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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bonefish who wrote (676654)10/2/2012 10:39:04 AM
From: joseffy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1587264
 
Brown signs young immigrant driver's license measure

By PATRICK MCGREEVY AND ANTHONY YORK
Los Angeles Times 10/01/2012
montereyherald.com


SACRAMENTO — Gov. Jerry Brown signed a new law that will allow hundreds of thousands of young illegal immigrants to obtain driver's licenses and vetoed another that would have restricted sheriffs from helping federal authorities detain undocumented Californians for potential deportation.

His actions, announced Sunday as the deadline neared to finish work on nearly 1,000 bills sent to him by the Legislature this year, followed an intense week of protests, prayer vigils and lobbying by immigrant advocacy groups.

The immigration bills sparked the most controversy.

The driver's license measure will make illegal immigrants eligible to drive legally in California if they qualify for a new federal work permit program. That Obama administration protocol allows illegal immigrants who came to the United States before they were 16, and who are now 30 or younger and meet certain other criteria, to obtain work permits.

"Gov. Brown believes the federal government should pursue comprehensive immigration reform with a pathway to citizenship," said Brown spokesman Gil Duran. "President Obama has recognized the unique status of these students, and making them eligible to apply for driver's licenses is an obvious next step."

Assemblyman Gil Cedillo (D-Los Angeles), the measure's author, had been crusading for such a law since a broader measure he pushed through the Legislature in 2003 prompted a voter backlash. The earlier bill was signed into law by former Gov. Gray Davis, who was ousted from office soon afterward. Before it took effect, lawmakers repealed it.

The assemblyman had wider support for the latest measure, AB 2189, however, with backing from some GOP lawmakers.

"I'm proud the governor chose public safety over the politics of the day," Cedillo said.

The other closely watched immigration bill was known as the Trust Act. It would have prohibited local law enforcement officers from cooperating with federal authorities to detain suspected illegal immigrants, unless they are charged with a serious or violent felony.

Some in law enforcement campaigned hard against the measure, AB 1081 by Assemblyman Tom Ammiano (D-San Francisco). Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca said it conflicted with federal law and vowed to defy it.

The act is aimed at Secure Communities, a federal program that creates a pipeline from local jails to deportation. In participating jurisdictions, the fingerprints of every person arrested and booked into local jails are run through federal databases. Federal authorities flag suspected illegal immigrants, then request that police detain them for 48 hours, providing more time for a transfer to federal custody.

Brown wrote in his veto message that he supported the intent of the Trust Act but it was "fatally flawed," as it would have protected illegal immigrants involved in such crimes as child abuse, drug trafficking and selling weapons. "I believe it's unwise to interfere with a sheriff's discretion to comply with a detainer issued for people with these kinds of troubling criminal records," he said.

Reshma Shamasunder, executive director of the California Immigrant Policy Center, said in a statement that the governor's veto "has doomed thousands of immigrants including domestic violence survivors, food vendors and people who for minor offenses are separated from their loved ones and detained unjustly."

Proponents of the act noted that fewer than a third of the roughly 80,000 people deported from California since the state joined the program in 2009 were convicted of serious felonies. Most of the rest committed misdemeanors, while others were guilty only of previous immigration violations.

Brown acted on dozens of other contentious proposals, among them the one addressing gay "conversion" treatment, which he condemned in his veto message.

"This bill bans non-scientific 'therapies' that have driven young people to depression and suicide," Brown wrote. "These practices have no basis in science or medicine and they will now be relegated to the dustbin of quackery."

The measure was supported by gay rights groups including Equality California. Its president, Clarissa Filgioun, said the governor's action reaffirmed that the therapy practices are "relics of prejudice and abuse."

The bill, SB 1172 by Sen. Ted Lieu (D-Torrance), was opposed by Republican lawmakers as an intrusion by the state into a family decision. And the conservative Pacific Justice Institute vowed to file a lawsuit alleging that the measure violates constitutional protections such as therapists' free-speech rights and patients' rights to privately pursue medical help.

Christopher Rosik, president of the Assn. for Research and Therapy of Homosexuality, called the new law an "unprecedented legislative intrusion."

Brown's decision to allow juvenile killers sentenced to life in prison to become eligible for early release after 25 years also came despite strong words from opponents.

The measure was championed by Sen. Leland Yee (D-San Francisco), a child psychologist who argued that minors lack good judgment and should be given a shot at a new life. He said that with the governor's signature on the bill, SB 9, "California said we believe all kids, even those we had given up on in the past, are deserving of a second chance."

The measure would apply to about 300 convicted murderers. They would have to show remorse and work toward rehabilitation before petitioning for a new sentence. The California District Attorneys Assn. fought the bill, saying in a letter to lawmakers that it is "an affront to justice and disrespectful of the victims of these crimes."

Hollywood applauded the governor's signature on a two-year extension of the state's tax credit for films and television shows shot in California, providing up to $200 million in breaks.

Supporters said extending the tax breaks to July 1, 2017, was justified amid "runaway film production," in which film companies are enticed to other states that offer their own tax breaks and other incentives.

"We commend the legislature and Gov. Brown for recognizing that the motion picture business is an integral part of the economic and cultural powerhouse that has been California during the last 100 years," said a statement issued by a coalition of entertainment industry unions, including the Directors Guild of America and the Teamsters.



To: Bonefish who wrote (676654)10/2/2012 11:29:58 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 1587264
 
Court Reveals Iranian Operatives In Charge Of Obama’s Iran Policy Since 2009

westernjournalism.com/ ^ | 26SEP12 | By Doug Book


A ruling handed down on September 13th by the D.C. District Federal Court has finally made clear what many have known for years–that the Obama Administration’s Iran policy was initiated and advanced by a group with illicit, hidden ties to the Iranian Regime and financed by the U.S./Israel- hating George Soros.

In 2009, Barack Obama turned over virtually all responsibility and authority for foreign policy negotiations with Iran to Trita Parsi and his National Iranian American Council (NIAC). Founded by Parsi in 2003, the Washington-based NIAC is a powerful lobbying group that is “…widely considered the de facto lobby for the Iranian Regime in America.”

Like too many organizations that claim to represent the best interests of the nation of Iran and Iranian-Americans, the NIAC is tightly connected with and known to be funded at least in part by the George Soros empire. Small wonder NIAC advice on dealing with Iran was replete with claims that Israeli propaganda was responsible for the negative image imposed on otherwise peace-loving, misunderstood Iranian mullahs. Not exactly a friend of Israel is George Soros.

And how did the reputedly “non-partisan” NIAC suggest the Obama Administration proceed with negotiations? Simple. The Council “…opposes sanctions on Iran, soft-pedals any controversial events in Iran, and counsels “patience” regarding Iran’s stance towards its nuclear program.”

What better way for NIAC representatives to serve their hidden masters in Tehran than by promoting a policy of “peaceful coexistence” between the US and Iran. And to the NIAC, peaceful coexistence meant “…acceptance of [the] Iranian government, accepting Iranian hegemony in the Gulf and its place in other parts of the Middle East, removal of sanctions and pressure against Iran, abandon of assistance to the Iranian people’s resistance against the regime and etc.”

For the U.S., the consequences of this game of intrigue played by the Administration’s hand-picked, Iranian representatives are summed up in this statement by Barack Obama: “I’ve made it clear that the United States respects the sovereignty of the Islamic Republic of Iran, and is not interfering with Iran’s affairs.” And indeed, this is the path Barack Obama has followed. Not exactly reassuring words from a president charged with keeping the American public safe from a nuclear-bound administration of religious fanatics dedicated to our demise.

And it is thanks to an ill-advised lawsuit that proof of the NIAC’s wrongdoing has finally been placed before the American public. In 2008, Trita Parsi and his organization filed a defamation suit against perpetual critic Seid Dai. Dai had publicly accused Parsi of secretly working with the ruling Iranian Regime against the interests of the United States and the Iranian people. But when Parsi filed suit hoping to silence-through-intimidation such potentially lethal criticism, it opened the floodgates of legal discovery allowing Dai to demand internal NIAC documents and emails that eventually “… confirmed [Parsi’s] ties to the [Iranian] mullahs…”

Not only did recovered emails reveal that Parsi had held “…numerous secret meetings with top level IRI [Islamic Republic of Iran] officials,” “Court documents show the NIAC was guilty of: lying to members of Congress, fraudulent membership numbers, tax law violations and evasions, Lobbying Disclosure Act violation, the Foreign Agents Registration Act violations, foreign bank accounts, defrauding of federal funds, bribing of eye witnesses, etc…”

And so egregious were NIAC attempts to duck its legal responsibilities of discovery that Judge John Bates dismissed the Parsi defamation suit, ordered sanctions against Parsi for his failure to comply with discovery, and ordered Parsi to pay significant percentages of Dai’s costs and fees.

This is an immensely important story, not surprisingly “missed” in its entirety by the mainstream media.

But why has the Romney campaign not demanded Obama’s rationale for handing the foreign policy decisions of the United States and the security of the American people over to representatives of the Iranian government itself? Could voters be pleased upon finding the president had placed America’s safety from possible nuclear attack in the hands of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad?



To: Bonefish who wrote (676654)10/17/2012 12:23:01 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1587264
 
A recap of last nite's debate and how Mr. Obama's negro army did whup ass on Mr. Romney.

"Please Proceed Governor" - UPDATE - Romney's Devastating Rose Garden Moment!

Remember when Romneyland said Obama couldn't win the second debate because he wasn't smart enough?

And How About That Great Moment When Mitt Threw His Own Base Under the Bus?

"Binders full of women" more damaging for Romney than we realize

Romney: Guns don't cause gun violence, sluts do + *

How Barack Obama threaded the town hall needle and got America to be outraged at Mitt Romney