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July 28, 2004
Western
DisUnion: CEO Charlie Fote Betrays America
By
Joe Guzzardi
Few states have been hammered harder
by illegal immigration than Colorado. Over the last
decade,
Colorado's Hispanic population has more than
doubled. And that doubling made Colorado the third
fastest growing state in the nation—a 30% population
increase in the last ten years. Colorado's non-English
speaking residents have tripled since 1990.
So it isn't surprising that tensions
run high when it comes to dealing with illegal
immigration issues. In the last two years alone, Colorado
has figured in several high visibility and acrimonious
feuds about how to slow down the illegal alien runaway
train.
Most public among those arguments
were:
- In October 2002, the Congressman Tom
Tancredo vs. Jesus Apodaca and the
Denver Post
incident shook up all of Colorado. Tancredo learned
that the Mexican Consulate in Denver was spoon-feeding
sob stories to the Denver Post about how cruel it
was that the illegal alien Apodaca could not attend the
University of Colorado at the in-state rate. When the
Post published the story, Tancredo immediately
suggested that the more appropriate action would be for
the
Immigration and Naturalization Service, as it was
then known, to enforce the law and
deport the Apodaca family. For demanding that
America's laws be obeyed, Tancredo was
slandered from coast to coast.
- In November 2002, Ron Unz's
"English for the Children" initiative that
would have ended bilingual education in Colorado was
defeated after an ugly summer-long campaign headed by
Padres Unidos and the National Council of La Raza.
Although Unz's initiative had been successful in
California, Arizona and Massachusetts, false allegations
of racism (and unprecedented spending by an
eccentric liberal heiress) led to its defeat in
Colorado.
But all of the recent controversies
pale in comparison to an incident in Denver last week
that pitted
First Data Corporation, a New York Stock Exchange
giant with $8 billion in 2003 revenues, and its CEO,
Charles T. Fote, against local activists Bill Herron
of Defend Colorado Now and Fred Elbel, and Mike McGarry
of Colorado Alliance for Immigration Reform (www.cairco.org)
First Data, headquartered in Denver,
has been
hosting a series of seminars around the country
titled
"Immigration: What Reform Will Bring to Our Nation."
Needless to say, First Data defines
"reform" to mean open borders.
Fote's real concern however is not
humanitarian. His eye is firmly on
those astronomical profits generated by the $30
billion in
remittances sent home by illegal aliens via Western
Union wires.
Western Union is an affiliate of First Data.
Coincidentally, Fote announced the
creation of a
$10 million First Data Corp. "empowerment fund"
supposedly to help alien communities.
[VDARE.COM note:
First Data also predictably
opposes Tom Tancredo's plan to
tax remittances.]
But don't be fooled. Fote wants more
illegal aliens entering the US to ensure that his pockets
will be lined well into the future. (Fote's total cash
compensation in 2003 according to Forbes is
$4.8 million.)
When Herron, Elbel, et al asked if
they could participate in the panel discussion
"moderated" by former Congressman Esteban Torres,
they were firmly rejected.
Only immigration extremists like
University of California at Los Angeles Professor
Raul Hinojosa were allowed.
For a
detailed analysis of the ugly events that
transpired—including an assault by a Hispanic activist on
a bystander and the suggestion from the crowd that
McGarry "Go back to
Ireland"—I urge you to read
Elbel's account in its entirety. (And send your
comments regarding the First Data agenda to Danielle
Pereia, Director of Communication [email]
or David Banks, Investor Relations. [email])
Clearly, Colorado is at the
crossroads. If the state remains as polarized as it is,
Colorado will end up as the Rocky Mountain's version of
California.
According to Defend Colorado Now's
Herron, himself a
California escapee, the organization will go ahead
with its once-delayed ballot initiative to restrict
non-federally mandated services to legal residents.
"The language was approved by the
Colorado State Supreme Court and we will be ready to go
no later than 2006—possibly sooner," said
Herron.
As we learned last week when we
reported on Kansas, immigration reformers cannot
count on elected officials to do their jobs.
They must take matters into their
own hands.
Joe Guzzardi [email
him], an instructor in English at the Lodi
Adult School, has been writing a weekly newspaper column
since 1988. This column is exclusive to VDARE.COM. |