Travel Warning

United States Department of State
Bureau of Consular Affairs
Washington, DC 20520

This information is current as of today, Sun May 09 09:34:01 2010.

MEXICO

May 06, 2010

The Department of State has issued this Travel Warning to inform U.S. citizens traveling to and living in Mexico about the security situation in Mexico, and to advise that the authorized departure of family members of U.S. government personnel from U.S. Consulates in the northern Mexico border cities of Tijuana, Nogales, Ciudad Juarez, Nuevo Laredo, Monterrey and Matamoros has been extended.  This Travel Warning supersedes the Travel Warning for Mexico dated April 12, 2010 to note the extension of authorized departure and to update guidance on security conditions and crime.  

Millions of U.S. citizens safely visit Mexico each year.  This includes tens of thousands who cross the border every day for study, tourism or business and at least one million U.S. citizens who live in Mexico.  The Mexican government makes a considerable effort to protect U.S. citizens and other visitors to major tourist destinations.   Resort areas and tourist destinations in Mexico do not see the levels of drug-related violence and crime reported in the border region and in areas along major drug trafficking routes.  Nevertheless, crime and violence are serious problems.  While most victims of violence are Mexican citizens associated with criminal activity, the security situation poses serious risks for U.S. citizens as well.   

It is imperative that U.S. citizens understand the risks involved in travel to Mexico, how best to avoid dangerous situations, and who to contact if one becomes a victim of crime or violence.  Common-sense precautions such as visiting only legitimate business and tourist areas during daylight hours, and avoiding areas where criminal activity might occur, can help ensure that travel to Mexico is safe and enjoyable.  U.S. citizen victims of crime in Mexico are urged to contact the consular section of the nearest U.S. Consulate or Embassy for advice and assistance. Contact information is provided at the end of this message.

More details at the United States Department of State web site. 

Today’s Los Angeles Times has a front page article assuring everyone that it really is safe to travel to Tijuana.  They do have a travel section that takes considerable advertising from agencies promoting travel to Mexico.  Could that be their motivation?

A Graham Tradition of Hate

The Associated Press reported today, “Evangelist Franklin Graham prayed on a sidewalk outside the Pentagon Thursday after his invitation to a prayer service inside was withdrawn because of comments that insulted Muslims.”

He said he doesn’t believe “all religions are equal” and that there is only “one way to God” – and that is through Jesus.

Graham said many American Christians “feel we are losing our freedoms while people of other faiths are gaining their freedom. It’s a perception, whether it’s right or wrong.”

Franklin Graham is the son of Billy Graham. The father is a known anti-Semite.  This reported in the newser.com.

(Newser) – Billy Graham blamed Jews from the “Synagogue of Satan” for pornography in a newly released 1973 conversation with Richard Nixon, USA Today reports. The men, in a discussion about anti-Semitism and Jewish opposition to Christian evangelical efforts, agreed that Jews needed to “behave themselves” to avoid unleashing a tide of anti-Semitism.

“It happened in Germany,” Nixon told Graham. “Now it’s going to happen in America if these people don’t start behaving. It may be they have a death wish. You know that’s been the problem with our Jewish friends for centuries.” The director of the Anti-Defamation League blasted both men for spouting “age-old classical anti-Semitic canards.”

Can I slam the door in the face of another Christian trying to convert me?

We Speak English

These days the words “bigot” and “hate monger” are used frequently to protect the “rights” of illegal immigrants.  There are very few public figures who are concerned with the rights of those who have assimilated into America.  Construction business owner and Alabama gubernatorial candidate Tim James is an exception.  He is quoted as saying “This is Alabama. We speak English. If you want to live here, learn it.”  I agree with him.

My primary reason for supporting this opinion is that the nation cannot function in unison when we are not communicating to each other in one language.  There is a group named ProEnglish that is promoting the idea of making English the official language of the United States.  The group does not call for the banning of other languages being used but does want English to be the only language used in naturalization ceremonies, including the Oath of Citizenship.

The ProEnglish guiding principles are:

  • In a pluralistic nation such as ours, the function of government should be to foster and support the similarities that unite us, rather than institutionalize the differences that divide us.
  • Our nation’s public schools have the clear responsibility to help students who don’t know English to learn that language as quickly as possible. To do otherwise is to sentence the child to a lifetime of political and economic isolation. Quality teaching of English and America’s civic culture should be a part of every student’s curriculum. The study of foreign languages, as an academic discipline, should be strongly encouraged.
  • All candidates for U.S. citizenship should be required to demonstrate knowledge of English and an understanding of our system of government, at a level sufficient to vote in the language of our country English.
  • Naturalization ceremonies, including the Oath of Citizenship, must be conducted in English.
  • The right to use other languages must be respected.
  • I wrote about my views on October 14, 2007.  I have not read anything or heard anything that has changed my opinion.

    A Plan to Stop the Employment of Illegal Aliens

    Actually this plan might be considered an invasion of privacy by some people but unless there is a better idea it will have to be implemented.  My wife and I both have passports.  To obtain those documents we supplied her birth certificate and my naturalization certificate.  Our pictures and birth dates appear on the documents.  Our Drivers licenses also have our thumb prints.  I do not consider this an invasion of privacy.   Securing the Mexican border is not a doable action.  The border is too long to guard and tunnels can be dug beneath.  Tunneling has already been discovered near San Ysidro (southern end of San Diego).  This article explaining the process appeared in the Wall Street Journal.

    March 27, 2010

    Lawmakers working to craft a new comprehensive immigration bill are proposing a new national biometric ID card that would be required of all U.S. workers. WSJ’s Laura Meckler explains the proposal and the objections from privacy advocates.

    Under the potentially controversial plan still taking shape in the Senate, all legal U.S. workers, including citizens and immigrants, would be issued an ID card with embedded information, such as fingerprints, to tie the card to the worker.

    The ID card plan is one of several steps advocates of an immigration overhaul are taking to address concerns that have defeated similar bills in the past.

    The uphill effort to pass a bill is being led by Sens. Chuck Schumer (D., N.Y.) and Lindsey Graham (R., S.C.), who plan to meet with President Barack Obama as soon as this week to update him on their work. An administration official said the White House had no position on the biometric card.

    “It’s the nub of solving the immigration dilemma politically speaking,” Mr. Schumer said in an interview. The card, he said, would directly answer concerns that after legislation is signed, another wave of illegal immigrants would arrive. “If you say they can’t get a job when they come here, you’ll stop it.”

    The biggest objections to the biometric cards may come from privacy advocates, who fear they would become de facto national ID cards that enable the government to track citizens.

    “It is fundamentally a massive invasion of people’s privacy,” said Chris Calabrese, legislative counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union. “We’re not only talking about fingerprinting every American, treating ordinary Americans like criminals in order to work. We’re also talking about a card that would quickly spread from work to voting to travel to pretty much every aspect of American life that requires identification.”

    Mr. Graham says he respects those concerns but disagrees. “We’ve all got Social Security cards,” he said. “They’re just easily tampered with. Make them tamper-proof. That’s all I’m saying.”

    U.S. employers now have the option of using an online system called E-Verify to check whether potential employees are in the U.S. legally. Many Republicans have pressed to make the system mandatory. But others, including Mr. Schumer, complain that the existing system is ineffective.

    Last year, White House aides said they expected to push immigration legislation in 2010. But with health care and unemployment dominating his attention, the president has given little indication the issue is a priority.

    Rather, Mr. Obama has said he wanted to see bipartisan support in Congress first. So far, Mr. Graham is the only Republican to voice interest publicly, and he wants at least one other GOP co-sponsor to launch the effort.

    An immigration overhaul has long proven a complicated political task. The Latino community is pressing for action and will be angry if it is put off again. But many Americans oppose any measure that resembles amnesty for people who came here illegally.

    Under the legislation envisioned by Messrs. Graham and Schumer, the estimated 10.8 million people living illegally in the U.S. would be offered a path to citizenship, though they would have to register, pay taxes, pay a fine and wait in line. A guest-worker program would let a set number of new foreigners come to the U.S. legally to work.

    Most European countries require citizens and foreigners to carry ID cards. The U.K. had been a holdout, but in the early 2000s it considered national cards as a way to stop identify fraud, protect against terrorism and help stop illegal foreign workers. Amid worries about the cost and complaints that the cards infringe on personal privacy, the government said it would make them voluntary for British citizens. They are required for foreign workers and students, and so far about 130,000 cards have been issued.

    Mr. Schumer first suggested a biometric-based employer-verification system last summer. Since then, the idea has gained currency and is now a centerpiece of the legislation being developed, aides said.

    A person familiar with the legislative planning said the biometric data would likely be either fingerprints or a scan of the veins in the top of the hand. It would be required of all workers, including teenagers, but would be phased in, with current workers needing to obtain the card only when they next changed jobs, the person said.

    The card requirement also would be phased in among employers, beginning with industries that typically rely on illegal-immigrant labor.

    The U.S. Chamber of Commerce doesn’t have a position on the proposal, but it is concerned that employers would find it expensive and complicated to properly check the biometrics.

    Mr. Schumer said employers would be able to buy a scanner to check the IDs for as much as $800. Small employers, he said, could take their applicants to a government office to like the Department of Motor Vehicles and have their hands scanned there.

    —Alistair MacDonald contributed to this article.

    Write to Laura Meckler at laura.meckler@wsj.com

    Sending Illegal Aliens Home

    The Arizona legislature sent the Republican governor, Jan Brewer, legislation making it a crime under state law to be in the country illegally.  She signed the law today.  It also requires local police officers to question people about their immigration status if there is reason to suspect they are illegal immigrants; allows lawsuits against government agencies that hinder enforcement of immigration laws; and makes it illegal to hire illegal immigrants for day labor or knowingly transport them.  Sanctuary cities are outlawed in the legislation.

    Three problems immediately come to mind.

    1. Illegal aliens living in Arizona will not call the police after a burglary or other criminal offense because they will fear being arrested.  Special Order 40 in Los Angeles was issued specifically to stop police from arresting suspected illegal aliens when dealing with crime issues.

    2. This law could result in everyone wearing an arm band to identify their status similar to Nazi Germany banding Jews and other “undesirables”.

    3. There will be racial profiling.  Anyone with a Hispanic/Latino surname, physical characteristics common to Mexicans, or an accent will be stopped and questioned.

    I have to respect those Arizonans for having the courage of their convictions.  Has anyone seen this data regarding crime in Arizona that was compiled by someone in Michigan?  When the car washes have no employees and the care givers have all left will they still demand the imposition of this law?  If the law conforms to all Federal law it will not be overturned.

    Despite the down sides, forcing illegal aliens back to their home countries is a good thing.  Most illegal aliens probably won’t go back to their native countries.  My question is how do you identify illegal aliens from Canada, eh? 

    The Republican Party will pay a price for this law.

    Here are two links that are worthy of considering from the Arizona Republic and from Freewheel Burning.

    Who Cares About the Facts?

    If you have read it, it must be true.  Blogs spew extraordinary amounts of mis-information.  Of course, those with a political point of view are trying to sell everyone their beliefs and write things that they know full well are lies or near lies.  That is the folly of freedom of the press.    

    Thus we have the short piece in Newsweek’s April 12, 2010 edition titled “INDIA IS ANNOYED BY THE U.S.”  The author, Sumit Ganguly, contends in red text “But the Obama administration, preoccupied with China and the Middle East, has left little room on its schedule for India.”  Perhaps Mr. Ganguly was on vacation while we all saw the State Dinner for the Indian Prime Minister on every news show.  If you will recall that was the dinner with the uninvited guests.  The dinner received significant coverage by almost every news outlet.

    Then there is Debbie Poochigian, Fresno County California Supervisor, and most likely a Republican.  Her poorly researched commentary only reinforces my perception that people support a candidate just because the person is a member of their political party.  On the Fox and Hounds blog she contends that Senator Barbara Boxer does not adequately support job growth in California.    However the facts do not support her contentions.  To the contrary when President Obama signed the recent jobs bill the Chicago Tribune quoted Boxer with these words, “This is a great day. Today, a million American workers — including 100,000 in California — know their jobs are more secure because we have renewed the transportation bill through the end of the year.”  Further more Boxer voted for the continuation of the C-17 aircraft program even though Secretary of Defense, Robert Gates, wanted to kill the project.  5,000 jobs were saved in Long Beach California as a result of this congressional action.

    You Can Avoid Execution for Murder

    White supremacist gang hit man Billy Joe Johnson got what he asked for from the Orange County California jury that convicted him of first-degree murder in October 2009: a death sentence.

    It wasn’t remorse for his crimes or a desire for atonement that drove him to ask for execution; it was the expectation that conditions on death row would be more comfortable than in other maximum-security prisons and that any date with the executioner would be decades away if it came at all.

    Huntington Beach, California Police Department detectives are trying to identify women, girls, boys and toddlers who appear in hundreds of photos seized from a storage locker in Seattle, Washington, that was rented by convicted serial killer and Dating Game winner Rodney Alcala.  Alcala, age 66, was sentenced to death on Monday, March 30, 2010 for killing five people. 

    The Los Angeles Times reports that since 1977 the actual number of executions in California prisons is 13.  What are the chances that Alcala or Johnson will be executed?  It is unlikely.  California has the nation’s largest death row population, with 685 sentenced to die by lethal injection.  Five times as many death row inmates — 71 — have died over that same period of natural causes, suicide or inside prison violence. 

    The reason the death penalty has failed to reduce murder is obvious.  The State of California rarely actually does conduct executions.

    Democrats Against Democracy

    This editorial speaks for itself.

    from LA Daily News


    Anti-democracy: Redistricting panel in cross hairs of legislators. Don’t let them kill it.

    Updated: 02/26/2010 10:14:22 AM PST

    CALIFORNIA voters are starting to make some moves to wrest control of their government away from entrenched interests and entrenched legislators. And now those threatened interests are fighting back.

    That’s the only way you can look at the attempt to do away with the state’s new Citizens Redistricting Commission, which is drawing support from Democrats in California’s congressional delegation.

    The Citizens Redistricting Commission is a result of the voters passing Proposition11, the Voters FIRST Act in the November 2008 general election. The commission is still being set up, but it clearly already has lawmakers worried.

    U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-San Francisco, and 12 other Democratic Congress members have given at least $5,000 each to a campaign to scrap the redistricting committee before it does its work. And Assembly Speaker Karen Bass, D-Los Angeles, who will run for the seat held by retiring Rep. Diane Watson, chipped in $20,000.

    The 14 legislators gave $160,000 in all to the so-called Financial Accountability in Redistricting Act, or FAIR Act, an initiative to repeal Prop. 11, which is currently in the signature-gathering phase.

    If FAIR petitions get 694,354 valid signature by July 5, the act will land on the November ballot, endangering the voters’ 2008 decision to let citizens redraw Assembly, state Senate and Board of Equalization boundaries – instead of letting sitting Assembly members and senators draw their own boundaries to keep themselves and their parties in power.

    There’s a reason lawmakers are willing to shell out so much money for this initiative, and it’s not about good government. They want to keep their jobs secure and know that a fair redrawing of the state’s political districts might endanger their re-election chances.

    Our advice to readers is to thwart this well-funded attempt to override the voters by not signing any petition that includes this summary:

    “Eliminates State Commission on Redistricting. Consolidates Authority for Redistricting with Elected Representatives. Initiative Constitutional Amendment and Statute.”

    The last time legislators redrew their district boundaries, in 2001, they divvied up the state into safe districts for Democrats and Republicans – choosing their own voters instead of letting voters choose them.

    Districts almost never change hands from one party to the other, which favors the most conservative Republicans and the most liberal Democrats in primaries because they don’t have to worry about the general election. This leaves the moderates – the people who might actually work together to solve California’s problems – out in the cold.

    The result is a gridlocked Sacramento, where state lawmakers put more stock in ideological divisions than in solving problems or governing for the benefit of the entire state.

    The citizens commission will help end that partisan gridlock, which is why it is the target of the FAIR act.

    In California, it is Democrats who most fear redistricting the most. They hold most of the elected positions and therefore have the most to lose in redrawn districts. If Republicans held majorities, they would do the same thing.

    That’s because, to most legislators, staying in office and keeping the party in control of seats has become more important than representing the people who gave them those seats in the first place.

    And there is nothing good about that kind of government. 

    Harry and Bess

    Harry Truman was a different kind of President.  He probably made as many, or more important decisions regarding our nation’s history as any of the other 42 Presidents preceding him. However, a measure of his greatness may rest on what he did after he left the White House.

    The only asset he had when he died was the house he lived in, which was in Independence Missouri. His wife had inherited the house from her mother and father and other than their years in the White House, they lived their entire lives there.

    When he retired from office in 1952, his income was a U.S. Army pension reported to have been $13,507.72 a year. Congress, noting that he was paying for his stamps and personally licking them, granted him an ‘allowance’ and,  later, a retroactive pension of $25,000 per year.

    After President Eisenhower was inaugurated, Harry and Bess drove home to Missouri by themselves. There was no Secret Service following them.

    When offered corporate positions at large salaries, he declined, stating, “You don’t want me. You want the office of the President, and that doesn’t belong to me. It belongs to the American people and it’s not for sale.”

    Even later, on May 6, 1971, when Congress was preparing to award him the Medal of Honor on his 87th birthday, he refused to accept it, writing, “I don’t consider that I have done anything which should be the reason for any award, Congressional or otherwise.”

    As president he paid for all of his own travel expenses and food.

    Modern politicians have found a new level of success in cashing in on the Presidency, resulting in untold wealth. Today, many in Congress also have found a way to become quite wealthy while enjoying the fruits of their offices. Political offices are now for sale.  (sic. Illinois )

    Good old Harry Truman was correct when he observed, “My choices in life were either to be a piano player in a whore house or a politician. And to tell the truth, there’s hardly any difference!

    I say dig him up and clone him!!

     

    Rabbi Arnold Stiebel, Ph.D.
    Woodland Hills, CA
    arnoldst@aol.com
     

    Child Molestation

    When will we have laws in every state that puts child molesters and sexual predators in jail for life?

    This question is promoted by today’s AP report from San Diego.

    March 03, 2010 2:01 AM EST

    SAN DIEGO (AP) — Thousands of people are at a vigil in a San Diego suburb for a 17-year-old girl whose body is believed to have been found five days after she went to a park for a jog.

    —-

    Twelve-year-old Polly Hannah Klaas was having a slumber party when a strange man holding a knife entered her bedroom, tied up all the girls and put pillow cases over their heads. The intruder then took a sobbing Polly off into the night.Her friends stood back-to-back trying to untie themselves. When that didn’t work, one girl was able to bring her hands under her feet to free herself. The girls then awakened Polly’s mother, who immediately called the police.It was October 1, 1993.

    A stranger had invaded a private home in Petaluma, CA and snatched an innocent child from her very own bedroom. There were witnesses to tell the story. People in her home town and throughout the world helped search for her.

    By the time Polly’s body was found on December 3, 1993, over 2 billion images of Polly Klaas had been distributed worldwide.

    ——

    Parolee named in Lily Burk abduction, murder *

    Kevin Roderick • July 27 2009 1:20 PM

    Police said today that they took transient Charlie Samuel into custody by 5:30 p.m. Friday on drug charges in Downtown. They now have a pretty horrific chronology of the events that led to Burk being found dead in her Volvo; Samuel was apparently spotted getting out of the car’s driver-side door at 4:52 p.m. outside 458 Alameda. Police believe Burk was abducted about 3 p.m. from outside Southwestern University Law School, located in the former Bullock’s Wilshire store on Wilshire in Koreatown. Samuel had been released from state prison in February and was arrested April 23 on a parole violation, then enrolled in a drug program.

    Laws pertaining to sex offenders and child molestation vary with each state.  California is probably no different than many other states but it certainly has had a continuing rash of repeat offenders. This situation is likely to grow larger due to budget shortfalls.

    From Sentencing Law and Policy. The Texas Senate panel approved a bill allowing the death penalty for repeat child sex offenders Tuesday but said major work remains on the proposal.  Senate Bill 5, the “Jessica’s Law” urged by Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst, now advances to the full Senate. The law is named for Jessica Lunsford of Florida, a 9-year-old girl who was abducted, raped and killed.

    The Senate Criminal Justice Committee vote was 5-1 with one member abstaining.  Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott joined Dewhurst at the hearing in supporting the bill, which calls for a minimum 25-year sentence for violent child sex offenses and life without parole or death for second offenses.

    Abbott brushed off concerns that the U.S. Supreme Court might find the death penalty unconstitutional for crimes that do not end in death.  Noting that the court barred the death penalty in a rape case 30 years ago, Abbott said he sees a “greater chance” the high court may allow the death penalty for repeat, felony sexual assault against children.  “I would proudly and personally go up to the United States Supreme Court and defend the constitutionality of this case, this legislation, which I think is the right legislation for the state of Texas,”said Abbott….

    Prosecutors and others who testified against the measure fear that families will be reluctant to turn in friends or relatives, who reportedly commit nine out of 10 sexual offenses against children.

    From USLegal Definitions. The National Center on Child Abuse and Neglect defines child sexual assault as: “Contacts or interactions between a child and an adult when the child is being used for sexual stimulation of the perpetrator or another person when the perpetrator or another person is in a position of power or control over the victim.” Sexual abuse has been defined to include inappropriate physical contact, making a child view sexual acts or pornography, using a child in making pornography, or exposing an adult’s genitals to a child.

    In some states, social workers, medical professionals, clergy, foster parents, attorneys, and camp counselors are required to report abuse. Some states require any person who suspects abuse to report it to authorities. The time when a complaint may be filed, called the statute of limitations, varies by state. One state law sets the statute of limitations on serious sex abuse of a child at age 31 for the victim in criminal cases and age 20 for civil litigation. In another state, the time period is defined according as a certain number of years after the victim turns 18. There is a trend toward extending the statute of limitations in such cases because research has shown that victims typically develop psychological coping, or blocking, mechanisms which may cause them to suppress the abuse or prevent their understanding of the cause of their trauma.