Crackdown in Virginia sending illegals to Maryland
Posted: 27 March 2008 07:37 AM   [ Ignore ]  
W. Churchill
Total Posts:  3015
Joined  2007-08-09

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/03/24/AR2008032402512.html

Public anger against illegal immigrants, already entrenched in parts of Northern Virginia, is seeping into Maryland. With legislators facing unprecedented demands to take action, fears of a crackdown are spreading among illegal immigrants in a state that has been more tolerant of them.

A record 20 bills targeting illegal immigrants have been introduced in the state legislature this session. Although none of the bills is expected to survive, their supporters are far more vocal and organized than in the past, and the movement has gained recent support in Maryland communities that include Mount Rainier, Gaithersburg and Taneytown.

“If there is any doubt that people like me truly represent the overwhelming majority on this issue, show some courage and put it on a referendum,” Margaret Montuori of Bethesda told the House Judiciary Committee at a hearing last week.

Last fall, a Washington Post poll found that about half of Maryland residents considered illegal immigration a problem and that Marylanders were more apt than Virginians to call it a “very serious” problem. Eighty-five percent of those surveyed said they wanted state and local government to take an active role in dealing with the issue.

“Everywhere you go now, the first thing they ask you for is papers,” Juan Perez, 28, a Central American construction worker, said outside a gas station in Langley Park one recent morning. “We do the work faster and cheaper, but no one wants us now. I haven’t sent any money home to my family since December, and I can barely pay to sleep in my friend’s apartment.”

Just across University Boulevard, a battered sedan with Virginia tags pulled up in front of a convenience store. The driver, a carpenter from Guatemala named Raul Romano, 40, said he and his family had recently fled Prince William County, their home for eight years, after it enacted a law allowing police to question immigrants about their legal status.

“Now I am too scared to go back and return my license plates,” said Romano, who has lived illegally in the United States for 18 years. “I left my job, my apartment, my daughters left their school. Now, here we are in Maryland, starting over again. We don’t know anyone, but it’s safer for the moment…
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A construction worker who attended another hearing was arrested afterward for allegedly threatening by e-mail to strangle Gov. Martin O’Malley (D). The man’s wife said he was upset after losing work to illegal immigrants…
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Kim Propeack, a CASA lobbyist who helped bring dozens of Latinos to the Annapolis hearings, said her organization was trying to counter the “ugliness” of a small activist group by presenting real immigrants and their problems.

Among the scores of illegal laborers who congregate in parking lots and at CASA job centers in Wheaton and Langley Park each morning, the fact that no laws are likely to be passed against them soon does little to ease the growing frustration and fear.

County police officers cruise the parking lots frequently and often give the laborers warnings for loitering. They do not ask for proof of legal residency, and police officials said their policy is to check legal status only if someone has been arrested and charged with breaking another law. But the men know that this has begun happening in Prince William, and they worry it could start affecting them, too.

They are also concerned about the small but growing exodus of illegal immigrants from Virginia. Some are showing up at the same day-laborer sites, adding to the competition. In Langley Park Plaza one recent mid-morning, two dozen idle men said they had been waiting for work since 6:30. Several said they had considered returning to their homelands but were embarrassed to face their families.

“I walked for 40 days across the desert; I was hungry and thirsty; my feet were swollen. I miss my children, but how can I go back with nothing?” said Angel Cervantes, 33, a Mexican father of three. “I know I am here illegally, but I believe in following the law. I never drink or even get a parking ticket,” he said. “If the day comes when they deport me, I want to go home with honor.”

Nearby, a white unmarked van circled the parking lot, cruising for a quick household moving job. The driver, a Mexican without legal papers who gave his name as Gerardo, said he had just gotten a police ticket for parking illegally and was relieved that the officer had not asked him for proof of legal residence.

“Look around at this plaza. See how much life we Latinos have created here,” Gerardo said. “There’s my bank. There’s my insurance agent. That’s where I buy my groceries. I used to have a good moving business with my truck, but every day it is harder to find workers. They are all scared of being arrested now. I am illegal, too, but I don’t hurt anyone. I am helping this community grow. We all are. Just look around!”

 
 
Posted: 27 March 2008 10:41 AM   [ Ignore ]  [ # 1 ]  
W. Churchill
Total Posts:  3681
Joined  2006-11-07
Bowman - 27 March 2008 07:37 AM

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/03/24/AR2008032402512.html

Kim Propeack, a CASA lobbyist who helped bring dozens of Latinos to the Annapolis hearings, said her organization was trying to counter the “ugliness” of a small activist group by presenting real immigrants and their problems.

Like I care.  Here’s a practical solution to their problems as illegal aliens in America: go home!

 
 
Posted: 27 March 2008 01:39 PM   [ Ignore ]  [ # 2 ]  
R. Limbaugh
Total Posts:  5818
Joined  2006-11-09

Curious attitude about “going home with honor”.  What is honorable about breaking and entering to acquire your “something” with which to go home?

I’m happy to see this happening now in State after State.

 Signature 

“Under certain circumstances, profanity provides a relief denied even to prayer.” - Mark Twain

 
 
Posted: 27 March 2008 03:00 PM   [ Ignore ]  [ # 3 ]  
W. Churchill
Total Posts:  3015
Joined  2007-08-09
Pandora - 27 March 2008 01:39 PM

Curious attitude about “going home with honor”.  What is honorable about breaking and entering to acquire your “something” with which to go home?

That struck me as funny too.

I’d be willing to have a daily parade to the border for them complete with high school bands and fanfare if that’s what it takes.

At the end of the parade we can hire the illegals scheduled to leave the next day to pick up the tickertape so we can throw it again tomorrow. I’m sure no americans would want to land a job picking up used tickertape....

 
 
 

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