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Uncategorized03 Mar 2008 01:35 pm

Mon Mar 3, 2008 at 8:32:34 AM EST
Email: admin@antibvbl.net

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Mar 3, 2008

‘CRACKDOWN’ STARTS NOW
Announcing new political site – AntiBVBL.net

MANASSAS, VA –  AntiBVBL.net today announced the release of the newest political satire blog in Northern Virginia.  AntiBVBL.net goes head-to-head with blog bvbl.net in covering politics in Prince William, Manassas, Manassas Park & beyond.  Created on February 22, 2008 AntiBVBL.net immediately took root in the blogoshere. 

After attending the Prince William County Forum of 100’s discussion of ‘Ethics, Blogging and the First Amendment’, Ben Tribett of http://notlarrysabato.typepad.com/, suggested the creation of a counter blog to ‘mock Greg’.  This suggestion combined with the issuance of an ‘administrative note’ by bvbl.net was the start of the AntiBVBL.net brain-child.
The ‘administrative note’ read as follows:

“you are free to purchase your own hard drives, power them on your own dime, house them in a computer you buy, and maintain it with your own spare time. You cannot compel me to pay to preserve your pearls of wisdom, or promote them to the world on your behalf.”

This ‘challenge’ issued by bvbl.net combined with a known demand by ‘banned’ users was the impetus for AntiBVBL’s inception.  Individuals who feel their voices have been silenced by bvbl.net are invited to participate in an interesting, uncensored discussion of important topics in a ‘familiar’ setting which extends mutual respect for differing viewpoints at http://www.AntiBVBL.net .

Uncategorized06 Jan 2008 07:43 pm

The Sound of Silence

By Linda Chavez
Friday, January 4, 2008

Arizona has been ground zero in the fight against illegal immigration — but a funny thing happened this week when a new anti-illegal alien state law went into effect. Nothing.

The law, one of the toughest in the nation, requires jurisdictions to investigate complaints by ordinary citizens against local businesses that may be employing illegal aliens. But apparently most Arizonans have better things to worry about. A spokesman for the state attorney general said his office had received about a half dozen calls. Some jurisdictions, including Pima County, which runs along the border with Mexico, received no complaints. It’s not exactly what you’d expect if Arizonans were chomping at the bit to run illegal aliens out of the state and punish their employers.

A new study out by the conservative think tank Americas Majority Foundation (www.amermaj.com ) suggests a possible explanation why more Arizonans aren’t rushing to run off illegal workers. It turns out Arizonans may be better off — not worse — because of the presence of so many immigrants in the population.

This sounds counterintuitive, at least if you believe current political rhetoric and tendentious research by anti-immigrant groups like the Center for Immigration Studies, NumbersUSA, and the Federation for American Immigration Reform. But the Americas Majority Foundation data are pretty persuasive. States with the highest percentage of immigrants or the largest recent influx of immigrants –19 High Immigrant Jurisdictions (HIJs) in all — are wealthier, have better employment numbers and most have better crime figures than those with fewer immigrants.

In Arizona, for example, personal income is higher, as is the gross state product, the measure of all economic activity in the state. Unemployment is lower, as is household poverty. And crime is lower than both the national average and the average among states with fewer immigrants.

And, the trends for HIJs are every bit as good as the absolute numbers. Not only are GSP, personal income, per capita personal income, disposable income, per capita disposable income, median household income and per capita median personal income higher than in other states, but they have been growing at faster rates between 1999 and 2006 than in other states.

In the area of crime, the trends are especially encouraging for HIJs. The 10 high influx states, those that experienced the most dramatic percentage increases in immigrant population from 2000-2007, had the lowest rates of violent crime and total crime, according to FBI figures. In 1999, the 19 HIJs did have higher crime rates, but the rates declined much faster than they did in lower immigration states over the next seven years: 13.6 percent faster compared with 7.1 percent in total crime and 15 percent compared with 1.2 percent in violent crime, leading to lower crime rates overall in HIJs in 2006.

These statistics don’t suggest that illegal immigration is not a problem for many jurisdictions. Illegal immigrants do impose costs, including increased health care and education expenses. Ironically, one of the growing costs is for incarcerating illegal aliens picked up in immigration raids or for offenses that usually don’t justify jail time. These increases are a direct result of efforts to crack down on illegal immigration. And if states like Arizona decide to vigorously enforce their new laws, we can expect to see these costs go up without much, if any, offset in savings to those jurisdictions.

The immigration debate is likely to continue untempered by the facts the Americas Majority Foundation has pulled together, at least through the political primary season. But the overwhelming majority of Americans — two-thirds to three-fourths, according to most polls — have no wish to see most long-term illegal alien residents rounded up and sent home. What they do want is a more concerted effort to secure the borders so the numbers don’t keep increasing.

Citing a November Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg poll, the Manhattan Institute’s Tamar Jacoby noted recently that “63 percent of Democrats, 64 percent of Republicans and 57 percent of independents favor allowing illegal immigrants who meet certain conditions — registering, being fingerprinted, paying a fine and learning English — to earn citizenship over time.”

Jacoby points out that the politicians don’t seem to be listening. But if we can get through 2008, maybe the sound of silence emanating even from places like Arizona will finally be heard.

Linda Chavez is the author of “An Unlikely Conservative: The Transformation of an Ex-Liberal.” To find out more about Linda Chavez, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

Uncategorized02 Jan 2008 02:42 pm

Great write-up on Raising Kaine concerning the decreased crime statistics in Prince William County. Hmm. Could this mean that all the ‘lawlessness’ in the County is actually causing less of the serious types of lawlessness like murders? Maybe we should consider increasing our so we have less of the really bad crimes.

by: Lowell
homicide stats are out for 2007 (2006 in parentheses); let’s see how they look.     Alexandria: 6 (5) +1
     Arlington: 2 (4) -2
     Fairfax: 15 (20) -5
     Loudoun: 1 (3) -2
     Prince William: 9 (16) -7
Northern Virginia: 33 (48) -15

That’s right, total homicides were down sharply in northern Virginia in 2007 — including in the epicenter for anti-”illegal immigrant” sentiment, Prince William County.  According to the Washington Post, “Homicides declined in Prince William more sharply than anywhere else in the region.”OK, now, I’m not a statistical expert, but doesn’t this demonstrate an INVERSE correlation between (increased) immigration and (decreased) homicide?   Yet, if you listen to the overheated rhetoric of the anti-immigrant forces, you’d think there was a strong, even disastrous, positive correlation.  Well, as the headline says, so much for THAT theory!

Uncategorized14 Dec 2007 12:03 am

The Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), an organization
that has played a key role in fueling the fierce backlash against
Latino immigrants in the United States, has a long record of bigotry,
according to a new SPLC report.

Because of its white supremacist views, the Southern Poverty Law
Center has designated FAIR a hate group.

Dec. 11, 2007 — The country’s leading anti-immigration organization –
whose leaders have testified repeatedly before Congress and are
frequently quoted in the media — has ties to known racists and a long
track record of bigotry, according to a new report released today by
the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC).

The group, the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR):

is the creation of a man who operates a racist publishing company and
has compared immigrants to “bacteria;”
has employed members of white supremacist groups in key positions;
has promoted racist conspiracy theories; and
has accepted more than $1 million from the Pioneer Fund, a racist
foundation devoted to eugenics and to proving a connection between
race and IQ.
FAIR and its ties to white supremacy are examined in the latest issue
of the SPLC’s quarterly Intelligence Report.

The SPLC today added FAIR to its list of hate groups operating in the
United States.

“FAIR’s position on immigration is rooted more in its anti-Latino and
anti-Catholic beliefs than in policy concerns,” said Mark Potok, the
director of the SPLC’s project that monitors hate group activity.
“Remarkably, it has still managed to infiltrate the mainstream and
shape the immigration debate in this country.”

FAIR helped defeat federal immigration reform earlier this year and
has played a key role in fueling the fierce, anti-immigrant backlash
in the United States. It was founded in 1979 by John Tanton, a man who
has compared immigrants to bacteria and warned that high birthrates
will allow Latinos to take over America. Still a member of FAIR’s
board, Tanton also operates The Social Contract Press, listed as a
hate group for many years by the SPLC because of its anti-Latino and
white supremacist writings.

“The sad fact is that attempts to reform our immigration system are
being sabotaged by organizations fueled by hate,” Henry Fernandez, a
senior fellow and expert on immigration at the Center for American
Progress, told the Intelligence Report.

The SPLC has documented a 40 percent increase in the number of hate
groups since 2000, an increase that SPLC analysts attribute to the
anti-immigrant fervor that is sweeping the country. The FBI recently
released statistics showing a 35 percent rise in hate crimes against
Latinos since 2003. A sampling of some of the most egregious acts of
violence against Latinos over the past three years is included in the
new issue of the SPLC’s Intelligence Report.

http://www.splcenter.org/news/item.jsp?aid=295

Christian & New Sanctuary Movement & Uncategorized03 Dec 2007 11:27 am

A reader reminded me of the Christian movement called - ’New Sanctuary Movement.’  There have been members of this movement that have spoken in opposition to the ’Immigration Resolution’ at the Prince William County Board of Supervisor’s Meetings. 

According to their pledge, -

The New Sanctuary Movement is a coalition of interfaith religious leaders and participating congregations, called by our faith to respond actively and publicly to the suffering of our immigrant brothers and sisters residing in the United States.

We acknowledge that the large-scale immigration of workers and their families to the United States is a complex historical, global and economic phenomenon that has many causes and does not lend itself to simplistic or purely reactive public policy solutions.

We stand together in our faith that everyone, regardless of national origin, has basic common rights, including but not limited to: 1) livelihood; 2) family unity; and 3) physical and emotional safety. We witness the violation of these rights under current immigration policy, particularly in the separation of children from their parents due to unjust deportations, and in the exploitation of immigrant workers. We are deeply grieved by the violence done to families through immigration raids. We cannot in good conscience ignore such suffering and injustice.

Therefore, We Covenant To:

• Take a public, moral stand for immigrants’ rights
• Reveal, through education and advocacy, the actual suffering of immigrant workers and families under current and proposed legislation
• Protect immigrants against hate, workplace discrimination, and unjust deportation

Uncategorized30 Nov 2007 05:18 pm

Today was the first of probably many lawsuits related to the County’s ‘Immigration Resolution’.

The Potomac News had the following to say:

 At a brief hearing Friday in U.S. District Court in Alexandria, Judge James Cacheris said the plaintiffs lacked standing to challenge the resolution passed earlier this year by the Prince William County Board of Supervisors.

The sooner the resolution is rescinded the sooner the County will be able to heal from both the human and economic impacts that it is causing.

Uncategorized16 Aug 2007 10:38 am

Let’s be clear, if you were in their shoes, you would have done the exact same thing.  So we can do away with the sanctimonious, holier than thou attitudes that a lot of Prince William County residents are flaunting.  If you were born just south of the border and could come to the ‘land of milk & honey’ and have a better life, job, home etc… you would do it too! Even if it meant breaking an unenforced federal immigration law.

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