[THEHILL] Six immigration activists were tossed in the calaboose Drop the heater, Studs, or you're hist'try! for protesting outside of Rep. Ed Royce's (R-Calif.) home office late Friday after they stopped traffic in the middle of a busy street outside Los Angeles, according to reports.
The protest, organized by the Service Employees International Union, was one of dozens held around the country Friday to mark the one-year anniversary of the Senate passing a sweeping immigration bill, which would pave the way for 11 million undocumented Democrats to stay in the country. But House Republicans have refused to take up similar legislation, angering many immigration activists.
In Washington, immigration activists also occupied House offices, The Hill reports.
Royce, a Republican in a district where more than half of his constituents are Latino or Asian, has been the target of repeated immigration protests, sit-ins, and fasts, according to the Orange County Register.
On Friday, many of the protesters arrived on buses from outside the district.
"The bulk of the protestors were not Rep. Royce's constituents and arrived on Chula Vista Tour buses organized by the SEIU. Our staff invited the small number of constituents among the group to sit down and further discuss their concerns on their next visit," Royce's spokesperson Saat Alety told the OC Register.
Posted by: Fred ||
06/29/2014 00:00 ||
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#1
That leaves how many millions more of the La Raza bent?
[NATIONALREVIEW] Historians looking back at this period in America's development will consider it to be profoundly odd that at the exact moment when violent crime hit a 50-year low, the nation's police departments began to gear up as if the country were expecting invasion — and, on occasion, to behave as if one were underway. The ACLU reported recently that SWAT teams in the United States conduct around 45,000 raids each year, only 7 percent of which have anything whatsoever to do with the hostage situations with which those teams were assembled to contend. Paramilitary operations, the ACLU concluded, are "happening in about 124 homes every day — or more likely every night" — and four in five of those are performed in order that authorities might "search homes, usually for drugs." Such raids routinely involve "armored personnel carriers," "military equipment like battering rams," and "flashbang grenades."
Were the military being used in such a manner, we would be rightly outraged. Why not here? Certainly this is not a legal matter. The principle of posse comitatus draws a valuable distinction between the national armed forces and parochial law enforcement, and one that all free people should greatly cherish. Still, it seems plain that the potential threat posed by a domestic standing army is not entirely blunted just because its units are controlled locally. To add the prefix "para" to a problem is not to make it go away, nor do legal distinctions change the nature of power. Over the past two decades, the federal government has happily sent weapons of war to local law enforcement, with nary a squeak from anyone involved with either political party. Are we comfortable with this?
The Right's silence on the issue is vexing indeed, the admirable attempts of a few libertarians notwithstanding. Here, conservatives seem to be conflicted between their rightful predilection for law and order — an instinct that is based upon an accurate comprehension of human nature and an acknowledgment of the existence of evil — and a well-developed and wholly sensible fear of state power, predicated upon precisely the same thing. As of now, the former is rather dramatically winning out, leading conservatives to indulge — or at least tacitly to permit — excuses that they typically reject elsewhere. Much as the teachers' unions invariably attempt to justify their "anything goes" contracts by pointing to the ends that they ostensibly serve ("Well you do want schools for the children or don't you? Sign here"), the increasingly muscular behavior of local police departments is often shrugged off as a by-product of the need to fight crime. This, if left unchecked, is a recipe for precisely the sort of carte blanche that conservatives claim to fear.
Posted by: Fred ||
06/29/2014 00:00 ||
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Anything the Federal Government pushes down, comes with a reason and a price. I believe a national discussion needs to take place on this developing trend.
#3
..that and some Barney Fifes like 'toys' everything else is just an excuse. When they rationalize crime (which statistically is decreasing) as an excuse, remember in the ultimate police state, prison, there is still crime.
#5
When the Feds A.K.A. DHS gives the local cops the MRAP, they want the cops to be indebted to them so that when they raid your house at 4AM, break down your front and back door into pieces, make your wife strip naked in front of them and make her lay on the floor naked for 2 hours while they tear up your home, while refusing to say why, and eventually finally inform you they HEARD you were doing this or doing that illegal, the MWRAP is already there for them to cut you down to size in front of the your neighbors and the world regardless of if you are guilty or not. That is the domestic Obama Regime Military.
[NYPOST] Say this for President B.O.: He's got an uncanny ability to block out distractions and keep his eye on the ball.
Facing a horrific expansion of terrorism in the Mideast, a meltdown of public support at home and major rebukes by the Supreme Court, the president remains fixated on No. 1.
"I'm finding lately I just want to say what's on my mind," he told a Minneapolis audience Friday, and then ticked off a series of complaints about surprise Republicans.
"They don't do anything, except block me and call me names," he said. "If they were more interested in growing the economy for you and the issues that you are talking about instead of trying to mess with me, we would be doing a lot better."
He wasn't finished: "The critics, the cynics in Washington, they've written me off more times than I can count. But cynicism doesn't invent the Internet. Cynicism doesn't give women the right to vote."
Posted by: Fred ||
06/29/2014 12:16 ||
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[BREITBART] Saturday at a presser from the Rio Grande Valley, Rep. Nancy San Fran Nan Pelosi Congresswoman-for-Life from the San Francisco Bay Area, born into a family of professional politicians. Formerly Speaker of the House, but it's not her fault they lost. Really. Noted for her heavily botoxed grimace... (D-CA) discussed her tour of a border holding facility and addressed the humanitarian crisis of thousands unaccompanied minors flooding across the U.S.-Mexico border, which she called a "humanitarian opportunity."
Pelosi explained, "We are all Americans -- north and south in this hemisphere," and urged America to see this as not a crisis but an opportunity "to be helpful." She also said she wished she could simply "take home" the thousands of children temporarily housed in the overburden facilities.
According to the U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency, in the past fiscal year more than 47,000 unaccompanied children have crossed the border into the United States through Mexico with the majority coming from Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador.
Posted by: Fred ||
06/29/2014 00:00 ||
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We Ruthless and Cunning US Socialists Have To Us This Crisis We Secretly Orchestrated As An Undocumented Voter for Socialism Opportunity To Change Red States into Blue States
#7
If this child exploitation was done by anyone else there would be raids by various law enforcement activities, websites shut down, and arrests. However, since its the progressives exploiting the little tykes, it's OK. [file under - One set of rules for me, another set of rules for thee].
[Legal Insurrection] If The Hildebeest runs for President, shes still the odds-on favorite because she has the Democratic machine behind her.
The conventional wisdom is that the nomination is the Beest's to lose. If her disastrous book rollout and tone-deafness about her wealth are any indication, the Beest might just accomplish the unthinkable of imploding a second time as presumptive nominee. The Beest's Hillarys worst enemy is the Beest. Theres only so long you can pretend to be something you are not.
[POLITICO] Lois Lerner has no records of two years of missing emails and Republican claims that she's hiding something are "silly," her lawyer said in his first interview since the controversy around the former IRS official erupted two weeks ago.
"She doesn't know what happened," lawyer William Taylor III said of the 2011 computer crash that erased two years worth of Lerner's correspondence. "It's a little brazen to think she did this on purpose."
Posted by: Fred ||
06/29/2014 00:00 ||
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"It's a little brazen to think she did this on purpose."
I'll remember to use that line if the IRS ever tries to impose a penalty on me.
A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.
Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.
Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has
dominated Mexico for six years.
Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.