|


Jim Dean, Heritage TV producer/host
|
Jim Dean is the producer of Heritage TV and a member of Georgia Heritage Council.
EMAIL THIS
PRINT THIS
|
When racial politics is OK – Commentary by Jim Dean
Dear legal Americans,
Below is another gem.
"I think the Villaraigosa election is the end of any non-Latino representation," Mr. Ramirez said.
"They are replacing everybody at the school board level, city council level, the water board, community college board levels, and they have been able
to do this with Spanish radio and TV telling illegal immigrants to vote."
You can just imagine the reaction to a person 'not of color' making a public statement like this. It really is incredible, but
then again, we are living in a dual universe. While the white folks walk around on egg shells, pushing sacrificial lambs out to be devoured by the
monster and hoping not to attract attention themselves, these Hispanic folks just lay in on you. 'This is what we are going to do to you.'
That is the whole point of backing illegal immigration. They are betting on them all being future voters and
an easy to manipulate sub-class. They will take back the Southwest and clean house of the gringos when they do. Just ask them if you don't believe me.
Jim Dean is the producer of Heritage TV and a member of the Georgia
Heritage Council.
WASHINGTON TIMES
Election changes color of politics
By Brian DeBose, June 6, 2005
The election of Los Angeles' first Hispanic mayor endangers the political dominance of black Democrats
there, and officials from both communities say they worry that tensions over political control of the city will lead to social unrest.
"The Democratic leadership in L.A., it is not going to be black anymore. It will be brown," said Morris
Reid, managing director of Westin Rinehart, a political consulting firm.
He said Mayor-elect Antonio Villaraigosa, a Democrat, was aided in his win over Mayor James K. Hahn by an
unprecedented display of unity between black and Hispanic politicians and voters.
Mr. Villaraigosa said he wants to build on the support he received from black leaders in the mayoral
election.
"Does that mean we still don't have many challenges" Absolutely not, but what it means is that there are
people who do want to make it work, who understand that none of us are going anywhere, and that the only way to make a city as diverse as Los
Angeles work is if we are collaborating across communities," Mr. Villaraigosa said.
"There is no question that there are tensions in Los Angeles, as there are in New York, Chicago or any
city as diverse as Los Angeles and as poor as Los Angeles."
Mr. Reid said he sees potential to further unify black and Hispanic communities.
"The story within the story was that the black community is still politically powerful because they
punished Hahn. It gives Hispanics a reason to stay with the [Democratic] party and it shows black and brown folks that their destiny is tied
together," Mr. Reid said.
Black and Hispanic community activists said the unity that swept Mr. Villaraigosa into office is not
likely to last.
"I have been, for the last 15 years, doing volunteer work in the public school system in L.A., Crenhaw
and Hawthorne and I have been seeing a silent warfare building between blacks and Hispanics," said the Rev. Jesse Lee Peterson, president of the
Brotherhood Organization of a New Destiny (BOND).
Mr. Peterson said blacks and Hispanics are clashing at the neighborhood level, with several incidents
of ethnic violence taking place in some schools. He said there are indications that Los Angeles' largest rival black street gangs, the Crips
and the Bloods, are uniting to take on Mexican and Salvadoran gangs.
The situation wasn't helped by Mexican President Vicente Fox's recent comments that Mexican immigrants
were working jobs that "not even blacks" will do, said Mr. Peterson, adding that the remark identified a real division between the two groups.
"I was not surprised at Vicente Fox's comments because that is an attitude of many Hispanics here --
not all, of course, but it is prevalent," he said.
Andy Ramirez, executive director of California-based Friends of the Border Patrol, said the unease is
a direct result of the shift in political leadership toward one that is increasingly majority Hispanic.
Los Angeles has been a power base for black congressmen on the West Coast since 1962, beginning with
former Reps. Augustus F. Hawkins, Julian C. Dixon in 1978 and Mervyn M. Dymally in 1980. In the 1990s political power began shifting to black
women, such as Reps. Maxine Waters and Juanita Millender-McDonald, and by 2000 -- with Rep. Diane Watson replacing Mr. Dixon -- that shift was
complete. But the female trio may be the last influential black politicians to come out of Los Angeles.
"I think the Villaraigosa election is the end of any non-Latino representation," Mr. Ramirez said.
"They are replacing everybody at the school board level, city council level, the water board, community college board levels, and they have
been able to do this with Spanish radio and TV telling illegal immigrants to vote."
www.washtimes.com/national/20050605-114446-3358r.htm
|
Mexican Terrorists, A Vision of the Future
by Jim Dean
Illegal Immigration, Diversity and Crime
by Jim Dean
Bush vows to pursue leniency for illegals
Knight-Ridder
Perdue endorses Bush's illegal immigrant amnesty plan
AtlantaLatino.com Click the IN ENGLISH link!
GEORGIA REPUBLICAN US SENATORS move to forefront on supporting illegal immigration and National ID
spofga.org
The Dark Side of Diversity
by Jim Dean
Another stealth tax: the Crime Tax
by Jim Dean
The Illegal Immigrants' Raid on Social Security
by Jim Dean
Illegal Immigration lobby brings out their heavy artillery
by Jim Dean
Meet a New American
by Jim Dean
OTM's...Other than Mexicans
by Jim Dean
The Minute Man Project
Bush Calls Border Watchers 'Vigilantes' - newsmax.com
El Presidente Bush & El Gobernador Perdue do the Illegal Immigration Amnesty Shuffle
EMAIL THIS
PRINT THIS
Copyright © 2003-2012, GeorgiaHeritageCouncil.org
Georgia Heritage Council | 2121 Hollywood RD
Atlanta, GA 30318 Email:
|



|