July 08, 2006
Saturday’s Letters: A South
Carolina Nurse Reports From The Front On The Illegal
Alien Invasion; etc.
From:
Name Withheld
I am a Certified Registered
Nurse Anesthetist writing to give a first hand
account of the invasion the United States is under.
At present, in my
South Carolina hospital one-third of our births are
to illegal aliens. When
social security numbers were required, few of our
expectant mothers had them
Now social security numbers have been removed from
patient’s identification labels probably because of
illegals heavy involvement in identity theft.
Every year at least 350,000 illegal alien women in the
U.S. give birth. [VDARE.COM
note: we estimate
500,000]
This is the first order of business for them…to have
their “jackpot” or “anchor
baby” born in the U.S.
Almost all give birth at hospitals to document that
their children are
American citizens.
At $5000 per vaginal delivery and $10,000 for a Cesarean
Section (and 25 percent need C-sections), do the math.
You pay over $2 billion each year just for illegals to
have their
anchor babies. [VDARE.COM
note: The total would be in excess of $3.3 billion using
our figures.]
I am sick of the
14th Amendment being hijacked to give illegal alien
anchor babies citizenship. We must stop this perverted
interpretation of the law.
If the mother is an illegal alien who is not under our
jurisdiction, then so is her baby.
Once illegals have a child,
taxpayers support them for…lifetime!
It amazes me anyone would want to give citizenship and
the right to vote to a women (indigenous Indians from
Guatemala, for example) who in the twenty years of
her life may not have learned
one word of Spanish and in five years in America not
one word of English.
It is not unusual for such women, many of whom become my
patients, not to know how tall they are or how much they
weigh.
Yet the federal government is willing to give them and
their children
a say in our country’s destiny and our
children’s future.
I
am sick of the selective morality and application of the
law to justify illegal immigration.
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Saturday’s Letters: A New Jersey
Union Worker Is Tired Of The Illegal Alien Scam
From: Name Withheld
I work the night shift
in a
New Jersey Shop-Rite.
I am in
the
United Food and Commercial Workers union and my
store is supposed to be 100%
union.
But the
people on the graveyard that are
cleaning the floors, the butcher shop and the bakery
do not have green cards, social security numbers, visas
or even passports.
How do
I know this? They told me!
Multiply those illegal aliens by our 23 stores and
that's a lot of jobs that some
Americans on unemployment lines would love to have.
The
union turns a blind eye. The UFCW spends all its time
and our union dues chasing
Wal-Mart around trying to organize their workers.
Our benefits are cut
back every year and our raises no longer keep up with
the cost of living increase.
Anyone hired in the
past 15 months is now part of the working poor of
Shop-Rite with no access to any health care . The
illegal alien takes home more money than a clerk working
five or six days a week. The illegal alien can also walk
into a hospital, give them any alias, and get treated. I
have to pay 100 percent out of my pocket. The state
taxes taken out of my paycheck will be used to reimburse
that hospital for treating that illegal alien. So not
only do we pay the salaries of the apathetic union
reps., but in the end we will also be footing the bill
for the illegal alien to get free medical care. The
decline of the middle class......the rich get richer and
the poor get poorer.
[Contact
UFCW President Joe Hansen
here;
telephone contact is 973-777-3700.]
People that just can’t
see the big picture concerning illegal workers surround
me. Others, including union representatives and shop
stewards, just don't care.
Many of
my co-workers and I are
tired of this. I'm a
veteran that served 10 years to protect the rights
of Americans and not illegal aliens.
“Name Withheld”
served in the
Navy Seabees
from 1986-2000
spending five years on active duty, five additional
years being recalled to active duty and four years in
the active reserve.
His tours
included building refugee camps in Guantanamo Bay during
the mass exodus of boat people from Haiti and Cuba in
1994-95 and had tours of duty in Sicily,
Somalia, Bermuda and
Puerto Rico.
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Saturday’s Letters: A Virginia
Reader Says “Amen” To VDARE.COM’s Take on Ruben
Navarrette
From:
Mike Cohen [e-mail
him]
Re: Joe Guzzardi’s
Column:
The Truth About Language Lies
I read Guzzardi’s piece concerning Navarrette and all I
can say is "Amen."
I found Guzzardi’s article while looking for a way to
e-mail Navarrette regarding his degrading comments about
the immigration hearings. [VDARE.COM
note: Navarrette, e-mail him
here, has recently
started to write an occasional column for
CNN. The Navarrette
piece to which Cohen refers is titled “Immigration
Hearings ‘Cynical and Cowardly’” and can be read
here.]
Given his
ethnicity, it wasn't rocket science to see what side
Navarrette would come down on.
Predictably, Navarrette tells a lot of half-truths about
the immigration hearings as well - too numerous to
mention, of course.
And I couldn't agree with Guzzardi more about the
sorry state of the English language in this
country.
Not only are non-English speakers an issue, but also
those who are reared in English speaking homes don't do
too well either.
In addition to my full time job as a contract
administrator with a major defense contractor, I'm an
adjunct professor in math and engineering at Tidewater
Community College and Old Dominion University. The way
some people write, I have no idea how they make it
through life.
Keep up your great work at VDARE.COM
Cohen is a
Naval Academy graduate and Vietnam era veteran who spent
his active duty years in nuclear submarines.
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Saturday’s Letters: A Texas
Reader Reminds Us That Nurses Who Can’t Read English Are
A Problem, Too
From:
Jennifer Small
As long as we're complaining about poor-English-speaking
nurses, let me tell you about some poor-English-reading
ones?
In 2001, I experienced a number of communication
difficulties during a five-day stay at an upscale Austin
hospital. After jaw surgery, I couldn't speak at all. A
large sign on my door alerted the
nurses to my condition.
For what I assume are seniority reasons, I had
American nurses during the day and Asian nurses at
night.
Several times at night, I would push the call button
and, in broken
English, the Asian nurses asked what I needed. They
repeatedly ignored the sign and continued to press me
for an answer to their question.
Though my writing was a shaky, it was in legible
English. Still I ended up pointing and playing Charades
with my
Asian nurses. This was disturbing enough to me that
my family began taking turns sleeping in my hospital
room.
But the most depressing thing of all was that I had to
pantomime to the
Caribbean woman who brought the meals so she
would stop bringing me solid foods.
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