Sierra update: immigration left out of SF
Chronicle reprint [Brenda
Walker]
- 11/07/04
What should a reader think about
a newspaper which publishes a
reprint of an article but omits a vital detail, one
revealing that a national environmental organization has
been fundamentally corrupted by money?
How ethical is it that the San
Francisco Chronicle left out the fact that the $100
million donation of
David Gelbaum to the Sierra Club came on the condition
that there be no mention of immigration as a negative
environmental influence? Los Angeles Times, Oct
27,
The Man Behind the Land"] As the original
article revealed...
But [Gelbaum]
said
Pope long had
known where he stood on the contentious issue. "I
did tell Carl Pope in 1994 or 1995 that if they ever
came out anti-immigration, they would never get a dollar
from me."
The Chronicle left out any mention of the
contentious Sierra Club elections where
immigration realists have sought to address the
issue. Board candidate and former Colorado Governor Dick
Lamm asked about the shadowy funds,
"Is
this foreign money? Is it money that comes with special
obligations? I would want to know I'm not running a
laundry or being a front group for an entity that
doesn't have the best interests of the United States at
heart."
But San Francisco Chronicle
readers do not learn these facts. How fortunate for the
Sierra Club, which has its national headquarters in that
city.
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Dreier’s days are numbered [Bryanna
Bevens] - 11/07/04
Steve Sailer wrote:
“David Dreier
survives KFI rabble-rousers John and Ken's
Political Human Sacrifice, but the California
Republican Congressman's 54-42 margin of victory is the
smallest of the 50 or so incumbents in hideously
gerrymandered California.”
This got me thinking.
In case I have been reticent with my opinions, I was
rather hoping (willing to sell my soul) that
Congressman Dreier would lose his re-election bid. Well,
not lose so much as have him pillaged like a ten
year old with a Twinkie on Sloppy Joe day at school.
Whatever the will of the people, of course.
This was a slim victory for Dreier as far as the number
of votes was concerned but what about the blaring
wake-up call that accompanied that vote?
Who could challenge a 12-term Republican Congressman and
Chairman of the House Committee on Rules, with a near
limitless war chest, and even make a dent?
The answer is not many, at least not many before this
year.
His opponent was Cynthia Matthews, an
openly gay, environmental activist who just happens
to be, and I am not afraid to say it, a liberal.
To borrow a Bushism, she prit near beat him.
Sailer made a great point when he informed us that
Dreier’s “margin
of victory is the smallest of the 50 or so incumbents.”
Let us also look at the last few election cycles:
2004
Cynthia M. Matthews Democratic
92,665 42.8%
David
Dreier Republican
116,218 53.7%
2002
Marjorie M. Mikels
Democrat 49,862 33.5%
David Dreier
Republican 94,907 63.8%
2000
Janice M. Nelson
Democrat 81,804 39.9%
David Dreier
Republican 116,557 56.9%
1998
Janice M. Nelson
Democrat 61,721 39 3%
David Dreier
Republican 90,607 57.7%
1996
David Levering Democrat
69,037 37.0 %
David Dreier Republican
113,389 60.7 %
One of the most powerful Republicans in one of the most
conservative seats in California faced a liberal
environmentalist, gay woman and she almost ran him over.
What he really encountered was a disenchanted,
conservative electorate willing to trade all other
conservative principles for immigration reform.
At this rate, the next candidate to challenge David
Dreier could be an angry Nazi youth with a rap sheet of
felonies that would make Jeffrey Dahmer say damn! Yet,
eager to end illegal immigration, he would be a
shoe-in.
This somehow makes me feel better. Slightly nervous, but
better.
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