Get serious about immigration enforcement

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wingman

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Get serious about immigration enforcement
05:42 PM CST on Wednesday, December 29, 2004

By HEATHER MacDONALD



Now that the Bernard Kerik nomination has crashed and burned, President Bush should ask the next candidate for Department of Homeland Security chief the most important question for the job: Will you enforce the law against border trespassers?

Nothing compromises our domestic defense against Islamic terrorism more than our failure to control who enters the country. The alien-smuggling trade is the "sea in which terrorists swim," explains David Cohen, the New York Police Department's deputy commissioner for intelligence and an ex-CIA expert on al-Qaeda.

Yet fear of offending the race and rights lobbies has trumped national security at DHS. This spring, for example, Asa Hutchinson – the department's undersecretary for Border and Transportation Security and now a contender for the top job – shut down a successful border-patrol initiative to catch illegal aliens.

A specially trained team had apprehended about 450 border trespassers in several Southern California cities. The Los Angeles Times, La Raza and every other advocacy group for illegal aliens protested that the arrests were racially motivated and that they were "scaring" illegal aliens.

The White House promptly called the team off, and Mr. Hutchinson appeased the race hustlers by denouncing the initiative as "racial profiling." He followed up with a memo to every U.S. immigration, border patrol and customs agent declaring that "preventing racial profiling is a priority mission of this department."

Shouldn't guarding public safety be the Department of Homeland Security's sole "priority mission"?

A glance at a tiny section of the northern border makes clear how lackluster the government's response to illegal entry remains.

Every week, agents in the border patrol's Swanton sector catch Middle Easterners and North Africans sneaking into Vermont. And every week, they immediately release those trespassers with a polite request to return for a deportation hearing. Why? The Department of Homeland Security failed to budget enough funding for sufficient detention space for lawbreakers.

In May alone, Swanton agents released illegal aliens from Malaysia, Pakistan, Morocco, Uganda and India without bond. Since all these aliens chose to evade the visa process, none has had a background check by a consular official that might have uncovered terrorist connections. All are now at large in the country.

The failure to interdict northern trespassers is particularly worrisome, since Canada is a proven springboard for terrorists. Ahmed Ressam, the Algerian caught at the Canadian border with 100 pounds of explosives destined for the Los Angeles airport in December 1999, ran an al-Qaeda cell in Montreal, despite having previously been ordered deported by the Canadian government. Two of the seven most wanted al-Qaeda members are naturalized Canadians.

This "catch and release" policy is in force all across the country for the same reason: no detention space. On June 8, agents in the Las Cruces, N.M., station apprehended three illegal Pakistanis and promptly let them go. The same day, guards at Texas' Uvalde station released a Bosnian wanted on an Interpol warrant for aggravated rape.

The number of people caught at the southern border from "countries of interest" – terror dens – is on the rise: This year's list includes people from Afghanistan, Egypt, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, Yemen and – in greatest numbers – Pakistan. In early December, border patrol officers captured a Bangladeshi man named Fakhrul Islam after he crossed the Rio Grande near Brownsville, in the company of a member of a Salvadoran gang suspected by U.S. authorities of helping al-Qaeda smuggle operatives.

At last report, the U.S. attorney's office in Houston said Mr. Islam was to be held in federal custody until deported to Bangladesh. Law enforcement authorities told The Washington Times that al-Qaeda is well aware of the border patrol's detention-space crisis and resulting "catch-and-release" policy, which it hopes to exploit to loose its agents into the country.

If the government were serious about ending illegal entry and its threat to national security, it would fund adequate detention space. Instead, the Bush administration plans to add only 117 new detention beds in 2005 (while probably losing another 1,400 beds for failure to reimburse county and local jails for the space it rents from them).

Putting national security ahead of political correctness would also mean ending the special status granted Mexican illegals. None of the recent measures to strengthen border oversight – inadequate in themselves – applies to Mexicans.

Meanwhile, Mexico's government is providing cover for its illegal emigrants by furnishing them with ID – "matricula consular" cards – meant to let them open U.S. bank accounts or get U.S. driver's licenses. The FBI has denounced the matricula consular card as a security nightmare, since its background check is so superficial and it is so easily forged – yet federal authorities are allowing its use to spread across the country.

These authorities seem to believe they can give a pass to the hundreds of thousands of Mexicans who cross illegally every year and still strengthen the border against terrorists. But since the government forswears consideration of national origin, race, religion or ethnicity in law-enforcement activities, strict policing across the board becomes even more crucial for catching terrorists.

Without real enforcement, terrorists will make use of the infrastructure of illegality – such as corrupt Mexican officials. In 2003, authorities busted Mexico's consul in Lebanon for selling fake visas for up to $4,500. Her ring had smuggled about 300 Lebanese into the United States from Tijuana from 1999 to November 2002.

To be against alien lawbreakers is not to be against immigrants. Border laws protect the country for immigrants who respect America's laws. Our inability to control who comes into the country is our biggest security threat, and we must empower every branch of law enforcement to apprehend the lawbreakers.

Washington should allocate the resources to detain and deport illegals and should start enforcing long-standing laws against employing alien lawbreakers. A deafening roar of "racism" will result – but with the country at war, pandering to the race advocates must give way to protecting American lives.
 
Please cite URL's of quoted articles. It helps in establishing credibility of the author.

That said, criminal immigration will become a major issue this year. Bush and other Democrats will do what they can to keep it off the public's radar screen. Meanwhile, congress is getting its ear melted by the folks at home. I got a suspicion real, live immigration reform will happen simply because the public is at a tipping point. There is no other issue in play in the US where the taxpaying class and the ruling class are so far apart in 1>perceiving a problem, 2>prescribing a solution. Social revolutions tend to arise out of such situations.

:eek:
 
The invisibility of illegal immigration is over. The heat is going to come down on all concerned, including Mr. Bush and Karl Rove. A lot of Americans are totally fed up and beginning to look at illegal immigration in very sober terms, connecting it with problems with Social Security and job prospects, among other things. If the Dems and the GOP won't deal with this issue honestly and honorably, respecting the American citizen and American taxpayer, they will watch the gradual emergence--or maybe not so gradual--of a hard-core nativist and nationalistic movement in this country. Where we go from there is anyone's guess. Integrity is best.

~r

http://www.teamamericapac.org/
 
Wait until the next terrorist attack walks across the Mexican border. Then the sheeple will wake up. Bush knows this, that's why he's pushing for the worker amnesty program or whatever he calls it.
 
Bush's amnesty...guest worker...program won't stop the rage that will erupt if a catastrophe can be traced south of the border.

Every time Bush opens his mouth on this subject he sounds more like the President of Mexico than the President of the United States.

Bush has been given an historic opportunity to turn this off-course ship around. If he blows it on illegal immigration that ship will founder.
 
Get serious about immigration enforcement
05:42 PM CST on Wednesday, December 29, 2004

By HEATHER MacDONALD

Now that the Bernard Kerik nomination has crashed and burned, President Bush should ask the next candidate for Department of Homeland Security chief the most important question for the job: Will you enforce the law against border trespassers?

Seems to me this a question Bush should ask the image in the bathroom mirror while he is shaving.

Pilgrim
 
"There is no other issue in play in the US where the taxpaying class and the ruling class are so far apart in 1>perceiving a problem, 2>prescribing a solution. Social revolutions tend to arise out of such situations."

Yup, I agree 100%.
 
If the Dems and the GOP won't deal with this issue honestly and honorably, respecting the American citizen and American taxpayer, they will watch the gradual emergence--or maybe not so gradual--of a hard-core nativist and nationalistic movement in this country.
Here's hopin'.
 
I liked the part about "racial profiling". What it boils down to is illegal immigrant profiling. If illegal immigrants tend to be of the same race which this profiling describes, oh well...!
 
I seem to recall that our only terrorist attacks have been conducted by LEGAL immigrants. Has there been a single documented case of an "islamic terrorist" illegally crossing the Southern border into the Unites States?
 
c_yeager,

http://www.washtimes.com/national/20041013-121643-5028r.htm

Chechen terrorists probed


By Bill Gertz
THE WASHINGTON TIMES


U.S. security officials are investigating a recent intelligence report that a group of 25 Chechen terrorists illegally entered the United States from Mexico in July.
The Chechen group is suspected of having links to Islamist terrorists seeking to separate the southern enclave of Chechnya from Russia, according to officials familiar with intelligence reports.
Members of the group, said to be wearing backpacks, secretly traveled to northern Mexico and crossed into a mountainous part of Arizona that is difficult for U.S. border security agents to monitor, said officials speaking on the condition of anonymity.
The intelligence report was supplied to the U.S. government in late August or early September and was based on information from an intelligence source that has been proved reliable in other instances, one official said.
A second U.S. official said the report is being investigated, but said it could not be determined whether the group of Chechens actually entered the country, as the intelligence source reported.
"We don't know whether or not that report is true," this official said.
A spokesman for U.S. Customs and Border Protection confirmed that the intelligence report was provided by another government agency, but said Border Patrol agents were unable to verify its accuracy.
It could not be learned whether the reported infiltration is related to the recent Education Department warning to school officials to examine security in the aftermath of the attack last month by pro-Chechnya Muslim terrorists on a school in Russia, in which more than 300 people were killed and some 700 wounded.
In the Russian attack, heavily armed Islamists took over and wired with explosives the school building in Beslan, North Ossetia. It is believed that an accidental explosion set off a battle between Russian security personnel and the terrorists, who set off several explosions and shot schoolchildren and teachers as they tried to escape.
U.S. officials believe the Beslan terrorists included some al Qaeda-linked foreign terrorists.
The Education Department letter said that school officials should examine "protective measure guidance" for helping to prevent and respond to a similar terrorist attack, were it to occur in the United States.
The notice said the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security are "currently unaware of any specific, credible information indicating a terrorist threat to public and private schools, universities or colleges in the United States."
The letter stated that indicators of terrorist surveillance before an attack include interest in site plans for schools, bus routes and attendance lists from persons who don't normally request such information.
Authorities also were advised to remain alert for "static surveillance" by people who may be disguised as panhandlers, shoeshiners, newspaper or flower vendors, or street sweepers who seem out of place in a particular area.
Other indicators of terrorist surveillance can include spying on school security drills, people staring at employees or vehicles in parking areas, and surveillance by pedestrians.
Fears of an attack on American schools also were raised by the recent discovery in Iraq of a computer disk containing data showing the layout of six schools in the United States, including districts in California, Florida, Georgia, Michigan, New Jersey and Oregon.
Officials believed the disk may have been part of a terrorist plot. However, FBI officials said on Friday that there did not appear to be a terrorist threat connected to the computer disk.
The Iraqi who had the disk, a member of Saddam Hussein's Ba'ath Party, apparently was collecting information from the Internet sites of American schools that would be useful for emergency planning for Iraqi schools, U.S. officials said.
U.S. security officials have been concerned in recent months that al Qaeda or other terrorists are planning to enter the United States from Mexico.
Intelligence officials said a suspected al Qaeda leader who has been in the United States was spotted recently in Mexico. Officials believe Adnan Shukrijumah, whom the FBI wants for questioning, met with alien smugglers in Mexico and Honduras and was seeking ways to bring al Qaeda members into the United States. Shukrijumah was seen in August in the Sonora province of northern Mexico, officials said.
Since October 2003, authorities have arrested five Arabs attempting to cross illegally into the United States from Mexico.
In July, officials dismissed as untrue an Internet report that said a group of Middle Eastern men were recently caught trying to cross the border from Mexico.
The report apparently was based on a group of Oaxacan tribesmen who were stopped as they tried to cross the border in Arizona. The tribesmen spoke an Indian language native to southern Mexico that may have been mistaken for Arabic, officials said at the time.
 
If the government were serious about ending illegal entry and its threat to national security, it would fund adequate detention space.

If the government were serious about ending illegal entry and its threat to national security, it would issue Letters of Marque and Reprisal to border watch groups.
 
I wish there was a clear distinction made between keeping terrorists out and keeping Mexicans out. Anti-terrorism is the fashionable, politically correct motive, but I guarantee you the goal is to curtail the flow of illegal Mexican immigrants. Touting border control as anti-terrorism is just as disingenuous as referring to the war in Iraq as the WOT.
 
Radical Islam and unassimilated Mexicanism are both clear and present dangers to America's historical core values. This nation needs to get clear about where it came from and what has held it together. That is getting increasingly difficult given the stranglehold on cultural inculcation controlled by the American Left. The notion that everyone wants the same things and plays by the same rules is more than naive, it is deliberately disingenuous and serves the agenda of those who wish to re-make America in a socialist image.
 
I wish there was a clear distinction made between keeping terrorists out and keeping Mexicans out. Anti-terrorism is the fashionable, politically correct motive, but I guarantee you the goal is to curtail the flow of illegal Mexican immigrants. Touting border control as anti-terrorism is just as disingenuous as referring to the war in Iraq as the WOT.

It took about three seconds after the first plane hit the WTC before the anti-gunners propped their soap boxes on the dead bodies to yammer on about how more gun laws were needed to fight terrorism.
When they were done yammering, the virulent xenophobes took their spot and began their own tirade.

I agree - touting border control as anti-terrorism is disingenuous as it is mostly a recent (post 9-11) slant on the issue.
Besides all that, last I checked, the biggest unprotected border of the U.S. was NOT on the southern fringe of our country. If anyone is truly worried about terrorists casually strolling into the U.S., their eyes should not be focused solely on Mexico.
 
If the government were serious about ending illegal entry and its threat to national security, it would issue Letters of Marque and Reprisal to border watch groups.

If the government were serious about ending illegal entry and its threat to national security, it would concentrate on eliminating the demand side of the equation that exists right here in the U.S.

The battle over the border has so far only been fought with the aim being on keeping so-called "illegal aliens" locked out but totally disregarding the businesses that seek them with open arms with exploitive and greedy intents.
The issue is akin to the drug war - stifling the supply does NOT simply eliminate the demand. There is a bigger picture that many intentionally choose not to face.
 
Hit the nail on the head

It took about three seconds after the first plane hit the WTC before the anti-gunners propped their soap boxes on the dead bodies to yammer on about how more gun laws were needed to fight terrorism.
When they were done yammering, the virulent xenophobes took their spot and began their own tirade.

I agree - touting border control as anti-terrorism is disingenuous as it is mostly a recent (post 9-11) slant on the issue.

I dont like illegals because they threaten my standard of living. They work for less i am willing to and when there are enough of them in the work place your benefits dissappear. So please if you cant honestly come up with a non racial or xenophobic reason, you should refrain from responding to this thread.
 
For political reasons the government choses not to actively control the borders.

This has allowed terrorists into the United States.

It's not a matter of if, but when.
 
why_me:

I dont like illegals because they threaten my standard of living. They work for less i am willing to and when there are enough of them in the work place your benefits dissappear. So please if you cant honestly come up with a non racial or xenophobic reason, you should refrain from responding to this thread.


What people like you fail to understand is that the flood of Mexican illegals entering the country is no excuse to parade your typical Liberal's disdain for Mexicans and other brown people who don't "look like" or "act like" you. You're going to have to do better than spout Michael Moore's socialist line as an excuse to parade these attitudes. There are legitimate economic & security reasons to oppose the flood of illegal aliens entering the US every day. A fear of "outsiders" is not a legitimate reason.
 
Look its really easy

If the reason you dont like illegals is because of the possibility that there culture may take over the culture of today. Then you are a Bigot and racist.
Yes the only good reasons to not like illegal immigration are security and economic.
I dont like illegals because they work for less money and b3enefits and threaten my standard of living.
 
Like or dislike their is no way we could make our borders secure. We could reduce the flow, thats all. But the cost to just to reduce the flow (don't forget court costs) would strip too many other worthwhile programs. The way to compete/security is to increase your job skills so that NOBODY on either side of the border can take your job!
 
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