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Immigrants, Including “Illegal Aliens” in California, Have Much Lower Crime Rate than the Rest of Us
Contributed by Tony Cheek   
Tuesday, 26 February 2008
By Frank D. Russo

A study released today by the Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC) should lay to rest the myth that immigrants, including those who are here in California illegally, are responsible for crime waves. In fact, it is just the opposite of what some xenophobes would have you believe when they try to whip up fears about crime from those who cross over from Mexico to California. Even amongst this group, the rate of criminal activities is substantially lower than those who are native born Americans.

“Crime, Corrections, and California: What Does Immigration Have to Do with it?” , based on U.S. Census data, looks at the data from multiple points of view and probes for a different outcome. But in 26 pages of rigorous analysis, this is what the authors conclude:

• People born outside the United States make up about 35 percent of California’s adult population but represent only about 17 percent of the state prison population.

• U.S.-born adult men are incarcerated in state prisons at rates up to 3.3 times higher than foreign-born men.

• Among men ages 18-40 – the age group most likely to commit crime – those born in the United States are 10 times more likely than immigrants to be in county jail or state prison.

• Noncitizen men from Mexico ages 18-40 – a group disproportionately likely to have entered the United States illegally – are more than 8 times less likely than U.S.-born men in the same age group to be in a correctional setting (0.48% vs. 4.2%).

• California cities with a higher share of recent immigrants have lower property and violent crime rates than in those with fewer immigrants.
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 26 February 2008 )
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He's an...Illegal Eh-lien
Contributed by iamme   
Wednesday, 20 February 2008

He’s stealing our jobs and our women. Plus, he talks funny.
Source:  Willamette Week

BY BETH SLOVIC BSLOVIC@WWEEK. | 503-243-2122
[February 20th, 2008]

On a construction site in North Portland, an illegal immigrant pounds nails and cuts two-by-fours. With each swift motion, he’s breaking the law.

He could be the poster child for anti-illegal immigrant zealots: He’s nonchalant about his status for the most part, unconcerned about not paying U.S. taxes and indifferent to the fact that he’s “stealing” the job of a U.S. citizen.

But he passes through Portland mostly untouched by the spittle spewing from the seal-our-borders-now camp.

Why? Because he’s not Mexican.

To read more on this editorial or to discuss this topic, click here.

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A Message from Silvestre Reyes Regarding FISA
Contributed by Administrator   
Friday, 15 February 2008
Dear Mr. President:

The Preamble to our Constitution states that one of our highest duties as public officials is to "provide for the common defence." As an elected Member of Congress, a senior Member of the House Armed Services Committee, and Chairman of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, I work everyday to ensure that our defense and intelligence capabilities remain strong in the face of serious threats to our national security.

Because I care so deeply about protecting our country, I take strong offense to your suggestion in recent days that the country will be vulnerable to terrorist attack unless Congress immediately enacts legislation giving you broader powers to conduct warrantless surveillance of Americans' communications and provides legal immunity for telecommunications companies that participated in the Administration's warrantless surveillance program.

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Georgia Teen, a Plaintiff in SPLC Suit, Tells House Subcommittee About Terrifying Immigration Raid
Contributed by Administrator   
Friday, 15 February 2008
 
ImageFeb. 13, 2008 – It was supposed to be the start of another school day for 15-year-old Marie Justeen Mancha as she sat in her bedroom, waiting for her mother to return from an errand in town.

But on this morning in September 2006, Mancha, a U.S. citizen, found herself in a situation she never expected to encounter in her own home.

"I started to hear the words, 'Police! Illegals!'" she said. "It seems as if those words still ring in my head today giving me that fear of them busting into my home. I walked around the corner from the hallway and saw a tall man reach toward his gun and look straight at me."
 
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Hispanic High School Seniors: Apply for the Hispanic Heritage Youth Awards Before March 14 Deadline
Contributed by Administrator   
Tuesday, 05 February 2008
Image RESTON, Va. — March 14 is the deadline for Hispanic high school seniors to submit their application for the Hispanic Heritage Foundation's (HHF) Youth Awards. Sallie Mae, the nation's leading saving- and paying-for-college company and a sponsor of the Youth Awards, encourages Hispanic high school seniors to apply for HHF's Youth Awards, which honor academically successful young Latino leaders at a regional and national level with educational grants ranging from $1,000 to $8,000. HHF is a nonprofit organization that works to identify, inspire, promote and prepare Latino role models through national leadership, cultural, educational and workforce programs.

"HHF shares in Sallie Mae's commitment to facilitate access to higher education for Latinos," said Jose Antonio Tijerino, president and CEO of the Hispanic Heritage Foundation. "Thanks to Sallie Mae's support, the Hispanic Heritage Youth Award Leadership Category will position young leaders as role models to their peers - providing inspiration and a vision to what can be accomplished."

Applications may be competed online at youthawards.hispanicheritage.org on or before March 14. The Youth Awards are open to graduating high school seniors of Hispanic/Latino descent (at least one parent) who maintain a minimum 3.0 GPA. Award categories include business, education (future teachers), engineering and mathematics, journalism, and sports. In 2007, more than $650,000 in Youth Awards were given to nearly 300 young leaders.
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 05 February 2008 )
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Dispelling Anti-Latino Animosity Will Take Work
Contributed by Administrator   
Friday, 25 January 2008
 
By Marcela Sanchez
Special to washingtonpost.com
Friday, January 25, 2008; 12:00 AM 

 
WASHINGTON -- Some readers assume a few things about me, such as my stance on the divisive issue of immigration. And after making that assumption, some of them have suggested -- in less than kind terms -- that I "go back to Mexico," even if I never came from there.

The fact that people in this country are making assumptions about people like me because of our names or our looks is understandable. Most of us are wired to automatically place people in categories. But uncivil behavior or impulsive hatred is altogether different.

In a country such as Colombia, where I do come from, such intolerance has not only been pervasive but has had dire consequences, costing people their lives. That's rarely the case here. For immigrants like me -- not to mention those from countries such as Sudan, El Salvador, Guatemala or the former Yugoslavia -- this nation's ability to remain trustful, welcoming and compassionate despite a vast diversity of people and points of view defies the experiences of our homelands.
 
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