November 29, 2002
View From Lodi, CA: “An Increasingly Bold,
Daring And Demanding Illegal Alien Population”
By
Joe Guzzardi
The ugly incident last week
at Lodi’s Lawrence Elementary School provides a
telling insight into how things are in the wacky
world of U.S. immigration.
About 40 Mexican parents
demonstrated in front of the school, demanding (in
Spanish) more bilingual aides and a Spanish-speaking
school counselor.
The irate group followed up by
submitting a petition (in Spanish) to L.U.S.D.
Superintendent Bill Huyett claiming that the Lawrence
staff violates the children’s civil rights by telling
them to speak English.
The petition concluded with this
mind-numbing sentence:
“Finally,
we demand that this district board assure that the
administrators at Lawrence School consist of people who
respond positively with the needs of Hispanic children
and parents. We want an administration that respects our
culture and language.”
Let’s get real. To begin with, the
325 Hispanic students, about half the total enrollment,
get a
free education with plenty of
bilingual services. The Lawrence School principal,
teachers and support staff are second to none in terms
of their dedication to education.
To those parents who find the
school lacking, may I suggest a private school? Or
perhaps the school system in Mexico might be more to
your liking?
If you are in the country illegally
but partaking of
taxpayer funded programs, then gratitude—not
hostility—is the appropriate sentiment.
The truth is that many of these
parents should, under the laws of the U. S., be
deported.
Instead they are lobbying for more,
more and more.
The law is very clear: according to
the U.S. Code, Title 8, illegal aliens may be
“physically expelled” at any time. To use the code’s
actual wording, such persons are subject to immediate “removal.”
Some people find Title 8
excessively harsh. Among them are
President George W. Bush and his
minions. And because no one in municipal, state or
federal government is interested in enforcing our
existing laws, we have an increasingly bold, daring and
demanding illegal alien population.
Immigration to the U.S. is a much
graver problem today than it was prior to 9/11. If you
haven’t been paying attention to what is going on around
you, then I suggest you start immediately.
KSFO radio talk show host
Michael Savage coined a wonderful phrase to describe
what America’s rallying cry should be: Borders,
Language, Culture.
At the moment, we’re losing all
three battles. A new report by Doctor Steven Camarota of
the Center for Immigration Studies (www.cis.org),
“Immigration in 2002, A Snapshot,” and based on
statistics from the U.S. Census Population Survey, March
2002, revealed these alarming statistics about
California:
If the U.S. government’s goal is to
add to an already substantial underclass, then we should
continue on our current path—keep the borders open and
give illegal aliens every possible loophole to
stay in the U.S. once they reach American soil.
Speaking in
Mexico City to reporters from Reforma and
El Universal, the new U.S. Ambassador to Mexico,
Tony Garza, announced that a “top priority” of the Bush
administration is to grant “legalization” to Mexicans
illegally in the U.S.
At Garza’s nomination hearing,
Senator Christopher Dodd (D-Conn.) told the new
Ambassador that the U.S. must “do a better job” of
welcoming illegal aliens. What could Dodd have in mind:
serving them breakfast in bed?
[VDARE.COM note:
Registration is required
for this DallasNews link, but it may be worth it to see
Senator Dodd say “we have been a tremendous
beneficiary” of illegal immigration.
The Washington Times has
confirmed (November 23) that the Bush administration is
hot for amnesty. Bush persists with his outrageous
plans despite a recent Zogby poll that found 77 percent
of Americans surveyed believe the government is not
doing enough to control the border and 56 percent
thought efforts by Mr. Bush and Mr. Fox to consider
amnesty for illegal aliens was a "bad or very bad idea."
But when Bush is in your corner,
why shouldn’t
Mexico press forward? In Mexico’s eyes, Americans
are patsies.
Try to digest the audacity of
Mexican Foreign Minister Jorge Castaneda who said that
he had issued instructions to Mexican
consulate offices in the U.S (63
offices according to the Department of Justice, not
47 as commonly quoted) to mobilize
unions,
churches,
universities and
Latino communities to demand amnesty.
Said Castaneda,
“We are already giving instructions to our consulates
that they begin propagating militant activities.”
As revolting as I find Bush, in an
odd way I hope he keeps it up. Every time he mentions
amnesty—or regularization, earned legalization or
whatever the euphemism of the day is—Americans become
more firmly entrenched in their opposition. Naked
defiance of the people’s will is not conducive to
re-election.
We’ve just had the last election
wherein candidates will be able to dodge immigration.
The issue has become so prominent that come 2004, the
people will demand an open, candid discussion.
And the candidates better have
answers.
Joe Guzzardi [email
him], an instructor in English
at the Lodi Adult School, has been writing a weekly
column since 1988. It currently appears in the
Lodi News-Sentinel.