Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Once again I ask, where is our humanity?




NEW YORK – The homeless man lay face down, unmoving, on the sidewalk outside an apartment building, blood from knife wounds pooling underneath his body. One person passed by in the early morning. Then another, and another. Video footage from a surveillance camera shows at least seven people going by, some turning their heads to look, others stopping to gawk. One even lifted the homeless man's body, exposing what appeared to be blood on the sidewalk underneath him, before walking away.

It wasn't until after the 31-year-old Guatemalan immigrant had been lying there for nearly an hour that emergency workers arrived, and by then, it was too late. Hugo Alfredo Tale-Yax — who police said was stabbed while intervening to help a woman being attacked — had died.
"I think it's horrific," said Marla Cohan, who teaches at P.S. 82, a school across the street from where Tale-Yax died. "I think people are just afraid to step in; they don't want to get involved; who knows what their reasons are?"

Tale-Yax was walking behind a man and a woman on 144th Street in the Jamaica section of Queens around 6 a.m. April 18 when the couple got into a fight that became physical, according to police, who pieced together what happened from surveillance footage and interviews with area residents. Tale-Yax was stabbed several times when he intervened to help the woman, NYPD spokesman Paul Browne said. She and the other man fled in different directions, and Tale-Yax pursued the man before collapsing. Authorities are searching for the man and woman.

A 911 call of a woman screaming came in around 6 a.m., but when officers responded to the address that was given, no one was there, police said. Another call came in around 7 a.m., saying a man was lying on the street, but gave the wrong address. Finally, around 7:20 a.m., someone called 911 to report a man had possibly been stabbed at 144th Street and 88th Road. Police and firefighters arrived a few minutes later to find Tale-Yax dead. Officials say they're not sure whether the man was still alive when passers-by opted not to help him.

Residents who regularly pass by the same stretch of sidewalk, in a working-class neighborhood of low-rise apartment buildings and fast food restaurants near a busy boulevard, were unnerved by the way Tale-Yax died. "Is anybody human anymore?" asked Raechelle Groce, visiting her grandmother at a nearby building on Monday. "What's wrong with humanity?"

In the urban environment, it's not unusual to see people on the street, sleeping or under the influence of drugs or alcohol. But even assuming the person they've just passed is drunk, instead of injured, is no reason not to notify authorities, said Seth Herman, another teacher at the school. He remembered calling an ambulance when seeing a man who appeared to be homeless on the street, with a beer bottle near by. He called 911, he said, because "I felt it wasn't my job to figure out if the person was drunk or actually hurt." Groce agreed. "I just think that's horrible, whether you're homeless or not," she said. "He's a human being; he needs help."
___
Associated Press writer Colleen Long contributed to this report.

Monday, April 26, 2010

Lucky People






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Operation Gatekeeper, 15 Years Later

View more news videos at: http://www.nbcsandiego.com/video.

Where is our humanity?

There has been so much in the news, recently, about illegal immigration into the United States. I understand some of the concerns, especially after 9/11, but the United States is a nation made up of immigrants. Most of the peoples of the US, today, are here solely because their ancestors immigrated to this country. Those ancestors came here to find a better life - leaving behind their homeland and everything they knew in the hope that they could gain something more substantial. This nation was built by hard-working people from countries from all over the world. What has made America strong, proud, and powerful has been its acceptance of those in need of shelter, food, and humanitarian aid. This country used to welcome the oppressed with open arms; now we build enormous fences and shoot to kill to keep out the unwanted immigrants.

I needed and wanted to know more about why my Mexican neighbors were coming into the U.S. illegally, rather than through the proper channels, so I did a little research. This is a summary of what I found.

Economic incentives
The continuing practice of hiring unauthorized workers has been referred to as “the magnet for illegal immigration.” As a significant percentage of employers are willing to hire illegal immigrants for higher pay than they would typically receive in their former country, illegal immigrants have prime motivation to cross borders.

In 2003, then-President of Mexico, Vicente Fox stated that remittances "are our biggest source of foreign income, bigger than oil, tourism or foreign investment" and that "the money transfers grew after Mexican consulates started giving identity cards to their citizens in the United States." He stated that money sent from Mexican workers in the United States to their families back home reached a record $12 billion. Two years later, in 2005, the World Bank stated that Mexico was receiving $18.1 billion in remittances and that it ranked third (behind only India and China) among the countries receiving the greatest amount of remittances.

Chain immigration
According to demographer Jeffery Passel of the Pew Hispanic Center, the flow of Mexicans to the U. S. has produced a "network effect" - furthering immigration as Mexicans moved to join relatives already in the U.S. The Pew Hispanic Center describes that the recent dramatic increase in the population of illegal immigrants has sparked more illegal immigrants to cross borders. Once the extended families of illegal immigrants cross national borders, they create a “network effect” by building large communities.

US government inefficiencies
Analysts believe that costs, delays, and inefficiencies in processing visa applications and work permits contribute to the number of immigrants who immigrate without authorization. As of 2007 there was a backlog of 1.1 million green card applications, and the typical waiting time was three years.

Trade agreements and government failures
The Rockridge Institute argues that globalization and trade agreement affected international migration, as laborers moved to where they could find jobs. Raising the standard of living around the world, a promise the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA), the World Trade Organization (WTO), the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and the World Bank, would reduce the economic incentive for illegal immigration. However, governments have not followed through on all of these programs.
The Mexican government failed to make promised investments of billions of dollars in roads, schooling, sanitation, housing, and other infrastructure to accommodate the new maquiladoras (border factories) envisioned under NAFTA. As a result few were built, and China surpassed Mexico in goods produced for the United States market. Instead of the anticipated increase, the number of manufacturing jobs in Mexico dropped from 4.1 million in 2000 to 3.5 million in 2004. The 1994 economic crisis in Mexico, which occurred the year NAFTA went into effect, resulted in a devaluation of the Mexican peso, decreasing the wages of Mexican workers relative to those in the United States. Meanwhile, more efficient agricultural operations in the United States and the elimination of tariffs under NAFTA caused the price of corn to fall 70% in Mexico between 1994 and 2001, and the number of farm jobs to decrease from 8.1 million in 1993 to 6.8 million in 2002.

Corruption hurts the economy of Mexico, which in turn leads to migration to the United States. Mexico was perceived as the 72nd least corrupt state out of 179 according to Transparency International's 2006 Corruption Perceptions Index, a survey of international business (for comparison, the United States ranked as the 20th least corrupt). Global Integrity estimates that in 2006 corruption cost the Mexican economy $60 billion per year. A survey by the Mexican research firm, Centro de Estudios Económicos del Sector Privado, found that 79 percent of companies in Mexico believe that “illegal transactions” are a serious obstacle to business development.

It sounds to me like the people of Mexico are coming into the United States of America for the same reasons that my ancestors came to America - leaving poverty and hardship in search of a better life. Government inadequacies make it next to impossible to enter legally and the Mexican government encourages it. It seems that checking for immigration papers (as proposed in Arizona) and deporting illegal aliens would only cause a repeat in the cycle and put those deported at risk of injury of death in the very dangerous border towns. It seems to me that there is a problem at the level of paperwork processing that needs to be changed.

I found a U.S. government website with a little history on immigration in the United States.
Immigration and U.S. History
http://www.america.gov/st/peopleplace-english/2008/February/20080307112004ebyessedo0.1716272.html

The U.S. government built a very large wall/border in the San Diego area 15 years ago that has caused <1%>5000 deaths.
Operation Gatekeeper, 15 Years Later
Border crossing deaths: human rights violations?

By
GENE CUBBISON
Updated 7:11 PM PDT, Wed, Sep 30, 2009Source:
Operation Gatekeeper, 15 Years Later NBC San Diego

The 15th anniversary of "Operation Gatekeeper" is being observed with outrage by humanitarian activists on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border. They estimate that as many as 5,600 people have died while crossing the border through rugged mountain and desert areas of California, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas since the operation was launched Oct. 1, 1994.

"If there was any other policy that the federal government adopted that systematically killed more than 500 people every year ... those policies would be changed quickly," said filmmaker John Carlos Frey, whose documentary "The 800 Mile Wall" is being released in conjunction with the anniversary. Frey's remarks came at a Wednesday news conference held by the American Civil Liberties Union's San Diego & Imperial Counties chapter. "If there were 500 Canadians that lost their lives crossing the border," Frey said, "The policy would be changed. The fact that they are 'no name, no face' people, the deaths continue."

Officials with the American Civil Liberties Union released a study of Gatekeeper's effects -- the study was conducted by Mexico's National Commission Human Rights -- recommending that more Border Patrol resources be directed toward search-and-rescue operations and family assistance. The report also calls for "sensible and humane immigration and border policies ... to that end, reforms should provide legal and safe avenues for crossing the border ..." ACLU board member William Aceves explained that passage meant "facilitating the immigration process," not an open border. Added ACLU Executive Director Kevin Keenan: "We certainly are opposed to open borders, as such. We favor the national government's ability to control its borders and to control national security. "That said," Keenan continued, "what we oppose is the U.S., and to a lesser extent Mexico, violating international human rights with a death count that's now well over 5,000."

In response, Peter Nunez, a board member of the Federation for American Immigration Reform, called the assertion of human rights violations "ludicrous." "All of these people who try to come in -- and some who die -- have made a choice." said Nunez, a former U.S. Attorney. "They have made a voluntary decision that they are willing to undergo the risk and danger to get out of Mexico, or wherever they're from, and come to the U.S ... Should we feel guilty because Mexico and other parts of the world have failed their own people, causing them to leave? No. I don't think the American people should have any guilt about that."
Source: Operation Gatekeeper, 15 Years Later NBC San Diego

I understand the fears behind those who want to keep the immigrants out, but how can we let our neighbors live next door in poverty and not allow them a chance to have a better life? We like to go to Mexico on vacation and play on the beach, but we won't allow another human the opportunity work to buy food for his family? How can we justify keeping them out? How can we justify shooting them? How can we justify dumping them back into border towns at night, knowing the dangers posed in those towns? How can we sleep at night knowing that they are dying in the mountains and deserts trying to get into our country because they cannot survive in their own? These people are our neighbors. These people are human beings. Where is our humanity?


Well the thing I find most amazing
In amazing grace
Is the chance to give it out
Maybe that's what love is all about

from I'm Not Who I Was by Brandon Heath


Saturday, April 24, 2010

FOXNews.com - Uncovered Portions of Blacked-Out Subpoena Suggest Obama Advised Blagojevich on Senate Replacement

I came across this today. It looks as though the President may be subpoenaed to testify in this case (when hell freezes over). I'm not sure that I like the involvement of the leader of our country in this mess, if it is true.

FOXNews.com - Uncovered Portions of Blacked-Out Subpoena Suggest Obama Advised Blagojevich on Senate Replacement

Posted using ShareThis

Friday, April 23, 2010

How long?


Grief and sorrow come and go, like waves on the shore of my soul. The sky is grey and the sun never shines. I long for the beauty of Spring. Where is the sunlight, the sound of the birds, the joy, the laughter, and the happiness I was promised? Oh, to feel happy again; I have forgotten how to laugh. It has been 7 months since my precious Jayden went to be with Jesus while I slept. I still miss him so.

Ousted Lawman Pleads Guilty After Local 2 Investigates Report On Stalking By Stephen Dean

POSTED: Tuesday, October 14, 2008
UPDATED: 1:57 pm CDT October 14, 2008

A lawman who was removed from his elected office amid stalking indictments has pleaded guilty some six years after Local 2 Investigates first reported on his case.

Raymond Cooke, 68, was constable in Waller County, about 50 miles northwest of Houston, when Local 2 Investigates first reported in 2002 that two women claimed he was using his badge to intimidate them after they turned away his advances.

A local professional rodeo racer produced dozens of e-mails that were traced back to Cooke, in which he threatened to have her arrested. She said the e-mails followed her refusal to become romantically involved with the lawman.

The woman was arrested and jailed for nearly one month on charges that she said were fabricated by the constable. The charge was later dismissed after Local 2 Investigates exposed the case.

A second woman, a local waitress, raised similar accusations and said she was ordered into his police car. She told investigators Cooke threatened her if she spoke to authorities about the case.

Cooke had been indicted on felony counts of retaliation, bribery and tampering with a witness, as well as a misdemeanor count of official oppression. Some of the charges centered around claims by a Waller County sheriff's deputy that the constable threatened him or tried to interfere with his testimony in the case.

The Waller County District Attorney at the time filed a lawsuit to remove Cooke from office. Cooke then resigned from office, handing over his badge.

As part of a plea bargain with the current district attorney of Waller County, all felony charges were dropped and Cooke pleaded guilty Monday to one misdemeanor count of harassment.

Cooke will serve 12 months of probation and pay a $1,200 fine. He was granted deferred adjudication, which means his record will be free of any final conviction if he completes his probation. The terms of his probation include attending anger management class, submitting to drug and alcohol testing and paying all court costs. He was also ordered to stay away from the waitress who came forward and caused the indictments after Local 2 Investigates first reported on the case.

The waitress gave an emotional victim impact statement in court as Cooke was being sentenced.

The professional rodeo racer was not in court, but she expressed anger at the plea bargain. She told Local 2 Investigates that her life was forever changed when she was locked up on bogus charges created by her stalker, so she remains bothered that he will serve probation and remain free with no final conviction on his record.
Copyright 2008 by Click2Houston.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.http://www.click2houston.com/investigates/17712933/detail.html

This is one scary story; to think that an officer of the law could misuse his position and take advantage of women using his badge. It is a nightmare come to life. How many other times has this happened and never been reported? It takes such trust for a woman to pull over to the side of the road at night for a peace officer. To have an officer violate that trust is something that can never be forgiven. I have many friends who are peace officers and I have much faith in law enforcement, but the few who use the power of the badge for evil purposes need to be found and weeded out so that there are no more victims.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Always respect your elders.






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Monday, April 19, 2010

Most Bizarre

Barack Obama is a Muslim, says Libya's Qadhafi..lol
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mZiqexz7aqQ

I was wasting time on YouTube, looking at random videos, and ran across this bizarre clip from Al-Jazeera TV (Qatar). This has got to be one of the strangest videos I've seen lately. Thrown right in the middle is a comment about the assassination of JFK. I've always known that Qadhafi is nuts, but this is an oscar-worthy performance.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Thought for the day

If we could read the secret history of our enemies, we should find in each man's life sorrow and suffering enough to disarm all hostility.
-Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Friday, April 16, 2010

Thought for the day

The life I touch for good or ill will touch another life, and that in turn another, until who knows where the trembling stops or in what far place my touch will be felt.

Frederick Buechner

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

My new friend, Buffalo Belle


I went crappie fishing the other day and caught the biggest fish I've ever caught. Now all of you serious fishermen can make fun of my bottom-feeder, but Buffalo Belle and I became great friends; we even posed for this picture together. The crappie were biting okay, but the sandbass were going nuts after sunset. Belle decided she wanted in on the minnow action, too, and that's how we met. Buffalo Belle's the one on the left. ;)

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Christ has Risen!


Easter is not a time for groping through dusty, musty tomes or tombs to disprove spontaneous generation or even to prove life eternal. It is a day to fan the ashes of dead hope, a day to banish doubts and seek the slopes where the sun is rising, to revel in the faith which transports us out of ourselves and the dead past into the vast and inviting unknown. ~Author unknown, as quoted in the Lewiston Tribune