JANET ALBRECHTSEN
You can be for the truth or with the terrorists
One sobering reminder of life under the former Iraqi dictator also failed to make the cut at most Australian newspapers. Late last week it was revealed that 113 Kurds – all but five of them women and children – were found in mass graves near the southern city of Samawah. There is a skeleton of a teenage girl clutching a bag of possessions. Many women were wearing their best clothes, like the shiny gold and purple dress found in one of the 18 trenches. Ten were babies. Since the fall of Saddam Hussein, more than 290 mass graves have been found, filled with at least 300,000 people believed to have been executed by the Baathist regime.
The Australian and The Daily Telegraph reported the story yesterday. But where was the rest of our press on this important story? Ignoring it, perhaps, because they are loath to remind us that the Iraqi people are free from such tyranny.
The media is a player in modern warfare. The more they inform us about hostages, the more hostages are taken. This is the deadly, inevitable, side to the information age. But if the media would more often lift their head above the ruck and look to the longer view as well as today's disaster, the distinction between journalism and history may not be quite so stark as it is now.
It is nice to see we have a friend somewhere!
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Friday, May 06, 2005
Notice the back handed insult, "unlikely Marine."
Hell's Kitchen - Pantano made it out of a tough neighborhood 9/11 reactivated his inner warrior
New York Metro ^ | April 25, 2005 | Steve Fishman
Posted on 04/20/2005 11:05:41 PM PDT by Former Military Chick
Pantano is, in most every way, an unlikely Marine. He was a Manhattan preppy—his mother is a literary agent—who graduated from Horace Mann and New York University. He’d charged into Goldman Sachs, rising quickly, and then into a film company, the Shooting Gallery. If he set his sights on conquest, it seemed to be in the business world, as many ambitious New Yorkers did. And yet, it turned out that what he truly dreamed of was to be a warrior—a real one....Now, a few weeks after arriving in Iraq, Pantano’s platoon had been dispatched to a dusty house along a dirt road near Mahmudiya, in the Sunni triangle. It was an ordinary house—one story, concrete. According to intelligence, it had been taken over by “Ali Baba,” as Pantano’s young Marines called the insurgents."
Just gotta love the political incorrectness of our Hereos!
Hell's Kitchen - Pantano made it out of a tough neighborhood 9/11 reactivated his inner warrior
New York Metro ^ | April 25, 2005 | Steve Fishman
Posted on 04/20/2005 11:05:41 PM PDT by Former Military Chick
Pantano is, in most every way, an unlikely Marine. He was a Manhattan preppy—his mother is a literary agent—who graduated from Horace Mann and New York University. He’d charged into Goldman Sachs, rising quickly, and then into a film company, the Shooting Gallery. If he set his sights on conquest, it seemed to be in the business world, as many ambitious New Yorkers did. And yet, it turned out that what he truly dreamed of was to be a warrior—a real one....Now, a few weeks after arriving in Iraq, Pantano’s platoon had been dispatched to a dusty house along a dirt road near Mahmudiya, in the Sunni triangle. It was an ordinary house—one story, concrete. According to intelligence, it had been taken over by “Ali Baba,” as Pantano’s young Marines called the insurgents."
Just gotta love the political incorrectness of our Hereos!
They Can Catch US, But We Can't Catch Them!
So the Mexican government can capture suspected criminals from the United States, but we can't or will not do the same with illegals from Mexico? Maybe we should pay off the Mexican police for every Mexican they stop from entering our country.
By Olga R. RodriguezASSOCIATED PRESS
10:55 a.m. May 3, 2005
MONTERREY, Mexico – Mexico detained two U.S. border patrol agents during a routine border check that uncovered a box filled with illegal ammunition in their car, the Mexican federal attorney general's office said Tuesday.
U.S. Border Patrol agents German Verdugo and David Allen Navarro were arrested late Friday in Mexicali, across from Calexico, California, U.S. Border Patrol spokesman Miguel Hernandez said._"He said the agents were off-duty and driving a private vehicle when they were arrested. Hernandez did not know why they were carrying the ammunition, the same assigned to other border patrol agents for use while on-duty.
"We're cooperating fully with Mexican law enforcement agents in their investigation," Hernandez said.
Verdugo and Allen Navarro crossed into Mexico in a lane assigned to vehicles with nothing to declare but were selected for inspection, Mexican federal prosecutors said in a statement.
Customs inspector found a box in the backseat of their car containing 1,286 .40-caliber and 10 .223-caliber Winchester rifle bullets, the statement said. Mexican law restricts that ammuniation to use by only the Mexican military.
The agents, both assigned to the U.S. Border Patrol in El Centro, California, are being held at a Mexicali prison and face weapon possesion charges.
The Mexican federal attorney general's office said the Border Patrol agents were unable to show that they could legally import the ammunition and didn't have a permit by Mexico's Defense Department.
By Olga R. RodriguezASSOCIATED PRESS
10:55 a.m. May 3, 2005
MONTERREY, Mexico – Mexico detained two U.S. border patrol agents during a routine border check that uncovered a box filled with illegal ammunition in their car, the Mexican federal attorney general's office said Tuesday.
U.S. Border Patrol agents German Verdugo and David Allen Navarro were arrested late Friday in Mexicali, across from Calexico, California, U.S. Border Patrol spokesman Miguel Hernandez said._"He said the agents were off-duty and driving a private vehicle when they were arrested. Hernandez did not know why they were carrying the ammunition, the same assigned to other border patrol agents for use while on-duty.
"We're cooperating fully with Mexican law enforcement agents in their investigation," Hernandez said.
Verdugo and Allen Navarro crossed into Mexico in a lane assigned to vehicles with nothing to declare but were selected for inspection, Mexican federal prosecutors said in a statement.
Customs inspector found a box in the backseat of their car containing 1,286 .40-caliber and 10 .223-caliber Winchester rifle bullets, the statement said. Mexican law restricts that ammuniation to use by only the Mexican military.
The agents, both assigned to the U.S. Border Patrol in El Centro, California, are being held at a Mexicali prison and face weapon possesion charges.
The Mexican federal attorney general's office said the Border Patrol agents were unable to show that they could legally import the ammunition and didn't have a permit by Mexico's Defense Department.
Lock it Down, Arnie!
California state-run Mexico border patrol proposed
the May 5, 2005 04:30 PM ET
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By Jim Christie
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Saying the U.S. government has failed to secure the border with Mexico, California activists who helped recall former Gov. Gray Davis said on Thursday they would promote a ballot measure calling for the state to fund its own border patrol.
They unveiled the measure, the California Border Police Act, as the Minutemen citizens' group that patrolled Arizona's border with Mexico in April prepares for a similar effort this summer south of San Diego along California's border with Mexico.
"California has been trying to pressure the feds for 20 years to do a better job and they haven't," said Dave Gilliard, the measure's political strategist.
The campaign took its first major step on Wednesday by filing a draft of its measure with California's attorney general with the aim of placing it on the June 2006 ballot.
That step came amid last-minute preparations for Cinco de Mayo festivities. Mexican-Americans each year on May 5 commemorate an 1862 battle in Puebla, Mexico in which Mexican soldiers defeated invading French forces.
Cinco de Mayo is not an official holiday in Mexico or California, but it has become both a popular occasion and celebration of Mexican culture.
The timing of the measure's unveiling a day ahead of Cinco de Mayo was "purely coincidental," Gilliard said, noting he wanted to seize on the attention to illegal immigration generated in recent weeks by the Minutemen.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger raised the profile of the issue of illegal immigration by recently endorsing the Minutemen, raising the ire of Latino elected officials already disappointed by his opposition to granting drivers' licenses for undocumented migrants.
His comments also revived hard feelings from the mid-1990s aroused by former Gov. Pete Wilson's tough stand on illegal immigration and support for a ballot measure aimed at deterring it. Voters backed the measure and he rode it to a second term.
Despite their widespread employment of undocumented workers -- as field hands, gardeners, laborers, domestics and in other jobs -- Californians have chafed at their state serving as a magnet for illegal immigration.
A state border patrol, which would be a first, would cut the costs to taxpayers from an estimated 3 million illegal immigrants in California, Gilliard said: "We estimate it would to save $5 billion to $7 billion (annually). California currently spends $9 billion to $10 billion for services, or for incarceration costs, on illegal immigrants."
The new state police agency, allowed by 1996 federal law, would employ more than 2,000 officers at a cost of $300 million to $400 million annually, Gilliard said. "Because they gave the states the authority to do this, there is no reason California shouldn't do it on its own," he said.
A spokesman for Schwarzenegger said the governor has not taken a stand on the measure. The American Civil Liberties Union, which had described his remarks on the Minutemen as irresponsible, said the measure would be socially divisive and complicate law enforcement along the California-Mexico border.
"Border security is a federal issue and immigration is a federal issue," said Ranjana Natarajan, a staff attorney for the ACLU of Southern California. "The last thing we need is more layers of bureaucracy ... Nothing shows this would improve the effectiveness of border policing."
I love the "Socially devisive" line. What is devisive is the fact that Mexico is allowing there undesirables to invade our country and drain our social services!
the May 5, 2005 04:30 PM ET
Printer Friendly Email Article Reprints RSS
By Jim Christie
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Saying the U.S. government has failed to secure the border with Mexico, California activists who helped recall former Gov. Gray Davis said on Thursday they would promote a ballot measure calling for the state to fund its own border patrol.
They unveiled the measure, the California Border Police Act, as the Minutemen citizens' group that patrolled Arizona's border with Mexico in April prepares for a similar effort this summer south of San Diego along California's border with Mexico.
"California has been trying to pressure the feds for 20 years to do a better job and they haven't," said Dave Gilliard, the measure's political strategist.
The campaign took its first major step on Wednesday by filing a draft of its measure with California's attorney general with the aim of placing it on the June 2006 ballot.
That step came amid last-minute preparations for Cinco de Mayo festivities. Mexican-Americans each year on May 5 commemorate an 1862 battle in Puebla, Mexico in which Mexican soldiers defeated invading French forces.
Cinco de Mayo is not an official holiday in Mexico or California, but it has become both a popular occasion and celebration of Mexican culture.
The timing of the measure's unveiling a day ahead of Cinco de Mayo was "purely coincidental," Gilliard said, noting he wanted to seize on the attention to illegal immigration generated in recent weeks by the Minutemen.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger raised the profile of the issue of illegal immigration by recently endorsing the Minutemen, raising the ire of Latino elected officials already disappointed by his opposition to granting drivers' licenses for undocumented migrants.
His comments also revived hard feelings from the mid-1990s aroused by former Gov. Pete Wilson's tough stand on illegal immigration and support for a ballot measure aimed at deterring it. Voters backed the measure and he rode it to a second term.
Despite their widespread employment of undocumented workers -- as field hands, gardeners, laborers, domestics and in other jobs -- Californians have chafed at their state serving as a magnet for illegal immigration.
A state border patrol, which would be a first, would cut the costs to taxpayers from an estimated 3 million illegal immigrants in California, Gilliard said: "We estimate it would to save $5 billion to $7 billion (annually). California currently spends $9 billion to $10 billion for services, or for incarceration costs, on illegal immigrants."
The new state police agency, allowed by 1996 federal law, would employ more than 2,000 officers at a cost of $300 million to $400 million annually, Gilliard said. "Because they gave the states the authority to do this, there is no reason California shouldn't do it on its own," he said.
A spokesman for Schwarzenegger said the governor has not taken a stand on the measure. The American Civil Liberties Union, which had described his remarks on the Minutemen as irresponsible, said the measure would be socially divisive and complicate law enforcement along the California-Mexico border.
"Border security is a federal issue and immigration is a federal issue," said Ranjana Natarajan, a staff attorney for the ACLU of Southern California. "The last thing we need is more layers of bureaucracy ... Nothing shows this would improve the effectiveness of border policing."
I love the "Socially devisive" line. What is devisive is the fact that Mexico is allowing there undesirables to invade our country and drain our social services!
Great Letter to the Editor of the Modesto Bee
I have to hand it to the staff of The Bee — you are courageous! At a time when many major newspapers are seeing a significant loss in subscribers for trying to spin the news, you people continue to soldier on! I see you are still spinning the news by printing anti-Christian letters (there were three on April 28). You are still trying to convince your readers that Christians are bad and being colonized by Mexico is good.
PAT BIRD
Manteca
This appeared on 5-6-05. Maybe people are starting see through the socialist smoke screen.
PAT BIRD
Manteca
This appeared on 5-6-05. Maybe people are starting see through the socialist smoke screen.
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