Monday, April 5, 2010

LAWMAKERS DEMAND NATIONAL GUARD on NARCOMEX BORDER - As Obama Takes Guards OFF!

Hispandering Obama has taken hundreds of border guard off our border with narcomex, even as the death rate has surged!

He has stopped the building of the wall.

He has changed the Dept. of Homeland Security, to “HOMELAND SECURITY = PATHWAY TO CITIZENSHIP”

He has a LA RAZA PARTY MEMBER, JANET NAPOLITANO as HEAD.
Why would anyone believe ANYTHING Obama says about anything?

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Lawmakers Demand Administration Deploy National Guard, Border Patrol After Killing
FOXNews.com
Lawmakers from Arizona and New Mexico are ratcheting up their demands that the Obama administration deploy hundreds of National Guard troops and Border Patrol agents to the
Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano attends a meeting in Mexico City March 23. (Reuters Photo)
Lawmakers from Arizona and New Mexico are ratcheting up their demands that the Obama administration deploy hundreds of National Guard troops and Border Patrol agents to the Mexican border after the killing of a prominent southeast Arizona rancher.
Local police say Robert Krentz, 58, whose body was found slumped over his ATV on his ranch Saturday, was probably shot to death by an illegal immigrant. Footprints from the scene of the crime led back across the Mexican border.
In the wake of the shooting, state and federal lawmakers have called on the Department of Homeland Security and the Pentagon to revive stalled plans to beef up border security and protect the people who live near notorious drug-running routes.
"The federal government must do all it can within its power to curb this violence and protect its citizens from criminals coming across the border from Mexico," Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., said in a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano.
McCain called on the administration to "immediately" reconsider sending National Guard troops to the border. "We must make the security of our borders one of our top national security priorities," he said.
related links
• States Boost Border Security as Pleas to Washington Go Unmet
• GOP Lawmaker Calls for Hearing Into Border Security After Rancher's Murder
• Mexicans Facing Drug War Violence Could Seek Political Asylum in U.S.
Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer also renewed her calls for additional National Guard troops, calling the Krentz killing a "horrible and unnecessary tragedy."
That demand came on top of a request from three members of New Mexico's congressional delegation for more Border Patrol agents in the Boot Heel of the state, and a tough call from former Colorado Rep. Tom Tancredo for the National Guard to be sent in.
Tancredo, in a statement through his Rocky Mountain Foundation, said the National Guard should be sent in to aid the Border Patrol. He decried the Obama administration for not completing border fencing along the area near where Krentz was killed, and he said Napolitano's claim that the border is secure is a "lie."
"The residents here know better," Tancredo said.
Krentz's family has been ranching in southern Arizona since 1907, and Robert was known for his generosity -- bringing water to illegal immigrants and helping those who were injured while trying to cross the desert.
The family, though, had repeatedly expressed their concern to authorities that illegal immigrants were damaging their property and disturbing, even killing, their livestock.
Robert's wife Susan wrote to Congress in 2007 saying their ranch had suffered $6.2 million in damage "because of illegal foot traffic."
"We are in fear for our lives and safety and health of ourselves and that of our families and friends," she wrote.
Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Ariz., also said in a written statement Sunday that "all options should be on the table" after the shooting, including the possibility of sending more Border Patrol agents and deploying the National Guard.
The Obama administration last summer had been considering a plan to send up to 1,500 National Guard volunteers to the southern border to help with the counter-drug effort, but that was stalled over disagreements about funding and other issues.

MEXICO'S MELTDOWN - MELTING RIGHT OVER OUR BORDERS

latimes.com
MEXICO UNDER SIEGE

10 youths slain in Mexico

The students, ages 8 to 21, were on their way to pick up scholarships when apparent drug gang members opened fire and threw grenades after their vehicle failed to stop at a checkpoint.

By Tracy Wilkinson and Cecilia Sanchez

March 30, 2010

Reporting from Mexico City

Ten students on their way to receive government scholarships were killed by gunmen at a checkpoint in the state of Durango, officials said Monday. Half of the victims were 16 or younger.

The checkpoint appeared to be the ad hoc type of roadblock often set up by drug traffickers who control parts of Durango, not a military installation, state prosecutors said.

Gunmen opened fire and hurled grenades at the youths, who were traveling in a pickup truck and apparently failed to stop at the roadblock, the officials said.

The dead included three girls, ages 8, 11 and 13; the rest were teens except for the eldest, who was 21. Four of the dead were siblings. The massacre occurred early Sunday afternoon.

The students were traveling over isolated rural roads to receive scholarships as part of a federal program called "Opportunities" that supports low-income students, Ruben Lopez, spokesman for the Durango state prosecutor's office, said in a telephone interview.

Parts of Durango have fallen under the sway of drug-running gunmen called the Zetas, who are battling for control of market and distribution routes.

Interior Minister Fernando Gomez Mont, at a news conference Monday, read out the names and ages of the victims, who he said were "cowardly murdered" by criminal gangs.

He denied that the checkpoint was staffed by soldiers.

Daniel Delgado, mayor of Pueblo Nuevo, a town in the region where the attack took place, said he felt powerless to challenge the gangs.

"We need more military presence . . . more police who are trained and equipped to fight the kind of criminals we are facing," he said in an interview with Milenio television.

Milenio said 993 people have been killed so far in March, more than in any other month in the last 3 1/2 years.

Also Monday, authorities announced the capture of a suspect in the March 13 slaying of three people attached to the U.S. Consulate in the border city of Ciudad Juarez.

Enrique Torres, spokesman for the joint police-military command that controls Ciudad Juarez, said the army, acting on information from the FBI, detained a leader of the Barrio Azteca gang.

Two U.S. citizens, Lesley A. Enriquez, a consular officer, and her husband, Arthur H. Redelfs, were killed on their way home from a children's birthday party in Ciudad Juarez.

Jorge Alberto Salcido, the husband of another consular officer, was killed about the same time after leaving the same birthday event.

MASSIVE MEXICAN VIOLENCE ON OUR OPEN & UNDEFENDED BORDERS

MEXICANOCCUPATION.blogspot.com

OUR OPEN AND UNDEFENDED BORDERS:

“Authorities said Ravelo, who was born in Mexico but has permanent resident status in the U.S., rules the gangs with a firm hand.”

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“In El Paso, Ravelo's gang is called Barrio Aztecas. It started small, evolving from the so-called Mexican Mafia of inmates in Texas prisons.”
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latimes.com
MEXICO UNDER SIEGE
He's called the face of Ciudad Juarez terror
Authorities say Eduardo Ravelo has helped turn the border city into Mexico's homicide capital. Now investigators think he played a role in the U.S. Consulate slayings.
By Richard A. Serrano
April 5, 2010
Reporting from El Paso
Authorities think he had his fingertips altered to disguise his prints and plastic surgery to mask his face. Except for his dark eyes, federal officials doubt he looks anything like his 12-year-old FBI most wanted photo -- round face, trim mustache and a scar along his cheek.

Eduardo Ravelo, known on the street as "Tablas," or "lumber," for his ability to crush, allegedly rules thousands of acolytes in an operation that authorities say specializes in killing, conspiracy, extortion, drug trafficking and money laundering.
(THE JOKE OF BORDER SECURITY! “ HE ELUDED ARREST!”)

Though he is thought to live across the border in Ciudad Juarez and regularly cross into Texas, he has eluded arrest.

"He's a butterfly, a moth," said Samantha Mikeska, an FBI special agent leading the hunt for Ravelo. "He takes care of his people and that keeps him under the radar."

Ravelo, 42, is said by law enforcement to have been a major factor in turning Ciudad Juarez into the homicide capital of Mexico, with nearly 5,000 people slain there since 2008 and more than 600 this year. He is thought to be responsible for dozens of the slayings.

Now he has risen to new prominence as authorities in the U.S. and Mexico investigate whether he was behind the recent drive-by killings of three people associated with the U.S. Consulate in Ciudad Juarez.

Arthur H. Redelfs, a detention officer at the El Paso County Jail, and his wife, Lesley A. Enriquez, a consulate employee, were ambushed and killed March 13 as they drove home from a birthday party. A third person, who was married to a consulate employee, was apparently killed by mistake as he drove from the same party in a vehicle similar to the Redelfs'.

The U.S. is determined to find Ravelo, and his wanted picture is plastered on billboards around El Paso. But in Mexico, he appears to have protection.

Robert Beltran, a former gang member who runs a private protection firm on both sides of the border, said the Mexican government, with scores of army troops stationed at the border, should be able to catch Ravelo

"Anybody can be found in Juarez," Beltran said. "If the government puts enough pressure, or the right price is put out, someone will give him up."

But Mikeska, the FBI agent, said Ravelo was no easy target. "He is at the highest rank you can get," she said. "He has a lot of pull, a lot of juice. He has done a lot to survive."

The violence is spilling across the Rio Grande, said Jesse Tovar of the El Paso County Sheriff's Office.

He pointed to the killing of Sergio Saucedo, 30, in September because of a Mexican drug deal, allegedly involving Ravelo, that went bad. Saucedo was kidnapped from his home in El Paso in front of his family and a school bus filled with children. His body was dumped on a street in Ciudad Juarez with his arms severed and placed on top of a cardboard sign on his chest.

In El Paso, Ravelo's gang is called Barrio Aztecas. It started small, evolving from the so-called Mexican Mafia of inmates in Texas prisons. Authorities said its initial aim in the late 1990s was street robberies to collect funds for the prisoners' commissary accounts.

Today, authorities say there are 2,000 or more hard-core Barrio Aztecas roaming El Paso, a city of 600,000 beset by drug trafficking and illegal immigrant smuggling. In Ciudad Juarez, Ravelo's gang is known simply as the Aztecas. Its numbers are difficult to count but are probably three times those in El Paso. Maybe more.

Both gangs largely work as one outfit, investigators said, primarily moving drugs from the Mexican side into the U.S. Officials said members from both sides, under Ravelo's eye, serve as hit men for the larger Juarez cartel and its Vicente Carrillo Fuentes drug trafficking operation that claims this part of the border region as its turf.

Authorities said Ravelo, who was born in Mexico but has permanent resident status in the U.S., rules the gangs with a firm hand. They said sicarios, or hired killers, are easy to find; he pays them less than 500 pesos, or $40, a week. Gang members who sell heroin for him and then get hooked on the drug are killed. When drug loads turn up missing in El Paso, suspects are kidnapped and taken to Ciudad Juarez. Some are shot; some are tortured and then shot. Some are beheaded.

But it is not always about drugs. Authorities think retaliation and intimidation were the motives behind the consulate shootings. Their operating theory is that Redelfs was the intended target because Ravelo and other gang leaders thought the detention officer was too tough on gang members in the El Paso County Jail.

The violence did not begin with the consulate ambush; it likely will not end there. Last week, Azteca members in Ciudad Juarez sent an e-mail to some residents warning them to expect more violence in the next three or four months.

"People from Juarez," the e-mail said, "get ready because the problem comes hard, the murders are coming heavy and hard. And don't cry with your blankets because nobody cares about you."
(HE’S A MEXICAN! “REPREATEDLY STABBING HIM AND THEN SHOOTING HIM IN THE NECK.” – MEXICAN LOP OFF MORE HEADS THAN THE MUSLIMS IN IRAQ!)

Authorities said Ravelo assumed leadership after a series of killings along the border eight years ago. To get to the top, they said, Ravelo betrayed his predecessor, repeatedly stabbing him and then shooting him in the neck.

His ascent was helped, authorities said, by the 2008 arrests in El Paso of six Barrio Azteca leaders, all of whom were handed sentences of life in prison. Ravelo was indicted with the others in the sweeping federal racketeering case. In all, 26 gang members were convicted or pleaded guilty, except for Ravelo, who was never caught.

(ARMORED TRUCK, AND HE CAN’T BE SPOTTED AND TAKEN DOWN?)

Authorities said he has slipped undetected between Ciudad Juarez and El Paso, sometimes coming with bodyguards and an armored truck to recruit hit men or simply to visit family members on the U.S. side.

For the most part, however, authorities say Ravelo lies low, living modestly with his common-law wife and their children in the Ciudad Juarez hillsides. Investigators think his base of operations is a tattoo parlor, though they said he rarely frequented the shop now, especially after the consulate shootings.

U.S. authorities have no jurisdiction in Mexico, and must rely on officials there to find and arrest him.

"He knows he is looking at life in prison with no parole in this country," said Mikeska of the FBI. "He's not a dumb man. And he's not the kind of person who would come in and surrender. Instead he's saying, 'Come get me.' "

(54 GANG MEMBERS ARRESTED – THAT ONLY LIVES 990 THOUSAND LEFT!)

Carmen Coutino, a Drug Enforcement Administration agent in El Paso, said the agency recently ran a three-day operation with more than 200 federal agents, arresting 54 gang members.

Ravelo's gang threatened to retaliate against El Paso police if it continued.

"The consulate shootings, that's one of the reasons we did this," Coutino said. "There was a lot of intelligence-gathering, a lot of new leads. We're trying to find out what else we don't know."
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(THE FIGURE FOR MEXICAN GANG MEMBERS IN OUR NATION NOW CALCULATED BY CNN TO BE MORE THAN A MILLION. ACCORDING TO THE F.B.I., THE MEXICAN DRUG CARTELS OPERATE IN 233 AMERICAN CITIES – HOMELAND SECURITY?)
Lou Dobbs Tonight
And there are some 800,000 gang members in this country: That’s more than the combined number of troops in our Army and Marine Corps. These gangs have become one of the principle ways to import and distribute drugs in the United States. Congressman David Reichert joins Lou to tell us why those gangs are growing larger and stronger, and why he’s introduced legislation to eliminate the top three international drug gangs.
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Lou Dobbs Tonight
Monday, September 28, 2009

And T.J. BONNER, president of the National Border Patrol Council, will weigh in on the federal government’s decision to pull nearly 400 agents from the U.S.-Mexican border. As always, Lou will take your calls to discuss the issues that matter most-and to get your thoughts on where America is headed.
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OBAMA SAYS NOT TO GET WORKED UP ABOUT JOBS! These Are Reserved For His UNREGISTERED VOTERS

MEXICANOCCUPATION.blogspot.com

TO OBAMA THE “ILLEGAL ALIEN POPULATION” ARE MERELY UNREGISTERED VOTERS!
OBAMA SPENT HIS FIRST YEAR IN OFFICE SERVICING HIS BANKSTER DONORS. YIKES, DON’T THEY LIKE THIS GUY? WE’RE FORCED TO PAY OFF A GLOBAL BANKSTER CRIME WAVE, FINANCE THEIR BONUSES, LEND THE MONEY AT $0%, SO THEY CAN TURN AROUND AND LEGALLY BUY U.S. BONDS THAT PAY NEARLY 4% INTERESTS. THE ONLY THING LEFT FOR OBAMA’S “NON CHANGE FOR BANKSTERS” WILL BE HIS NO REGULATION FOR BANKSTERS! MEANWHILE THE BANKSTERS’ RAPE AND PILLAGE PROFITS SOAR, LIKE THEIR BONUSES! THEY CHARGE EVEN THEIR BEST CUSTOMERS 30% CREDIT CARD INTEREST ON THAT $0% MONEY THEY’VE LOANED, AND FORECLOSURES HAVE MADE BANKSTER WELLS FARGO, WHICH HAS LONG HAD IT’S CA MORTGAGE LICENSE REVOKED FOR CORPORATE CRIME, RICHER!
WASN’T IT BARACK OBAMA THAT SAID THE DIDN’T WANT TO “PUNISH HIS BANKSTER DONORS”???
THEN HE SAID, HEY FOLKS, BE REALISTIC. THERE’S NO MONEY LEFT FOR (REAL) JOBS PLANS, SO I WANT TO KEEP OUR BORDERS OPEN, UNDEFENDED SO HORDES OF ILLEGALS TRAMPLE OUR LAWS, AND WALK RIGHT INTO OUR JOBS, WELFARE LINES, “FREE” EMERGENCY ROOM MEDICAL AND VOTING BOOTHS!
TO OBAMA THE “ILLEGAL ALIEN POPULATION” ARE MERELY UNREGISTERED VOTERS!
HOW MANY ILLEGALS ARE EAGER TO VOTE FOR OBAMA’S BAILOUT OF MEXICO? We Are Mexico’s WELFARE & PRISON SYSTEM!
Illegal alien population may be as high as 38 million

Study: Illegal alien population may be as high as 38 million A new report finds the Homeland Security Department "grossly underestimates" the number of illegal aliens living in the U.S. Homeland Security's Office of Immigration Studies released a report August 31 that estimates the number of illegal aliens residing in the U.S. is between 8 and 12 million. But the group Californians for Population Stabilization, or CAPS, has unveiled a report estimating the illegal population is actually between 20 and 38 million. Four experts, all of whom contributed to the study prepared by CAPS, discussed their findings at a news conference at the National Press Club in Washington Wednesday. James Walsh, a former associate general counsel of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, said he is "appalled" that the Bush administration, lawyers on the Senate Judiciary Committee, and every Democratic presidential candidate, with the exception of Joe Biden, have no problem with sanctuary cities for illegal aliens. "Ladies and gentlemen, the sanctuary cities and the people that support them are violating the laws of the United States of America. They're violating 8 USC section 1324 and 1325, which is a felony -- [it's] a felony to aid, support, transport, shield, harbor illegal aliens," Walsh stated. Walsh said his analysis indicating there are 38 million illegal aliens in the U.S. was calculated using the conservative estimate of three illegal immigrants entering the U.S. for each one apprehended. According to Walsh, "In the United States, immigration is in a state of anarchy -- not chaos, but anarchy."




Illegal alien population may be as high as 38 million

Study: Illegal alien population may be as high as 38 million A new report finds the Homeland Security Department "grossly underestimates" the number of illegal aliens living in the U.S. Homeland Security's Office of Immigration Studies released a report August 31 that estimates the number of illegal aliens residing in the U.S. is between 8 and 12 million. But the group Californians for Population Stabilization, or CAPS, has unveiled a report estimating the illegal population is actually between 20 and 38 million. Four experts, all of whom contributed to the study prepared by CAPS, discussed their findings at a news conference at the National Press Club in Washington Wednesday. James Walsh, a former associate general counsel of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, said he is "appalled" that the Bush administration, lawyers on the Senate Judiciary Committee, and every Democratic presidential candidate, with the exception of Joe Biden, have no problem with sanctuary cities for illegal aliens. "Ladies and gentlemen, the sanctuary cities and the people that support them are violating the laws of the United States of America. They're violating 8 USC section 1324 and 1325, which is a felony -- [it's] a felony to aid, support, transport, shield, harbor illegal aliens," Walsh stated. Walsh said his analysis indicating there are 38 million illegal aliens in the U.S. was calculated using the conservative estimate of three illegal immigrants entering the U.S. for each one apprehended. According to Walsh, "In the United States, immigration is in a state of anarchy -- not chaos, but anarchy."




Jobless rate may rise as many are drawn back to labor force
By V. Dion Haynes
Monday, April 5, 2010; A01
The increase in jobs highlighted in the nation's most recent unemployment report carried the sound of economic promise, but Obama administration officials said Sunday that the public shouldn't expect any dramatic improvement in the jobless rate, largely because of the effect of thousands of "discouraged" unemployed people who have resumed their search for work.
Some economists assert that the unemployment rate, which held steady at 9.7 percent in March, is likely to be driven higher as many more such people are lured into looking for work by signs of recovery.
The number of people looking for jobs rose by more than 200,000 last month compared with February, according to the Economic Policy Institute -- and that's a good sign, economists say. It means that Americans are seeing more jobs being created and that they're optimistic about their prospects.
But the supply of new jobs -- 162,000 in March, the biggest monthly increase in three years -- will accommodate only a fraction of the unemployed. Some economists say the jobless rate will not recede to pre-recession levels near 5 percent for four more years.
Those described as discouraged -- who are available and want to work but have stopped looking for jobs -- can affect the data significantly because of how the government calculates the jobless rate. They are considered part of the labor force and are counted in the official unemployment rate only if they are looking for work. So dropping out can deflate the rate, and resuming a search can inflate it.
Behind the high unemployment rate, "there's just been a tremendous increase in the labor force," Christina Romer, chairman of the president's Council of Economic Advisers, said on NBC's "Meet the Press."
"Over the last three months, we've added more than a million people to the labor force. And that's actually, that's a great sign," Romer added. "That's a sign that people that might have been discouraged dropped out because of the terrible recession, have started to have some hope again and are looking for work again."
Lawrence H. Summers, another senior White House adviser and director of the National Economic Council, told Jake Tapper, host of ABC's "This Week," that the "discouraged worker" effect is counterintuitive: "As you see progress in job creation, you tend to [assume unemployment will] go down. It's not quite as simple as some people think, Jake, because as conditions get better, more people decide to look for work and are counted as in the labor force. So sometimes it's frustrating and the progress doesn't show up immediately in the unemployment rate, but it's progress nonetheless in giving jobs to people who need them."
Ann Morgan, a 61-year-old Bladensburg resident, counts herself among the discouraged reentering the job market. Morgan lost her job as an administrative assistant for a government contractor 14 months ago. At first, she was so confident she'd find work that she didn't bother filing for unemployment benefits. But 60 unanswered résumés later, she was forced to sign up for the weekly $340 payments.
By fall, she was so frustrated by her fruitless search that she gave up looking. But, encouraged by friends who have found work, she dropped by an unemployment center Thursday to put out feelers. She is not alone.
Even though the number of jobs has grown, there are still about 5.4 job seekers per opening, according to economists. That number has declined from 6.2 in November, but it remains much higher than in earlier recessions. In September 2003, for example, it was 2.8.
Morgan, like many other unemployed people, is going through a difficult calculus: Stick with what she knows and wait out the downturn, or remake herself and gamble on what could be a hot job of the future. Her life, she said, goes in fits and starts, sometimes relying on odd jobs, cycling between hope, disappointment and desperation.
"I'm going to go back Monday and see what they're saying" at the unemployment center, she said. "If they can offer me training as a medical receptionist, I'll accept it. I'm hoping I don't have the same feeling of rejection."
Meanwhile, she'll become part of the official count once more, along with part of another burgeoning and often overlapping category -- the long-term unemployed who have been out of work 27 weeks or more. Their numbers reached 6.5 million in March, up from 6.1 million in February and 6.3 million in January, and their search for work is often burdened by uncertainty: Have the kind of jobs they once held disappeared forever?
Long-term unemployment has reached record levels in this downturn, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. In March, about 44.1 percent of the 15 million unemployed people across the country were out of work 27 weeks or more, up from 40.9 percent in February. The previous peak of 26 percent was reached in June 1983. About 20 percent of the people on the unemployment rolls have been out of work a year or longer, economists say.
Their circumstances exemplify the severe economic situation. In the past, people who lost their jobs could move to a better labor market in another part of the country. Not so now.
"People aren't able to sell their houses," said Heidi Shierholz, an economist at the Economic Policy Institute. "Homeowners are more locked into the labor market they're in."
David Neff, 42, of Bradenton, Fla., lost his job as a computer network administrator in 2008. Since then, he has applied for countless jobs in his field, with no success. He got licensed to sell commercial real estate last summer but has not had much luck. He is considering opening a business focusing on renewable energy, or perhaps going to school.
In the meantime, he has maxed out his credit cards and seen his home fall into foreclosure. He said he is dreading the day when he and his two children will be forced to vacate.
"I'm still putting resources out there, but I'm not hopeful," Neff said. "It's like throwing spaghetti at the wall."
With the exception of health care, even the experts can't tell what jobs and skill sets will be in demand and which won't.
"It's not clear to me who ends up on the short end of the stick in occupations that are no longer prevalent," said Christopher Woock, a researcher and labor economist at the Conference Board. "That's the hard part, figuring out where those new opportunities are going to be."
In June 2008, Dave Ellingsworth, 55, lost his marketing job at a Lasik eye surgery chain in Springfield, Mo. More than 100 résumés yielded only three interviews, but no offers.
With his unemployment benefits about to run out, he and his wife sold their house, two cars and most of their possessions. They bought a pickup truck and a trailer to live in and got a summer gig at an amusement park in Altoona, Iowa.
Both will make about $7.50 an hour, a fraction of what Ellingsworth made in marketing, he said, but it's better than nothing.
"I'm better off doing what I'm doing rather than staying there and chase an elusive job market," said Ellingsworth, who was speaking on a cellphone in his pickup en route to his new job.
Staff writers Perry Bacon Jr. and Michelle Singletary contributed to this report.
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THIS FIGURE IS DATED. LAST COUNT IT WAS HOVERING AROUND $50 MILLION AND GOING UP AS FAST AS THE MEXICAN CAN GET PREGNANT!


LOS ANGELES COUNTY SPENDS 37 MILLION... ONE MONTH... WELFARE FOR ILLEGALS!

Welfare and food stamp benefits soar $3 million higher than September payout. New statistics from the Department of Public Social Services reveal that illegal aliens and their families in Los Angeles County collected over $37 million in welfare and food stamp allocations in November 2007 – up $3 million dollars from September, announced Los Angeles County Supervisor Michael D. Antonovich. Twenty five percent of the all welfare and food stamps benefits is going directly to the children of illegal aliens. Illegals collected over $20 million in welfare assistance for November 2007 and over $16 million in monthly food stamp allocations for a projected annual cost of $444 million. “This new information shows an alarming increase in the devastating impact Illegal immigration continues to have on Los Angeles County taxpayers,” said Antonovich. “With $220 million for public safety, $400 million for healthcare, and $444 million in welfare allocations, the total cost for illegal immigrants to County taxpayers far exceeds $1 billion a year – not including the millions of dollars for education.”

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1949085/posts


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