I Still Think We Should Have A Blog…
By James
Fulford
Execution in Virginia
Mir Aimal Kansi, a native of
Pakistan, is being executed
tomorrow by the Commonwealth of Virginia for
murdering two CIA employees in
1993. The State Department has
warned that terrorists may use this as an excuse for
another attack.
In
Alien Nation,
Peter Brimelow
mentioned the case Mir Aimal Kansi in discussion of
the media treatment of immigration and crime. In
response, the Julian Simon, the late designated
immigration enthusiast economist,
wrote
“And
these are the sort of inflammatory events that he
suggests as our destiny:
1. ‘In January, 1993, a Pakistani [applicant for
political asylum] (and, simultaneously, for amnesty as
an illegal immigrant) opens fire on employees entering
CIA headquarters, killing two and wounding three.’
2. ‘In February, 1993, a gang of Middle Easterners...
blow up New York's World Trade Center, killing six and
injuring more than 1,000!!" (his exclamation points, of
course).’
Julian Simon made a
famous bet on commodity prices which
he won, but if he’d had a bet down on “inflammatory
events” he would have lost it on September 11th,
2001.
According to
CNS News,
In
retrospect, Kansi was a harbinger of the modern age
of terrorism. During his trial, he said he fired the
shots to protest U.S. policies that hurt Muslim nations
Our italics, of course.
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Golden
Rules: Do Unto America
Last year around this time,
Bernardo Méndez Lugo [send him
mail] of the Mexican Consulate in San Francisco,
issued some
golden rules for illegal immigrants. He told them
they’re better off obeying the law and behaving
themselves (if an American politician told Mexican
immigrants that they should refrain from littering,
beating their children, drinking while driving etc, all
hell would break loose, but that’s what Méndez Lugo
said) and better off legally not having
false documents, etc. What fascinated me was his
telling illegals that as soon as they get to the city
where they want to reside illegally, they should report
to the
Mexican Consulate.
“As
soon as you arrive in a city in the United States, you
should contact your nearest Consulate. The Consulate has
people designated specifically for the protection and
defense of the human and labor rights of its foreign
nationals. There are ten Consulate offices available for
Mexicans in California: Calexico, San Diego, Los
Angeles, Oxnard, Fresno, Santa Ana, San Bernardino, San
Jose, Sacramento and San Francisco.”
Golden Rules for Undocumented Immigrants in U.S.
elmensajero.com, Bernardo Méndez, December 28 2001
Which must mean that somewhere in
the Mexican Consulate is a list of all the illegals in
San Francisco. Doesn’t this raise the issue of
“harboring”? A Consul has a duty to see that citizens
of his are treated fairly once they’re arrested. But
he’s really not supposed to support and encourage them
in their criminal activities. Méndez Lugo may have
diplomatic immunity to the
laws about harboring illegals. But the State
Department can declare badly-behaved Consuls persona
non grata. If it finds that the Consulates are
acting as accessories to illegal immigration, it can
just close them.
All that would take would be an
order from the President, George W….Oh, never mind.
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Multiculturalism Lives in Infamy
In San Pedro, California, a showing
of the 1970 movie,
"Tora,
Tora, Tora" , a joint American-Japanese production
about the Japanese sneak attack on Pearl Harbor which
was scheduled for December 7th, has been
cancelled by Los Angeles City Councilwoman Janice
Hahn.
“I wanted to be very sensitive to the
Japanese-American community,” Hahn said. “Dec. 7 is a
tough day, especially for the second and third
generations of Japanese-Americans. Why do we want to do
something that makes it more difficult?”
The standard response to this is
that of
Eugene Volokh , quoted by
James Taranto.
[T]he
main reason that many people now regret the internment
of American citizens of Japanese extraction during World
War II -- there are other reasons, but this is the main
one -- is that the Japanese-American community was
extremely loyal to the U.S. They were on our side, not
the side of the Japanese, because they were us, not the
Japanese. The attack on America was an attack on
their country. Suggesting that recalling the events
of that day is somehow "insensitive to the
Japanese-American community" is an insult to that
very community.
That’s not necessarily so. Many
Japanese-Americans are
extremely patriotic, especially those who were
born in the US, or whose ancestors immigrated before
the war. But there was and is a segment of the community
that is less patriotic.
See Japanese American Voice’s
resolution to the effect that the
Memorial to Japanese-American Patriotism should
reflect the views of those who were unpatriotic, or PBS
documentary on
organized draft resistance by Japanese internees.
See anything at all by
Ronald Takaki.
More to the point, since the
conclusion of hostilities in 1945, there has been a good
deal of
Japanese immigration to the Los Angeles area. Many
second generation Japanese today may be related not
to veterans of the
442nd RCT, but to veterans of the
731 Bacteriological Warfare Unit, on the Axis side.
That’s why Councilwoman Hahn had to
be sensitive to Japanese feelings.
But is anyone ever going to be
sensitive to American feelings?
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November 13, 2002