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Nebraska town: Is illegal immigration crackdown worth the cost?

Daniel B. Wood
The Christian Science Monitor

The city council of Fremont, Nebraska (pop. 25,000), is expected to decide Tuesday whether to delay enforcement of a new illegal immigration law because of legal challenges by civil rights groups. The ordinance, which would prohibit businesses from hiring and landlords from renting to illegal immigrants, was approved by voters June 21 and is scheduled to go into effect on Thursday.

Immigration experts say the case could be a useful barometer of public sentiment and could provide indications of the mood of courts in the wake of scores of such laws being introduced in several states after Arizona’s tough immigration law passed in April. That law, pending a federal injunction, is also due to take effect Thursday. Continue reading Nebraska town: Is illegal immigration crackdown worth the cost?

TUSD won’t enforce laws governing immigration

I guess it is time the state of Az cut the TUSD  money. It is also time the people of Tucson elected new school board members

Alexis Huicochea
Arizona Daily Star

The TUSD Governing Board approved a policy Tuesday that maintains the district’s stance of not enforcing immigration laws in the district’s schools.

The 5-0 board vote is in response [...]

Goldman reveals where bailout cash went

Karen Mracek and Thomas Beaumont, Des Moines Register

USA Today

Goldman Sachs sent $4.3 billion in federal tax money to 32 entities, including many overseas banks, hedge funds and pensions, according to information made public Friday night.

Goldman Sachs disclosed the list of companies to the Senate Finance Committee after a threat of subpoena from Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Ia.

Asked the significance of the list, Grassley said, “I hope it’s as simple as taxpayers deserve to know what happened to their money.”

He added, “We thought originally we were bailing out AIG. Then later on … we learned that the money flowed through AIG to a few big banks, and now we know that the money went from these few big banks to dozens of financial institutions all around the world.”

Grassley said he was reserving judgment on the appropriateness of U.S. taxpayer money ending up overseas until he learns more about the 32 entities. Continue reading Goldman reveals where bailout cash went

US Treasury Running on Fumes

Paul Craig Roberts

VDARE

The White House is screaming like a stuck pig. WikiLeaks’ release of the Afghan War Documents “puts the lives of our soldiers and our coalition partners at risk.”

What nonsense. Obama’s war puts the lives of American soldiers at risk, and the craven puppet state behavior of “our partners” in serving as US mercenaries is what puts their troops at risk.

Keep in mind that it was someone in the US military that leaked the documents to WikiLeaks.  This means that there is a spark of rebellion within the Empire itself.

And rightly so.  The leaked documents show that the US has committed numerous war crimes and that the US government and military have lied through their teeth in order to cover up the failure of their policies. These are the revelations that Washington wants to keep secret.

If Obama cared about the lives of our soldiers, he would not have sent them to a war, the purpose of which he cannot identify.  Earlier in his regime, Obama admitted that he did not know what the mission was in Afghanistan. He vowed to find out what the mission was and to tell us, but he never did.  After being read the riot act by the military/security complex, which recycles war profits into political campaign contributions, Obama simply declared the war to be “necessary.” No one has ever explained why the war is necessary.

The government cannot explain why the war is necessary, because it is not necessary to the American people. Any necessary reason for the war has to do with the enrichment of narrow private interests and with undeclared agendas.  If the agendas were declared and the private interests being served identified, even the American sheeple might revolt.

The Obama regime has made war the business of America.  Escalation in Afghanistan has gone hand in hand with drone attacks on Pakistan and the use of proxy forces to conduct wars in Pakistan and North Africa. Currently, the US is conducting provocative

naval exercises off the coasts of China and North Korea and instigating war between Columbia and Venezuela in South America. Former CIA director Michael Hayden declared on July 25 that an attack on Iran seems unavoidable. Continue reading US Treasury Running on Fumes

Despite billions to banks, small businesses struggle for loans

Tony Pugh

McClatchy Newspapers

WASHINGTON — Carl Calhoun makes mattresses for a living, but lately he’s been enduring more than his share of sleepless nights.

As the president and CEO of the Body Rest Mattress Co. in St. Petersburg, Fla., Calhoun and his wife, Emma, are struggling to keep their 28-year-old company from becoming another casualty of the Great Recession.

They’ve laid off half their employees. They’ve cut the hours and benefits of those who remained. They’ve even tapped their home equity to pump more money into the business.

Yet without a six-digit bank loan to see them through, the Calhouns and their 31 employees face a very uncertain future.

“We know what we’re doing,” Calhoun said. “We just ran out of capital. It’s only through the grace of God that we’re here right now. And I’m not the only one.” Continue reading Despite billions to banks, small businesses struggle for loans

An immigration push Reid regrets

Jon Ralston

The Las Vegas Sun

The senator was clearly incensed about illegal immigration when he took to the floor, bemoaning “a decade of wretched excess and, true to form, immigration was taken to excess as well.”

The solution: “Paring back immigration to more manageable levels would necessitate some long-overdue changes in the way immigrants are selected,” the senator argued as he introduced a bill to deny citizenship to children of illegal immigrants and drastically reduce legal immigration. “The ever-growing pressure to expand immigration levels is a byproduct of a system that grants immigration preferences to extended family members.”

So which Republican made these comments, which would outrage many Democrats, on the Senate floor? No Republican at all. In fact, those comments were made by a Democrat by the name of Harry Reid.

I now pause for jaws to drop on both sides of the political spectrum. Continue reading An immigration push Reid regrets

Taxpayer funded CASA de Maryland ventures into politics

Brian Hughes
The Washington Examiner

CASA de Maryland, the immigration advocacy group that collects millions of dollars in taxpayer money, has started a political organization to back pro-Hispanic candidates that critics contend blurs the line between nonprofit work and political activism.

Dubbed CASA in Action, the group sent out surveys to politicians in Montgomery and Prince George’s counties and will endorse primary candidates who promote Hispanic causes.

Among the questions: Whether candidates support giving driver’s licenses to illegal immigrants, whether English should be the official state language, and whether office seekers would push for more funding for Hispanic nonprofits.

‘It allows immigrants and low-income people in Maryland to come together and express their political priorities,’ said spokeswoman Eliza Leighton.

But some say the group’s foray into politics should preclude it from receiving taxpayer money. Continue reading Taxpayer funded CASA de Maryland ventures into politics

$77K in initial billings by attorneys hired to defend new Arizona immigration law

LA Times

Paul Davenport
The Associated Press

Phoenix (AP) — The state is paying approximately $77,000 to private lawyers for just the first 12 days of work defending Arizona’s new immigration enforcement law, with that initial amount expected to be a small fraction of the total costs the state will ultimately face in the seven pending cases.

An invoice obtained [...]

Hispanic Dems want health care fix

Carrie Budoff Brown
The Politico

A group of Democratic lawmakers wants to use the immigration reform debate to fix one of the most hotly contested aspects of the health care law — provisions that bar immigrants from using new government programs to get coverage.

The move by the Congressional Hispanic Caucus would add a contentious new element to an already monumental task — passing a bill that puts 11 million illegal immigrants on a path to citizenship.

But the lawmakers say they’re merely following through on a pledge they made when the health care overhaul passed in March, and they expect the White House and Democratic leadership to do the same.

Some members of the caucus almost withheld their votes for health reform over what they saw as punitive, anti-immigrant measures in the bill, which bans illegal immigrants from using newly created exchanges to buy insurance, even with their own money, and maintains a five-year waiting period for legal residents to enroll in Medicaid.

They signed on only after receiving assurances that their concerns would be rectified as part of the immigration reform battle, according to lawmakers, advocates and Hill aides.

‘The expectation was that everybody knew it was unfair and that a new immigration bill would correct that,’ Rep. Raul Grijalva (D-Ariz.) told POLITICO. Continue reading Hispanic Dems want health care fix

Whitman stance on illegal immigrants riles GOP

Joe Garofoli,Carla Marinucci

SF Gate

Republican gubernatorial candidate Meg Whitman, who recently campaigned with GOP former Gov. Pete Wilson as being “tough as nails” on illegal immigration, could alienate her crucial conservative base, some party members say, by declaring she’s in lockstep on the issue with her rival: former Gov. Jerry Brown.

In an opinion piece published this week in a Spanish-language publication in Southern California, Whitman wrote that there is “very little” that she disagrees with Brown on concerning the hot-button issue of illegal immigration.

While both agree that undocumented immigrants should not be allowed to get amnesty or obtain driver’s licenses, Brown’s camp says they disagree on key issues, including whether to give illegal immigrants a path to legalization, which Brown supports.

Riling conservatives

Still, Whitman’s statement has riled some conservatives to the point that they’re threatening to sit out the election – an exodus that could hamper Whitman’s chances.

“The more Meg says ‘I’m just like Jerry Brown,’ the more demoralizing it is to Republican activists,” said Mike Spence, a GOP strategist and former president of the California Republican Assembly, a grassroots conservative group that former President Ronald Reagan called “the conscience of the Republican Party.”

“When Meg Whitman’s campaign says things like that,” Spence said, “it depresses the (party’s) base.”

The group’s current president, Celeste Greig, is asking the California Republican Party to approve a resolution supporting Arizona’s new immigration law at its August convention.

Greig is “disappointed” in Whitman’s current immigration position, saying she is “worried because I hear that from a lot, a lot, a lot of people: ‘Why should I waste my vote? That’s what we did with (Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger).’ ”

But in a year in which many Republican candidates nationwide are wooing Tea Party voters to expand their base, Whitman will need the votes of all the conservatives like Greig and Spence – plus some independents – to overcome the Democratic Party’s advantage of 2 million registered voters in California, analysts say.

Compounding Whitman’s dilemma is that her nuanced immigration position wedges her between Wilson, her hard-line campaign chairman, and her moderate running mate, Lt. Gov. Abel Maldonado.

While serving in the Assembly, Maldonado co-authored AB540, legislation to allow undocumented students to get in-state tuition, and has passionately campaigned for a path to legalization for the state’s 2 million undocumented residents. The law was signed by then-Gov. Gray Davis but overturned by a state appellate court, which said it could not supersede federal law.

In an interview Thursday, Maldonado told The Chronicle that he is sure he and Whitman are not that far apart on immigration issues.

Maldonado is particularly concerned about the tuition issue, and said he wants to have more conversations with Whitman about what he feels are a myriad of benefits in educating such immigrant students. “I think in her heart, she’s there,” he said.

If so, that would present a contradiction to Whitman’s statements in the GOP primary race and in her campaign literature, which boldly declared: “Meg will ban undocumented students from attending California’s higher education system.”

Distance from Wilson

Maldonado also appeared to be putting distance between the GOP ticket and Wilson, who supported 1994′s voter-approved Proposition 187, which would have denied public health services and public education to illegal immigrants. A federal judge later overturned the law.

“Pete Wilson is the past,” he said when asked about Whitman’s pre-primary appearances in commercials alongside Wilson. “He is not running for governor.”

Whitman’s immigration controversy stems from an opinion piece the former eBay CEO wrote this week for Eastern Group Publications, a Spanish-language newspaper chain in East Los Angeles.

After delineating her immigration position, Whitman wrote, “When we examine our positions on immigration, there is very little that Jerry Brown and I disagree on,” according to a translation of Whitman’s opinion piece. Continue reading Whitman stance on illegal immigrants riles GOP