We must keep this momentum going in the direction that it now is, that is seeing more illegals deported like our friend Elvira Arrelano we've been blogging about for the past few days here and here with more and more raids being conducted thus sending the message out that the free ride is over, and it's now time to go home and get back in line.
Sacbee.com tries to lump all denouncers of illegal immigration into hate group status as the illegal immigrant lobby and the left likes to do. This tactic is always used when there is no valid argument against our bone of contention, being that these people are simply lawbreakers that need to be deported en mass before any type of legislation is lumped on to the already ignored laws on the books that the government likes to pretend does not exist.
Again, All we ask is to enforce the present laws already on the books before writing useless new ones that the illegals will flaunt and disregard with impunity as they do already. Hardly a racist anti IMMIGRANT stance, but an anti ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT stance, a little variation they so conveniently leave out of the argument.
Immigration debate gets angrierHe's right about the importance of this fight and there's no reason this battle cannot be won in the war on illegals to win our country back.
sacbee.com: "WASHINGTON -- Seven weeks after the collapse of legislation in Congress, the outcry against illegal immigration is louder than ever, manifested by proposed clampdowns at the state and local levels and an uproar over the arrest of an undocumented immigrant in the execution-style slayings of three New Jersey college students.
Scores of organizations, ranging from mainstream to fringe groups, are marshaling forces in what former House Speaker Newt Gingrich calls 'a war here at home' against illegal immigration, which he says is as important as America's conflicts being fought overseas in Iraq and Afghanistan."
While most of the groups register legitimate, widespread concerns about the impact of illegal immigration on jobs, social services and national security, the intense rhetoric is generating fears of an emerging dark side, reflected in what appears to be growing discrimination against Latinos and a surge of xenophobia unseen since the last big wave of immigration in the early 20th century.
"I don't think there's been a time like this in our lifetime," said Doris Meissner, a senior fellow with the Migration Policy Institute and former commissioner of the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service. "Even though immigration is always unsettling and somewhat controversial, we haven't had this kind of intensity and widespread, deep-seated anger for almost 100 years. continued
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