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Randall Amster

Randall Amster

Posted: May 1, 2010 10:13 AM

State of Disgrace: The Right Fiddles While Arizona Burns

What's Your Reaction:

It's getting hot here in Arizona these days, and summer isn't even upon us yet. As you've most likely heard, the Republican-controlled State Legislature passed -- and the Republican Governor signed -- the nation's most draconian anti-immigrant law, essentially creating a class of new "status crimes" and opening a Pandora's Box of racial profiling implications. While for too many of us who live here such sentiments among state officials aren't exactly novel, the shocking "where are your papers?" aspects of the law (SB 1070) have raised a much-deserved national furor.

As is almost always the case, there's more to this than meets the eye. Yes, this is part of an ideologically-motivated and racially-tinged platform embraced by many in power here. In addition to perpetual anti-immigrant bills being proposed and sometimes passed, this cadre has been targeting education both through severe budget cuts and a form of pedagogical purification in which it will quite likely soon be illegal to teach anything that is deemed "anti-American" (HB 2281). Apparently, the irony of passing these two bills in near succession must be lost on those who would contravene constitutional law and moral sensibility in the name of American purity.

It's the Economy, Stupid

We've been living in a political desert here for a long time, and irony is only relevant if it can be strip-mined. While the state's coffers have precipitously hit their nadir, legislators have rolled out corporate tax breaks, passed "birther" requirements for ballot access, forced our public education system down to the bottom rung, and shilled for more concealed weapons in our midst. Now we get apartheid laws that even go so far as to criminalize anyone who transports, harbors, employs, or attempts to shield from enforcement an "unauthorized alien" (which is of course a euphemism for "illegal immigrant," which is in turn a euphemism for "persona non grata"). SB 1070 further cracks down on "day laborers" and those who utilize said labor, indicating an obvious anti-Latino strain permeating this shameful legislative act.

Much of the commentary thus far has understandably focused on the ethnic and racial aspects of the bill. Undoubtedly, the measure is aimed directly at vulnerable communities of color, and consequently the sense of fear and terror among people already used to being persecuted has risen to unprecedented levels. Many are considering leaving the state, and indeed this type of en masse forced migration may be part of what the law's advocates have intended all along. Less considered in the analysis are the profoundly negative economic impacts likely to be the result of the law, which flies in the face of the standard line advanced by proponents that illegal immigrants are an economic drain on the state.

As Leah Mundell, co-chair of the Northern Arizona Interfaith Council, explains:

"One thing that has seemed increasingly clear is how blind our representatives are to the links between immigrants and economic recovery in Arizona .... Even if you ignore the moral implications of SB 1070 entirely, it is incredible that the Republicans would have passed this at a moment of such economic crisis for the state. Judy Ganz [is] an economist at the Udall Center at the University of Arizona , who has calculated the economic costs and benefits of immigration and shown that immigrants provide a tremendous net cost benefit for the state. To pass a bill like this - an unfunded mandate for already strapped police departments, which will fill up our jails and lead to untold lawsuits from both the right and the left (for racial profiling and failure to enforce the law) -- at a time when we're so deep in debt already is irresponsible beyond measure."
At this juncture, we might pause for a moment to consider the state motto, which is "Ditat Deus" -- translation: "God Enriches." Given the thorough dismantling of the state's treasury in recent years, the phrase "Red State" has taken on new meaning here, and the divine ethos of this motto may well be our best remaining hope for avoiding total economic collapse. By all appearances the Republicans are fiddling while Arizona burns, yet perhaps a sense of just desserts will still triumph in the end as the backlash from their folly might finally cause the Right to fizzle while Phoenix , et al. rises from the ashes. Maybe then we can adopt a new and more accurate motto for the state: "Dito Advenae" -- "Immigrants Enrich" (pardon my Latin).

Electoral Dysfunctions

Others have further noted the ostensible political machinations at play here. Greg Palast speculates that SB 1070 is a ploy to tamp down Democratic-leaning minority voters, and in fact there is a potent history on this point that includes our current Governor when she was Secretary of State. As Palast cogently observes, the law suits the interests of the Republicans in power "because the vast majority of perfectly legal voters and residents who lack ID sufficient for [them] are citizens of color, citizens of poverty." Thus, part of the impetus for SB 1070, as Palast concludes, is to dissuade legal immigrants from participating electorally by creating a climate of intimidation. The roots of this sort of nefarious business run deep here, including longstanding allegations that prominent Arizona Republicans such as former Supreme Court Chief Justice William Rehnquist have orchestrated "ballot security" actions "that swept through polling places in minority-dominated districts to challenge the right of African Americans and Latinos to vote."

More recently, powerful individuals such as the bill's sponsor, Republican State Sen. Russell Pearce, seem determined to uphold this unfortunate legacy. As Democratic State Rep. Kyrsten Sinema recently told me, Pearce "has been working for years to pass this bill. Up to now, we've been successful in stopping him.... Instead of focusing on real solutions to our state's crisis, this bill will only exacerbate problems that already exist. Already, Sheriff Joe [Arpaio] is under investigation by the Department of Justice, and reports of racial profiling are coming out of Maricopa County regularly now. This is a sad stain on our state, but it's not a new stain. Folks like Mr. Pearce and his extremist allies around the country have been working towards this for years." Oddly enough, Pearce prominently displays these words from the Declaration of Independence on his website, seemingly ignorant of the fact that they contain no apparent limitation as to the extent of their applicability: "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness."

Such ironies and absurdities would almost be funny -- kind of a desert Mayberry moment where the hayseeds find themselves in charge without a clue how to proceed -- except that it's a deadly serious game being played here. The Arizona-Mexico border is the nation's most lethal for would-be crossers, and the tensions of NAFTA-inspired corporate globalization have added a demonstrable touch of evil to an already foreboding landscape. While racism and electoral machinations certainly play a part in the drama, there are even more layers to this story, and unsurprisingly crass politics figure prominently into the toxic mix that has engendered this law.

The Only Thing We Have to Fear...

I recently spoke about these is sue s with Dr. Luis Fernandez , a professor of Criminal Justice at Northern Arizona University (NAU) who regularly works with immigrant communities. He notes that a more pragmatic motivation for passing SB 1070 is that "with the economy so bad in the state, the party in power would normally stand a good chance of getting kicked out of office," and with this bill the Republican-dominated incumbents "are attempting to deflect attention from the economy and control the agenda by forcing the immigration is sue " to the fore in a feat of political scapegoating. He further observes that "the far right is trying to gain control of the Republican Party here," evidenced by the serious primary challenges from the right being faced by Governor Jan Brewer and Sen. John McCain, among others. "This is part of a battle for the party's soul, and it could be a preview of what's in store nationally as well," Fernandez concludes.

Thus, while it appears to be a contest between powerful reactionary forces on the one hand and communities of color and their progressive allies on the other, it might be more to the point to see the furor over SB 1070 as a battle between the right and the far right on some level, with voter manipulation and pervasive racial profiling as the welcomed byproducts. Still, the consequences for people already in precarious political, legal, and economic straits are demonstrable. As Fernandez recalls, the day the law was signed was akin to a "crushing blow ... people were openly crying and many have been gripped by a terrifying fear." For many of these individuals, the overwhelming majority of whom strive to support their families and contribute peaceably to their communities, it was already scary to drive, ask for work, or participate in the political process. "Now," Fernandez laments, "their very existence is being threatened" -- a point that is doubly poignant when we further consider that many immigrants are in fact political and economic refugees who have come here seeking a safe haven from violence and repression.

In another moment of irony, the passage of SB 1070 may actually be the product of fear and a perceived existential threat in itself, argues Dr. Joel Olson, professor of Political Science at NAU and a member of the Repeal Coalition, a statewide grassroots organizing seeking the repeal of all anti-immigrant laws in Arizona since 2008. Olson points out that "the support for nativism in Arizona is largely motivated by whites who fear a loss of racial status due to the influx of Latinos to the state and who are uncomfortable with Spanish-language signs in stores, TV and radio stations, etc." The racial aspects of the bill are complex, he notes, and "very few supporters of 1070 consider themselves racist or want to be seen as racist." Nevertheless, "they are driven by a fear of the immigrant (read: Mexican) as a criminal," and oftentimes will "project their racialized fears of crime onto the migrant, while still denying they are racist," Olson concludes. As Mark Kurlansky opines in his book Nonviolence, "people motivated by fear do not act well."

From Protest to Paradigm Shift

In this sense, the law is race-based yet is also motivated by factors of fear, power, and status. Again, there are pervasive ironies to be found, which Olson notes in his call for breaking the cycle of fear and repression that largely defines the terms of the conflict: "The only solution is to show [supporters of 1070] that these laws strip away their freedom, too... These laws encourage them to see their neighbors through the lens of fear rather than solidarity. They are creating, in other words, the very problem they are trying to solve." As State Rep. Sinema concurs, "the bill criminalizes people for being good neighbors -- taking a friend to church or giving someone a ride when their car breaks down. If an Arizonan doesn't ask about their neighbors' legal status, they're jeopardizing their own safety under the law. This forces citizens to 'police' their own community, which is wrong." This line of analysis has the virtue of resisting the tendency to demonize the law's supporters, and furthermore suggests that we might seek solidarity-based answers to the complex is sue s at play here rather than falling into the trap of pitting communities against one another as real concerns go unheeded.

Indeed, amidst the grief and terror that has gripped migrant communities, advocates and allies are seeking ways to help people turn their tears into action. Talk of boycotts, mass civil disobedience, and open subversion of the law is being heard from many corners. Some have been calling upon law enforcement officers to refuse to enforce the law on moral and constitutional grounds. Legal challenges are in the offing and it's possible (though by most counts unlikely) that the federal government will step in given the massive outcry over the bill. Regardless, it's going to be a long, hot summer here in the desert as the battle en sue s in the days ahead. As Sinema counsels, the rightwing power structure has been at this for some time, and now "it's our job to stop them and begin rebuilding an Arizona that is welcoming and diverse."

It is in this same spirit of turning crisis into opportunity and divisiveness into solidarity that Mundell observes:

"This moment has tremendous potential if we don't squander it. This week, people from across the community are scandalized and furious. Immigrant leaders are calling for an economic boycott to show the power of immigrant dollars. Public officials are debating how to take legal action. Students are protesting. The anger and outrage are even stronger than the fear that the bill provokes. But that kind of energy can only be sustained for so long [and] I hope that we will use this moment to build a more long-term strategy. That includes deep and collaborative relationships with law enforcement, who [in many instances] do not want to have to enforce this bill. It means listening carefully to immigrant leaders who have often been afraid to speak out but now feel they have nothing left to lose. It also means capitalizing on the shock that many who have not been involved in this is sue in the past are now feeling. We have the opportunity to build a much broader power base now, to hold our state elected officials accountable ... and to ensure that comprehensive immigration reform doesn't fall off the national stage by summer."

Forward

Talking about Arizona politics in today's news cycle seemingly conjures images of Mississippi in the 1960s: i.e., a place where racist fears have gone completely haywire. From an outsider's perspective it may justifiably look this way, yet it's also the case that many decent and dedicated people are working tirelessly here not just to undo bad laws but to create a climate of respect and equity. In a time of crisis where fear is rampant on all sides of the immigration debate, perhaps the recognition of this basic commonality can serve as a crucible for turning an incendiary issue into an opportunity for Arizonans to act well with the eyes of the nation now squarely upon us. Stranger things have happened in the desert, where we are all merely strangers in a strange land.

 
 
 
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01:04 PM on 06/01/2010
And the Left Fiddles While the USA Burns.

This Lecture was done in 1999. - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FM1YU-Ni_84

Looking at the chart when he gets there,
What they estimated in 1999 for 2010 is spot on what actually happened.
[Estimated just over 300 million in 2010.]

When he gets to the gumball demonstration keep in mind the large jar represents the people in the world that are WORSE OFF than Mexicans.

Because of illegal immigration from 1999 to present we've had to:
Build TWICE as many schools.
Build TWICE as many roads.
Build TWICE as many sewer plants.
Build TWICE as many power plants.
Build TWICE as much about anything else.
Had to add twice as many cops and firemen and teachers. [Or leave areas under serviced.]
And use TWICE as many trees and other natural resources.

Anyone that thinks illegal immigration isn't a significant load on our economy and natural resources is a moron.

If you don't want every city in the US to become a giant LA Slum within our or our children's lifetimes then it has to STOP NOW!

~

Link to just the chart. [Sorry about the quality.]
http://www.numbersusa.com/content/files/imagecache/fpage/files/cck_images/population.jpg..
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Randall Amster
02:21 PM on 05/03/2010
Many people and communities in Arizona have been resisting ALL of the draconian actions taken in recent years by the ruling cadre, including deep cuts in education, social services, and the entire public infrastructure of the state. Now on top of the immigration law comes banning ethnic studies and even ferreting out teachers with Hispanic accents that are deemed too thick. Yeah, it's outlandish to see a racial tinge to any of this! Bonez, I guess we're living in two different states here, which is precisely how apartheid is supposed to work after all. Mission accomplished, it appears....
03:12 PM on 05/03/2010
AH, but MOST of that happened with a DEMOCRAT as Governor and you are pointing to the right.
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03:19 PM on 05/03/2010
I don't support banning ethnic studies, but thank you so much for PROFILING me..
12:18 PM on 05/03/2010
There is nothing racist about HB2162 [the correct name for the amended SB1070, which you apparently don't know.] - Anyone that has READ IT and has two grains of common sense knows that.

Several Anti-ILLEGAL-Immigration Laws were passed in AZ - LAST YEAR - but stirring up civil unrest wasn't on the Leftists agenda at that time.

They are doing it now because if they don't find a rallying point to frighten and upset and the people in order to overshadow Obama-care in the News they are going to get hammered in the next election.

They were LOOKING for an issue to blow out of proportion and anger the public. Fabricating SB1070/HB2162 into something racist with a few lies was really easy for them. As soon as someone says 'racist' tempers flare and people get 'stupid angry' [irrational] even if the claim is OBVIOUSLY not true.

Anyone that thinks SB1070/HB2162 is racist has been PLAYED. - Go read it!.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
justoverit333
make art not war
10:07 AM on 05/03/2010
Can't blame the illegal immigration problem on Obama.
Bush admitted he was leaving the mess for the next guy.
He ignored it for 8 years.
01:29 PM on 05/03/2010
So you are saying that Obama's lack of action on immigration is because...

Bush - Obama - More of the same.
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11:58 PM on 05/02/2010
When these idiots drive out all of the Illegal labor, they'll end up having to pay white folks $25 and hour and give them benefits.

All of Arizona's small business will be bankrupt in the next two years.

Mark my words.
12:22 PM on 05/03/2010
Actually what it will do is give our 9-10% that are unemployed jobs.

In the States the illegals migrate to the unemployment rates will go up.

How many would you like?
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12:37 PM on 05/03/2010
"" All of Arizona's small business will be bankrupt in the next two years. ""

Any business that can't exist without illegal workers NEEDS to go away and be replaced by a healthy business with a more realistic business plan.

Thing is we keep catching illegals working at places like McDonalds and Dominos Pizza.

I doubt they are gonna pay $25/hr.
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11:50 PM on 05/02/2010
Obsession with Mexican Illegals clearly indicates racism.
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rbchilds
Independent with Open Eyes
12:57 AM on 05/03/2010
Not necessarily, fact is most illegals are Mexicans.
12:27 PM on 05/03/2010
We have 500,000 Illegal Latinos and something less than 50,000 Illegal 'other'.

That's not racism it's probability.

The focus on Mexicans comes from the Mexicans themselves and the simple fact there are so many of them.
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08:15 PM on 05/02/2010
Lets see, the Democrats hold both houses of Congress and the presidency, yet it's the Republican's fault that nothing has been done to contain illegal immigration. I think this writers needs a fourth grade class in American civics.
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11:51 PM on 05/02/2010
Nice Straw Man.
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rbchilds
Independent with Open Eyes
01:00 AM on 05/03/2010
The current Gov of AZ has written the WH no less than 5 times and the WH does nothing. The former Gov of AZ, now Sec. of Homeland Security is the one who brought the issue of Az's problems to the forefront and she does nothing. Clinton put up a wall in San Diego and El Paso and the illegals flowed around it to AZ. Clinton started it, Bush ignored it, Obama does nothing. Dems win 2-1 for ignorance.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
BoyInBOYCOTT
07:19 PM on 05/02/2010
AZ = the elephant's graveyard
05:45 PM on 05/02/2010
I actually love this....the right-wing is getting killed nationally by this

It is yet another example of the right-wing tripping over itself to get their radical agenda through...and yet another reason they will NOT get anywhere near as many seats in the next election as they expect

Palin? Romney? Idiots who will not come even close to beating Obama
12:40 PM on 05/03/2010
We're here for the Obama cash.
03:25 PM on 05/02/2010
Hopefully the Republicans will stay in power in Arizona, and set an example of just how immigration laws should be enforced. After all, Obama cut back on border enforcement and made the situation much, much worse.
05:05 PM on 05/02/2010
hooktender: The Repubs have just spent their chance to do it right and blew it big time. I am hoping for some way to be rescued from the christian Repubs as well as the Repub christians, neither of which has the ability to think.
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11:52 PM on 05/02/2010
Arizona will bankrupt itself and whine to Obama for a bailout.
12:54 PM on 05/03/2010
Democrat Napolitano bankrupt us a long while ago. - Deficit spending, like Obama.

We can't afford $16,000 each to keep children of illegals that don't make enough money to pay taxes in school anymore. That's only a small part of their free-load on the State.

We have high school grads that can't get entry level jobs because the illegal have all the opportunities filled up. - And generally they don't have kids until AFTER they make enough money to pay fair taxes.
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02:41 PM on 05/02/2010
Because plans look good on paper or a speech, the impractical is unlikely to succeed. Soviets (with shoot to kill orders) found that out, with their own Wall and Laws did not succeed holding people back. We are re-inventing something that others have tried and failed? Will the Wall or Legislation succeed just because we are Americans?

Human Migration is a natural phenomenon that has occurred for millenniums. Man-made measures will not stop or mitigate natural forces. Man-made measures are best directed to COPE WITH natural forces.

All those Arizonians (and Americans elsewhere) including native Americans who are suggesting solutions to stop this natural phenomena should examine the reasons why their ancestors came to this country.

Those with European ancestry may want to read about the "Little Ice Age" across Europe that forced many of their ancestors to pack and flee to Americas with no paper-work. We should know our history, albeit a short one.

Fault of the current problem is the inept Federal govt which under Republican and Democratic Presidents is hamstrung by elected representatives like the two senators of Arizona. So Arizonians are to be blamed for electing two selfish, short-sighted senators, more interested in re-election than providing leadership. Sadly the same applies to us who elect similar representatives.

Boycott peacefully hurts big business. They will put effective pressure on our ineffective politicians. Those against illegals (includes me) should support boycott to pressurize Washington to solve this problem not band-aid it.
06:12 PM on 05/02/2010
Actually, the Soviets held 99% of the people back for a long long time. And a humane working border is within our technology with virtual surveillance and rapid response border guards.
Immigration is a legal process. There is no such thing as illegal immigration, that term is like saying I am declaring an illegal bankruptcy, it has no meaning. There are only immigrants and invaders.
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11:53 PM on 05/02/2010
Quick question: Does the Soviet Union exist anymore?
01:15 PM on 05/03/2010
In that context: Illegal = Not in accordance with the legal process and rules.

You COULD declare an illegal bankruptcy by not following the legal process or rules.

I think the Federal Laws [some do anyway] refer to them as Trespassers.

Personally invader works well enough. It's a synonym. Criminal works too.
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ronkw
Wake up and smell the whiskey
02:08 PM on 05/02/2010
Blame it on the right, while Libs have own/owned Congress for past 4yr or is it 5.
They disregard the law of the land (fed law) because they want the Hispanic vote.
The right is also guilty in this respect.
Screw the country, the law and the citizens, esp., the border states....they want to make them legal/amnesty so Dems get their vote. Put em all on entitlements if need be. Get that vote!
Can you not see this, it's clear as day and it's WRONG!
This gov/admin is giving us all the finger.
01:18 PM on 05/03/2010
Amen
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ariveria
11:03 AM on 05/02/2010
this will do nothing to stop illegal immigrants. they only way to fix that issue is to seize any business that hires an illegal immigrant.

now for all of you that support this law are willing to have your taxes raised to secure the border, hire new ins agents, build new holding tanks, hire new federal attorneys, build new jails, pay the cost of deportation, etc etc etc.

"when the truth is found to be lies"
jefferson airplane

First the internet replaced talk radio
as the cesspool of misinformation
now it is Fox News
11:58 PM on 05/02/2010
What's another tax to a liberal? After all isn't it Patriotic to pay taxes? Oh, that's right. 47% do not pay any Federal Income Tax so it wouldn't be a burden to them anyway. The only thing I have agreed with any of your immigration posts is going after businesses. This has to be done with heavy penalties but that does not excuse the people that are in our country illegaly. They must go through proper channles or go.
01:22 PM on 05/03/2010
AZ went after businesses last year with a new Law but at that time the Liberals didn't need a heated smoke screen issue to make people forget about Obama-care so they did nothing.
10:00 AM on 05/02/2010
The article writer is clearly out of touch with the mainstream which supports this bill(60 percent in the polls) and even out of touch with reality when he calls the bill a Draconian antiimmigration bill.

The bill is only against ILLEGAL not legal immigration and it is almost identical to federal law so what's the problem???
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Soulsurfer
Solar Electrician,Longtime Surfin'Fool
10:21 AM on 05/02/2010
What about the illegal employers who hire the illegal immigrants? Who is going to clean your pools, harvest and cook your food, cut your lawns, bulk up the sales tax revenue, fix your cars, and on and on? Okay, we'll watch and see what happens when most of your low end work force leaves........business owners will have to pay decent, legal wages and taxes, and either their profits will go down or the price of goods and services will go up. I wonder which?
06:11 PM on 05/02/2010
I clean my own pool,cut my own grass and in general do my own work.I don't fix my car but an African American friend of mine is in the repair business and i always take my car to him for repair.He does a great job at reasonable rates.As for the business owners having to pay decent legal wages,so what? They should have been doing so all along!

In fact they should get a sizeable fine every time they get caught using illegals.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
istvan13
The world needs more thinkers.
10:26 AM on 05/02/2010
Your comments demonstrate that you missed the entire point of this article.
12:48 AM on 05/02/2010
The immigrant community should adopt the tactics of the teabaggers. Arm themselves to the teeth and start disrupting republican meetings and press conferences. They should demand THEIR country back!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
larrylnd
09:49 AM on 05/02/2010
I like that adopt the tactics of the Tea Party lol. You can say all you want about us, but we get disruptive but we have only had a few cases of violence. I watch the new and not just Fox I watch a little of all of them, And what do I see? A bunch illegal and legal how do I put this ah yes Mexican-Americans. I use that term loosely too, throwing things like bottles, rocks, and trash at police officers who are only doing their jobs.

I think its funny that any one who protests against something that any one connected with Republican party are so violent. I just don't see how that make you look good.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pecosdog
this sht writes itself
10:22 AM on 05/02/2010
It make us look good when we put rock on you head. A bunch illegal come to you house and put rock at you, that how make us look good. We like that adopt tactics of teaparty lol. We not have cases violence yet, but we get mad soon we get disruptive lol.