Typical journalistic bombast...and misleading headline...it is an
"Anti-ILLEGAL Immigrant Movement".

Bruce


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050718/ap_on_re_us/anti_immigration_minutemen
 
U.S. Anti-Immigration Movement Spreads
By DUNCAN MANSFIELD, Associated Press WriterSun Jul 17, 9:41 PM ET 



A volunteer movement that vows to guard America from a wave of illegal
immigration has spread from the dusty U.S.-Mexican border to the verdant
hollows of Appalachia.

At least 40 anti-immigration groups have popped up nationally, inspired by
the Minuteman Project that rallied hundreds this year to patrol the Mexican
border in Arizona.

"It's like O'Leary's cow has kicked over the lantern. The fire has just
started now," said Carl "Two Feathers" Whitaker, an American Indian activist
and perennial gubernatorial candidate who runs the Tennessee Volunteer
Minutemen, aimed at exposing those who employ illegals.

Critics call the movement vigilantism, and some hear in the words of the
Minutemen a vitriol similar to what hate groups like the Ku Klux Klan used
against Southern blacks in the 1960s.

The Minuteman Project has generated chapters in 18 states - from California
to states far from Mexico, like Utah, Minnesota and Maine. The Tennessee
group and others like it have no direct affiliation, but share a common
goal.

"I struck the mother lode of patriotism or nationalism or whatever you want
to call it," said Jim Gilchrist, a Vietnam veteran and retired CPA who
co-founded the Minuteman Project 10 months ago. "That common nerve that was
bothering a lot of people, but due to politically correct paralysis ...
everyone was afraid to bring up - the lack of law enforcement."

At the Department of Homeland Security, whose authority includes patrolling
borders and enforcing immigration laws, response to Minuteman-type activism
is guarded.

"Homeland security is a shared responsibility, and the department believes
the American public plays a critical role in helping to defend the
homeland," agency spokesman Jarrod Agen said from Washington. "But as far
doing an investigation or anything beyond giving us a heads-up, that should
be handled by trained law enforcement."

A group leading patrols of the California border raised concerns from the
U.S. Border Patrol last week when they urged volunteers to bring baseball
bats, mace, pepper spray and machetes to patrol the border. They backed off
the recommendation, but insisted on another weapon when they started patrols
Saturday: guns.

"The guns are for one reason - to keep my people alive," said Jim Chase, a
former Arizona Minuteman volunteer who is leading the effort.

Gilchrist said people from across the country have been sending him dirt on
companies that hire illegal immigrants.

"It is a rampant problem. It is happening in Chicago and Portland, Maine.
And Milwaukee and Montana and Idaho. And these people want the government to
do something," he said.

The Southeast has the nation's fastest-growing Hispanic population. In
Tennessee, the Hispanic population nearly tripled in the last decade.

The Tennessee Minutemen, which plans rallies in Memphis and Nashville and
reputedly has heard from at least 120 potential members statewide, insist
they are not vigilantes or racists.

"We don't want to project it as a hate group. We don't hate anybody or
anything. But there are legal immigrants and illegal," Whitaker said.

In Morristown, a Southern industrial town of 25,000 with a small but
burgeoning population of Latinos, some see the Volunteer Minutemen's spiel
as race baiting.

"The same sort of dogmatism that racists used against blacks in lower
Alabama and across the South, I am seeing the same patterns here," said Thom
Robinson, who heads the area's Chamber of Commerce. "They are using it as a
racially divisive thing."

Santos Aguilar, executive director with Alianza del Pueblo, a regional
Hispanic support group in Knoxville, said he fears the volunteers are
"spreading a lot of misinformation and are terrorizing the ethnic community
in the area." 
Members of the Hamblen County Commission recently suggested that Hispanic
immigrants were to blame if property taxes have to be raised next year -
though commissioners insisted they were talking only about illegal
immigrants. 
County Commissioner Tom Lowe, who says "we do not want (all) Hispanics
stereotyped as illegal," estimates as many as 85 percent of Hamblen's
Hispanics are - and he fears they carry drug-resistant disease. 
"We could be two or three aliens away from an epidemic that would sweep
through our county and state," the retired pharmacist said. 
Hamblen County Mayor David Purkey said, like Lowe, he supports immigration
laws, but finds such comments disturbing. "I think you have to be careful
when you are expressing your opinion on that, that you don't appear as if
you are against diversity as a whole," he said. 
Guatemala native Noel Montepeque, who owns a company that provides a variety
of blue-collar jobs to Hispanics, said the tone has changed since the first
migrant farm workers passed through the area in the 1990s. 
"Now they are getting afraid of the many Hispanic folks coming in,"
Montepeque said. "And we are coming to stay." 
___ 
On the Net: 
U.S. Customs and Border Protection: http://www.cbp.gov/ 
Tennessee Minutemen: http://www.tennesseevolunteerminutemen.com/

 




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