Report: Illegal Mexicans ‘Not Going To Take It Anymore’, Promise Violent Approach

ICE tactics photo reutersPat Dollard

Excerpted from FOX NEWS LATINO: The frustration, say immigration advocates, is reaching a fever pitch.

That is why, many say, recent weeks have seen activists use chains and pipes to tie themselves to the tires of buses that carry immigrants slated for deportation to court, block traffic on Capitol Hill and get arrested, surround Tucson police when they targeted two immigrants during a traffic stop, and chain themselves and block the entrance of a federal detention center.  

More such actions, they vow, are coming.

“It’s absolutely out of frustration and impatience,” said Marisa Franco, campaign organizer for the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, which helped coordinate some of the more provocative actions. “Immigrant communities who are losing 1,100 loved ones every day to deportation cannot wait for Congress to end its political games or for the President to rediscover his moral compass,” she added.”The people will take power back into their own hands and set a true example of leadership that the Beltway will have to follow,” Franco vowed.

The more radical approach to protesting the record number of deportations that that have occurred under the Obama administration, and the stalled efforts in Congress to work on an immigration reform bill, differs from the more traditional nature of immigration demonstrations.

They consisted, in public, chiefly of vigils, rallies, and marches. On the private level, more established immigration advocacy organizations leaned heavily on telephone and email campaigns, press conferences, and direct communication with members of Congress and their staffs.

“These organizations stopped having faith in any progress for immigration reform,” said Michael Young, who is a sociology professor at the University of Texas. “They’re distancing themselves from the national, more moderate organizations that said you have to worry about this will come off or how it will play to the national, broader audience.”

After seeing the DREAM Act, a measure that called for giving a path to legal status to undocumented immigrants brought to the United States as minors, pass the House in 2010 but then die in the Senate, and see immigration reform efforts practically fizzle this year in Congress, Young said, “they got to where they don’t care.”

Many feel that being measured, Young said, has yielded no results.

“That’s what the ‘good immigrants’ have been doing for years, and what has it won them,” he said. “The Obama administration has deported almost 2 million people.”

Younger immigrants, known as DREAMers, began walking away from the more mainstream advocacy movement about three years ago, after seeing the defeat of the DREAM Act in Congress.

“They were raised by the [mainstream advocacy] groups, which helped [DREAMers] with their message,” Young said. “But then they started seeing them as compromised, and leaving them made them feel unleashed.”

Some of the more provocative DREAMer groups started using terms such as “non-profit industrial complex” to refer to the more Old Guard organizations that were involved with immigration reform efforts.
The more recent actions have focused on fighting deportations – mano a mano, and, often, at the local level, experts say.

They’ve also branched out beyond DREAMers.

Last Friday, the actions outside a federal courthouse in Tucson prompted a judge to cancel deportation proceedings.

Some 15 people were arrested after immigration rights activists blocked two buses bringing suspected illegal immigrants to a federal courthouse in Tucson. A few days later, on Tuesday, officers in Tucson pepper-sprayed members of a crowd trying to prevent U.S. Border Patrol agents from detaining two people who originally police encountered during a traffic stop.

The Tucson Police Department dispatched 100 officers to deal with protests at two locations, something that Sgt. Chris Wildmer told reporters entailed pulling them off patrols throughout the city.

“Something has to give,” he said, according to local media.

Demonstrators also have held hunger strikes and demonstrations outside offices of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, taking the battle right to the source.

They are assailing members of Congress, of both parties, and Obama, who made a campaign promise in 2008 to reform immigration in a way that would, among other things, provide a path to legal status for many of the nation’s 11 million undocumented immigrants.

“The promise the President made in 2008 is now so empty that people have forgotten he even made it,” Franco said. “Unless he actually uses his authority to provide real relief, he’ll only be remembered as the Deporter-in-Chief.”

Officials of immigration organizations that lean on traditional ways of pushing for change say they understand the underlying frustration that is driving the more aggressive tactics.

They say they do not plan to change their style, and they say they will not criticize the more radical approach.

“The landscape has changed so much because enforcement has been so intense,” said Angela Kelley, vice president for immigration policy at the Center for American Progress in Washington D.C. “Communities are feeling the impact of the increased deportations. They go right to the heart of so many communities. That’s translating into more vigorous advocacy and the sense that ‘I’ve got nothing to lose.’”

http://patdollard.com/2013/10/report-illegal-mexicans-not-going-to-take-it-anymore-promise-violent-approach/

8 thoughts on “Report: Illegal Mexicans ‘Not Going To Take It Anymore’, Promise Violent Approach

  1. How about using some of that stash of hollow point ammo the DHS and other agencies have been buying up like there’s no tomorrow? Tell these foreign insurgents “Go back to your own country now on your own two feet, or go back in a body bag.” I bet they would start running like the cockroaches they are. I am so sick of the criminal government we have catering to these criminals. Oh, that’s right, they invited them here for the purpose of destroying us.

  2. Bring it on. We’ve been waiting. Start your crap and see where it gets you. WE,RE NOT GOING TO TAKE IT ANYMORE.

  3. This is wonderful news. Now we can show the stupified traitors in the gov how this is dealt with. And they have all those coffin liners stored around the south, how convenient.
    Want to start something? Please, please do. We will end it, and enjoy it.
    You won’t take it any more !! ha ha ha ha wanna bet?

  4. And so the push for civil war by the elites as well as Obama and company begins. So what are we waiting for? Let the revolution begin!

    But instead of the illegals (who are just a distraction), let’s start at DC and the White House first (the root of the problem). Then once they are gone, I’m pretty sure that without the criminal government’s support anymore, the illegals will flee back to Mexico like the chickens that they are.

  5. “The promise the President made in 2008 is now so empty that people have forgotten he even made it,” Franco said. “Unless he actually uses his authority to provide real relief, he’ll only be remembered as the Deporter-in-Chief.”

    BAHAHAHAAHA!!! Man, do they have their nerve. And they expect us to feel sorry for them. YOU’RE ILLEGAL, YOU STUPID ASSHOLES!!! GET THE F**K OUT OF OUR COUNTRY!! WHAT PART OF “ILLEGAL” DO YOU NOT UNDERSTAND????

    This is hilarious and disgusting at the same time. The MSM is trying to make the people feel sorry for the illegals who think that they are entitled to an illegal law passed by an illegal president and government. I mean insanity doesn’t even cut it, people.

  6. “That is why, many say, recent weeks have seen activists use chains and pipes to tie themselves to the tires of buses that carry immigrants slated for deportation to court,”

    Damn, they are making this way to easy for us. Who’s got the bus keys?

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