lframerica.com Blog

February 19, 2008

Cheap Tomatoes!

Filed under: Big Business, Bills, Costs, Government, Illegal Alien, News-Newspaper, Uncategorized — Administrator @ 2:50 am

DiggersRealm

The story below is brought to you from an English teacher and was written around the time of the amnesty push. Let us revisit how “cheap” tomatoes (or lettuce or grapes or substitute your favorite fruit or vegetable) are due to illegal aliens.

CHEAP TOMATOES

This should make everyone think, be you Democrat, Republican or
Independent or whatever.

From a California school teacher – - -

“As you listen to the news about the student protests over illegal immigration, there are some things that you should be aware of: I am in charge of the English-as-a-second-language department at a large southern California high school which is designated a Title 1 school, meaning that its student’s average lower socioeconomic and income levels.

Most of the schools you are hearing about, South Gate High, Bell Gardens, Huntington Park, etc., where these students are protesting, are also Title 1 schools. Title 1 schools are on the free breakfast and free lunch program. When I say free breakfast, I’m not talking a glass of milk and roll — but a full breakfast and cereal bar with fruits and juices that would make a Marriott proud. The waste of this food is monumental, with trays and trays of it being dumped in the trash uneaten. (OUR TAX DOLLARS AT WORK)

I estimate that well over 50% of these students are obese or at least moderately overweight. About 75% or more DO have cell phones. The school also provides day care centers for the unwed teenage pregnant girls (some as young as 13) so they can attend class without the inconvenience of having to arrange for babysitters or having family watch their kids. (OUR TAX DOLLARS AT WORK)

I was ordered to spend $700,000 on my department or risk losing funding for the upcoming year even though there was little need for anything; my budget was already substantial. I ended up buying new computers for the computer learning center, half of which, one month later, have been carved with graffiti by the appreciative students who obviously feel humbled and grateful to have a free education in America. (OUR TAX DOLLARS AT WORK)

I have had to intervene several times for young and substitute teachers whose classes consist of many illegal immigrant students here in the country less then 3 months who raised so much hell with the female teachers, calling them “Putas” (whores) and throwing things, that the teachers were in tears.

Free medical, free education, free food, day care etc., etc, etc. Is it any wonder they feel entitled to not only be in this country but to demand rights, privileges and entitlements?

To those who want to point out how much these illegal immigrants contribute to our society because they LIKE their gardener and housekeeper and they like to pay less for tomatoes: spend some time in the real world of illegal immigration and see the TRUE costs.

Higher insurance, medical facilities closing, higher medical costs, more crime, lower standards of education in our schools, overcrowding, new diseases etc., etc, etc. For me, I’ll pay more for tomatoes.

Americans! We need to wake up. The guest worker program will be a disaster because we won’t have the guts to enforce it. Does anyone in their right mind really think they will voluntarily leave and return?

It does, however, have everything to do with culture: A third-world culture that does not value education, that accepts children getting pregnant and dropping out of school by 15 and that refuses to assimilate, and an American culture that has become so weak and worried about “political correctness” that we don’t have the will to do anything about it.

If this makes your blood boil, as it did mine, forward this to everyone you know.

CHEAP LABOR! Isn’t that what the whole immigration issue is about?

Business doesn’t want to pay a decent wage.

Consumers don’t want expensive produce.

Government will tell you Americans don’t want the jobs.

But the bottom line is cheap labor. The phrase “cheap labor” is a myth, a farce, and a lie. There is no such thing as “cheap labor.”

Take, for example, an illegal alien with a wife and five children. He takes a job for $5.00 or 6. 00/hour. At that wage, with six dependents, he pays no income tax, yet at the end of the year, if he files an Income Tax Return, he gets an “earned income credit” of up to $3,200 free.

He qualifies for Section 8 housing and subsidized rent.

He qualifies for food stamps.

He qualifies for free (no deductible, no co-pay) health care.

His children get free breakfasts and lunches at school.

He requires bilingual teachers and books.

He qualifies for relief from high energy bills.

If they are or become, aged, blind or disabled, they qualify for SSI. Once qualified for SSI they can qualify for Medicare. All of this is at (our) taxpayer’s expense.

He doesn’t worry about car insurance, life insurance, or homeowners insurance.

Taxpayers provide Spanish language signs, bulletins and printed material.

He and his family receive the equivalent of $20.00 to $30.00/hour in benefits.

Working Americans are lucky to have $5.00 or $6.00/hour left after paying their bills and his.

The American taxpayers also pay for increased crime, graffiti and trash clean-up.

Cheap labor! YEAH RIGHT! Wake up people!

THESE ARE THE QUESTIONS WE SHOULD BE ADDRESSING TO THE PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES FOR EITHER PARTY. AND WHEN THEY LIE TO US AND DON’T DO AS THEY SAY, WE SHOULD REPLACE THEM AT ONCE!

July 3, 2007

Editorials on Immigration Legislation – ARTICLE

Filed under: Bills, Government, Illegal Alien, Uncategorized — Administrator @ 11:48 am
Editorials on immigration legislation
McClatchy-Tribune News Service
Article Last Updated: 07/02/2007 06:53:55 PM MDT

The following editorial appeared in the Miami Herald on Friday, June 29:
SENATE FALTERS ON IMMIGRATION REFORM
The Senate’s decision to slam the door shut on immigration reform Thursday represents an enormous failure that borders on dereliction of duty. Congress has walked away from the problem and left the broken immigration system for someone else to fix. All because the people’s elected representatives could not muster the courage or political will to deal with a controversial topic.
The only real issue before the Senate was whether the reform legislation improves the chaotic status quo, which is rightly deemed unacceptable by both advocates and opponents of immigration reform. But instead of voting on the merits of the package, the Senate punted. By a margin of 53-46, members voted against limiting debate. This stalling tactic opens the door to an endless stream of amendments and could have postponed a final vote on the merits until Doomsday. This was not the Senate’s finest moment.
As Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., lamented afterward, the failure to act carries a high price. Instead of establishing pathways to legal status for an estimated 12 million immigrants who live in the shadows, there will be more immigration raids that terrorize businesses and immigrant communities. State and local governments will continue adding to the volume of conflicting ordinances that characterize our patchwork system of immigration laws.
For President Bush, who sought to make immigration reform his crowning domestic achievement, this represents a severe setback. Although he had lobbied hard for the bill and even threw an extra $4 billion into the enforcement pot to revive debate earlier this month, 37 senators from his own party – including the two from his home state of Texas – voted against curtailing debate.
For opponents of the immigration bill, this is a hollow victory. They cannot claim to have solved the immigration problem because they never offered solutions other than building fences and demanding large-scale immigration round-ups. The former won’t work – not for long, anyway. Ultimately, people find ways over, around or under fences. Mass deportations aren’t a solution, either. “It sounds good,” President Bush said on a visit to the border region in Arizona last April. “It won’t happen.”
Ultimately, as Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said, immigration reform will be back on the legislative agenda. It’s just a matter of when. Like the epic struggle against segregation that ended with the passage of civil-rights legislation, it may take a few years and a few stumbles to get to the finish line, but this issue is too important to remain unresolved. Immigration, too, is a controversial topic, and it, too, is a matter of simple justice.

The following editorial appeared in the Chicago Tribune on Friday, June 29:
THE SPEECH BUSH DIDN’T GIVE
U.S. senators who tried for two years to solve this nation’s immigration dilemma met a bracing truth Thursday: Too many Americans distrust their comprehensive plan to regulate the flow of foreigners into this country and its economy.
Immigration reform now lies in ruin. That doesn’t mean supporters of a broad immigration bill will or ought to surrender. It should, though, force them to admit they didn’t do the hard work that would convince Americans to back their efforts to reduce illegal immigration and control the legal immigration our economy needs.
Specifically, they never admitted how spectacularly they and their like-minded predecessors failed to keep their word after Congress rewrote immigration law in 1986. They didn’t do the difficult work that would have kept a respected, pro-business lawmaker such as Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, from recently telling a New York Times reporter how much he regrets his vote for that bill 21 years ago: “I thought then that taking care of 3 million people illegally in the country would solve the problem once and for all. I found out, however, if you reward illegality, you get more of it.” The proponents also had no retort when Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., said he had supported the 1986 law “based on the very same promises we hear today. . . . I will not vote to make the same mistake twice.”
Thursday’s devastating defeat didn’t have to be. Suppose that after the 2004 election, President George W. Bush had leveled with his fellow Americans:
“Back in 1986, the people who write this nation’s laws made promises they didn’t even attempt to keep. They promised you they would control our borders, stop our employers from hiring illegal immigrants and give legal status to 3 million people who were here in violation of the law.
“But in succeeding years, Washington broke its pledges – all except the one about legalizing those 3 million people. Members of Congress who’d voted for the bill stopped talking about enforcement, let alone demanding it. They had placated big business and immigrant communities full of potential voters, and they’d gotten what they wanted from President Reagan-his signature and his morning-in-America endorsement: ‘Future generations of Americans will be thankful for our efforts to humanely regain control of our borders.’
“Those pieties of 1986 have rung hollow ever since, and until we get square with you, the American people, (U.S. Sens.) Ted Kennedy and John McCain and I and everybody else in Washington who wants to fix immigration will get just as much of your trust on this as we deserve.
“Now, though, this cause has what it needs, a president committed to fixing this mess before he leaves office. You may not like me, but you know how I get when I’m resolute. I won’t flinch.
“What matters more is that, on this issue more than most, you voters terrify Congress – Republicans and Democrats, Senate and House. Unless you give your permission, reform won’t happen.
“So here’s what we in Washington have to do. We have to enforce the 1986 law we’ve got. It may take us a couple of years to gear up, and you may not like what you get. Expect higher prices for the goods and services you purchase when we start forcing employers to abide by that law.
“But we will show you that government can make a good-faith effort to do what it’s supposed to do, which is enforce the law. We’re not just going to spend more money on border control. We’re going to cut the flow of illegal immigrants.
“This time, though, don’t judge us by our gauzy promises and our optimistic predictions and our billions spent for border agents and technology. Judge us by whether we succeed.
“Because when we show you that we know how to enforce a law, we’ll earn your support for a new one. I could say a lot today about what we’ll gain from the new citizens and legal guest workers and other benefits a reform bill will give us, but until I earn your trust, I don’t have the right to say any of that.”
That would have been a fine speech for Bush to give in 2004. Just as it would be a fine speech for him, and for Democrats and Republicans who want immigration reform, to give in 2007.
After Thursday’s vote, those who want a comprehensive immigration bill have to find a radically new way forward.
Do they want to be seen now and always as ruthlessly tactical, as their Senate supporters were this week in trying to silence debate on a bill that – whether you favor or oppose it – unarguably would change the fabric of America?
Or will they recognize that Washington has to climb out of a hole it dug 21 years ago? A hole that got perilously deeper each year the demands of the ‘86 law didn’t even get lip service from our members of Congress and our presidents?

The following editorial appeared in the Philadelphia Inquirer on Friday, June 29:
IMMIGRATION BILL FAILS: A MERCIFUL ENDING
Sometimes the only thing you can do for a badly wounded animal is put it down. Any disappointment in the Senate’s inability to pass immigration reform must be tempered by an acknowledgment that the bill had become so mangled that it needed to be put out of its misery.
No one was totally happy with the bill. Often that is a sign of fruitful negotiation. But this proposal so compromised principles on both sides of the argument that in the end few had the stomach to keep fighting.
Both Democrats and Republicans were opposing the bill when a procedural vote ended the fiasco Thursday. The vote sent a clear message to President Bush, who personally lobbied for the bill, that his low poll ratings have made him a paper tiger in his own party.
Conservatives kept harping about the need to make America’s border with Mexico more secure. The dead bill would have done that. It included not only increasing the Border Patrol, but also adding fencing and electronic surveillance at key spots.
The stickier point that still has most Americans scratching their heads is what to do with the 12 million or more people who have entered this nation illegally.
The defeated bill included a path to citizenship, but it was decried by critics as granting “amnesty.” That was hardly the case, unless you deem anything short of deportation as amnesty.
The bill called for fines, fees and other steps before eligible persons could apply first for legal residency and then for citizenship. It’s not amnesty when you have to pay a fine for what you did.
But the path had problems. For example, it treated all illegal residents the same; an earlier version made clearer, proper distinctions between new arrivals and those who had lived and worked in this country for years.
What happens next is a guess. Immigration will likely be a hot topic in the 2008 elections. Some steps are proceeding to make borders more secure. Immigration officials are making more raids to catch undocumented workers. But not enough is being done to sanction the companies that hire and often exploit them.
America must find the will to balance its immigration concerns and its Statue of Liberty ideals.

The following editorial appeared in the Dallas Morning News on Friday, June 29:
BUSH LOST ON IMMIGRATION BUT WAS ON RIGHT SIDE
The senators who voted Thursday to cut off debate on the immigration bill did the nation no good deed. We’re particularly disappointed that Texas Sens. Kay Bailey Hutchison and John Cornyn sided with the bunch who effectively killed it.
The two knew, as did everyone else, that the vote to limit debate was a way to get the legislation yanked off the floor. Now Americans have little more than a lick and a promise that the Senate will get back to work on the issue this year or next.
President Bush, on the other hand, deserves enormous credit for pushing immigration to the top of Washington’s domestic agenda. His stand on behalf of a better immigration system is like what he did as governor when he pressed legislators to overhaul Texas’ school funding system. Ironically, he lost that battle too, again because some Senate Republicans went south on him. But he was right when he warned Austin about a coming crisis, just as he has been correct to encourage Washington to find a saner way of dealing with immigration.
We hope he and immigration reformers like Sen. Ted Kennedy keep the battle going. Mr. Kennedy also worked valiantly to find a compromise that would satisfy enough senators to win passage. Mr. Kennedy, the president and several others tried to build a coalition from the center out, usually the only way to get a victory in Washington.
They didn’t succeed this time, but it’s better to take on a good fight and fail than not to take it on for fear of losing.
It’s also best for the nation to solve this problem sooner rather than later. If Congress waits two or three more years, we’ll have another million illegal immigrants. We’ll have more employers looking the other way when it comes to hiring illegal workers. And we’ll lack enough agents to protect our borders. This is one problem that will only get worse with time.

The following editorial appeared in the Orlando Sentinel on Friday, June 29:
THE DEFEAT OF IMMIGRATION REFORM DEALS A BLOW TO ALL AMERICANS
The Senate came to a contentious dead end on the issue of immigration reform Thursday. It’s a failure that will be felt way beyond the borders of Washington.
Americans lost big Thursday. They can thank a group of Republicans and a handful of Democrats who cried amnesty without offering reasonable alternatives. These naysayers got their wish by torpedoing a vote that would have ended the debate and moved the bill toward passage.
Guess what? The bill included a $4.4 billion provision for increased border security. It’s a cruel irony that these lawmakers voted to make our borders less secure.
The winners? How about unscrupulous employers who knowingly hire illegal immigrants? This bill’s failure lets them off the hook. There would have been much stronger rules requiring employee verification. Tamper-proof cards would have helped weed out undocumented workers and opened up the job market for U.S. citizens who claim they are deprived of jobs that go to cheap, illegal labor.
Rejecting the bill also closed doors for American companies who need high-tech workers who would come here under a temporary work visa. Now high-tech companies that can’t find enough qualified workers here will send the work overseas, hurting the American economy.
The bill’s failure also makes it more difficult for law enforcement, since an estimated 12 million illegal immigrants will remain unchecked. Although the majority of them are law-abiding folks, there is a criminal element that will continue to live here with little fear of being discovered by a thorough immigration system.
This bill wasn’t perfect, but it was a compromise that offered something to both sides of the immigration debate. Now, nobody gets a thing, and the saddest part is that immigration reform will remain in legal limbo for two more years because of the 2008 election season coming up.
All that’s left are the hard feelings from a bitter debate that too often vilified people with principled objections.
Immigration now becomes the focus of advocacy groups intent to make senators who opposed this bill accountable at the polls. As well they should be. Expect a backlash from the expanding universe of Hispanic voters. But all Americans had an interest in seeing this issue resolved.
The scorecard reads 37 Republicans and 15 Democrats and one Independent voting against the bill. To their credit, Florida Sens. Mel Martinez and Bill Nelson voted for the bill.
They understood the bipartisan strength it would take to hold the bill together. Now, as Martinez noted, the burden shifts to others to see what solutions they will offer.
They had a workable answer in their hands, and dropped it.
All Americans lose.

June 22, 2007

20 Dishonorable Loopholes in Senate Amnesty Bill – Sen. Jeff Sessions

Filed under: Bills, Government, Illegal Alien, U.S. Security, Uncategorized — Administrator @ 10:54 pm

Senator Jeff Sessions (R-AL) has published the twenty loopholes he’s managed to find placed in the Amnesty bill aka S.1639 aka S.1348. for the American people.

In Sen. Sessions own words yesterday on the “Sean Hannity Radio Show”, the only thing different about the new bill (new in number anyways) is an increase of $4.4 billion dollars.

Read Sen. Sessions Press Release regarding the $4.4 billion dollars.

Read Sen. Sessions 20 Loopholes

Opponents Vow To Try To Block Immigration Bill

Filed under: Government, Illegal Alien — Administrator @ 6:37 am

NewsMax.com Wires
Friday, June 22, 2007

WASHINGTON — A group of Republican senators opposed to a sweeping immigration overhaul that would legalize millions of unlawful immigrants said on Thursday they were determined to torpedo the bill when the Senate resumes debate next week.

“The process has been rigged from the beginning, which we think gives us justification to use every measure possible to slow this thing down and stop it,” said Sen. Jim DeMint, a South Carolina Republican, at a news conference.

DeMint and other Republican opponents argue the bill amounts to amnesty for millions of law-breakers with no guarantee that tough border security and workplace enforcement measures would go into effect. They argue the legalization program will only encourage more illegal immigration.

The immigration overhaul, put together during months of negotiations among a small group Republicans, Democrats and the White House, would be a major legislative victory for President George W. Bush in his second term. Democrats have pressed him to bring more of his Republican allies in Congress on board after the bill stalled in the face of stiff opposition.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Nevada Democrat, decried Republican efforts to slow the legislation and said he was hopeful it would pass this time around.

A determined minority can often derail legislation in the closely divided 100-member Senate where it takes 60 votes to advance any controversial bill. But it was unclear if opponents of the immigration bill would be able to maneuver around a rarely used tactic, called a clay pigeon, Reid plans to use to push the bill to passage.

The parliamentary ploy effectively allows Senate leaders to pick amendments for consideration and shut out the opposition.

Democrats are also divided over the immigration bill. Labor unions oppose the temporary worker program saying it would create an underclass of cheap laborers. Bush, backed by his Republican party’s pro-business wing, favors the temporary worker program to fill jobs they say Americans cannot or will not perform.

A survey of illegal immigrants from Latin American countries released on Thursday showed the vast majority of them would seek legal residency if the legislation passes.

The poll of 1,600 illegal immigrants conducted by New America Media, an association of ethnic news media, found about 83 percent would apply for the new “Z” visa that would allow them to work legally in the United States and eventually apply for permanent resident status.

But about 27 percent of those said that they would probably not apply if they were required to return to their home country to pick up the visa, the survey said.

Help Sen. McConnell Find The Right Side To Get Off The Fence.

Filed under: Government, Illegal Alien, News-Newspaper — Administrator @ 4:59 am

Sen. McConnell is riding the fence, but he needs to make a decision and make one soon. He has to make a choice that is FOR America and it’s people or step down from his position in Senate.

Friday June 22, 2007 1:01 AM

AP Photo WX102, WX101

By CHARLES BABINGTON

Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) – The Senate’s Republican leader says he is unsure whether he will vote for the immigration bill President Bush strongly supports, underscoring the measure’s precarious status.

Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has long called for an immigration overhaul, saying the current situation is deeply flawed. And as the Senate minority leader, McConnell is central to shepherding legislation the president wants.

But in an interview with The Associated Press on Thursday, McConnell said he would not decide how to vote on the measure until a long series of amendments are disposed of next week.

“The bill on the merits is a mixed bag,” said McConnell, who had brushed aside reporters’ questions on immigration Tuesday and Wednesday. “I’m not uniformly enthusiastic about it.”

“At the end of the process,” he said, “we’re going to have to make a call as to whether this is an improvement over the status quo. I’m not ready to make that call yet.”

McConnell said it is unclear whether the bill’s supporters can muster the 60 votes eventually needed to allow a final roll call on the bill in the 100-member Senate. His chief goal, he said, has been to see that all Republicans are treated fairly and allowed to be heard.

“In the end, I frankly don’t know whether this thing will fly or not,” McConnell said. “But we will have given it our best shot.”

McConnell’s ambivalence has been known to colleagues, but Thursday’s comments about his misgivings were especially blunt and specific.

Also on Thursday, Texas’ two Republican senators, John Cornyn and Kay Bailey Hutchison, said they would vote against bringing the bill back to the Senate floor.

Hutchison, the No. 4 Republican, said the measure includes “amnesty provisions” for illegal immigrants.

The immigration issue splits the GOP leadership much as it divides the party’s base.

Many business groups, hungry to fill low-wage jobs, support the bill. Many social conservatives, backed by talk show hosts, denounce it as amnesty for illegal immigrants.

The Senate bill would tighten borders and workplace enforcement, create a new guest worker program and provide pathways to legal status for most of the estimated 12 million illegal immigrants in the country. The House has yet to draft legislation.

The immigration debate has squeezed many politicians, but perhaps none more so than McConnell, a strong White House ally. Some see the legislation as Bush’s last hope for a major domestic achievement, and McConnell himself has repeatedly said an immigration revision is one of the “big things” a divided government can achieve.

But most Senate Republicans thus far have refused to embrace the bill. And some party strategists think voters in 2008 will reward those who oppose giving illegal immigrants lawful status.

McConnell is “not riding two horses, he’s trying to decide which horse to ride,” Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., a bill supporter, said in an interview. “He has a very difficult role, with the caucus so badly split. He has a duty to represent the caucus.”

McConnell has proceeded cautiously, demanding that Republican senators be allowed to offer about two dozen amendments when Democrats tried to cut off debate sooner. He has declined to pressure colleagues, letting other party members step out front to defend and push the measure.

Some Republican backers of the bill grumble that McConnell has been too tepid. But others defend his approach, saying browbeating colleagues on such an emotional topic might backfire.

“I think he and Trent are dealing with it about as well as leadership could,” said Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., referring to McConnell and Senate Republican Whip Trent Lott of Mississippi.

Lott has been more outspoken in saying the bill is flawed but needed, and in criticizing those who denounce it. Conservative talk show hosts have blistered Lott in return, while leaving McConnell largely alone.

Still, the corrosive debate seems to have taken a toll on McConnell. On Tuesday and Wednesday, he refused to take reporters’ questions on immigration, a rare move in the Capitol hallways for a man whose deadpan demeanor and calm, monotone voice seldom change.

Privately, some Bush allies say they wish McConnell would openly back the immigration bill. Publicly, colleagues who support the bill have placed McConnell’s comments and actions in the best possible light.

“I take him at his word,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., noting that McConnell repeatedly has said the Senate bill is preferable to the status quo. “He has been helpful in making sure it comes back” for more amendments and votes, Graham said, referring to last week’s hiatus that nearly doomed the bill.

McConnell agreed that keeping the process moving, without embracing or rejecting the bill, has been his aim. Pressuring reluctant Republicans to back the president “would be exactly the wrong way to operate on a bill of this type,” he said. “It would have been counterproductive.”

McConnell noted that earlier this month he voted for an unsuccessful amendment that would have eliminated so-called Z visas for immigrants who lack legal status. Bill supporters called it a killer amendment, but critics call the Z visas the key to granting amnesty to illegal immigrants.

“Substantively, there are things to like and things to not like about this bill,” McConnell said.

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