It’s kinda funny how the right-wing mouth-foamers have made a habit of using immigration as a way of distancing themselves from the most despised president in history — because Bush has, in their eyes, simply not done enough to target those eeeevil illegal immigrants. The reality, as we saw in Iowa last week, is that Bush and his team — including his newly and dubiously installed U.S. attorneys — these days are doing everything they can to scapegoat immigrants.
The people who track federal prosecutions have noted a sharp spike in convictions related to illegal immigration:
Federal convictions in February 2008 resulting from immigration matters jumped to the highest point in recent history, according to timely data from the Justice Department. The total of 6,583 such convictions is nearly double what it was in the previous month, up an unprecedented 96 percent.
The highly unusual spurt in the convictions of individuals charged with various immigration crimes appears to be the result of "Operation Streamline." Under this recently intensified administration policy, according to news reports and interviews with federal public defenders, the government has charged a rapidly growing number of undocumented aliens with various federal criminal charges in selected districts along the Mexican border. "Operation Streamline" began as a pilot project in December 2005 in Del Rio, Texas.
"Operation Streamline" is a product of the nativists who have been jumping up and down demanding we "enforce the laws on the books" — even if, as we’ve seen in the past week, doing so produces human travesties involving the treatment of immigrants. It’s essentially a "zero tolerance" policy applied to immigration:
The "normal" routine on the U.S.-Mexico border (if anything can be called normal there) is for visa-less border crossers to be fingerprinted, photographed, and immediately shipped back across the line by the Border Patrol.
But based on pilot projects in the Del Rio sector of South Texas and elsewhere, "Operation Streamline" just launched in Laredo – one of the busiest ports of entry in the world. Under this "zero tolerance" program, all crossers, without exception, are charged with the misdemeanor crime of illegal entry in federal district court. Most plead guilty, serve some time in a federal penitentiary, and then get deported. Repeat offenders get hit with felony charges and even more time.
The Bush folks insist that "Operation Streamline" has been a success — though its greatest success could be in further degrading the standards of due process for American citizens and illegal immigrants alike:
Since Operation Streamline went into effect just over a year ago, arrests in the Del Rio sector have dropped 37 percent.
"By sending the message to the folks that are crossing that you are going to be arrested, you’re not just going to get let loose," says agent Kathlyn Lawrence, "it kind of discouraged them from crossing with the frequency that they were crossing. That has freed us up to be able to look more for the possible terrorism elements."
But critics claim the undocumented immigrants are being coerced to plead guilty to a law they don’t understand.
"They are then convicted in these sham proceedings in which they are given one, maybe two minutes in front of the judge, and to call that due process is shameful," says Jennifer Chang, with the American Civil Liberties Union Immigrant’s Rights Project.
The civil-rights bulldozer "streamline" approach has been wielded to great effect in the Iowa immigration raids, as the New York Times reported Sunday:
In temporary courtrooms at a fairgrounds here, 270 illegal immigrants were sentenced this week to five months in prison for working at a meatpacking plant with false documents.
The prosecutions, which ended Friday, signal a sharp escalation in the Bush administration’s crackdown on illegal workers, with prosecutors bringing tough federal criminal charges against most of the immigrants arrested in a May 12 raid. Until now, unauthorized workers have generally been detained by immigration officials for civil violations and rapidly deported.
The convicted immigrants were among 389 workers detained at the Agriprocessors Inc. plant in nearby Postville in a raid that federal officials called the largest criminal enforcement operation ever carried out by immigration authorities at a workplace.
Matt M. Dummermuth, the United States attorney for northern Iowa, who oversaw the prosecutions, called the operation an “astonishing success.”
Well, yeah, if you call obliterating basic standards of due process and civil rights a success. And considering this administration’s record in that regard, I expect that’s exactly what they meant.
The unusually swift proceedings, in which 297 immigrants pleaded guilty and were sentenced in four days, were criticized by criminal defense lawyers, who warned of violations of due process. Twenty-seven immigrants received probation. The American Immigration Lawyers Association protested that the workers had been denied meetings with immigration lawyers and that their claims under immigration law had been swept aside in unusual and speedy plea agreements.
… The large number of criminal cases was remarkable because immigration violations generally fall under civil statutes. Until now, relatively few immigrants caught in raids have been charged with federal crimes like identity theft or document fraud.
“To my knowledge, the magnitude of these indictments is completely unprecedented,” said Juliet Stumpf, an immigration law professor at Lewis & Clark Law School in Portland, Ore., who was formerly a senior civil rights lawyer at the Justice Department. “It’s the reliance on criminal process here as part of an immigration enforcement action that takes this out of the ordinary, a startling intensification of the criminalization of immigration law.”
Defense lawyers, who were appointed by the court, said most of the immigrants were ready to accept the plea deals because of the hard bargain driven by the prosecutors.
If the immigrants did not plead guilty, Mr. Dummermuth said he would try them on felony identity theft charges that carry a mandatory two-year minimum jail sentence. In many cases, court documents show, the immigrants were working under real Social Security numbers or immigration visas, known as green cards, that belonged to other people.
All but a handful of the workers here had no criminal record, court documents showed.
And it’s worth remembering that Dummermuth, as Lynda Waddington notes, was one of BushCo’s new team of U.S. attorneys hired after the 2004 election — though his hiring was not as suspect as others, since his predecessor appears not to have been forced out:
There are, however, direct links between Dummermuth and the Bush administration. In addition to small campaign contributions, Dummermuth was one of three field staff for the Bush-Cheney presidential campaign in Iowa during 2000. He directed campaign activities in the eastern portion of the state while Scott Shuman worked central and Grant Young worked western Iowa. The three answered directly to political director Craig Schoenfeld.
In addition, Dummermuth’s wife, Rebecca, previously served in the Bush administration’s Department of Labor as special assistant to the solicitor (then Eugene Scalia). She also worked in the White House, serving as associate director for legal affairs in the Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives. In that capacity, she often served as a spokeswoman and advocate for faith-based initiatives. In a 2004 article in the Hawaii-Reporter, Rebecca was reported as explaining the constitutional guidelines of such funding and same-faith hiring practices. The topic was not new to Rebecca, who had previously served as a legal counsel at The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, a public-interest law firm that protects the free expression of religion. Also, as lead articles editor of the Washington and Lee Law Review, she published a column entitled "If We Recant, Could We Qualify?" that examined the exclusion of religious providers from state social-service voucher programs.
Bush may not be popular with the anti-immigrant crowd, but it’s clear he was just a step or two behind them; these days, he should be their poster boy. And as Frank Sharry explores at AlterNet, the results have proven to be yet another Republican disaster in the making.
Related posts:
- Joe Wilson: Both Lying and Stupid; Immigrants Buying Insurance Makes Sense
- At Texas Tea Party, Joe The Plumber Recommends Forced Deportation of Immigrants
- Zelikow to Durbin: How the Bush Administration Gamed the Briefing Process
- Bush Administration Action Proves It: There was No Ticking Time Bomb
- Administration Still Defending the Indefensible DOMA





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Hey, David!
I still think that this is just part of the privatization of prisons. Bill Moyer had a good show about that a couple of weeks ago. The latest “market” push BY the prison companies is illegal immigrants.
http://www.pbs.org/now/shows/419/
But critics claim the undocumented immigrants are being coerced to plead guilty to a law they don’t understand.
“They are then convicted in these sham proceedings in which they are given one, maybe two minutes in front of the judge, and to call that due process is shameful,” says Jennifer Chang, with the American Civil Liberties Union Immigrant’s Rights Project.
Once a Mexican is arrested he is entitled by treaty with America to legal representation and a visit from the Mexican embassy to make sure he or she is being treated well.
Of course Mexico’s Presidents tend to talk a great game but do nothing which is why many of us leave in the first place.
Of course if Bush returns enough of us there will be a revolution a Leftist one! Which actually I am very cool with but I don’t think the GOP is.
You are almost certainly right about that.
I’ll be writing more on this point soon. Thanks for pointing it out.
So what SHOULD happen to people who are caught tryin to cross without visa?
Is it correct to have a penalty?
If so- what should it be?
Hi Dave,
I remember that Carol Lam, one of the original USA Eight, was criticized by Rep. Issa for concentrating on the big guys in the illegal immigration business – the traffickers, IOW – rather than just racking up a big score by prosecuting lots of immigrants. Looks like there’s been a “clarification” since then.
Send a meat packer to jail- I mean a CEO.
Dream on. The sad fact is, and this scarcely needs explaining, I know, that the very people most responsible for making illegal immigration so lucrative are the last ones who will be prosecuted, thanks to their political connections.
I think it’s a good bet this will be true in the next Presidential administration, too.
Yeah- it’s been that way for several thousand years at least…
The Golden Rule- “them that’s got the gold makes the rule”.
270 illegal immigrants were sentenced this week to five months in prison for working at a meatpacking plant with false documents.
Ok How much time did the plant owners get Were they even charged at all? If Bush wants to make immigration an issue fine lets up the ante!
We need to run on a platform that says only the people who hire illegals will go to jail and yes if INS takes one of your workers you will go to jail and they will go back to Mexico.
What do you want to bet the Minute Men will like my idea a whole lot better than Bush’s.
Forget this Mexicans need higher paying jobs bull Mexico can afford to pay their workers higher pay Carlos Slim can afford it. Mexico is the only Oil exporter I know that has a migrant worker population.
Tell the Mexican Elite NAFTA is over unless they pay their workers half of what an American gets for a minim wage. That and enforce some environmental laws.
Going back to Mexico is a penalty.
fines of $100,000 per incident and a mandatory jail sentence for corporate officers would stop this QUICKLY…course no one really WANTS to stop it- so it’s a game we play with ourselves- surprised we don’t have hair on our palms.
Illegal Immigration will continue as long as Mexico pays their workers crappy wages which forces them to go elsewhere to earn a living wage and as long as American employers face no Penalty for hiring them.
I suppose so- but is it a penalty that dissuades anyone, or do those caught just turn around north and head back again? I don’t know.
If our companies doing business in Mexico had to follow the same rules they did here for worker safety, environment, etc., their expenses would be much closer to what they are in the US, regardless of pay, I think. The administrative and production costs of following these laws are one of the reasons companies “move south”.
6 months eating county jail food at a regular jail not a club Fed might kill them! I support your idea :) Beware the brown peaches!
Sounds about right- so they would lose the advantage of being in Mexico and would move their operations back here- which would INCREASE non documented migration?
More the latter, I think. A few years ago a local comic-turned-pundit noted that the only other border he could think of where the economic disparity was so great and there was no illegal immigration to speak of was the border between the two Koreas. That gives you some idea, he said, what is required to keep people from crossing the border.
There should be a penalty for border crossing, but making it a felony is wildly disproportionate to the immigration-status violation itself, which as the story notes is actually a civil, not a criminal, violation.
The other part of this that is not being discussed is the effect of all of us of yet again another deadening blow to people’s sensitivities regarding the treatment of our fellow human beings. Being herded up and hauled off, not being given adequate representation, people seeing law enforcement being used in this way – it inures people (and law enforcement officers as well)to seeing this sort of treatment as acceptable’ which, of course, it is NOT.
So costs would go up, the Rich in Mexico can either invest in their country and create jobs or they can lose their country.
This is all politics after all. I don’t think we COULD stop the immigration or even slow it down without heavy penalties for employers- and those aren’t happening. So we pretend that fences will stop it..
Gullible americans!
Just in Mexico? Hmmmm.
Imigration is the Freemarket scapegoat and the testbed of the security industry.
Thanks…I look forward to seeing this issue discussed more. Incarceration for profit needs more public airing. This whipping up of immigration “problems” seems similar to the march to war in Iraq and most recently the march to war with Iran. All for profit.
I certainly agree that it should not be a felony- and there should be proper judicial procedure- but if there is to be a law there needs to be a reasonable penalty attached to breaking it I would think.
Why should there a penalty for crossing the border?
Why should there be*
preview is my firend.
Of course they come back here if they can there is no hope there. But coming back takes serious money for a Coyote to guide you across unless you have been across so often you know how to get through the desert, pass the border patrol, where to go to get a job, not everyone is strong enough to do construction and hang out at Home Depot, etc.
Getting that money involves working and saving at Mexico’s wages or borrowing from relatives who are also poor. Plus Mexico’s crime rates are really getting out of hand and thats the government numbers which nobody trusts.
Do you support totally open borders with all nations? No duty, no immigration restrictions?
That would of course eliminate the problem. Would you see any problems with that?
Some people apparently cross back and forth across the border at will with no apparent difficulty. I don’t know how they do it.
As I have said before, fear has worked and Republicans will use it again. In this case, they will use fear of terrorists, Muslims, Blacks (hey it’s Obama’s fault he’s black right?), gays, and – last but not least – immigrants.
Essentially they will exploit every possible fear and immigrants are just one of them. We will hear it all: they steal from government, they take our jobs, they rape our children, etc. No assault on immigrants will be too much provided that they get John McDraft elected. Hey after all it is the immigrants’ fault that they did not all switch to Republican when they had a chance!
Disclosure: I am a Cuban/American and get very angry at this bigotry that’s always there against “foreigners”, not only by Republicans but occassionally by Democrats as well.
They have experience from crossing over so much or they grew up on the northern border.
Yeah- some of em have legal relatives in the north.
Hi I’m Mexican American how are the Cuban Americans trending this election what if any is their take on the immigration issue?
Forgot that:)
I think that would be ideal so long as an open border policy isn’t dominated by freemarket thinking.
I wonder if some of the coyotes are US citizens.
Beat me to it. As far as I can tell, the only people to benefit from these practices are in the “corrections” industry.
A former prosecutor who knows what real convicts should look like has a pointed piece up on HuffPo today. Vincent Bugliosi, the man who successfully prosecuted a major sociopath, Charles Manson, takes on arguably the worst in political memory.
Lest we forget about Chuckles-in-Chief.
get very angry at this bigotry that’s always there against “foreigners”, not only by Republicans but occassionally by Democrats as well.
my bold that would be the Rahm Emanuel wing of the Democratic Party the Bush dogs the we ain’t got no stones party!
The new Prison Industrial Complex. They could be getting ready—doing a dress rehearsal, as it were for taking over more than just those who dare cross borders.
More and more of the scenarios of Sinclair Lewis are coming true. Don’t like it a bit. And if the dem legislators don’t think they’d be targets too, just read that piece of “fiction.”
I get more and more paranoid of these people every day.
YMMV, of course.
I’m sure some are.
From reporting I saw when Obama spoke in Miami, the Cuban American community seems to be showing the same generational division as the rest of us.
Seasoned white woman ever young in spirit for Obama
Has Holy Joe said anything about ICE ? All this criminal inhumanity is under his watch, his baby, the Dept of Heimat security.
I once saw a documentary on PBS about the INS and applying for refugee status. My friend, who was a HK/Chinese citizen and I howled at the INS workers on the screen for their ignorance about what goes on in China.
But the ACLU reports on treatment of immigrants in ICE and in the clip above is police state /crimes against humanity bad. I live in a town where the Catholic church is pretty active bringing Catholics from troubled countries, including Vietnam into the country. I think the Church should scream louder and harder.
The Church should scream louder and harder, however it has compromised its moral authority by its history of enabling and covering-up pedophilia and allying with corrupt Rethugs over the pro-life issue.
Funny, when I think of the Catholic church, I get a sense of vastness. There are good things and bad things done. It almost gets me a little angry, because sometimes I feel there is anti-catholic sentiment involved when pedophilia is mentioned everytime the word Catholic church is mentioned. It’s sorta like legitimately criticizing China, brings out the sinophobes, or legitimately criticizing Israel, sometimes brings out the anti-semites.
Once upon a time “the Church” mostly concerned itself with issues that weren’t about sex in one form or another. Maybe they will refocus again some day.
I gave up on Holy Joe ever doing the right thing a long time ago. We need to insist that the Democrats kick him out in order to get anything done.
The Catholic Church used to help when they supported Liberation Theology but the last pope killed that idea. Commies killing Poles is bad, RightWingers like Pat Buchanan “I’m a Contra too” and Students of the School for the Americas supporting or actually killing white American Nuns who want to help brown people ? thats A OK.
I am not sure about the church politics on China?
“The army has already been reinforcing security in the city since March, though its presence has done little to deter the crime wave. Each weekend has seen an average of around 25 murders.
Municipal officials believe the violence gripping the city is the result of a war between drug cartels.
Reyes Ferriz had claimed early last week that the conflict was having no impact on life in general in Juarez. But the sudden evacuation of the streets after the e-mails paints a different picture.
One measure of the effect of the threat was the time it takes to cross one of the bridges into El Paso.”
http://rawstory.com/news/afp/E…..62008.html
We saw the movie “The Visitor” on Sat. night. It was a brilliant way to focus the immigration mess on a single episode of the unexpected intersection of lives. Highly recommend.
Excuse me, I have seen the catholic church do a whole lot of good work for new immigrants. Someone who was practically my foster mother was saved from refugee camp in Korea, with the help of a friend in military and the catholic church. My old boyfriend grew up in very hard times in HK where the missionaries started a school and gave flour to families that were starving.
So I am a little angry, yes, when persons say it’s *all* about sex, as prochoice as I am.
Yes, but how does Holy Joe justify himself verbally?
OT from Political Wire:
I don’t think it’s so much “all about sex” but that the TradMed concentrates solely on the sex problems to the exclusion of all the good things the church may do.
I.E. the pedophile or anti-abortion aspect or anti-contraception views of the church can press certain hot buttons and gain ratings or favor from powers that be and the good, charitable aspects of the church where those less fortunate are helped aren’t considered ratings grabbers or circulation increasers.
So it becomes sex and the church and let’s call Bill Donohue and get him to rant and all’s right with the world. /s
Actually maybe I should write to Lieberman and ask him, or call.
“Ricardo Ramirez Vela, president of the local branch of the Canirac restaurant industry association, floated a novel theory: “I don’t doubt that this (e-mail) could have come from people who have businesses in the United States and are trying to profit from what is happening in our city.”
Across the Rio Grande, the jolting e-mail and ongoing violence sparked an emotionally charged but intellectually challenged exchange on the El Paso Times web site. A contributor who claimed to have witnessed the aftermath of a recent execution offered a tip of practical advice to anyone visiting Ciudad Juarez. He advised motorists to keep their windows cracked and the radio tuned down so sounds of gunshots could be easily heard.
While some writers took the opportunity to explore issues like the connection between the consumption of illegal drugs in the United States and violence in Mexico, others used the forum as a platform to expound thinly-disguised racist attitudes toward Mexicans. Some called for closing the border, deploying U.S. troops, constructing a huge wall and firing Patriot missiles into Mexico. As one writer commented in response to the proposal for an artillery barrage, Patriot missiles are shot into the air at other missiles. Until now, Ciudad Juarez’s latest narco war has not spilled across the border into the U.S., though the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City cautioned citizens about visiting the city last weekend.”
http://www.newspapertree.com/n…..dad-juarez
If you had sufficient money, you could retire and live well in Mexico. Do you consider this a possibility for yourself? A Mex-Am customer of mine has purchased and is restoring a large house near her old home town in MEX (west of the Rockies). She will retire there, run a B&B if she feels up to it. She currently employs local construction workers at about $18/day. Hard to get materials, various problems, etc.
Its an exciting, interesting and romantic idea.
Thank you. I am not catholic. I certainly have friends and family who are. But to me, its a vast entity with franchises in different countries, and priests really varying from person to person. I once heard the idea of beaurocracy was modelled on the catholic church and the military.
The Church has a Lefty wing and a Power mad wing the Jesuits under
“Father Diaz Taño, and succeeded in getting from Urban VIII a letter forbidding the enslavement of the mission Indians under the severest church penalties, and from King Philip IV, the long-desired and long-refused permission for the Indians to be furnished with fire-arms for their own defense, and to be trained to their use by veteran soldiers who had become members of the Jesuit order. When the next Paulista army, 800 strong, entered the mission territory in 1641, a body of Christian Guaraní armed with guns and led by their own chief met them on the Acaray river and in two pitched battles inflicted such severe defeat as put an end to the invasions for ten years. “
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07045a.htm
The Power Mad Wing however supported America when all those right wing governments sprouted up in Central and South America taking away everyone’s rights the Church is much like America good and bad.
I’m not saying that they don’t do a lot of good work on immigration. But the public face and pronouncements that get the most focus are about sex. Whether it is the media’s fault for focusing on that I can’t say, but there are enough awful things going on with immigrants that it would be nice to see more public witness on the subject.
Thank you, I have loved ones who might be dead or in a shit can if it weren’t for the help of the catholic church.
Who’s winning. The Lefties or the power mad. Expand. Because that’s really interesting.
He ignores the questions, answers strawmen arguments if he answers at all and questions the patriotism of his opposition. He supports Bush on war with Iran because of the threat to Israel but says not a word when Bush wants to give the Saudis Nuclear
weaponstechnology.If you missed it, this salon on The Family was informative.
What penalty could be worse than your family starving if you didn’t try to work in the US?
That reminds me of this article by David Bacon
But here’s where Republican personal responsibility (not) kicks in
Belize they speak English there, I’m third generation no Spanish but I think Mexico is due for a Revolution the crime rates and the kidnapping rates of anyone with money who does not live behind a gate or drive a bullet proof car are to high.
Pretty soon Mexico won’t be able to protect the tourists.
How does fundamentalist apply to the immigration discussion. I think I can guess, but . . .
Trust me, I know. Don’t forget arms to India. I was a Ned Lamont supporter. I am from CT and have been gnashing my teeth since the Alito nomination. I just want Lieberman explain it out loud, why he thinks immigrants should be inhumanely detained. Then we can make chop suey instead of his logic.
A fresh post from Cliff is now on top. It takes you to the Campaign Silo.
ot, npr just had mccain saying we will win in iraq, we will win in iraq and the troops will come home with honor.
no “win”, no honor? slimebucket!
South America has freed itself from the ProAmerican right wing military governments America encouraged back in the 70’s. The current Pope is suppose to be conservative but he is not doing much of anything unlike the old pope so I don’t know who is winning today.
I suppose if the Pope is staying out of Politics then the Left which helps the poor is wining.
Unless you count Supreme Court Justice Scalia he’s Opes Dei a right wing Catholic Group they whip themselves like Shia Muslims do? They are weird Self Flagellation ended in the Catholic Church in the Middle Ages until Opes Dei a new Catholic Group brought it back.
Scalia not the Pope (if this Pope even is on the power mad side I can’t tell) is the biggest power mad Catholic in power today.
I use the term power mad rather than conservative because the Church is older and because they would see America humble beneath their feet. But Bush only begs before the feet of Saudi Kings for more oil, they seem to like telling him No.
If Bush believes in the “Divine Right of Kings” then Scalia’s branch of the Church believes the Pope is above all Kings, which is something GW would never go for.
mui1, I hear you. One of the most profound experiences of my life was visiting the Vatican a decade ago. The contrast between the wealth therein and the poverty in the world can be both physical and spiritual.
I recognize the good works, but there is also too much of the closed society, protect our own whatever their sins mindset. Cardinal Law. A diocese right here in North Dakota that shipped a priest back to the Philippines under the cloud of a sex scandal. Another diocese that said civilian authorities could not prosecute a priest for embezzling hundreds of thousands of dollars from its economically marginal parishioners.
By contrast, right in our neighborhood, a Catholic church maintains strong personal ties with a Peruvian mission to impoverished native peoples there.
The imprecaution “beware of false prophets” is a strong reminder, whatever one’s faith walk…Catholic, Jew, evangelical…church basement jello-salad Lutheran….
Thanks thats good know.
Isn’t this Opus Dei a little fringe though? I can see right-wing church members hooking up with right-wing fundamentalists but not for long. Fundamentalists don’t look to kindly on other denominations and faiths. I would love to see Scalia caught for something like tax evasion. And well Scalito, he looks like a pervert.
Zimbabwe/South Africa, the Limpopo border migh just be gettind there.
Which tells you how bad Zim is.
That’s sort of what I mean. There is corruption and in-boyishnes etc. in one area, but good works are done in another neighborhood. I am not catholic or part of any organized religion, so the whole false prophet” thing is a little like preaching to the choir. What I do object to is having pedophile whispered everytime Catholic is mentioned. It wreaks of antiCatholicism, in the way people will criticize the Chinese government, but then the argument can degenerate into a sinophobic discussion of Chinese people and culture. I can’t think of some specific examples, but sometimes it sounds like what boils down to “Chinese food is dirty,or Chinese people are dirty” or something like that, or sometimes people will say somehing as if the vast Chinese diaspora, including taiwanese, hongkong, malaysian and american chinese, are some sort of third column ready to infiltrate America with some sort of yellow perilishness. Maybe I am oversensitive, but it really seems that people don’t draw a line sometimes. I think we progressives need to avoid this at all costs.
I also think there’s a homophobic/sexual fear type of element in all the publicity over “catholic pedophilia.” Yes there are real pedophiles out there. But I think persons have a hard time wondering why a man should choose to be celibate. That kind of suspicion cast on all celibates is unfair.
New Jane a couple of flights up
I agree. I wonder if the prison system is completely privatized along the US/Mexico border. Then they get to help out their corporate friends by shifting even more of our taxes to corporate prisons and please the racists. Damn. How can any president fix this country?