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This is the story of a conservative white American who learned Spanish,
moved to Mexico, married a Mexican, and
became an
immigration activist.
Is it my story? It could be. But it is also the story of talk radio host
Benjamin Reed.
The difference between us is that my experience led me to believe that we
need to
protect our border and not
merge with Mexico. Ben Reed's experience resulted in
his becoming a rabid open borders proponent and a "Defensor de la Raza". Ben Reed [send
him email] now works openly to encourage
illegal immigration, subvert U.S. immigration law and
promote the Mexicanization of the U.S.A.
Ben Reed's odyssey was the subject of a puff piece in the
Los Angeles Times
penned by one Hector Tobar,
son of Guatemalan
immigrants, entitled
Walking a Mile in an Immigrant's Moccasins,
(November3, 2009). Let's examine what Tobar has to say
about Reed's story and read between the lines.
Benjamin Reed is from Idaho. As a Mormon (see my
Mitt Romney and the
Mormon Question) Reed did a two-year mission,
was sent to Argentina and thus learned Spanish.
According to Tobar, Reed was once a staunch conservative from Red State
America:
"I first met Ben Reed, a veteran
Idaho radio DJ, while reporting a story for the
Times nine years ago. Ben is not someone you easily
forget. He's a former Mormon missionary and fluent
Spanish speaker who used to be a conservative talk show
host. .. Reed once was a devout Reagan Republican…. When
I first met Ben Reed in 2000, he was railing against the
Clinton administration on an English-language radio
station in Rupert, Idaho. He grew up in Idaho with solid
Republican values. Catching a glimpse of
Ronald Reagan at the Idaho Falls airport in 1980 was
one of the highlights of his childhood."
So what happened to transform Reed from conservative
activist into a White Anglo-Saxon Raza Booster?
Basically, it was a result of mass immigration.
"[Reed's] corner of
southern Idaho
filled up with Spanish-speaking people. He fell in
love with his new neighbors. They were
emotional people who always seemed ready to hug him.
He became addicted to their music and their food. And he
fell hard for Deyanira [whom he eventually married]
too."
Now this is interesting. It seems that one of the results
of mass immigration is that, when
foreign enclaves are set up in the U.S., some
Americans wind up assimilating to the foreigners rather
than the other way around. Like Reed, who liked getting
hugged by
"emotional people".
Ben Reed was still a conservative talk show host when he
also became a Spanish-speaking talk show host on a
Spanish-speaking radio station. Reed's Spanish-speaking
persona was "El Chupacabras",
named after the legendary creature that supposedly kills
livestock in Latin America.
So for a time, Reed hosted talk shows in both English and
Spanish. According to Tobar,
"In Rupert
[Idaho], [Reed]
juggled his English and Spanish radio gigs for a while.
Then he got to know the immigrant working people of
southern Idaho. When he got sick, he said, only his
Spanish-speaking listeners showed up at his bedside. I
started to ask myself, 'Who am I?' Ben told me over the
phone last week. 'And the answer was I'd much rather be
El Chupacabras than be Ben Reed the conservative shock
jock—that wasn't me.' Ben changed, and so did his radio
style."
But it was more than his "style"
that changed. Reed became an open promoter of the
Mexican illegal alien agenda. As Tobar approvingly
reports,
"When immigration authorities
conducted local raids,
[Reed] confronted
them on the air. When a local high school
gym
teacher confiscated a student's Mexican flag on Cinco de
Mayo, he organized a protest. He told his listeners
to wear the colors of Mexico's flag to school. 'I nearly
lost my job over that,' he said."
Reed was against the raids that rounded up illegal aliens (his listeners)
and told
the media that
"I know there is
racial profiling going on out there. If they are going
after documents, why aren't they asking everyone? Why
are they only asking people with brown skin?"
Maybe because the illegals have
brown skin? Yes, it's the tired old profiling
argument.
But Reed was still living in Idaho. What drove him to move
to Mexico was what happened to his Mexican fiancée,
Deyanira.
Deyanira, it ought to be pointed out, is Mexican, but she
wasn't an
illegal alien field laborer of the type Ben Reed
makes such a show of defending. Oh no. Deyanira is a
Euro-Mexican, a white Mexican. Reed met her when she was
in Rexburg, Idaho, studying at a Mormon institution of
higher learning, Brigham Young University-Idaho.
Notice that when it came time
for courtin' and marryin' a
Mexican, Ben Reed,
"Defensor de la Raza", went for an
educated white Mexican woman. (So did I, but unlike
Chupacabras I never claimed to be a
defender of the
La Raza cause).
Anyhow, Ben and Deyanira got engaged and planned to marry
in a Mormon temple in Idaho. She went to Mexico and was
returning to Idaho for the wedding when things didn't go
according to plan. Tobar explains:
"The bride had to go through immigration in L.A. before catching her
connecting flight to Idaho. She thought her papers were
in order. So when the immigration agent asked her the
purpose of her visit to the United States, she responded
truthfully, 'I'm going to get married.' Before she knew
it, she had been deported and was on the next plane back
to Mexico. …At LAX, she was told that returning for her
wedding without having obtained a
'fiancée visa' constituted fraud. She was deported
and her tourist visa revoked."
According to Tobar:
"This pushed her fiancé, the already excitable Benjamin
Reed, nearly over the edge. ´They treated her very
poorly,' Reed said of the agents at
LAX.
Among other things, he said, they took wedding
invitations they found in her purse and handled them as
if they were evidence of a criminal conspiracy. 'They
treated her like a dog.' … Before his wedding, he had
consulted with attorneys and immigration officials in
Idaho. 'I was doing everything according to the letter
of the law,' he told me. 'I was told that since she had
lived in the U.S. legally, and since she had a tourist
visa, we wouldn't have any problems fixing up her
papers.' "
Yeah, I know, life is rough and things don't always turn out like we plan.
That's been true in my life too.
However, there is such a thing as
marriage fraud. It´s just one of many problems in
our immigration system. And there is such a thing as a
fiancée visa, which they could have availed
themselves of. Or, as I did, they could have just gotten
married in Mexico to begin with. After all, that's where
the bride was from!
Of course, in the Tobar article, all these experiences
transformed Ben into the enlightened open borders
Razista he is today:
"All of this has led
[Reed] to put on
'the moccasins of the immigrant,' Ben told me. Now
nothing looks quite as simple as it used to. Love and
empathy will do that, which is why some people think
love and empathy are as dangerous to America as the
swine flu. 'I've been radicalized by this whole
experience,' Ben told me."
Tobar uses Reed's experience as an excuse to zing American
immigration policy:
"Don't feel bad, Ben—no one can make sense of our
immigration bureaucracy. It's a cruel machine of
contradictory rules and arbitrary decision-making that
routinely tears marriages and families apart."
But, as we've pointed out numerous times,
families could stay
"united"
by staying in their own countries. As for
international couples, they´ll just have to figure
out how to live in one country or another. That's what
my wife and I did.
But Tobar puts it so much more dramatically:
"Ben Reed learned
this the hard way. Eventually, he was forced …. to
choose between his fiancée and his country."
[How dramatic!]
"'I'll always love my chiquita,' he said. 'She is my
life. Living separate was never an option. We were going
to find a way to be together.'"
[How romantic!]
"Over the years, love has often changed the way Ben sees
things."
Excuse me, but it looks to me like Reed had already chosen the
interests of La Raza over his own country. It was
just that the Deyanira situation drove him to move:
"Ben tried for a year to get her papers sorted out. Then
he moved to Mexico. 'He gave up everything to be with
me,' Deyanira, 34, told me over the phone from
Queretaro, Mexico."
Gave up everything? He didn't give up his Chupacabras radio show (more on
that later). Nor does it sound like his life in Mexico
is that bad.
It's ironic that the same people who say Mexico is a great country say it's
terrible when people have to live there. Doesn't make
sense.
Anyway, Ben and Deyanira finally did get married, in December of 2008.
Here's
a photo of the happy couple.
They were wed in the picturesque town of San Miguel de Allende, which I have
written about
before, and which has a sizeable expatriate gringo
colony. It is a great place to live. Check out some
photos
here .
So what's so bad about Ben Reed's situation? Here's how Tobar
melodramatically described it:
"These days … Ben is an American living with a Mexican
spouse in immigration exile."
Exile? But in the very next sentence, Tobar says that
"[Reed]
says he's never been happier."
Once again, so what's the problem?
Besides, Reed's still got his radio show, broadcast Monday through Friday
from Mexico to
Rupert, Idaho (which, coincidentally, is where Lou
Dobbs grew up):
"His old Spanish-speaking friends still listen to him
every day in Idaho's Magic Valley, because he still
hosts his Rupert radio show via the Internet."
And, unlike many of the Mexicans the Chupacabras champions in Idaho, Reed is
legal in Mexico:
"He applied for, and quickly received, Mexico's
equivalent of a green card. 'Now, I'm an immigrant too,'
he told me over the phone. 'Frankly, it's an experience
more gabachos
should have,' he added, using Mexican slang for white
Americans. Ben has those immigrant moccasins firmly on
his feet now. Sometimes I wish I had a pair or two I
could lend out."
Well, I've spent a lot more time in Mexico than Reed has, and I came to
completely different conclusions. See my previous
articles Education of a Gringo
in Mexico,
How
Can I Live in Mexico and Write for VDARE.COM?
and
Reflections of an American Immigration Reform Patriot
Living in Mexico.
Reed's "Chupacabras" show airs
over Rupert's 970 AM
"La Fantastica"
station. You can visit the station's website
here. [Email them]
Notice the little Mexican flag up to the left
of the URL. (This is an American radio station,
remember).
Also, if you click the little ad in the middle for the Chupacabra show, it
calls Reed a
"Defensor de la Raza" and says he will
"defend your rights".
The show is broadcast from San Miguel de Allende, Mexico to Idaho, directed
to Mexican colonists including illegal aliens.
Spanish-language radio
stations are a
key part
of the Mexican
Reconquista of the U.S. The 2006-2007 illegal
alien marches were organized through Spanish-language
stations. These stations are important beachheads—after
all, most Americans can't even understand what they're
saying!
Benjamin "Chupacabras" Reed,
"Defensor de la
Raza", also has his own
Twitter site.
Just scroll down it and see the kinds of things he
posts. Here are a few examples:
January 15th – "American Law Enforcement Must Demand
the Removal of Sheriff Joe Arpaio from Duty".
January 15th – "DON'T FORGET ! TOMORROW SAT
JAN 16, bring human rights violator ARPAIO down!
January 9th – Nobody is illegal. An ill
eagle is a bird with stomach problems. REFORM NOW!
January 5th – "Que gachos! ICE expels
359,455 Mexicans during 2009."
January 5th – "U.S. has the world's
second-largest Hispanic population behind only Mexico…"
Dec. 17th – "GABACHOS DEJARAN DE SER LA
MAYORIA EN 2050!"
["Whites
will cease to be the majority of the U.S. in 2050".
Reed seems very excited about this.]
Dec. 16th – "Conservative Talk Radio Has
Fewer Fans Than Previously Thought". [Remember, Reed is a former conservative talk show host.]
Besides all the Raza-boosting and white-bashing, Reed
openly aids illegal aliens in the U.S. to avoid
detention.
A twitter posting from January 20th says:
"ALERTA: Mis radioescuchas confirman la presencia de la migra en la Highway 93 al sur de Twin Falls, ID. Parece que hay reten #immigration
The busy Sr. Reed also finds time to participate in
internet discussions. On the John Birch Society website,
he
popped up and defended the Spanish use of the term
América:
"An American is anyone who dwells on the North or South
American continents. You might be a U.S. Citizen, but
anyone who lives from Alaska to Tierra del Fuego is an
AMERICAN! As Simon Bolivar said, 'Our country is called
AMERICA!' Get it! Anything else is tired imperialism."
Thus Reed robotically repeats the standard Latin
American Spanish view of the terms
América and
americano. But this view is being used to strip us of our identity,
our sovereignty and our ability to control our own
borders. I guess that's why Chupacabras likes it.
In the English language, of course, the term "American"
has referred to residents of the United States since
even before independence—see my article
Is
it Wrong For Us To Call Ourselves Americans ? In
his
farewell address, George Washington said "The
name of American, which belongs to you, in your national
capacity, must always exalt the just pride of
Patriotism…"
Personally, I attach more weight to Washington than
Simon Bolivar.
Reed seems happy in Mexico and is somewhat of a
celebrity. Everything about him indicates that he
prefers La Raza interests to American interests.
So why doesn't he go the whole way—become a
Mexican citizen and renounce his American (excuse
me, his U.S.) citizenship?
Wouldn't that be the honorable thing to do?
In the meantime, why should we give a hoot what Benjamin
"Chupacabras"
Reed,
"Defensor de la
Raza", has to say about U.S. immigration policy?
American citizen Allan Wall (email
him) recently moved back to the