The Blacks and the Media are blaming it on not enough welfare for all the parasitic immigrants. This is not a class war , it is about third world immigrants starting a race war a looting war because the the Giant Welfare Tit of London is putting out the milk for the animalsJoin the British Nationals Party - Stop all immigration for ten years
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Tuesday, August 9, 2011
London Riots Black Immigrants Burn Loot Destroy London : Multiculturalism Race Wars
Monday, August 8, 2011
Borderland Beat: Zetas Moving to Nuevo Laredo
Borderland Beat: Zetas Moving to Nuevo Laredo: "Zetas Plan to Make Nuevo Laredo Their Base of Operations. Sources say that the Zetas are out of Reynosa tonight. They've moved about 150 ..."
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
Tuesday, July 26, 2011
Illegal Mexican shoots at Arizona Farmer
Mexican Shoots Arizona Farmer after tres
This mexican gangster was carrying two guns, two stolen social security cards and a fake visa .
espassing
This mexican gangster was carrying two guns, two stolen social security cards and a fake visa .
espassing
Traitor Wu strikes again David Wu Congressman & Rapist Resigns in Oregon
Traitor Wu strikes again David Wu Congressman & Rapist Resigns in OregonTraitor Wu strikes again!
His real crimes were against the people of Oregon, although they voted for him even when they heard he had raped a woman in college. . His stauch on Immigration is at the level of traitor and he should be deported.My opinion is that anyone who sponsors illegal aliens, or who is in a position of authority and does not do everything in their power to rid our country of them is guilty of harboring fugitives and should be brought to justice.
This was a notice from Oregonians For Immigration Reform (OFIR). This Wu guy needs to go ASAP. What a traitor to our country and the immigrants who try to follow the rules!!Congressman David Wu is a cosponsor of the DREAM Act. (H.R.1751).
The DREAM Act if passed would give in-state tuition to illegal aliens, a benefit that would not be extended to American citizens or to legal immigrants from out-of-state.
In addition to reduced tuition, the illegal alien students would be given amnesty and they would in turn be able to sponsor extended family members to come into our country.
At a time when American students are facing increasing tuition rates and fewer classroom slots the DREAM Act is pure insanity.
The cost of giving in-state tuition rates to illegal aliens would be about $13,000 per student per year. Who is going to pay for it? Will Wu go open his own wallet or does he expect American students to pay higher tuition in order to make up for the millions of dollars in lost tuition?
Please call Congressman Wu to let him know how you feel:
Portland office: (503) 326-2901 or (800) 422-4003
Washington DC office: (202) 225-0855
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The DREAM Act Illegal Alien Amnesty: A Bad Idea at the Worst Possible Time, Says FAIR
Despite overwhelming opposition by the American public when it was first proposed in 2000, the House and the Senate have reintroduced a sweeping illegal alien amnesty bill known as the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act.The legislation is a broad amnesty measure disguised as an educational initiative that would allow millions of illegal aliens who meet a very loose definition of “student” to qualify for green cards. In addition, it provides in-state tuition benefits for illegal aliens that will displace legal residents competing for a fixed number of college admission slots and taxpayer subsidies.
The DREAM Act represents yet another attempt to enact an amnesty for illegal aliens, either in one comprehensive bill, or piecemeal. The DREAM Act would also place severe strains on state budgets and harm middle class families who are struggling to get their own kids through college.
Passage of the DREAM Act would:
- Reward parents who violated immigration laws through their children, and provide a powerful incentive for more illegal immigration.
- Transfer seats and tuition subsidies to illegal aliens at a time when state higher education budgets are being slashed, admissions curtailed, and tuitions increased.
- By broadly defining “student” it gives amnesty to large numbers of illegal aliens who may be pursing any sort of education.
- Accelerate chain migration and exponential population growth because illegal aliens who are granted green cards will be able to petition the Department of Homeland Security in the future to grant their parents and relatives legal status too.
“The American people have made it very clear that they reject amnesty for illegal aliens whether it’s in one comprehensive bill, or piecemeal,” Stein said. to compete for their jobs, but allow them to compete for their own children’s educational opportunities. With private university tuitions already out of reach for most middle class families, and tuitions at public universities rising three times faster than median family incomes, the DREAM Act would be more than a reward for illegal aliens. It would crush the hopes and dreams of countless American families trying to go to college.
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Monday, July 25, 2011
In Oregon case, Eusiquio Illegal Mexican Migrant’s word is enough to get birth certificate for anchor baby son, court says
In Oregon case, Eusiquio Illegal Mexican Migrant’s word is enough to get birth certificate for anchor baby son, court says
Jim Ludwick, communications director for Oregonians for Immigration Reform, said obtaining an Oregon birth certificate should require more than someone’s word. His group advocates for ending illegal immigration and favors improved border security.
This is how Oregon got their “Legal Mexicans ” ( NOT) in Woodburn etc Forest Grove etc. Migrants came from Mexico on temporary work visas, had babie or brought them and refused to self deport.
In Oregon case, Eusiquio Illegal Mexican Migrant’s word is enough to get birth certificate for anchor baby son, court says
Deport Eusiquio
Published: Saturday, July 23, 2011, 10:17 PM By Noelle Crombie, Jim Ludwick, communications director for Oregonians for Immigration Reform, said obtaining an Oregon birth certificate should require more than someone’s word. His group advocates for ending illegal immigration and favors improved border security.
Nicolaza Eusiquio was living in a North Plains-area migrant camp in January 2005 when she gave birth to a boy — an event attended only by her cousin. Eusiquio received no prenatal care and sought no medical attention after her son’s birth. For months afterward, Eusiquio hardly left her cousin’s home.
She sought a birth certificate from the Oregon Center for Health Statistics more than a year later, offering only her word and that of her cousin as proof that the boy was born here.
The state registrar turned down Eusiquio’s request for a delayed birth certificate — certificates issued more than a year after birth — saying the mother needed documentation showing she was in Oregon at the time of her child’s birth. A Marion County Circuit Court agreed; Eusiquio’s son was not entitled to an Oregon birth certificate.
But earlier this year, in a highly unusual case, the Oregon Court of Appeals overturned the lower court’s decision, saying statements from Eusiquio and her cousin were proof enough. It sent the case back to the trial court and, in essence, ordered that Eusiquio’s son be issued an Oregon birth certificate.
On its face, the 10-page opinion is technical, dry and deals mostly with a detailed history of vital records rules in Oregon. But legal experts say the case underscores a birth certificate’s growing importance as a gateway to American society in a post-9/11 world. Americans increasingly need birth certificates to do everything from obtain a driver’s license to enroll in school.
And it comes at a time when some politicians have suggested that babies born in the United States to parents who are here illegally shouldn’t automatically be U.S. citizens.
Cunningham-Parmeter, who has expertise in immigration and employment law, pointed to two bills that failed in the Oregon Legislature last session that were aimed at undocumented immigrants. One would have allowed them to pay in-state tuition at public universities, and the other would have granted alternative Oregon driver’s licenses. Since 2008, Oregon has required people to prove they are U.S. citizens to get a driver’s license.
At the heart of both bills was a person’s ability to prove where he or she was born.
Jim Ludwick, communications director for Oregonians for Immigration Reform, said obtaining an Oregon birth certificate should require more than someone’s word.
“For someone to claim without any hospital certification or any medical records or anything like that that their child was born here is to me absolutely crazy,” said Ludwick, whose group advocates for ending illegal immigration and improved border security.
“We have a situation in our country where government officials, whether they are judges or legislators, have no sense of what it means to be a citizen,” he said. “They basically want to open the border to anybody who wants to come here, regardless of their intention, and this seems like another way of doing that.”
Mother says cousin was only witness to birth
According to the appellate ruling, Eusiquio told a Marion County judge that she gave birth to her son in a migrant camp near North Plains on Jan. 22, 2005. She told the judge that she lived at the camp from November 2004 through February 2005 with her cousin Rosaura Hernandez, and she later moved to Washington. She said she worried her son’s father would be arrested if authorities were told that he had fathered a child. Only Hernandez was present when the boy was born.
Hernandez corroborated Eusiquio’s account.
Eusiquio conceded she lacked any documentation that would verify she was in Oregon at the time of the boy’s birth, the ruling states.
The ruling does not cite Eusiquio’s immigration status. Brenda Bradley, a lawyer with Legal Aid of Oregon, argued the case before the appellate court. She declined to comment on the case and the ruling. Eusiquio, reached through her lawyer, also declined to comment.
Tony Green, a spokesman for the Oregon attorney general’s office, said in an emailed statement that the ruling is “very narrow” and limited to the facts in this case. He said the state does not plan to appeal.
.
For a delayed birth certificate for a child younger than 6, the state requires two notarized affidavits: one signed by a parent and the other by someone with knowledge of the birth. The state also requires proof of the mother’s residence at the time of the child’s birth and the mother’s identification.
People tend to ask for birth certificates when they realize they need them for other official documents, such as driver’s licenses.
Effects on poor, marginalized cited
Though the ruling doesn’t have far-reaching practical implications — the state issued just 47 delayed birth certificates out of more than 45,000 in 2010 — those it does affect tend to be poor and marginalized, said Juliet Stumpf, a Lewis & Clark Law School professor who teaches civil procedure and immigration law.
“I think the people it could affect are some of the most vulnerable populations of our society,” said Stumpf, citing migrant workers, people without access to regular medical care, teenage mothers and even women who give birth at home.
Added Cunningham-Parmeter: “Just imagine if this mother had been a privileged white woman doing a home birth and the only witnesses were her mother and midwife. The state issues those birth certificates all the time. But now we have a Latina working in a migrant camp and suddenly the state has questions.
“I think the appellate court sensed the double standard here and was right to correct it.”
“This is a gateway document,” she said. “It’s going to mean the kid can go to school. It means the kid can get vaccinated. … He exists.”
Related topics: birth certificate, immigrat
Sunday, July 24, 2011
Feds Bust H1-B Visa Scam- Foreign Criminals Lie to get US Jobs
Feds Bust H1-B Visa Scam:- Foreign Criminals Lie to Get US Jobs
Lots of Indian Workers hired Over Amerians at Intel etc
Lots of Indian Workers hired Over Amerians at Intel etc
Feds Bust Nationwide H-1B Visa Scam
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Federal agents arrest 11 people in seven states for allegedly submitting false statements and documents in support of their H-1B visa petitions. The Department of Justice has also issued a 10-count indictment against IT services company Vision Systems Group, of New Jersey, for conspiracy and mail fraud involving H-1B visas. The indictment seeks $7.4 million in forfeitures against Vision Systems while warning that other IT companies are under investigation.
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Federal authorities have busted an alleged nationwide H-1B scam ring, arresting 11 people in seven states and bringing a 10-count indictment against a New Jersey IT services company. The indictment charges Vision Systems Group with one count of conspiracy and eight counts of mail fraud and seeks $7.4 million in forfeitures.
The individual arrests were carried out Feb. 11 by federal, state and local law enforcement agencies in Iowa, California, Massachusetts, Texas, Pennsylvania, Kentucky and New Jersey.
According to Matthew G. Whitaker, U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Iowa, the federal investigation involves companies that sponsor primarily H-1B nonimmigrants. Vision Systems and five other companies under investigation have said their H-1B workers have been brought to the United States to fill existing IT vacancies. Whitaker claims the companies have not always had jobs available for these workers, placing them in nonpay status after they arrive in the United States.
In some cases, according to the charges, the H-1B workers have been placed in jobs and locations not previously certified by the Department of Labor, replacing qualified American workers and violating prevailing wage laws. The companies and foreign workers have allegedly submitted false statements and documents in support of their visa petitions.
Since the allegedly false statements and documents were mailed or wired to state and federal agencies in support of the H-1B applications, the companies are suspected of visa fraud, mail fraud, wire fraud, money laundering and conspiracy. In addition to Vision Systems, which maintains a branch office in Coon Rapids, Iowa, Whitaker said Worldwide Software Services and Sana Systems in Clinton, Iowa, are under investigation for document fraud.
"This is a prime example of how the Department of Homeland Security identifies fraud," USCIS (U.S. Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services) Acting Deputy Director Michael Aytes said in a statement. "Our adjudication officers can spot inconsistencies during the application process that ultimately lead to the successful outcome we're seeing today. Visa fraud undermines the integrity of the immigration system."
A favorite of American technology companies, the H-1B program is a temporary work visa program allowing American companies and universities to employ foreign guest workers who have the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree in a job category that is considered by the USCIS to be a "specialty occupation." The idea is to help companies hire foreign workers on a temporary basis when there is not a sufficient qualified American work force to meet those needs. H-1B visa winners can work in the United States for three years, with an option for an additional three years.
The Silicon Valley has repeatedly urged Congress to raise the H-1B cap, which is currently set at 65,000 visas per fiscal year, but lawmakers have resisted, citing concerns over fraud in the H-1B program.
In October 2008, a USCIS report found that the H-1B program has more than a 20 percent violation rate. The fraud identified in the report included jobs not located where employers claimed, H-1B visa holders not being paid the prevailing wage, forged documents, fraudulent degrees and "shell businesses."
Even before the report was issued, Senators Charles Grassley of Iowa, Dick Durbin of Illinois and Bernie Sanders of Vermont were seeking reform of the H-1B visa program. A bill introduced in the 110th Congress by Grassley and Durbin would require employers to make a good-faith effort to hire American workers first. Employers would also have to show that the H-1B worker would not displace an American worker.
The bill, likely to be reintroduced in the new Congress, would require employers to advertise job openings on a Department of Labor Web site before submitting an H-1B application. In addition, the bill would give the Department of Labor a mandate to conduct random audits of any company that uses the H-1B program and would require annual audits of companies with more than 100 employees that have 15 percent or more of those workers on H-1B visas.
"This is about protecting the American worker," Grassley said in a statement accompanying the bill. "We're closing loopholes that employers have exploited by requiring them to be more transparent about their hiring, and we're ensuring more oversight of these visa programs to reduce fraud and abuse. A little sunshine will go a long way to help the American worker
The individual arrests were carried out Feb. 11 by federal, state and local law enforcement agencies in Iowa, California, Massachusetts, Texas, Pennsylvania, Kentucky and New Jersey.
According to Matthew G. Whitaker, U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Iowa, the federal investigation involves companies that sponsor primarily H-1B nonimmigrants. Vision Systems and five other companies under investigation have said their H-1B workers have been brought to the United States to fill existing IT vacancies. Whitaker claims the companies have not always had jobs available for these workers, placing them in nonpay status after they arrive in the United States.
In some cases, according to the charges, the H-1B workers have been placed in jobs and locations not previously certified by the Department of Labor, replacing qualified American workers and violating prevailing wage laws. The companies and foreign workers have allegedly submitted false statements and documents in support of their visa petitions.
Since the allegedly false statements and documents were mailed or wired to state and federal agencies in support of the H-1B applications, the companies are suspected of visa fraud, mail fraud, wire fraud, money laundering and conspiracy. In addition to Vision Systems, which maintains a branch office in Coon Rapids, Iowa, Whitaker said Worldwide Software Services and Sana Systems in Clinton, Iowa, are under investigation for document fraud.
"This is a prime example of how the Department of Homeland Security identifies fraud," USCIS (U.S. Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services) Acting Deputy Director Michael Aytes said in a statement. "Our adjudication officers can spot inconsistencies during the application process that ultimately lead to the successful outcome we're seeing today. Visa fraud undermines the integrity of the immigration system."
A favorite of American technology companies, the H-1B program is a temporary work visa program allowing American companies and universities to employ foreign guest workers who have the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree in a job category that is considered by the USCIS to be a "specialty occupation." The idea is to help companies hire foreign workers on a temporary basis when there is not a sufficient qualified American work force to meet those needs. H-1B visa winners can work in the United States for three years, with an option for an additional three years.
The Silicon Valley has repeatedly urged Congress to raise the H-1B cap, which is currently set at 65,000 visas per fiscal year, but lawmakers have resisted, citing concerns over fraud in the H-1B program.
In October 2008, a USCIS report found that the H-1B program has more than a 20 percent violation rate. The fraud identified in the report included jobs not located where employers claimed, H-1B visa holders not being paid the prevailing wage, forged documents, fraudulent degrees and "shell businesses."
Even before the report was issued, Senators Charles Grassley of Iowa, Dick Durbin of Illinois and Bernie Sanders of Vermont were seeking reform of the H-1B visa program. A bill introduced in the 110th Congress by Grassley and Durbin would require employers to make a good-faith effort to hire American workers first. Employers would also have to show that the H-1B worker would not displace an American worker.
The bill, likely to be reintroduced in the new Congress, would require employers to advertise job openings on a Department of Labor Web site before submitting an H-1B application. In addition, the bill would give the Department of Labor a mandate to conduct random audits of any company that uses the H-1B program and would require annual audits of companies with more than 100 employees that have 15 percent or more of those workers on H-1B visas.
"This is about protecting the American worker," Grassley said in a statement accompanying the bill. "We're closing loopholes that employers have exploited by requiring them to be more transparent about their hiring, and we're ensuring more oversight of these visa programs to reduce fraud and abuse. A little sunshine will go a long way to help the American worker
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