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Politics : Attack Iraq? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: GROUND ZERO™ who wrote (3145)12/13/2002 11:52:25 AM
From: calgal  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 8683
 
Oliver North

URL:http://www.townhall.com/columnists/ollienorth/

December 13, 2002

Border security: an oxymoron

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- This week, when federal authorities arrested workers at Chicago's O'Hare and Midway Airports for unlawfully possessing security badges, "open borders" advocates were outraged because several of those apprehended were illegal immigrants. Apparently the "rights" of those who break America's laws by entering our country illegally outweigh the safety of law-abiding American citizens. It's nothing new. But it's getting worse.

Two weeks ago in Atlanta, federal agents caught employees of the Social Security Administration doubling as street vendors, selling Social Security numbers to illegal aliens. And last month in Charlotte, N.C., the feds busted a fraud ring selling bogus immigration papers to aliens from Hong Kong, Malaysia and communist China.

In Texas, hospitals located near the Mexican border are reporting losses of up to $200 million annually attributable to illegal immigrants who cross the border to obtain emergency medical care, which U.S. hospitals are obligated to provide. Hospitals located on the border in California and Arizona face the same problem.

In Arizona, the frustration with lax borders has gotten so bad that several armed "citizen-militia" groups help police the border. Meanwhile, in Washington, the politicians are fiddling while the borders burn. Neither party seems to be interested in stopping the tidal wave of illegals.

The Democrats designed "motor voter" -- the process of registering to vote simultaneously when applying for or renewing a driver's license. And in 1996, William "The Zipper" Clinton and his pal Al benefited by naturalizing 1.3 million immigrants (four times the average number), despite the fact that 60,000 of them turned out to have criminal records.

The GOP doesn't do much better. Most Republicans seem to believe that immigration control has replaced Social Security reform as the new "third-rail" of American politics. They believe this, despite the fact that California Gov. Pete Wilson cruised to re-election in 1994 by advancing the sensible view that illegal aliens are not "entitled" to the same welfare benefits and public services that resident aliens and citizens in the United States enjoy. Wilson was later blamed for the plummeting level of Hispanic support for the Republican Party.

Rep. Tom Tancredo, R-Colo., a longtime proponent for protecting our borders, is the latest Republican to feel the lash. When he contested a Denver Post feature on how illegal alien Jesus Apodaca feels persecuted because he's not allowed to pay discounted, in-state college tuition rates, he -- rather than Apodaca -- was pummeled in the press and by members of his own party. He's not alone. Virginia Attorney General Jerry Kilgore, a Republican, is being battered for suggesting that public colleges and universities in the commonwealth should deny enrollment to illegal immigrants and report those illegals on campus to federal authorities.

Unfortunately, Tancredo and Kilgore are nearly alone in their efforts to deal with the problem. American businesses, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, powerful members of their own party and liberal activists are all allied against them. So are our "neighbors." They don't want their own people back -- they have unemployment problems of their own.

Canada has objected to any measures that would impede traffic across our northern border. Mexico is now issuing special identity cards to its illegal aliens in America through Mexican consulates. Available for a $29.00 fee, the identity card is accepted as a legal proof of identification at airports, government buildings, state motor vehicle departments, banks and police departments in 13 states and more than 80 cities. And the government of El Salvador, with one fourth of its population now resident in the United States, is urging those who left to take advantage of their Temporary Protected Status and stay here.

Since the terror attack of Sept. 11, 2001, the immigration debate has been influenced by the ease with which Arab terrorists entered the United States. As part of the Department of Homeland Security legislation, the Immigration and Naturalization Service will have its two principal, and often conflicting, functions -- enforcing border controls and supervising the citizenship formation of legal immigrants -- partitioned into separate agencies. This long overdue measure is supposed to reinforce the necessary distinction between legal immigrants, who have followed the law and patiently waited their turn to emigrate to the United States, and those who have illegally jumped border fences, waded the Rio Grande or trekked through desert crossings.

The ink was hardly dry on the president's signature on the homeland security bill before "open borders" and Hispanic "rights" advocates were lobbying Congress to ignore the illegal alien problem. They note that illegals, particularly from Mexico, perform work that others in the United States will not do. They also point out that terrorists like Mohamed Atta were in the United States legally and ask what security threats are posed by illegal, undocumented workers inside the United States.

The case of accused "Beltway Sniper" Lee Malvo springs to mind. Malvo, an illegal alien, was detained last December in Washington -- and then released by the INS. The Malvo case may be exceptional in its violence, but all illegal immigrants, by definition, break the law when they surreptitiously enter the country. That's reason enough to detain and deport them. As the United States readies for renewed conflict against Iraq, it's high time to think about securing our own borders before we commit to protecting Kuwait's and Saudi Arabia's.

©2002 Creators Syndicate, Inc.



To: GROUND ZERO™ who wrote (3145)12/14/2002 11:03:17 AM
From: lorne  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 8683
 
Infidel Saddam dons Islamic clothing for Jihad against US
Agence France-Presse
Baghdad, December 13

dLong branded an "infidel" by Islamist groups such as al-Qaeda, Iraqi President Saddam Hussein has adopted the language of political Islam as he moves to bolster support for holy war against the United States.
Senior officials of his ultra-secular Baath party have been sent off to religious seminaries for refresher courses in the finer points of Islam, while the bars and nightclubs that used to dot Baghdad have been forced underground.

A state-sponsored Islamic People's Organization has been set up to spearhead the cultural revolution which has seen new mosques and Koranic schools spring up across the country to preach the Jihad (holy war).

"The believers are taking on the infidel," says the imam of Baghdad's huge Abu Hanifa mosque, Sheikh Watheq al-Oteibi, echoing the sermons which ring out weekly across Iraq railing against the heathen West.

"People are convinced that the United States is leading a Crusade against Iraq and the whole Muslim world, and are determined to defend their faith," he says.

The regime is "channelling" the increasingly Islamist views of ordinary Iraqis when it portrays Saddam as a new Saladin, the 12th century warrior who recaptured Jerusalem from the Crusaders of Christian Europe, says Oteibi.

For the man who heads the Islamisation campaign, Abdel Latif Hmaiem, it is a matter of "returning Iraq to its roots," although he acknowledges that the campaign has been resisted by many traditionalists in the Baath party.

"Some cadres are against it even now," admits Hmaiem, the secretary general of the Islamic People's Organization.

But he swiftly adds that the party has "finally been won over" and now "does not deny Islam".

Officially dubbed the "campaign to strengthen faith", Islamisation has played a vital role as a "shock absorber for discontent and a counter to the religious extremism" which had grown "menacingly" amid the poverty created by 12-year-old UN sanctions, he says.

But in a nod to the misgivings within a party which has traditionally included many Christians as well as both Sunni and Shiite Muslims, Hmaiem insists the goal of the campaign is limited to "reintegrating religion into the country's secular landscape."

For long-time dissident Abdel Jabar al-Qobeisi, the marriage of convenience between Saddam and Islam is the product of common hostility regarding the United States.

"Secularists and believers have been forced into the same trench by the US threat," he says.

A strong opponent of US designs on Iraq, Qobeisi returned to Baghdad with other members of his National Iraqi Coalition last month after 26 years in exile.

He says the regime's redicovery of religion has been a political masterstroke, ensuring that Saddam has "lost neither supporters nor ground" to his opponents.

"He has managed to win the masses over to the now sancrosanct principle of holy war against the United States," he says.

The radicals of al-Qaeda may still refer to the Iraqi strongman as an "infidel dictator" but even they now threaten attacks against the US forces ranged against him as they target the common enemy.

"The danger of what America and its allies are preparing against Iraq and its people is not limited to overthrowing the infidel regime and its dictator but is aimed at... Balkanising this great country," al-Qaeda spokesman Sulaiman Abu Ghaith said in an Internet voice recording last weekend.

hindustantimes.com



To: GROUND ZERO™ who wrote (3145)12/15/2002 10:00:43 AM
From: DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 8683
 
Excellent. Thank you