June 20, 2006
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06/19/06 - A Former Texas
Teacher Tells Why He Left The Classroom…And Explains Why
He Will Never Return
A Texas Reader Says The Senate Is Sucked In By
The MSM
From:
Christopher T. J. Sawyer [e-mail
him]
How
about for once the
MSM writes an article in favor of the enforcement of
our immigration laws?
And
at that the enforcement story it writes targets aliens
as criminals instead of
good guys?
But
every story on immigration has to make it seem like
the Gestapo just Blitzkrieg'd an alien enclave to bring
misery upon its world.
Media
coverage of immigration is certainly one of the main
reasons the Senate passed its outrageous legislation,
S.2611.
Check out the highlighted portions of this story by
Associated Press reporter Elliot Spagat. Note Spagat’s
subtle influences so that the he gets you to
sympathize with his point of view:
By ELLIOT SPAGAT,
Associated Press Writer
Sun Jun 18, 5:28 PM ET
SAN DIEGO - Fewer
parents are walking their children to school in this
border city's Linda Vista neighborhood. The crowd of day
laborers huddled
in a parking lot outside McDonald's has dropped by half.
A sense of
unease has
spread in this community of weather-worn homes since
immigration agents began walking the streets as part of
a stepped-up nationwide effort
targeting an
estimated 590,000 immigrant
fugitives. Other
illegal immigrants are being
rounded up along
the way.
Juana Osorio, an
illegal immigrant from the Mexican state of Oaxaca, said
her neighbors have largely stayed indoors since agents
visited her apartment complex June 2.
"People
rarely leave their
houses now to go shopping," Osorio, 37, said
as she clutched
a bottle of laundry detergent in a barren courtyard.
"They walk in fear."
Her husband, Juan
Rivera, 29, has
stopped
taking their two children to the park on
weekends. "We want to go out
but we can't,"
said Rivera, a construction worker.
In a
blitz that began
May 26 and ended Tuesday, federal agents arrested nearly
2,200 illegal immigrants, including about 400 in the San
Diego area more than any other city.
It was the
latest salvo in
a crackdown on illegal immigration that has included
arrests of nearly 1,200 workers at a supplier of wooden
cargo pallets and the
deployment of National Guard troops on the
Mexican border. Meantime, Congress is considering a
broad overhaul of immigration laws.
All this has
immigrants on edge,
even in places such as San Diego that are home to
thousands of illegals, many of whom have lived openly
for years.
U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement said about half the 2,179 people
arrested in the 19-day nationwide raids “dubbed
Operation Return to Sender” had criminal records,
including convictions for sexual assault of a minor,
assault with a deadly weapon and kidnapping.
While criminals were
targeted, agents also asked neighbors and curious
onlookers about their immigration status and, if they
were in the country illegally, they
got hauled away
for deportation, too.
"We can't just turn
our heads away from people we find along the way," said
Lauren Mack, an ICE spokeswoman in San Diego.
Agents staked out
homes to determine when best to come knocking,
interviewed apartment managers and checked credit
reports and loan applications.
Since last fall, the
agency has increased its fugitive task forces nationwide
from 18 to 38, and plans to expand to 52 teams by the
end of the year. The Bush administration has proposed a
total of 70 teams.
San Diego's Linda
Vista is a hardscrabble neighborhood of two-story homes
favored by Mexican, Filipino and Vietnamese immigrants.
As in other cities, the fugitive task force arrived in
unmarked vehicles and agents were
dressed like civilians.
Mack said agents wore something to identify them as law
enforcement, perhaps an agency insignia on a shirt
or a bulletproof vest
marked POLICE. [As if he were lying - beneath the
other clothes?]
Day laborer Fredy
Calleja said his uncle was arrested about two weeks ago
while watering plants outside his home. An agent asked
him about someone suspected of selling drugs in the
area. When the uncle said he didn't know the drug
dealer, the agent asked if he was in the country
illegally and arrested him when he said he was.
Calleja said his uncle
was deported but then sneaked across the border in
Tijuana, Mexico. He was back in San Diego a little more
than a week later.
Since the blitz began,
Serafina Morales has been looking for unmarked white or
black vehicles whenever she leaves the house.
"We're
all scared to go to school," she said. "Many of
us are letting our children walk alone."
Sawyer is a New Yorker by birth and
a Texan for the majority of his life. He is a Navy
veteran with a Mechanical Engineering degree from Boston
University and an MBA from the University of Texas
Austin. Sawyer has served overseas in the past and
expects to do so again at some point in the future.
Joe Guzzardi
comments: The
Associated Press is as bad if
not worse than any MSM outlet when it comes to reporting
fairly on immigration. On immigration reporting, AP
consistently violates its own journalism principles.
Read those principles
here.
For more biased Elliot Spagat
stories, read
here. And for
the Lone Wacko’s take on
Spagat’s unprofessional journalism, read
here.
Tracking down
individual AP reporters is hard but use this general
e-mail to send your comments.