul, about a
million of them live in the area served by the consulate. That’s Arkansas,
Mississippi, eastern Oklahoma and western Tennessee. Protecting them is
Chao’s job. He met with Womack in Rogers about the new police program. Both
men say the meeting was civil, but they didn’t reach agreement. Chao says
he’s still waiting for documentation that Womack was supposed to send
concerning the alleged high crime rates for Mexican immigrants in Rogers.

Immigration is a worldwide problem, Chao
said, but “In Europe, they’re tearing down the walls,” while some Americans
want to build new walls or strengthen old ones. “We [Mexico] want to build
bridges instead of fences,” he said.

Chao said that his government too wants fewer
Mexicans leaving home for the U.S. “We need to create well-paying jobs in
Mexico,” Chao said. “A worker can make in a week in the U.S. what he makes
in a month in Mexico. If we don’t stop the loss of younger labor, in 10
years we’ll have a serious problem. The two countries need to share the
problem. There are costs and benefits to both sides.”

As for the criticism that Mexican immigrants
drive down wages and take jobs away from American workers, Chao said, “The
jobs are there. We don’t make the decision how much to pay.”

The problem of people not speaking English
will correct itself over time, Chao said. “The ones who have been here
awhile say ‘I want my son to speak English.’ The younger generation now
speaks more English than Spanish. It causes problems in the family. Old
people have trouble learning English. The grammar is different, and many of
them have low levels of education.”

Those younger, English-speaking people will
stay in the U.S., Chao said. Most of the older ones want to go back to
Mexico eventually, even if they won’t know when they get there. “The
Mexican government spent $5 million last year to help Mexicans be buried in
Mexico,” Chao said.

http:// www.arktimes.com/articles/articleviewer.aspx?ArticleID=f9d31127-f651-4a90-8bea-e478a1bcc9c0



The real enemies desperate & being flushed out under the usual “altruist” excuse


 

 

Who belongs to the newly formed Arkansas Friendship
Coalition protecting illegals (partial list below) and what is their true
purpose?

 

Rev. Steve Copley, Chair of
the of Arkansas Friendship Coalition & United Methodist pastor

Archie Schaffer, Government Affairs, Tyson Foods

Randy Wilbourn, Alltel Corporation

Rita Sklar, Director of the Arkansas affiliate
of the American Civil Liberties Union

Warren Stephens, Stephens Inc.

Rev. Gordon Garlington and Rev. Howard Gordon,
Presbyterian pastors

Neal Sealy, ACORN

Tommy Fish, Associated General Contractors
(AGC)

Graham Catlett and Paul Charton,
Catlett and Stodola Law Firm

Stacy Sells and Michele Bond,
Cranford Johnson Robinson Woods

Rabbi Gene Levy, Reform Jewish leader in Little
Rock

Skip Rutherford, Clinton School of Public Service

Rev. Joyce Hardy,
Episcopalian pastor

Alan Leveritt, Publisher of Arkansas Times and El
Latino newspapers

Rev. Wendell Griffen, Baptist
pastor

 

This
shameless list represents what happens when BIG biz/big government/big churches
coalesce together to defy existing immigration laws to maximize their profit,
power, and influence. A tragic day for taxpaying, law-abiding citizens.

 

While they posture behind their “altruistic” subterfuge,
who bears the brunt for their greed? Taxpayers—for illegals’ education,
healthcare, law enforcement, welfare.

 

This
attack on middleclass taxpayers is unprecedented. American producers are now
responsible for the “disadvantaged” of the entire world. That’s what the above
list would have us believe, no matter the insanity, but they won’t themselves
be expected to pay such a price.

 

If
the U.S. is to survive, all these types must be exposed…our most dangerous
enemies are within, not without.  

 

Barbara
McCutchen



 

 

 

What Huckabee’s illegals are doing to schools

Poverty, influx of
Hispanics
called
hurdles for schools



June 28, 2006

BY HEATHER WECSLER

ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE

The growing percentage of low-income students and other
population shifts in Arkansas’ public
schools present a challenge
to education leaders in meeting the state’s
educational goals, ac­cording to a Southern Regional Education Board report

The board,
which concluded its
annual two-day meeting Tuesday, released a report on Arkansas’ prog­-
ress in meeting such educational goals as availability of early child­ hood programs and compliance
with the federal No Child Left Be­hind Act of 200L Most of the data, such as the state’s results on the
Na­-
tional Assessment of Educational Progress, have been issued before. But the report also tracks demo­
graphic changes in the state.

According to the report, the
percentage of the state’s students
who are low-income
— defined as
students
who qualify for the Na-
tional School Lunch Program—has
climbed from 39 percent of Arkan­-
sas students in 1990 to 56 percent
in
2004. In that year, 251,000 students
were approved for the school lunch
program  in Arkansas

Ken James, the state
education
commissioner and a member of the
board who attended the meet­
ing,
said the state is already trying
to
address the number of students
living in poverty by supporting
pre-kindergarten programs and funneling
state funds toward dis­
tricts with high percentages of low-income
students.

“We’re doing our best to level
the playing field for those stu­-
dents who are coming to us with
poverty and other contributing
factors,” James said. “That’s go­
ing to pay dividends, and I think
already is when you look at our
fourth-grade Benchmark scores
for the last few years.”       

  Based
on the current popula- tion of first-graders, the report also predicts that over the next 12 years
the proportion of Hispanic graduating high school seniors in the state will grow from 5 percent



To 27
percent
The report projects that
the percentage of white and black seniors will
drop. The over­
all student
population is expected
to slightly decrease from about 452,000 students in 2006 to about 447,000
in 2012.

Such trends will make improv­ing student test scores and gradu­ation rates tougher for Arkansas, the
board said. The board —
a nonprofit nonpartisan organiza­tion based in Atlanta — advises state
educators and policy-mak­ers on how to
improve education. Its 16 member states extend from
Texas in the
southwest to Dela­ware in the northeast.

Benny Gooden, the superin­tendent of
the 13,400-student Fort
Smith School
District, said in 20
years he has seen the Hispanic population of his
school system grow from less than one-half
of 1
percent to about 21 percent.

He said those students fre­quently
arrive on campus without
good language skills.

“They also typically don’t have good preschool experienc­es to
prepare them for school,” Gooden said.

The report says
Hispanic eighth-
graders in Arkansas
who scored at
or above basic level in
math on the
National Assessment of
Education­
al Progress trailed white
students
by 19 percentage points in
2005.
Black eighth-graders trailed
their
white counterparts by 45
percent­age points in 2005. But the report
also says in Arkansas, the
high school graduation rates for black students
and Hispanic males ex­ceed the national
average. And the
state’s overall
graduation rate of 77
percent exceeds
the national aver­age in 2003 of 74 percent

Sea Jim Argue, D-Little Rock, who
also attended the Southern Regional
Education Board meet­
ing, said he
believes Arkansas has
taken
important steps in address­
ing its
demographic challenges.

“Our future is something we can change,” he said. “But it
re­quires choices for school improve­ment to be made today.”

Invasion of U.S.

Police face Mexican military, smugglers 

Armed standoff along U.S.
border

By Sara A. Carter and Kenneth Todd Ruiz, Staff Writers

laceName>InlandlaceName> laceType>ValleylaceType>
Daily Bulletin

http://www.dailybulletin.com/portlet/article/html/fragments/print_article.jsp?articleId=3430815&siteId=203

Thursday, October
18, 2007

 

Mexican soldiers and civilian smugglers had an armed
standoff with nearly 30 U.S.
law enforcement officials on the Rio Grande
in Texas Monday afternoon, according
to Texas police and the FBI.

 

Mexican military Humvees were towing what appeared to be
thousands of pounds of marijuana across the border into the United
States
, said Chief Deputy Mike Doyal, of the
Hudspeth County Sheriff’s Department.

 

Mexican Army troops had several mounted machine guns on the
ground more than 200 yards inside the U.S. border — near Neely’s Crossing,
about 50 miles east of El Paso — when Border Patrol agents called for backup. laceName>HudspethlaceName>
laceType>CountylaceType>
deputies and Texas
Highway
patrol officers arrived shortly afterward,
Doyal said.

 

“It’s been so bred into everyone not to start an
international incident with Mexico
that it’s been going on for years,” Doyal said. “When you’re up
against mounted machine guns, what can you do? Who wants to pull the trigger
first? Certainly not us.”

 

An FBI spokeswoman confirmed the incident happened at 2:15
p.m.
Pacific Time.

 

“Bad guys in three vehicles ended up on the
border,” said Andrea Simmons, a spokeswoman with the FBI’s El
Paso
office. “People with Humvees, who appeared to be
with the Mexican Army, were involved with the three vehicles in getting them
back across.”

 

Simmons said the FBI was not involved and referred inquiries
to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

 

ICE did not return calls seeking comment.

 

Doyal said deputies captured one vehicle in the incident, a
Cadillac Escalade reportedly stolen from El Paso,
and found 1,477 pounds of marijuana inside. The Mexican soldiers set fire to
one of the Humvees stuck in the river, he said.

 

Doyal’s deputies faced a similar incident on Nov. 17, when
agents from the laceType>FortlaceType> laceName>HancocklaceName>
border patrol station in Texas called
the sheriff’s department for backup after confronting more than six fully armed
men dressed in Mexican military uniforms. The men — who were carrying machine
guns and driving military vehicles — were trying to bring more than three tons
of marijuana across the Rio Grande,
Doyal said.

 

Doyal said such incidents are common at Neely’s Crossing,
which is near Fort Hancock, Texas,
and across from the Mexican state of Chihuahua.

 

“It happens quite often here,” he said.

 

Deputies and border patrol agents are not equipped for
combat, he added.

 

“Our government has to do something,” he said.
“It’s not the immigrants coming over for jobs we’re worried about. It’s
the smugglers, Mexican military and the national threat to our borders that
we’re worried about.”

 

Citing a Jan. 15 story in the Daily Bulletin, Reps. David
Dreier, R-Glendora, and Duncan Hunter, R-San Diego, last week asked the House
Judiciary Committee, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Michael
Chertoff, the House Homeland Security Committee and the House International
Relations Committee to investigate the incursions. The story focused on a
Department of Homeland Security document reporting 216 incursions by Mexican
soldiers during the past 10 years and a map with the seal of the president’s
Office of National Drug Control Policy, both of which were given to the
newspaper.

 

Requests by Dreier, chairman of the House Rules Committee,
and Hunter were made in jointly signed letters.

 

On Wednesday, Chertoff played down the reports of border
incursions by the Mexican military. He suggested many of the incursions could
have been mistakes, blaming bad navigation by military personnel or attributing
the incursions to criminals dressed in military garb.

 

Mexican officials last week denied any incursions made by
their military.

 

But border agents interviewed over the past year have
discussed confrontations those they believe to be Mexican military personnel.

 

“We’re sitting ducks,” said a border agent
speaking on condition of anonymity. “The government has our hands
tied.”

 

– Sara A. Carter can be reached by e-mail at sara.carter@dailybulletin.com
or by phone at (909) 483-8552.

 

– Kenneth Todd Ruiz can be reached by e-mail at todd.ruiz@dailybulletin.com or by
phone at (909) 483-8555.

 

 

Fax to Ark. Congressman re: votes to increase SCHIPS (for illegal aliens)

Congressmen Boozman, Berry, Ross, Snyder:

 

Gentlemen:  To
the point—SCHIPS an illegal & politicians dream                                            October 13, 2007

 

Three of the four of you voted to increase SCHIPS spending
by $35 billion.

I have filed 4 FOI requests in recent days:

 

To determine numbers, costs to term, cost of ancillary
services, and the numbers of anchor babies produced by illegal alien women by
way of unconstitutional law, namely prenatal healthcare for illegals. Partial
results have been made available to me and they are devastating—a traitorous
attack on middleclass taxpaying Arkansans and funded in the main, by the SCHIPS
program.  Picking up the deficits are
Arkids 1st & Medicaid. 
The numbers are escalating exponentially by the month.  The proposed $35 billion increase is nothing
more than a magnet drawing more illegals, which is making this once preeminent
Republic nothing more than a 3rd World dumping ground.

 

An FOI request to the Ark. Children’s Hospital and
their conduct regarding a heart transplant for a young Mexican national (legal
or illegal?) and the political implications of former Mex. President’s Vicente
Fox’s motivations in this undertaking. 
Fox, on Larry King Live on Oct. 9, 2007 stated Mexican illegals did not
partake of U.S. healthcare and claimed he and his wife had raised $200,000 for
a procedure that would in all likelihood would run into millions, this
notwithstanding the 2 months the child spent in a San Antonio hospital.  These services not available to U.S. citizens—a
crime by any standard. Results not available at this time.

 

FOI request to Sebastian County Sheriff Atkinson on
his legal justification for using county resources (men and equipment) and the
county Ben Geren Park for a regional picnic for 3-5,000 illegal Mexicans &
OTM’s who work for OK Foods, i.e. Collier Wenderoth Jr. & Sr., and Russ
Bragg.   Results not yet available.

 

FOI request to Ark. State Parks & Tourism
Commission regarding millions of dollars in advertising targeting Hispanics,
women, & Gulf Coast residents…and the language used in these
commercials.  If they are in fact in
Spanish, this is nothing more than a veiled invitation for illegals to come to
Arkansas and work for the criminals, e.g. Tyson’s, George’s, Simmons, Ok Foods,
etc………but gentlemen, you know who they are and that they all have the blessings
of the Chambers of Commerce.

 

Log on to arkansasfreedom.net
for details of the FOI’s.

 

The 3 of you who voted for the treasonous increase in
SCHIPS insuring the destruction of middleclass Arkansans specifically, and
American citizens generally. The 3 of you have a constitutional,rule of law
decision to make:  Are you going to
defend the rights and property of U.S. citizen s or are you going to betray
citizens supporting the open borders, cheap labor lobby, coupled with a
perceived traitorous  pandering for votes
& economic one-upsmanship?

 

Dr. Snyder, I have not had the pleasure of meeting
you,  but Marion & Mike I do know
each of you and cannot believe you are going to put party over the will and
constitution of U.S. citizens.

Congressman Boozman, thank you for your vote in support
of citizens.

 

Kindest regards,

 

 

Joe McCutchen

Fort Smith

 

Fax to Okla. Gov. re illegal prenatal care to illegals.

Governor Brad Henry

State Capitol

Oklahoma City, Ok.

 

Governor Henry,                                                                                              October
12, 2007

 

You have very recently violated the Constitution, U.S.
law and have embarked upon an illegal activity in installing prenatal care for
illegal Mexican women and OTM’s.  You are
stealing from the productive citizens of Oklahoma and redistributing this theft
to illegal, criminal women.

 

There is no authority, legal, ethical, or rule of law
that states our citizenry should be responsible for other’s irresponsible behavior,
i.e. midnight frolicking.  Additionally
the 6 person committee that ruled that Oklahoma should offer prenatal care to
illegals has no legal authority.  You and
this committee have taken gross advantage of the taxpaying citizens who have
put their trust in you to protect their freedoms, fortunes, and the rule of
law.

 

Recently Oklahoma passed a much needed law to prosecute
businesses that engage in the hiring of illegals and deny benefits to
non-citizens.   Then comes the oxymoron,
free prenatal care to illegals.

 

You use the worn out canard, either you are ignorant or
lying, that it is cheaper to let the dysfunctional government pay for these
deliveries.  Nothing is said regarding
the dozens of ancillary services required and the anchor babies produced.   Had you been sincerely interested in cost,
you could have checked with DHS in Arkansas. 
Former Gov. Huckabee echoed the same crap you are putting out that it’s
cheaper, as if we have any moral or constitutional authority to provide these criminal
services.  Huckabee stated in a run up to
Ark. Prenatal care that it would cost $3,500 per head.  Through my numerous FOI’s it has been
determined that it is slightly over $15,000 per head, and no consideration for
the ongoing costs of the anchor babies produced. The monthly numbers and costs
are escalating monthly.

 

Such grandiose, unearned, criminal largesse only acts as
a giant magnet for more illegals.

 

Governor, rethink your position.  Your proposed actions are nothing but grand
theft and a vote buying scheme.

 

Kindest regards,

 

Joe McCutchen