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D aramis19 |
Re: "A day without an Immirgrant" | ||
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I'm an idiot
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Skip Lone |
Re: "A day without an Immirgrant" | ||
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These fuckers need to quick blocking traffic I swear to god I'm going to run them over!
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Anubis Starkiller |
Re: "A day without an Immirgrant" | ||
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Go ahead. Noone will miss em.
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Vohn Exel |
Re: "A day without an Immirgrant" | ||
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Thats somewhat my point (what Ceel said.) Mexico has a strict policy regarding illegal imigrants, rallies, ect. However, the people who are want to protest these rallies often wave the Mexican flag....These people want to live in America, right? Then why wave the mexican flag and say how great Mexico is? If Mexico is so great,why did you leave?
I'm all for people that are already over here wanting to stay here. We've got a great country,and from what I've heard about the place, Mexico kinda sucks, if you live there. So I understand coming over here..but if you're over here, then live like you're over here, not back where you came from...I mean the reason to leave was to get to this country and live here...so live here. I have a friend in Britan who can't get over here because of all the legal documentation that he's gotta go through..and yet these illegal immigrants are able to stay...and they're the ones protesting? I mean, they are illegal, and they are breaking the law...that much they can't deny. However, if they want to stay here so bad, isn't forming protests and saying how great Mexico is actually a bad thing? I dunno, I'll be glad when all this is over, unless they give Texas back...then I'll be pissed ![]() |
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General Ceel |
Re: "A day without an Immirgrant" | ||
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Immigrants Try to Extend Boycott Momentum
LOS ANGELES - Illegal immigrants and their supporters vowed to keep up the pressure on Congress for reforms after more than 1 million people stepped out of the shadows and poured into the streets in a nationwide show of economic clout. From Los Angeles to Chicago, Houston to Miami, a "Day Without Immigrants" Monday meant a day boycotting work and school in favor of rallies and marches with waves of red, white and blue filling streets for miles. "We have far exceeded our expectations," said Mahonrry Hidalgo, chairman of the Immigration Committee of the Latino Leadership Alliance of New Jersey. "The events are intended to show solidarity and, at the same time, send a message that injustice against the immigrant community is unacceptable. This is not the end of our struggle. It is the beginning." The boycott was organized by immigrant activists angered by federal legislation that would criminalize an estimated 11 million illegal immigrants and fortify the U.S-Mexico border. While some businesses suffered, the marches were festive despite divisions among activists who argued a boycott would alienate federal lawmakers. In all, police departments and local officials in more than two dozen U.S. cities contacted by The Associated Press gave crowd estimates that totaled about 1.1 million marchers. Two major rallies in Los Angeles attracted an estimated 400,000, according to the mayor's office. Another 400,000 marched through Chicago's downtown business district, police estimated. The list was long: As many as 30,000 in Houston, 50,000 in San Jose, 30,000 more across Florida. From New Mexico to Tennessee to Massachusetts, smaller rallies attracted hundreds more. Marchers standing shoulder-to-shoulder sang and chanted and danced in the streets wearing American flags as capes and bandanas. In most cities, those who rallied wore white to signify peace and solidarity and waved signs reading "We are America" and "Today we march, tomorrow we vote." In Los Angeles, marchers held U.S. flags aloft and sang the national anthem in English as traditional Mexican dancers and Korean drummers wove through the crowd. In Philadelphia, about a thousand people from different marches converged in the historic area near the Liberty Bell. In Washington, D.C., rallies were scattered but the White House took note spokesman Scott McClellan said President Bush disapproved of the boycott. While most demonstrations were peaceful, a Santa Ana rally of 5,000 in California was marred by people hurling rocks and plastic bottles at officers. Police made several arrests, but it was unclear if they were protesters. Two people were arrested in Los Angeles on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon. Both men had been throwing rocks and bottles at police, Officer Jason Lee said. And a march in Seattle was disrupted when a car struck a group of marchers, though injuries were minor: The driver was arrested, five other people were arrested for possible weapons violations and one person was arrested for obstructing. Industries that rely on immigrant workers were clearly affected, though the impact was not uniform. There was low attendance at hotels in Indianapolis, construction sites in Miami and plant nurseries and landscapers across a wide area. Tyson Foods Inc., the world's largest meat producer, shuttered about a dozen of its more than 100 plants. Eight of 14 Perdue Farms chicken plants also closed for the day. The rallies shut down 29 branches of Chipotle Mexican Grill, a Denver-based fast-casual dining chain. Goya Foods, which bills itself as the nation's largest Hispanic-owned food chain, suspended delivery everywhere except Florida in what the company called a gesture of solidarity. In the Los Angeles area, many restaurants and markets were dark and truck traffic at the twin ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach the nation's busiest was off 90 percent, said spokeswoman Theresa Adams Lopez. The construction industry was hard hit in Florida. More than half the workers at construction sites in Miami-Dade County did not show up, according to Bill Spann, executive vice president of the Associated General Contractors of Greater Florida. "If I lose my job, it's worth it," said Jose Cruz, an immigrant from El Salvador who rather than working his construction job protested with several thousand others in the rural city of Homestead outside Miami. "It's worth losing several jobs to get my papers." About 35 to 40 anti-immigration demonstrators got into shouting matches with pro-immigration marchers as they were leaving a Denver park. Among them were Ron and Marge Mason of Thornton, a Denver suburb. "We're tired of seeing the illegals coming in," Ron Mason said. College Republicans at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte staged a rally of their own Monday, demanding tougher enforcement of existing immigration laws. The GOP group sold $5 bricks symbolic of a wall it said was needed to secure U.S. borders. The impact on some school systems was significant. In the sprawling Los Angeles Unified School District, which is 73 percent Hispanic, about 72,000 middle and high school students were absent roughly one in every four. In San Francisco, Benita Olmedo pulled her 11-year-old daughter and 7-year-old son from school. "I want my children to know their mother is not a criminal," said Olmedo, a nanny who came here illegally in 1986 from Mexico. "I want them to be as strong I am. This shows our strength. ![]() Wields: A Green Lightsaber Made By Darth Stone [The Gungan Council][The Jedi Council] |
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Rach Sullen |
Re: "A day without an Immirgrant" | ||
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Where I work in Chicago, nothing seemed any different yesterday. All of my ususal customers came in (of hispanic decent and can hardly speak any english) and bought their beer. I guess they couldn't boycott the liquor, lol.
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Unregistered(d) |
Re: "A day without an Immirgrant" | ||
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Yeah my Economics class thought it was quite humorous that absent Illegal Immigrants meant that a Chicken Factory lost production and in Kentucky of all places.
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General Ceel |
Re: "A day without an Immirgrant" | ||
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U.S. Prepares for Mexico Border Crossings
SASABE, Mexico - Wearing tight jeans and a glittery "bebe" T-shirt, the 17-year-old scrambled out of a packed van as the temperature edged toward 90 degrees in this barren stretch of the U.S.-Mexican border. Carrying no hat or sunscreen, the teenager who called herself Adriana Brenda said the longest hike she'd taken was through a shopping mall. But here she was, ready for a three-day trek across the desert. She carried two gallons of water enough, experts say, to keep her hydrated for two hours. As temperatures rise, the U.S. Border Patrol and aid groups are gearing up for what they fear could be one of the deadliest summers for migrants sneaking into the United States. The U.S. Senate is debating a bill that could lock the border tighter than ever, and activists fear the flow of migrants is moving to an even hotter and more remote section of desert than the current favorite, an area south of Tucson, Ariz., where hundreds of people have died since 1994. The desert around Tucson is crawling with 2,400 U.S. Border Patrol agents. Rifle-bearing civilians known as Minutemen are also keeping watch. In response, many migrants are crossing closer to Yuma, Ariz., where daytime temperatures can hover around 120 degrees 10-15 degrees hotter than around Tucson. Migrant deaths for the Yuma sector hit a record 51 in 2005, up from 36 in 2004 and 15 in 2003, according to the Border Patrol. Apprehensions have jumped 16 percent for the region with 89,336 people caught from October through April, said Richard Hays, a spokesman for the Border Patrol in Yuma. "We are already anticipating this shift in traffic and are working to ensure the safety of those who are determined to get into the United States in violation of the law," he said. Those plans include erecting seven more rescue beacons in the Yuma sector there are now 12 and adding agents, Hays said. Migrants have moved to more remote areas each time the U.S. has cracked down on a section of the 2,000-mile-long border, activists say. The desert east of Yuma is one of the least forgiving. From the border, a migrant can walk for 50 miles before reaching an interstate. In 2001, one of Arizona's worst migrant tragedies occurred in the area, when 14 people died in temperatures reaching 115 degrees. Adding to the danger is the Barry M. Goldwater Bombing Range, where the U.S. Air Force drops bombs to train for the war in Iraq. Last year, Border Patrol agents rescued five children, five women and four men from the bombing range after their smuggler abandoned them and they activated a rescue beacon. No one has been hit by a bomb, Hays said. Migrant groups estimate 500 people died trying to cross the border in 2005. The Border Patrol reported 415 deaths in the fiscal year ending Sept. 30. While that number includes people who drowned in the Rio Grande, died in car accidents and succumbed to cold, the desert's searing heat takes the heaviest toll. In southern Arizona, Border Patrol agents routinely run across people vomiting uncontrollably in the summer heat, their skin clammy, their eyes glazed over, said Aerr Eltringham, a Border Patrol spokesman in Tucson. Some migrants are found dead. On a recent afternoon, agents for the Mexican government's Grupo Beta aid group distributed pamphlets to migrants preparing to cross. The pamphlets recommend carrying plenty of water, food and salt, and advise migrants to keep their clothing on to avoid dehydration and sunburn. If the heat gets to be too much, the pamphlets advise setting a fire to summon rescuers. Brenda, the 17-year-old in the "bebe" T-shirt, stuffed the pamphlet into her backpack and said she didn't think the trip would be so hard. However, the teenager from the central city of Puebla admitted she had little experience in the outdoors. "My parents warned us about the risks along the way, that you suffer cramps and get tired, but I have food and water," said Brenda, who set out last week with her 18-year-old sister and about 16 other migrants on her way to Mesa, Ariz., where her brothers live. "We're doing this so we can have a better life," said Brenda, who may not have given her full name for fear of being found by U.S. officials. It was impossible to determine if she successfully made the crossing. The Border Patrol does not confirm the names of detainees for privacy reasons. Alejandra Valenzuela, 27, said her group used mountain bikes to move across the rugged terrain. But she and another woman couldn't keep up, and the smuggler and other migrants wouldn't wait. She said the cold desert nights were worse than the baking sun. "It was the coldest I'd ever felt in my life. I spent the night hugging that woman," said Valenzuela, pointing to a woman sleeping on a nearby bunk at a shelter in the border town of Nogales. After spotting what she believed was a coyote and hearing snakes hiss nearby, the women found a highway and waited for the Border Patrol. "I thought I would get to the other side and everything would be beautiful, and I could buy all kinds of nice things," Valenzuela said. "But you have to suffer so much, it's not worth it." ![]() Wields: A Green Lightsaber Made By Darth Stone [The Gungan Council][The Jedi Council] |
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General Ceel |
Re: "A day without an Immirgrant" | ||
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Latin American nations offer US to share responsibility of immigrants
WASHINGTON (AFP) - Eleven Latin American nations offered to share responsibility with the United States over the illegal immigration issue that drew huge protests across this country. Latin American officials, however, insisted that they were not trying to interfere in US domestic policy. "The countries which we represent here are ready to assume our co-responsibility," Mexican Foreign Minister Luis Ernesto Derbez said after a meeting in Washington of representatives from Belize, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama and the Dominican Republic. Derbez said the United States and the immigrants' home countries each must have an idea of how to achieve "the balance between security and immigration reform necessary to allow our people to have a decent life inside the United States." "What we have to analyze is how we can work together, Mexico, the United States, Central America and the other countries, to create a concept of regional security" amid the extensive migration, he said, while underscoring that the 11 were not trying to interfere with the US debate on immigrants. Derbez and the others were meeting one day after more than a million people joined boycotts and marches across the United States to fight for legal status for illegal immigrants. The marches came as the US Senate prepares to reopen debate on immigration reforms in which some legislators want to legalize the illegal immigrants while others want them subjected to criminal charges. The marches were cheered in Mexico -- the source of roughly half of the estimated 11.5 million illegal immigrants in the United States. "Migrants show their force," declared the headline of El Universal newspaper. Mexico City said Tuesday it supports the immigrant demands. Ruben Aguilar, a spokesman for Mexico's President Vicente Fox, said of the demonstrations: "We are very respectful of the sovereignty of the US government ... but the government agrees with the demands of the migrant groups that their huge contribution to the US economy should be recognized." In El Salvador, Foreign Minister Francisco Lainez called the US demonstrations a democratic act. "It is an expression which, thank god, we can see in democratic countries," he said ![]() Wields: A Green Lightsaber Made By Darth Stone [The Gungan Council][The Jedi Council] |
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D aramis19 |
Re: "A day without an Immirgrant" | ||
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EDIT: BANNED. Go back to Star Wars Evolution and please take your friends with you.
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Anubis Starkiller |
Re: "A day without an Immirgrant" | ||
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Yeah...it is a seriously bad day. Imagine the day when an American looses their job because of this..
I lose my job the other day...to one of the Hispanic guys. Apparently, that was their way of making them happy... Great... ![]() |
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General Ceel |
Re: "A day without an Immirgrant" | ||
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Apparently Americans are no longer allowed to live the American Dream. You have to be an illegal breaking the law to be entitled to it. lol
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Mason England |
Re: "A day without an Immirgrant" | ||
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The weird thing is that they protested and didn't go to work so they could get the right to work.
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General Ceel |
Re: "A day without an Immirgrant" | ||
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yeah, ironic isn't it? It was supposed to "fix us legal Americans" for trying to do something about lawbreakers.
illegal immigrants say they are so important to our country. But if that is the case then why are they illegal. ![]() Wields: A Green Lightsaber Made By Darth Stone [The Gungan Council][The Jedi Council] |
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Anubis Starkiller |
Re: "A day without an Immirgrant" | ||
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Yep...seems America is no longer the Home of the Free, Land of the Brave..
Home of the Immigrant, Land of the Jobless. Jebus...seems the US is turnin into Mexico...slowly, but surely... ![]() |
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Dari Knightsaber |
Re: "A day without an Immirgrant" | ||
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It is in fact true. That's what the Mexican Government wants, and that's why Americans are so upset about the issue.
Many imigrants, granted not all of them, come here but do nothing better than what they are accustomed to in their countires. The Vietanese, some Chinese, Mexicans, and other groups, like some Koreans, have been brought up in poverty, come to this country and live in poverty, let there homes become run down, let there cars polute the air, and eat cats and serve them in their restaurants illegally(you heard about that right? Dari Knightsaber "Darkness holds no power of its own. It exists only as the abscence of light. How then do you measure darkness, if not by the presence of light? That is why they seek to destroy us." Jedi Knight Wandering Light |
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Anubis Starkiller |
Re: "A day without an Immirgrant" | ||
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Another Civil War, I believe I will sit this one out and just watch intently, then...hopefully, the country gets righted soon.
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Vohn Exel |
Re: "A day without an Immirgrant" | ||
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Well something that I heard someone point out...was that they don't see it as invading. They are taking back what was once thiers, you know, like Texas and California. However, it's not more theirs then ours, the Indians were there before them. However, I've been saying that somethings probably going to happen soon. This could come to a head and cause alot of chaos in the country...if they start using the slogan "The South Shall Rise Again," or "Remember the Alamo," I'm going to be really pissed. Most people that aren't from the Texas,(and a few that are) don't know how important that is to us, but it really is, it's part of our hertiage. It's going to be interesting to see how this pans out..
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High Admiral Disra |
Re: "A day without an Immirgrant" | ||
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I went to everyone of my Hispanic friends at school and asked them "Hey,.. why aren't you in Tampa?" They'd be like "Por que?" or "Why?"
So I'd reply "Oh, for the protest. *insert hispanic impression* La migre La Migre!" ![]() |
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General Ceel |
Re: "A day without an Immirgrant" | ||
Quote: LOL! ![]() Wields: A Green Lightsaber Made By Darth Stone [The Gungan Council][The Jedi Council] |
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EPIII: ROTS 10th Anniversary: