A Victory In Georgia [D.A.
King] - 02/13/05
Until Thursday afternoon, the
Georgia Department of Labor office in the rural
south Georgia town of
Valdosta was to be the location of the Mexican
government’s most recent attempt to “document” as
many Mexican illegal aliens as could be processed for
the
infamous Matricula Consular ID on a winter
Saturday.
The Mexican consulate in Atlanta sent out an
announcement [Click
here for larger view]
to its citizens here in Georgia, inviting them to meet
the
Mexican Mobile Consulate at the state offices on
Saturday, February 12, 2005. Hundreds were expected to
line up before dawn.
I
personally made the Atlanta Journal Constitution
aware of the coming event, as I did CNN.
Don’t bother trying to find the story on either, as
apparently the intended
violation of federal law is not news—even when it
involves aiding and assisting illegal aliens in state
offices. (One AJC writer told me it was nothing
unusual and not news because “it happens every day”.)
Estuardo Rodas, a Georgia Department of Labor employee,
and Israel Cortez, a member of the Georgia Governor’s
“Commission for a New Georgia”, worked
diligently with two Valdosta “empowerment”
groups to arrange the event with the Mexican government
here.
But all it took to get the meeting cancelled was for
citizens to
speak up.
The Georgia governor’s office and Michael Thurmond, the
[elected] Commissioner of the Georgia Department of
Labor, now deny any knowledge or association with the
planned crime.
Yay us!
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More On Wall Street
Journal concession. [Peter
Brimelow] - 02/13/05
H. Abramyan has now put the
entire WSJ article exposing the wage impact of
immigration in Arkansas on the Berkeley blog
Res Ipsa Loquitur, after David Orland’s
noted my
comment there. H. also adds a tart remark on an
immigration-themed political science course he’s in—“my
instructor…has been attempting to downplay the negative
effects of immigration (legal and illegal)”—and
links to an Orland RIL posting last year, which is a
succinct a statement of the immigration reform
argument as I have seen. David has, of course, done some
fine work for VDARE.COM.
Thanks,
gentlemen
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