Caribbean-Latin America |
Mexico: 'U.S. troops OK, but no stopping illegals!' |
2010-05-27 |
The Mexican government has announced it respects the Obama administration's decision to send 1,200 National Guard troops to the U.S. southern border to counter cross-border drug and weapons trafficking just as long as the troops don't enforce U.S. immigration laws. The Embassy of Mexico in Washington, D.C., released the following statement on May 25: Regarding the administration's decision to send 1,200 National Guard servicemen to the U.S. Southern border, the government of Mexico trusts that this decision will help to channel additional U.S. resources to enhance efforts to prevent the illegal flows of weapons and bulk cash into Mexico, which provide organized crime with its firepower and its ability to corrupt. Additionally, the government of Mexico expects that National Guard personnel will strengthen U.S. operations in the fight against transnational organized crime that operates on both sides of our common border and that it will not, in accordance to its legal obligations, conduct activities directly linked to the enforcement of immigration laws [emphasis added]. Upon learning of the statement, former Rep. Tom Tancredo told WND, "The Mexican government can be assured that there will be no attempt to enforce immigration law by the National Guard because there is no attempt to enforce immigration law by the president of the United States." Tancredo said 1,200 troops for a 2,000 mile border is an inadequate number because there have been requests for up to 8,000, with 6,000 in the Arizona area alone. "Remember, 1,200 means 400 in three shifts," he said. "If you do not have three shifts, what does it matter? You have 1,200 out there for eight hours a day and then you pull them back? It's ludicrous!" |
Link |
-Lurid Crime Tales- |
AZ Rancher Who Aided Illegals Found Murdered |
2010-03-29 |
A longtime rancher was killed on his Douglas-area property over the weekend, and neighbors worried that his homicide was connected to increasing border-related crime in the area. The Cochise County Sheriff's Office offered little information into the late-Saturday shooting death of 58-year-old Robert Krentz, whose family began the Krentz Ranch more than 100 years ago. Krentz's body was found on his land, which is about 35 miles northeast of Douglas, just before midnight Saturday, said Carol Capas, a spokeswoman for the Sheriff's Office. The Sheriff's Office, aided by the U.S. Border Patrol, had no suspects Sunday and continued to follow leads, Capas said. She declined to comment on reports from neighbors and border activists that Krentz's death was related to smuggling in the area. Area residents said Krentz had no enemies, and they could think of no motive for his death other than the possibility it was related to what they called the growing level of crime in the area related to illegal immigrants and drug smugglers. Tom Tancredo, a former U.S. representative from Colorado, was visiting ranchers near Douglas to discuss border issues when he heard of Krentz's death. Tancredo said he and Krentz were friends and that he was "a mild-mannered guy" who was known for providing illegal immigrants with food and water. Tancredo and Chris Simcox, co-founder of the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps, said Krentz phoned a family member Saturday afternoon to say he was out near his watering hole, providing one or more illegal immigrants with aid. That's the last his family heard from him, Simcox and Tancredo said. "He looked the other way so often," Tancredo said. "It's so ironic that he, of all people, got murdered." If Krentz's killing was caused by an illegal immigrant or a drug smuggler, U.S. Border Patrol spokesman Omar Candelaria said, it would be a first for the area, to his recollection. "We haven't seen any instances of illegal immigrants or drug smugglers attacking U.S. citizens," Candelaria said. Others who live nearby were unwilling to disclose their names when they spoke about the homicide Sunday because, they said, they were afraid of possible repercussions. A person at the Krentz home also declined to comment. In a 1999 PBS interview, Robert Krentz and his wife, Susan, said illegal immigrants once stole property from their ranch, but that incident didn't stop him from aiding other trespassers. "You know, we've personally been broke in once. And they took about $700 worth of stuff. And you know, if they come in and ask for water, I'll still give them water. I, you know, that's just my nature," Krentz was quoted as saying in written transcripts of the interview. The longtime rancher's homicide already has caught U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords' attention. Sometime this week, the Arizona Democrat will travel to Douglas for a briefing on the homicide, said Giffords' spokesman, C.J. Karamargin. "Rob Krentz was a pillar of the Cochise County ranching community," Giffords said in a press release. "He will be greatly missed." The Krentz family's cattle ranch was inducted into the Arizona Farming and Ranching Hall of Fame in 2008. The family started the ranch in 1907. |
Link |
Home Front: Politix |
Bush Pardons Coyote But Not Ignacio and Jose Compean |
2009-01-02 |
John Allen Aregood was convicted of conspiring to transport and harbor illegal aliens. President Bush pardoned him just days ago. And what about former Border Agents Ignacio Compean and Jose Compean who, according to Congress Tom Tancredo and so many others, were sent to prison for "doing their jobs?" NOTHING! Not a word! |
Link |
Home Front: Politix |
Tancredo Proposes Anti-Sharia Measure in Wake of U.K. Certification of Islamic Courts |
2008-09-21 |
Amid disturbing revelations that the verdicts of Islamic Sharia courts are now legally binding in civil cases in the United Kingdom, U.S. Representative Tom Tancredo (R-Littleton) moved quickly today to introduce legislation designed to protect the United States from a similar fate. According to recent news reports, a new network of Sharia courts in a half-dozen major cities in the U.K. have been empowered under British law to adjudicate a wide variety of legal cases ranging from divorces and financial disputes to those involving domestic violence. This is a case where truth is truly stranger than fiction, said Tancredo. Today the British people are learning a hard lesson about the consequences of massive, unrestricted immigration. Sharia law, favored by Muslim extremists around the world, often calls for brutal punishment such as the stoning of women who are accused of adultery or have children out of wedlock, cutting off the hands of petty thieves and lashings for the casual consumption of alcohol. Under Sharia law, a woman is often required to provide numerous witnesses to prove rape allegations against an assailant a near impossible task. When you have an immigration policy that allows for the importation of millions of radical Muslims, you are also importing their radical ideology an ideology that is fundamentally hostile to the foundations of western democracy such as gender equality, pluralism, and individual liberty, said Tancredo. The best way to safeguard America against the importation of the destructive effects of this poisonous ideology is to prevent its purveyors from coming here in the first place. Tancredos bill, dubbed the Jihad Prevention Act, would bar the entry of foreign nationals who advocate Sharia law. In addition, the legislation would make the advocacy of Sharia law by radical Muslims already in the United States a deportable offense. Tancredo pointed to the results of a recent poll conducted by the Centre for Social Cohesion as evidence that the U.S. should act to prevent the situation in Great Britain from replicating itself here in the United States. The poll found that some 40 percent of Muslim students in the United Kingdom support the introduction of Sharia law there, and 33 percent support the imposition of an Islamic Sharia-based government worldwide. We need to send a clear message that the only law we recognize here in America is the U.S. Constitution and the laws passed by our democratically elected representatives, concluded Tancredo. If you arent comfortable with that concept, you arent welcome in the United States. |
Link |
Home Front: Culture Wars |
Killings turn focus on San Francisco sanctuary law |
2008-07-24 |
You reap what you sow... SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The scene repeats itself daily on city streets: a driver gets stuck bumper to bumper, blocking an intersection and preventing another car from turning left. But authorities say that was enough to cause Edwin Ramos to unload an AK-47 assault weapon on a man and his two sons, killing them. The deaths immediately drew public outrage, which intensified when authorities revealed that Ramos, 21, is an illegal immigrant who managed to avoid deportation despite previous brushes with the law. The case has put San Francisco's liberal politics to the test, setting off a debate over its sanctuary law that shields undocumented immigrants from deportation. On Wednesday, Ramos pleaded not guilty to three counts of murder in the deaths of Anthony Bologna, 49, and his sons, Michael, 20, and Matthew, 16. Bologna and his older son died in the intersection on June 22. His younger son succumbed to his injuries days later. Shortly after that, police arrested Ramos, a native of El Salvador and reputed member of the Mara Salvatrucha gang, known as MS-13. Investigators believe he was the gunman, though two other men were seen in the car with him. The heinousness of the deaths has put pressure on San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris to seek the death penalty against Ramos. Harris, who campaigned on an anti-death penalty platform and has never pursued capital punishment during her more than four years in office, has declined to say exactly how she intends to proceed. "This case has been charged as a special circumstance case," making it eligible for the death penalty, spokeswoman Erica Derryck said. "No additional announcement has been made about this aspect of the charging." Ramos' attorney, Robert Amparan, said his client was not the shooter. "They have the wrong person," he said. Amparan declined to discuss details of the case, but he denied his client was involved in gang activity and said Ramos entered the country legally. Federal authorities contend Ramos is undocumented. The victims' family learned that Ramos had been arrested at least three times before the shooting and evaded deportation, largely because of San Francisco's sanctuary status. The policy, adopted in 1989 by the city's elected Board of Supervisors, bars local officials from cooperating with federal authorities in their efforts to deport illegal immigrants. Officials in the juvenile offenders agency interpreted the law to also shield underage felons from deportation by refusing to report undocumented ones. Mayor Gavin Newsom said he rescinded the policy regarding juvenile offenders after learning about it in May. The Bolognas' relatives say Ramos apparently benefited from the policy when he reportedly was convicted twice of felonies in 2003 and 2004 but never was turned over for deportation. "All San Francisco's sanctuary ordinance has done is bring violence and death to this once-great city," said Frank Kennedy, who is married to Anthony Bologna's sister. Kennedy called for an investigation of the sanctuary policy and demanded "prosecutions for violating the law." Meanwhile, local and federal authorities are pointing fingers at each other over Ramos' most recent arrest before the shooting. Ramos was arrested in late March with another man after police discovered a gun used in a double homicide in the car Ramos was driving. The district attorney's office decided not to file charges against Ramos, and he was released April 2 even though he was in the process of being deported after his application for legal residence was denied, according to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. San Francisco Sheriff's Department spokesman Eileen Hirst said jail officials faxed ICE on March 30 asking if Ramos should remain jailed. Ramos was freed after Hirst said immigration officials didn't respond. ICE spokesman Timothy Counts said his agency did not receive word of Ramos' arrest in March. He said the only communication received about Ramos was an "electronic message" from the sheriff's department three hours after his release. The case has garnered national attention, leading U.S. Rep. Tom Tancredo, R-Colo., and an anti-immigration group called Californians for Population Stabilization to ask the U.S. Department of Justice to take over, alleging San Francisco authorities have mishandled it. "Because San Francisco's political leaders have already demonstrated their willingness to act in flagrant violation of federal law, I do not believe that local judicial institutions can be trusted to fairly try the case or mete out an appropriate punishment," Tancredo said in a letter sent Tuesday to U.S. Attorney General Michael Mukasey. Justice Department spokesman Charles Miller said he was unaware of the case and the congressman's request. Miller said the attorney general routinely responds privately to such requests. Diana Hull, president of Californians for Population Stabilization, called on about a dozen cities nationwide with similar sanctuary policies to end those programs. "We need to remember always that a death-dealing policy like 'sanctuary' hides behind the false mantle of compassion," Hull said. Nathan Ballard, a spokesman for San Francisco's mayor, said city officials were wrong to shield undocumented, juvenile felons from federal immigration authorities. "The sanctuary program was never intended to shield felons," Ballard said. "The policy was inappropriate." However, Newsom "still supports the worthwhile aims of denying the federal government" assistance in deporting otherwise law-abiding undocumented residents, he said. |
Link |
Home Front: Politix |
Tom Tancredo to Drop Out of Presidential Race |
2007-12-20 |
![]() Tancredo would not personally confirm whether he will pull out of the race. I will neither confirm nor deny that report, Tancredo told FOX News. But he added, I wouldnt have a press conference if I didnt have anything to say. The five-term Colorado representative already announced in late October that he would not seek reelection to the House of Representatives in 2008. He said at the time that his core issue of illegal immigration has been elevated to national prominence and that he doesnt need to remain in Congress to promote it. Tancredo aired a startling ad a month ago tying illegal immigration to terrorism. The ad showed a man in a hooded sweatshirt and backpack walking into a crowded shopping mall, with the sound of an explosion ringing out after the screen goes dark. The ad then showed bloody pictures of victims of terrorist acts in Europe, while the narrator said: The price we pay for spineless politicians who refuse to defend our borders against those who come to kill. |
Link |
Home Front: WoT | |
I voted present because I read somewhere that Congress shall make no law... | |
2007-10-04 | |
The resolution recognized the Islamic faith as one of the great religions of the world, rejected hatred, bigotry and violence directed against Muslims, both in the United States and worldwide and [commended] Muslims in the United States and across the globe who have privately and publicly rejected interpretations and movements of Islam that justify and encourage hatred, violence and terror. Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-Colo.) dismissed the resolution as political correctness gone too far. This resolution is an example of the degree to which political correctness has captured the political and media elite in this country, Tancredo said. I am not opposed to commending any religion for their faith. The problem is that any attempt to do so for Jews or Christians is immediately condemned as breaching the non-existent line between church and state by the same elite. Rep. Mike Pence (R-Ind.) said, I voted present because I read somewhere that Congress shall make no law respecting the establishment of religion. Joining Tancredo in his present vote were Republican Reps. Robert Aderholt (Ala.), Todd Akin (Mo.), Gresham Barrett (S.C.), Jo Bonner (Ala.), Mary Bono (Calif.), Paul Broun (Ga.), Ginny Brown-Waite (Fla.), Michael Burgess (Texas), Steve Buyer (Ind.), John Carter (Texas), Mike Conaway (Texas), Nathan Deal (Ga.), Terry Everett (Ala.), Mary Fallin (Okla.), Randy Forbes (Va.), Trent Franks (Ariz.), Scott Garrett (N.J.), Louie Gohmert (Texas), Virgil Goode (Va.), Kay Granger (Texas), Robin Hayes (N.C.), Sam Johnson (Texas), Jim Jordan (Ohio), Steve King (Iowa), Doug Lamborn (Colo.), Kenny Marchant (Texas), Jeff Miller (Fla.), Randy Neugebauer (Texas), Tom Price (Ga.), Mike Rogers (Ala.), Mark Souder (Ind.), Mac Thornberry (Texas), Todd Tiahrt (Kan.), Tim Walberg (Mich.), Zach Wamp (Tenn.), Dave Weldon (Fla.), Lynn Westmoreland (Ga.), Don Young (Alaska) and Bill Young (Fla.), as well as Democrat Mike McIntyre (N.C.). | |
Link |
Arabia | ||
'Nobody can strike the Kaaba in Mecca' | ||
2007-08-15 | ||
![]()
Earlier this month, Tancredo told about 30 people at a town hall meeting in the state of Iowa that he believes a nuclear terrorist attack on the US could be imminent and that the US needs to hurry up and think of a way to stop it. "If it is up to me, we are going to explain that an attack on this homeland of that nature would be followed by an attack on the holy sites in Mecca and Medina. Because that's the only thing I can think of that might deter somebody from doing what they otherwise might do," said the Colorado Republican, whose bid for the White House is considered unlikely to succeed. Mecca and Medina, in Saudi Arabia, are Islam's holiest cities. All able-bodied Muslims are required to make a pilgrimage there at least once in their lives. Islam is the only religion that | ||
Link |
India-Pakistan |
Strategic |
2007-08-10 |
![]() He strongly condemned the statements of US presidential hopefuls on bombing Muslims' declaring them imprudent. "These are insane and foolish remarks. I have conveyed to our counterparts in the US Congress and the administration as well that these remarks and the bill linking US aid to Pakistan with its anti-terror performance will prove counterproductive," he said. He said not even a single individual of the 1.25 billion Muslim population could tolerate such irresponsiblestatements and threats issued by Tom Tancredo and Barrack Obama. "Let me also make it clear that the defence of our sacred places is not only the responsibility of the Saudi Arabia. Muslim living across the world will get united if anybody tries to cast an evil eye on our holy places," he warned. He called for legislation at international level to safeguard religious sentiments of all communities in the world. He said that he had already made it clear to the US administration that their elections should not be held at the cost of Pakistan. The foreign minister strongly refuted US claims of Pakistan's tribal areas being safe havens for Al-Qaeda terrorists and ruled out the possibility of unilateral action by the US or NATO inside Pakistan. "Let me state it categorically that there is no safe haven for terrorists in Pakistan. There could be some individuals hiding in tribal areas and we're taking action against them. We're ready to take action against anyone if provided with any credible information," he said. Declaring any US military action inside Pakistan would be unacceptable, Kasuri said that Pakistan was a sovereign state and would not allow any unilateral action on its soil, as its own forces were capable enough to deal with any challenge. He said he had conveyed it to the US administration that linking Pakistan's aid with its performance in anti-terror war was also disappointing and could prove counterproductive in war on terrorism. Defending the country's foreign policy, Kasuri said that Pakistan had decided to join the war on terror in the best national interests and not on US dictates. "Terrorism is a great concern not only for the US but also for our friends like China and Saudi Arabia," he said. Rejecting the opposition's claims of Pakistan following the US diktat, the foreign minister said that the government had opposed the US stand on several international issues. To support his point, Kasuri referred to Iraq war, nuclear issue of Iran, Iran-India-Gas Pipeline, UNSC's resolution on weapons of mass destruction, nuclear proliferation by non-state actors and comprehensive convention against terrorism. "We have also successfully halted the entry of some states in the UNSC during its reforms against the US policy," he further said. Responding to some MNAs' call for halting ties with the US and some other countries, Kasuri said that Pakistan could not afford isolation at a time when the world had turned into a global village. "Our policies are based on two principles, national economy and defence. We're trying to get free access of our products and services to the US and the EU markets so that our economy could grow. We've achieved some success too," he said. He said Pakistan's policy was not US-centred as it enjoyed exemplary relations with China, Muslim world, Europe and East Asia. "We're also members of all effective regional and |
Link |
India-Pakistan |
The heathens' last blunder? |
2007-08-10 |
![]() |
Link |
India-Pakistan |
Lawyer serves notice on Tom Tancredo |
2007-08-04 |
![]() Supreme Court Bar Association secretary Sarfaraz Cheema termed the statement as an eye-opener for the whole Muslim community. He urged Muslims in particular and US government in general to take notice of blasphemy committed by Tancredo. He said Tancredo had hurt feelings of Muslims. He said the statement was meant to create clash between the civilisations. He said, We will sacrifice our lives for the sake of our religion. He urged Muslims all over the world to be united against the anti-Islamic elements. He criticised the Pakistan government for helping the US in war against terrorism. He said the US was responsible for terrorism across the world, adding that this statement could be a cause of terrorism. The West has no respect for Muslims emotions, he said. |
Link |
Home Front: WoT |
Proposal Would Essentially End Jailed Border Agents' Prison Sentences |
2007-07-26 |
Washington, D.C. (AHN)-U.S. Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-CO) announced Friday he will offer an amendment to an annual spending bill that would prohibit the federal government from using funds to enforce the prison sentences of two U.S. Border Patrol agents. If approved, Tancredo, a Republican presidential hopeful, said the amendment would force the release of Ignacio Ramos and Jose Alonso Compean, who were sentenced to 11- and 12-year prison terms respectively for shooting a fleeing alleged drug-smuggler. "Americans have been waiting months for the president to right this wrong and I am not going to wait any longer," Tancredo said, according to The Washington Times. "It's time that the Congress took matters into its own hands." He added, "This kangaroo court in Texas has made a decision, but Congress is under no obligation to provide the administration with the funds they need to enforce it." |
Link |