The below video (July, 2007) is from CBS 46 in Atlanta, before Atlanta TV news outlets cancelled pro-enforcement Americans and related thought crimes – and before illegals learned the laws would not be enforced in GA.
looking for a better life • news and pro-enforcement opinion
By D.A. King
The below video (July, 2007) is from CBS 46 in Atlanta, before Atlanta TV news outlets cancelled pro-enforcement Americans and related thought crimes – and before illegals learned the laws would not be enforced in GA.
By D.A. King
Update: Aug 20, 2022: Half of US companies gearing up for layoffs, survey suggests
Georgia’s congressional delegation remains deeply divided, politically, but they are in agreement on one thing: the state needs more workers.
Members of congress from both parties spoke Tuesday in Macon, in an event hosted by the Georgia Chamber.
Republican Rep. Buddy Carter, who represents the state’s 1stCongressional District, says Georgia’s worker shortage is not hard to miss.
“Ride down the road, you see ‘Help Wanted’ signs everywhere,” Carter said. “You see businesses closing early and cutting back on their business hours because they don’t have the help.”
Rep. Carolyn Bourdeaux, a Democrat, says a significant reason for this labor shortage is the steep drop in immigration over the last six year…
Read there entire report from the liberal WABE News here.
By D.A. King
Ed Painter was a friend, an advisor and an inspiration. There should a photo of Ed Painter in the political encyclopedia under the term “genuine, sly conservative.” And he was patient. He will be missed. We are all better because he was here. Our best to his loving family.
We sometimes worked together on illegal immigration under the Gold Dome and I was always grateful for Ed’s advice, experience, insight and knowledge of North Georgia politicians. Ed was Chairman of the Republican Party in the 14th District for awhile but had a special place in his heart for sell-out, anything-for-a-buck, establishment Republicans who betrayed the voters who sent them to Atlanta. I can think of no better example of that description than out-going state Senator Jeff Mullis.
Ed was somewhat upset and perhaps a tad jealous that Mullis listed me over Ed on a list of Capitol regulars who public servant Mullis did not want to deal with.
I think the 2017 photos below of Sen Mullis’ office in the Georgia state Capitol tell that story. Adios, Ed and thank you.
Note: We have posted four photos below here. We are being told that they are not visible when using some portable devices. We are trying to figure out why.
By D.A. King
The use of a false Social Security Number or card is a felony,[1] punishable by a fine, and up to five years in prison.
People use false Social Security Numbers to:
Criminal charges may result from all of these uses.
Since 1936, they are the primary way that the United States government identifies people for certain benefits, and taxes. But it should be understood that Social Security Numbers were never intended as identification numbers for all purposes; they are for the government to determine Social Security benefits and to report income to the IRS.
No one has a right to ask for your Social Security Number without a good reason. The only organizations that can require it are the IRS and the Social Security Administration. Many entities can refuse to do business with you if you don’t provide it.
Most banks and financial institutions will not give loans or even open a bank account without getting it. Medical providers and other businesses may ask for it, but they are not entitled to it; they only want it so they can report you to credit bureaus if you don’t pay.
By D.A. King
Dec 10, 2020
Boltsmag.org
Growing up in Gwinnett County, Georgia, in the northeastern Atlanta suburbs, Jonathan Zuñiga remembers the fear his parents felt driving to the grocery store.
In 2009, the Gwinnett County sheriff’s office, under Sheriff Butch Conway, started turning over hundreds of Latinx immigrants in its custody to ICE—including many who only landed in jail after police arrested them for minor traffic violations. Zuñiga says his parents, who are undocumented immigrants from Mexico, had to leave their construction jobs for lower-paying factory jobs that required less driving. But running errands continued to pose a threat.
“Driving even small amounts of time was unsafe,” Zuñiga said.
The county sheriff’s office was making these transfers because it had joined ICE’s 287(g) program, which allows local officers to directly enforce federal immigration policies, including screening immigration status and detaining residents until ICE takes custody. Gwinnett County operates one of the largest 287(g) programs in the country: this year, it ranks fourth in the nation for the number of ICE detainer requests, in which local jails hold people in custody longer in order to hand them over to federal agents. Detainers in Gwinnett peaked in 2012 and then steadily declined throughout Barack Obama’s second term as president. But they soared again after Donald Trump took office in early 2017 with new enforcement priorities, including having ICE arrest noncitizens more frequently for minor crimes. A Mother Jones investigation found that between 2017 and July 2019, the primary charge for nearly half of the people held for ICE at the Gwinnett County Jail was for driving without a license or another minor traffic violation.
But in November, voters in Gwinnett and nearby suburban Cobb County chose Democratic sheriffs for the first time in decades, electing candidates who made campaign promises to end the 287(g) programs. A Democratic candidate who opposed 287(g) also won in Charleston County, South Carolina; altogether these wins mirror a string of progressive sheriff victoriesin 2018 that were driven by immigration issues.
Cobb County’s longtime sheriff, Neil Warren, lost to challenger Craig Owens. In Gwinnett County, Sheriff-elect Keybo Taylor won with 57 percent of the vote against Republican candidate Lou Solis, the second-in-command to Conway, who didn’t seek re-election. In 2016, by contrast, Conway ran unopposed and won 97 percent of the vote.
That upset, and the emphasis on 287(g) as a central campaign issue in both counties, resulted in large part from the work of local immigrants’ rights organizers who have grown their operations under the Trump presidency and activated communities of color. Their organizing also contributed to Georgia electing a Democrat presidential candidate for the first time since 1992.
Leading up to the November elections, Zuñiga joined Georgia Latino Alliance for Human Rights (GLAHR) Action Network as a canvasser focused on the sheriff races in Gwinnett and Cobb counties. Working as part of the “Take Action, Get Power” coalition with Southerners on New Ground (SONG) Power, and Mijente, Zuñiga and other canvassers were able to reach more than 125,000 residences—primarily Latinx and Black voters—by door-knocking (with COVID-19 precautions), according to GLAHR. Their work paralleled groups like the Asian American Advocacy Fund, whose outreach helped to nearly double voter turnout among Asian American and Pacific Islander communities.
Zuñiga found that many residents were aware of 287(g) but not of how to change it. “They didn’t know the formal name of that policy, but they knew what could happen if [you didn’t have] a license,” he said. “A lot of people thought it was something coming down from the federal level. They weren’t aware that changing a sheriff could actually change that policy.”
Founded nearly 15 years ago, GLAHR is the largest Latinx grassroots organization in the state. Under the Trump administration, GLAHR, SONG, and other long-established Georgia-based nonprofits have joined a nationwide trend of changing liberal activism by creating 501(c)(4) arms—organizations that are also exempt from federal income tax but can lobby and do political work—in order to be more aggressive political players, rather than solely focused on litigation, educational work, or providing services.
Kevin Joachin, an organizer with GLAHR Action Network, says the organization’s priority has become “building the political consciousness of our community”—helping inform Latinx residents about specific policies and their ability to change them at a scale that has little precedence in Georgia, particularly for a down-ballot race. That organizing began early in the election cycle; GLAHR lead organizer Carlos Medina says that activating Latinx voters for the sheriff primaries helped push Democratic candidates in both counties leftward, leading to promises to end the 287(g) program.
Related reading: Communist banner unfurled at anti-borders GLAHR Gold Dome
Zuñiga says he found that many Latinx and Black voters in the suburbs—particularly in the more rural areas of Cobb and Gwinnett counties—never before had an interaction with a canvasser, despite the influx of political spending and organizing that’s accompanied Georgia’s demographic change in recent years. “We try to get that small, little conversation with people because we feel like that actually matters,” Zuñiga said.
Although Hillary Clinton won Gwinnett County in the 2016 presidential election, and Joe Biden won the county and state this year, more than a third of Latinxes in Georgia voted for Trump, according to exit polls. Canvassers with Take Action Get Power found that some Latinx voters in Gwinnett supported Solis for sheriff partially because of his Latinx identity. Joachin says GLAHR Action Network’s in-person approach was pivotal: Canvassers would see pro-Solis signs in some stores and talk to the owners or employees about Gwinnett’s high rates of deportations. The next time canvassers drove by, Joachin said, the signs were gone. Compared to hyperpolarized debates about presidential candidates, Zuñiga says he was able to have “more in-touch conversations [about the sheriff’s race] because it was something that was affecting their communities, and they could see that firsthand.”
SONG volunteer coordinator Tayleece Paul says door-knocking yielded contact or conversations with 32 percent of residences, versus just 2 percent with phone banking. Paul grew up in Gwinnett County and remembers a friend’s father who was deported through the 287(g) program. Many of the coalition’s canvassers met people who had similar experiences with the program, she says. “Each person had their own unique story.”
Joachin says that engaging the entire Latinx community—including those who cannot vote, like undocumented immigrants—is central to GLAHR Action Network’s strategy of empowerment. “We’re not always concerned if the person who we’re looking for is at home, because maybe their family member who is undocumented will benefit from the conversation by being included,” he said. “We’re not telling them to vote—that’s voter fraud—but what we’re doing is creating a culture of voting.” More here.
By D.A. King
Newsman.com
August 2, 2022
In an editorial Monday, the conservative Hispanic news outlet “El American” called for the immediate impeachment of Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas for his failure to handle the situation at the southern border.
“It is therefore with no pleasure that this outlet should call for the impeachment of one of the most powerful Hispanic leaders in the country, albeit in a Democratic administration,” the editorial Monday said. “Yet the failings of the incumbent Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, Alejandro Mayorkas, are so immense that they must no longer be ignored.”
The conservative digital publication said while it supports promoting Hispanics to positions of power, Mayorkas has shown “gross incompetence and disdain for protecting America’s southern border” since his 2021 appointment to the post.
“The facts speak for themselves,” the editorial reads. “More than 3.1 million illegal immigrants have been apprehended by U.S. Customs and Border Protection since [President Joe] Biden took office and more than 800,000 have evaded capture, considerably more than the number of detentions during the entire [Donald] Trump presidency. Meanwhile, the some two million illegal crossings in 2021 represents a record high, more than five times the number that crossed in the previous year.”
The editorial also pointed out the 1,000 reported illegal migrant deaths in the border region, including 53 migrants discovered dead from heat exposure in a truck without air conditioning and operated by human traffickers.
“Violent Mexican cartels weaponize illegal immigration as a diversionary tactic to transport thousands of kilos of drugs across the border, netting them tens of millions in profits,” the editorial continued. “This has contributed to the ongoing opioid epidemic, with at least 108,000 Americans killed by overdoses in 2021. To put that number in perspective, it is the same as the entire population of Green Bay, Wisconsin dying due to substance abuse.”
The publication said that Biden and Mayorkas are not showing any signs of taking action to stop the “humanitarian crisis,” and Mayorkas continues to “brush off” calls by Republicans in Congress to impeach him for “betraying his oath of office… Read the rest here.
By D.A. King
Center for Immigration Studies
By George Fishman on July 25, 2022
One-third of all foreign students in the US are from China. In many cases vetting is not effective as students are only approached for intelligence-gathering purposes by the PRC after arriving in the U.S. or after returning to China.
From the Washington-based Center for Immigration Studies.
The People’s Republic of China under Xi Jinping believes that war with the United States is inevitable. Depending on the outcome of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the risk of armed conflict might come sooner rather than later. A Russian victory might entice the PRC to invade Taiwan, which could very well draw in U.S. troops.
The Chinese Communist Party is intently focused on modernizing its military to close the gap between U.S. and Chinese military power, embracing critical and emerging technologies to serve as “assassin’s mace” or “silver bullet” technologies. A RAND Corporation analyst has testified that should it succeed:
[This would] represent perhaps the most destabilizing geostrategic development of the 21st century. [S]teep advances in the [People’s Liberation Army’s] PLA’s conventional capabilities … could, for the first time in modern history, pit the United States against a militarily superior adversary.
At the same time, the number of students from the PRC at U.S. universities has skyrocketed in recent years to 317,299, representing more than one-third of all foreign students. As recently as 2008/09, they accounted for only 14.6 percent of all foreign students, in 1994/95 only 8.7 percent, and in 1984/85 only 3.0 percent.
FBI Director Christopher Wray has stated that:
[N]o country poses a broader, more severe intelligence collection threat than China. China has pioneered a societal approach to stealing innovation any way it can [including] … through graduate students and researchers. … Nation-state actors are … targeting academia — including professors, research scientists, and graduate students [seeking] our cutting-edge research, our advanced technology, and our world-class equipment and expertise.
In 2018, the Department of Justice set up the “China Initiative” to deal with these threats. The Biden administration has shut it down.
Given the paucity of effective mechanisms to prevent students from the PRC once in the U.S. from engaging in espionage and otherwise bringing the fruits of our scientific research back home, it may be time to consider barring the entry of all students from the PRC, or at least those who will be studying in STEM or other fields likely to give them access to information and research of value to the PLA.
While of course not every such student will engage in deleterious activities while in the U.S. (or after they return home), a sufficiently large number will that, given the impossibility of the U.S. government conducting sufficiently in-depth background checks on each of them (as a result of a lack of resources or access to the necessary information), a blanket ban might be the only effective alternative. And, in many instances, students are only approached for intelligence-gathering purposes by the PRC after they have arrived in the U.S. or after they have returned home to China. In such cases, pre-vetting would be ineffectual.
Such a blanket ban would be advisable only for so long as the PRC seeks to undermine around the world the values we hold dear, considers America an enemy, conducts (and solicits Chinese students in the U.S. to conduct) massive amounts of espionage against us, pilfers our nation’s intellectual property, and prepares for future armed conflict against us. However, it is impossible to say when the PRC will cease and desist.
By D.A. King
The governor is the chief executive of the state and oversees the executive branch. He or she is the chief law enforcement officer and the commander-in-chief of the state’s military forces.
The governor shall “take care that the laws are faithfully executed and shall be the conservator of the peace” in the state. This power to enforce laws is almost identical to that of the president of the United States. He or she has the power to veto legislation, although the Georgia General Assembly can override the governor’s veto with a two-thirds majority in each chamber.
From the Governor’s office official website. See also the Georgia constitution.
By D.A. King
By D.A. King
Update: July 28, 2022: I sent an open records request to the Cobb Sheriff’s office asking for copies of documents that would show compliance with state law on checking immigration status of prisoners and reporting illegal aliens to DHS and received a response. There is no record of compliance with the state law, OCGA 42-4-14.
“No drivers license” is usually the tip-off that a foreign national is an illegal alien.
Booking report from Cobb County (hat tip Bob Trent):
From WSB TV news:
“Lopez-Vail was arrested and charged with
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July 24, 2022
MARIETTA – Marietta police said officers charged a teenage suspect in an alleged hit-and-run that hospitalized a man and 6-year-old boy.
Police identified the suspect as 19-year-old Horacio Lopez-Vail. Police said Sunday that the man and child were still in critical condition.
Police said the pedestrians were walking along Chert Road between Roswell Road and Gresham Road when a car hit them from behind. The driver, police said, fled the scene without contacting police. Police shared an image of a dark-colored Toyota Corolla and asked for the public’s help in finding a suspect. Police arrested Lopez-Vail on Saturday night.
Police charged Lopez-Vail with two counts of failure to maintain lane, serious injury by vehicle and felony hit-and-run. He’s also charged with driving on the wrong side of the road, driving without a license, reckless driving, driving while distracted, duty to report striking a fixed object and tampering with evidence.
Read the entire report here from Fox5 News.
Contact info for the Georgia delegation in Washington DC here. Just click on their name.