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December 31, 2003
Mann’s 2003 Wrap-Up: Juan Told You So . . .
By
Juan Mann
In January,
2003, I made some
predictions about the real grass-roots
immigration reform movement and some of its patriots.
The good
news was that they all came true—well, sort of.
The bad news
for 2003 was that few in
Congress or the
Bush Administration seem to care—yet. The already
pronounced gap between
public and “elite” opinion on immigration policy got
even worse in 2003.
This
situation is not stable and will not last. But it’s very
irritating while it does.
Here’s a
review of my predictions . . . and what really happened
in 2003
 | “The truth about illegal alien in-state
college tuition, illegal alien driver’s licenses,
illegal alien
“Matricula consular” identification cards, and
illegal alien two-nation bank accounts will become
increasingly unavoidable. All subvert the sovereignty of
the United States.” |
Yes, all three are
still unmitigated disasters. But only the lunacy of
illegal alien driver’s licenses shows any signs of
losing momentum. California voters—God bless ‘em!—still
frisky from the gubernatorial recall of Gray Davis made
sure to keep up the pressure to force the newly-elected
Governor “Terminator”
and the California legislature to repeal the insane
SB-60 illegal alien driver’s license bill.
 | “Americans, and perhaps even
Drug Czar Walters, will realize that the Bush
Administration’s plan to give Mexican trucks full access
to the roads of the United States will make it easier
for smugglers to bring illegal aliens and drugs to YOUR
door.” |
Most American patriots
already know that NAFTA and the “free flow” of
trade (with Mexican trucks on American roads) means two
things: 1) illegal drugs and illegal aliens go north,
and 2) American jobs, laundered money and remittances go
south. But few in government seem to mind.
 | “New York City and the entire state of
California (always the trend-setters, you know) will
be the first to implode from immigrant-exacerbated
budget crises.” |
As California implodes
with massive budget
deficits, the new “Son
of Prop. 187” campaign can’t come a moment too soon!
But while the Big Apple sleeps—grudgingly repealing
illegal alien sanctuary rules—California is way ahead of
the rest of the country with its train wreck of illegal
immigration and the welfare state. Stay tuned in 2004.
The first annual Kris
Eggle award was given in memory of all the fallen U.S.
Border Patrol agents in October, 2003. But save Colorado
Congressman
Tom Tancredo and a few courageous others, Congress
and the President still aren’t listening. Heroic
Border Patrol officers, out-manned and out-gunned,
still die from cat and mouse games with illegal aliens
and smugglers on our borders.
 | “The Bush-backed illegal alien amnesty for
Mexicans, much less illegal alien amnesty for all, is
doomed. The immigration enthusiasts’ fall-back
position: undeclared “stealth” amnesties. American
citizenship further cheapens. The Constitutional
distinction between citizens and persons—as well as
the intuitive distinction between legal and illegal—
will be all but abolished.” |
I guess no one should
ever underestimate the insanity of our government. As
of Christmas Eve—when the White House thought no one
would notice—the illegal alien amnesty (this time by
stealth) is
back on the table again.
There’s been a lot of
action with these three citizen groups on the border in
2003. The technological advances made by Glenn Spencer’s
ABP are being investigated for possible use by the U.S.
military in Iraq . . . maybe for the
Iraqi border? Chris Simcox and his Civil Homeland
Defense volunteers successfully intercepted and possibly
saved the lives of hundreds of illegal aliens crossing
into Arizona. Jack Foote’s Ranch Rescue group may have
gained a boost from being featured in Soldier of
Fortune Magazine, but it took a hit after volunteer
Casey Nethercott was brought up on aggravated assault
charges in South Texas.
The SOF articles in
2003 showed what a group of highly-trained American
citizens—in this case, Ranch Rescue volunteers who just
happened to be military and law enforcement
veterans—could do against marijuana smugglers on the
Mexican border. As always in the pages of SOF, the bad
guys didn’t stand a chance.
 | “Peter Brimelow and VDARE.COM will continue
to be in the forefront of truth-tellers on the
internet, running rings around censored mainstream
media.”[Peter Brimelow comments: (embarrassed cough!) |
We’ll let our beloved
readers be the judge . . .
Despite the efforts of
prosecutors, the
young illegal alien from Jamaica was given life in
prison—thanks to Santa Claus and a Virginia jury the
week before Christmas.
But the truth of the
matter remains that the carnage Malvo inflicted in and
around the Beltway was brought to you courtesy of
meddling
“immigrant rights” lawyers, the bureaucratic morass
of the Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR),
and the detention and removal staff at the now abolished
INS who
released the illegal Jamaican alien from detention
in the first place.
 | “Terry
Anderson, the tell-it-like-it-is host of the
internet’s most unique
radio show on the illegal alien invasion, will still
be mad and paying attention.” |
At
least I got one right!!
Americans are paying attention to Terry Anderson like
never before. Terry’s radio show spread like wildfire in
syndication across the country this past year. He even
testified before Congress in October.
Congratulations on a great 2003, Terry!
(Dreaming for 2003
started here....)
Unfortunately, the
well-dressed Secretario Ridge—another
political
appointee
serving in lieu of a law enforcement
officer—was too busy dithering about exactly how to phrase
his support for illegal alien amnesty than to appoint
anyone who might know what is going on with immigration
law enforcement.
 | “Following the lead of Policy Chief Mann,
Congress will abolish the EOIR—or at least revive the
mandatory detention of criminal aliens by revoking the
authority of the Attorney General’s
EOIR immigration judges to review immigration
bonds.” |
The bureaucrats of the
EOIR are still at large. The humble
DeportAliens.com remains a voice crying in the
wilderness.
Federal immigration
detention remains mandatory for all convicted criminals
(except spouse abusers—go figure!), just as Congress
said in 1996. But it took a
ruling in 2003 by the United States Supreme Court
to finally get the message across.
And since the DHS has a
finite amount of detention bed space, more illegal alien
arrivals are being released into the United States every
day—never to be seen again until they commit crimes too.
 |
“Rio Grande freezes over.” |
Actually, thanks to a report from a
VDARE.COM reader, I now know that it’s possible. In some
northwestern portions of the river—the temperature does
drop below freezing.
There’s hope yet!
Juan Mann [send him
email] is a lawyer and the proprietor of
DeportAliens.com. |