Center for Immigration Studies

From Prensa Libre

Ninety-seven percent of the Guatemalan minors who have gone illegally to the United States have been turned over to relatives in that country, as the law provides.

Nevertheless, this program, which is administered by the U.S. Department of Health, does not guarantee that the children will not be deported in the future.   Continue reading “Guatemalan Paper: U.S. Turns over 97% of Border Crossers to Relatives in the U.S.”

PIX 11

NEW YORK (PIX11) – Clinton Pittman cannot forget the night of Dec.16, 2011.

It’s the night he asked, “What the hell is going on here?”

The Brooklyn native and MTA conductor was driving to his home in Queens when suddenly, at the intersection of Linden Boulevard and the Van Wyck service road in Queens, Pittman was stopped by undercover officers from Nassau County and uniformed cops from the NYPD.    Continue reading “Father allegedly stopped at gunpoint for driving stolen car that belonged to him”

Zero Hedge – by Tyler Durden

If you thought the latest round of US sanctions against some largely unknown Russians and a few new companies listed here, most notably Rosneft and Gazprombank – but not Gazprom, never Gazprom – that would cut off Russian gas to Europe and Merkel doesn’t want that – would be largely a non-event, you are right. Unless you own a Kalashnikov, aka AK-47 rifle. In which case read on.   Continue reading “If You Own A Kalashnikov Rifle, Obama Just Sanctioned You”

bud_seligMoonbattery

Did you think you could escape from liberal politics into sports? Wrong:

Major League Baseball has appointed former outfielder Billy Bean, who came out as gay after his playing career, to serve as a consultant in guiding the sport toward greater inclusion and equality. … Continue reading “MLB Appoints Pervert to Help Homosexualize Baseball”

sulsonaHuffington Post – by Kimberly Yam

Michael Sulsona of Staten Island, New York, has not led an easy life. The former Marine lost both of his legs in the Vietnam War when he was 20 years old, according to WABC. Sulsona has since used a wheelchair.

Last Monday, his wheelchair broke in a Lowe’s store in Staten Island, and he found himself in a desperate situation. In a letter to Staten Island Advance, Sulsona wrote that three compassionate employees, David, Marcus, and Souleyman, sprung into action and placed him in a separate chair while they worked on repairing the wheelchair.   Continue reading “Double Amputee Veteran’s Wheelchair Breaks In Lowe’s, Workers Drop Everything To Fix It”

obama-to-take-longest-vacation-yet-marthas-vineyard-2014NTEB

IT WILL BE AMONG THE LONGEST VACATIONS OBAMA HAS TAKEN AND FOUR TIMES LONGER THAN THE AVERAGE 3.8 DAY VACATION THE TYPICAL AMERICAN FAMILY TAKES.

Nothing that the American taxpayer can provide  is too good for the lavish tastes of the community organizer from Kenya and his family. Obama loves to parade his ostentatious luxury vacations in the face of the American people, and rub our noses in the fact that we are the ones paying for it all.   Continue reading “Obama To Take Longest Vacation Yet In $12 Million Luxury Residence In Martha’s Vineyard”

anti-illegal-immigrant-graffitiMoonbattery

You might feel tempted to complain about the federal government spending us into bankruptcy as it imports millions of Third World welfare colonists to overwhelm us at the ballot box. But don’t do it in Maryland:

Maryland State Police have classified anti-immigration graffiti spray painted on the former Army Reserve Center in Westminster as a hate crime. Continue reading “Complaining About Illegal Immigrant Invasion Can Get You Three Years in Maryland”

palm aire resortGateway Pundit – by Jim Hoft

As reported earlier today by Kristinn Taylor

The Obama administration has awarded a$50 million contract to a charitable group to buy a Texas resort hotel and transform it in to a 600 bed facility for juvenile illegal aliens.

The beautiful Palm Aire resort and hotel has an indoor Olympic sized pool and an outdoor pool.  Free Wi-Fi and cable TV are included in the simply decorated guest rooms.   Continue reading “BIG UPDATE— Baptist Child and Family Services Withdraws Bid for Palm Aire Resort”

Monsanto Ordered to Pay Landmark Settlement to Herbicide VictimsOff the Grid News – by Daniel Jennings

West Virginia’s state Supreme Court delivered a landmark victory to opponents of Monsanto, and citizens who were impacted by the company’s pollution are now receiving big payouts.

The court approved a settlement last year that will require the agribusiness giant to spend $93 million to clean up toxic contamination created by the production of herbicides and other products in the small town of Nitro, West Virginia, and this month, the settlement was finalized.   Continue reading “Monsanto Must Pay $93 Million After Poisoning Town”

Moses with Ten CommandmentsAmerican Vision – by Gary DeMar

Judges around the country have become a law unto themselves. There were five church-going judges in Alabama who ruled that sodomy marriages are constitutional. Their Christianity made no difference in their lives. I don’t know who to blame, the churches they attend who separate the Christian faith from politics (and nearly everything else) or the law schools they attended that do the same thing.

U.S. District Judge John G. Heyburn II ruled that a Kentucky law prohibiting same-sex marriages is unconstitutional. He based his argument on the 14th Amendment, an amendment that has nothing to do with same-sex anything.   Continue reading “Judge Says Man’s Law Higher than God’s Law”

Washington’s Blog

Is Israel Trying to Bomb Gaza Back to the Dark Ages?

We noted Friday that Israel is bombing Gaza back to the stone age to get Hamas … But ISIS – NOT HAMAS – claims credit for attacks against Israel.

In response, several commenters accused us of exaggerating the brutality of Israel’s bombing campaign.    Continue reading “Israeli Interior Minister: “The Goal of the Operation Is to Send Gaza Back to the Middle Ages”, “Destroying All the Infrastructure Including Roads and Water””

Miami Dade – by Jenny Staletovich

One of the world’s rarest forests, a section of Miami-Dade County’s last intact tracts of endangered pine rockland, is getting a new resident: a Walmart.

About 88 acres of rockland, a globally imperiled habitat containing a menagerie of plants, animals and insects found no place else, was sold this month by the University of Miami to a Palm Beach County developer. To secure permission for the 158,000-square-foot box store, plus an LA Fitness center, Chik-fil-A and Chili’s restaurants and about 900 apartments, the university and the developer, Ram, agreed to set aside 40 acres for a preserve. Continue reading “Walmart planned for endangered forest lands in South Florida”

AmazonNatural News – by Mike Adams

Amazon.com is building the CIA’s new $600 million data center, reports the Financial Times. (1) At the same time Amazon.com is building this massive cloud computing infrastructure for the CIA, the company is also shipping millions of Fire TV set-top devices to customers who are placing them in their private homes. I have one myself, and it’s a terrific piece of hardware for delivering Prime video content. In fact, in terms of its usability and specs, it’s far superior to Roku or Netflix-capable devices. Fire TV is, hands down, the best set-top video delivery device on the market today.   Continue reading “Millions of Americans installing ‘perfect spying device’ in their own living rooms: Amazon Fire TV monitors and records your conversations”

Cartel KidnappersYahoo News – by MEG KINNARD and MICHAEL BIESECKER

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — Three men affiliated with a Mexican drug cartel kidnapped a South Carolina man and held him for ransom for nearly a week in a dispute over $200,000 in marijuana, authorities said Wednesday.

The man was blindfolded and bound at a North Carolina home before FBI agents traced phone calls from his abductors and stormed the residence, rescuing him mostly unharmed, authorities said. His identity was being withheld for his safety.   Continue reading “FBI: 3 cartel members accused of kidnapping SC man”

Christian Science Monitor – by Kristina Lindborg

They can range from a svelte 100 pounds to several thousand. They can be snub-nosed, bullet shaped brutes that can dive six miles deep or buoyancy-propelled machines that can gracefully glide for several months at a time. And they can perform a myriad of tasks ranging from tracking pollution to mapping terrain for oil and gas exploration.

They are autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs), the aquatic answer to the airborne drones that track terrorists in Yemen and, if Amazon has its way, could be delivering DVDs and dog food to your back patio.   Continue reading “Military ramps up use of underwater drones. What do they do?”