Students Attack Minuteman Founder

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dahunan

Lifer
Jan 10, 2002
18,191
3
0
Will the school be taking action against the students? That is what I want to know..
 

OneOfTheseDays

Diamond Member
Jan 15, 2000
7,052
0
0
What's sad is how these kids think they are representing democracy and their country. You don't win the hearts and minds of people by being belligerent and violent, you win with peaceful and passionate discourse.

That being said, I would say that the reason this story is covered so much by the MSM is because it's not nearly as salacious compared to a scandal of epic proportions like the Foley scandal. Remember the media is not blatantly biased left/right, it's biased towards what will attract viewers.
 

ProfJohn

Lifer
Jul 28, 2006
18,161
7
0
Originally posted by: Sudheer Anne
What's sad is how these kids think they are representing democracy and their country. You don't win the hearts and minds of people by being belligerent and violent, you win with peaceful and passionate discourse.

That being said, I would say that the reason this story is covered so much by the MSM is because it's not nearly as salacious compared to a scandal of epic proportions like the Foley scandal. Remember the media is not blatantly biased left/right, it's biased towards what will attract viewers.
What you said about viewers is very true. But isn't that one of the biggest complaints about the media? The chase for the $$$.
Also, Foley is gone and is not a threat to America, what these kids did in storming the stage and attacking the rights of these guys to speak is an attack on free speech and that IS a threat to our country, albeit a minor one.

Ps. Don?t respond to this post with some BS about Bush taking away free speech, unless you have links to people being arrested for what they said.
 

babylon5

Golden Member
Dec 11, 2000
1,363
1
0
While on the topic of dispute--

Bush said Amnesty must be given to illegals


On the heels of signing a bill to boost border security funding, President Bush yesterday said immigration reform requires granting citizenship to current illegal aliens.
"You can't kick 12 million people out of your country," Mr. Bush said at the White House celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month. "We must figure out a way to say to those that if you're lawful and if you've contributed to the United States of America, there is a way for you to eventually earn citizenship."
Since this spring, Mr. Bush has been a supporter of allowing some illegal aliens to earn citizenship, and he backed a Senate plan that divided immigrants, giving longtime illegal aliens a chance for citizenship while withholding that chance from less-entrenched illegal aliens.
Any action on immigration will have to wait until Congress returns, either during a lame-duck session after next month's elections or next year, when a new Congress is sworn in.
But in the meantime, Mr. Bush will soon sign a bill authorizing 700 miles of fence to be built along the U.S.-Mexico border. This week he signed a spending bill that included the first installment of money for that fence, as well as for other infrastructure such as vehicle barriers and ground-based radar.
The fence is already stirring the political pot, even before construction begins.
Mexican officials sent a diplomatic protest to the Bush administration this week and have said they doubt the fence will ever be built. A report in The Washington Post yesterday seemed to concur, stating that the wording of the fence and spending measures gives the Bush administration so much leeway that it is unlikely the 700 miles will be completed.
But Rep. Duncan Hunter, California Republican, who wrote the fence provisions that passed last year as part of the House's enforcement-only bill, said yesterday that building the fence is not optional.
He held a press conference yesterday on the U.S.-Mexico border to address the report and said the language in the bill means the administration "shall" build it.
During the celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month Mr. Bush praised U.S. troops who are Hispanic, noting that more than 200,000 are in uniform now.
He also urged that the immigration debate not turn nasty.
"We are a land of immigrants, and as we debate immigration policy, we must always keep that important fact in mind," Mr. Bush said.
It is the first time the president has used the phrase "earn citizenship," a description popular among groups that lobby for granting rights to illegal aliens. But many critics, including Republican leaders, equate that concept with amnesty.
Mr. Bush had some fun with one of yesterday's visitors to the White House, retired Lt. Col. Consuelo Kickbusch, winner of the 2006 Hispanic Heritage Award for leadership.
"Interesting name, 'Kickbusch' -- sounds like a political campaign," the president said.

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And since our politicans don't want to close our border so more cheap illegal workers can keep coming in for benefit of corporate interests....Minuteman and like-minded grassroot movement will be around for a while.
 

CPA

Elite Member
Nov 19, 2001
30,322
4
0
Originally posted by: slash196
OH NOES, PEOPLE STANDING UP FOR WHAT THEY BELIEVE IN! ARREST THESE MEN IMMEDIATELY!

OH NOES, PEOPLE STANDING UP FOR WHAT THEY BELIEVE IN! STORM THEIR PLATFORM AND FORCEFULLY REFUSE THEM AN OPPORTUNITY TO SPEAK!
 

1EZduzit

Lifer
Feb 4, 2002
11,833
1
0
Originally posted by: babylon5
While on the topic of dispute--

Bush said Amnesty must be given to illegals


On the heels of signing a bill to boost border security funding, President Bush yesterday said immigration reform requires granting citizenship to current illegal aliens.
"You can't kick 12 million people out of your country," Mr. Bush said at the White House celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month. "We must figure out a way to say to those that if you're lawful and if you've contributed to the United States of America, there is a way for you to eventually earn citizenship."
Since this spring, Mr. Bush has been a supporter of allowing some illegal aliens to earn citizenship, and he backed a Senate plan that divided immigrants, giving longtime illegal aliens a chance for citizenship while withholding that chance from less-entrenched illegal aliens.
Any action on immigration will have to wait until Congress returns, either during a lame-duck session after next month's elections or next year, when a new Congress is sworn in.
But in the meantime, Mr. Bush will soon sign a bill authorizing 700 miles of fence to be built along the U.S.-Mexico border. This week he signed a spending bill that included the first installment of money for that fence, as well as for other infrastructure such as vehicle barriers and ground-based radar.
The fence is already stirring the political pot, even before construction begins.
Mexican officials sent a diplomatic protest to the Bush administration this week and have said they doubt the fence will ever be built. A report in The Washington Post yesterday seemed to concur, stating that the wording of the fence and spending measures gives the Bush administration so much leeway that it is unlikely the 700 miles will be completed.
But Rep. Duncan Hunter, California Republican, who wrote the fence provisions that passed last year as part of the House's enforcement-only bill, said yesterday that building the fence is not optional.
He held a press conference yesterday on the U.S.-Mexico border to address the report and said the language in the bill means the administration "shall" build it.
During the celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month Mr. Bush praised U.S. troops who are Hispanic, noting that more than 200,000 are in uniform now.
He also urged that the immigration debate not turn nasty.
"We are a land of immigrants, and as we debate immigration policy, we must always keep that important fact in mind," Mr. Bush said.
It is the first time the president has used the phrase "earn citizenship," a description popular among groups that lobby for granting rights to illegal aliens. But many critics, including Republican leaders, equate that concept with amnesty.
Mr. Bush had some fun with one of yesterday's visitors to the White House, retired Lt. Col. Consuelo Kickbusch, winner of the 2006 Hispanic Heritage Award for leadership.
"Interesting name, 'Kickbusch' -- sounds like a political campaign," the president said.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

And since our politicans don't want to close our border so more cheap illegal workers can keep coming in for benefit of corporate interests....Minuteman and like-minded grassroot movement will be around for a while.

SO Bush has changed his tune from granting the illegals guest worker status to citizenship?? Must be election season.

Fvckin flip-flopper!! Reward law breakers and spy on the legal people. :disgust: