2 IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENTS

by phuk minutemen Saturday, Jul. 16, 2005 at 2:31 AM
somosindigena@hotmail.com

a) SAVE OUR STATE TO BULLY MORE DAY LABORERES IN LAGUNA BEACH THIS SATURDAY b) MINUTEMEN HAVE OFFICIALLY ARRIVED IN SAN DIEGO--GROUPS CALLED ON TO COUNTER--THEIR PRESENCE!!!

2 IMPORTANT ANNOUNCE...
jornaleros_del_monte_unidos.jpg, image/jpeg, 1103x615

2 DIFFERENT ARTICLES CUT AND PASTED BELOW--SCROLL FOR THE PAGE BREAK TO SCAN THROUGH:

URGENT BULLETIN!!!

a) THIS SATURDAY, "SAVE OUR STATE" PLAN TO BULLY MORE DAY LABORERES IN LAGUNA BEACH (O.C.)

b) MINUTEMENT OFFICIALLY ARRIVE AS ARMED VIGILANTES IN SAN DIEGO TO PATROL LA FRONTERA, HUMAN RIGHTS GROUPS ARE CALLED INTO ACTION TO PATROL / WITNESS / PROTECT . both items are listed in detail below.

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Announcement as worded by SOS-show up to counter their message of hate-

LAGUNA BEACH

Laguna Canyon Road/Laguna Canyon Frontage Rd.

JULY 16TH * SATURDAY

10AM-12PM

ARTS FESTIVAL RALLY!

The City of Laguna Beach supports an Illegal Day Labor site through

income generated by their World Famous Art Festivals. We are gathering in a peaceful rally in front of the arts center to educate those entering the festival and the drive-by public to the illegal

activities their tickets are paying for.

Bring your signs:

"Shame on Laguna Beach"

"Laguna Beach Supports Illegals"

"Laguna Beach Arts Support Illegals"

"Laguna Beach Residents Before Illegals"

"Your Art Ticket Pays For Mexico"

Also bring the usual signs denouncing Illegal Immigration and Day

Labor Sites.





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The Minutemen officially "arrived" to Campo, California (East of San Diego) on Tuesday, July 12, 2005. They are armed and ready to keep Mexicans out.

RALLY AGAINST THE MINUTEMEN IN SAN DIEGO

WHEN: SATURDAY, JULY 16, 2005

WHERE: CAMPO, CALIFORNIA

[FROM SAN DIEGO, TAKE I-8 TO BUCKMAN SPRINGS ROAD, SOUTH TO 94, RIGHT CAMPO, SOUTH TO FOREST GATE, LOOK FOR SIGNS/PEOPLE AT THE VFW OR BORDER PATROL BUILDINGS]

THE MINUTEMEN ARE ALREADY IN SAN DIEGO!

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Legal groups to watch county 'Minutemen'

By Leslie Berestein

UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER

July 1, 2005

SAN YSIDRO – If anti-illegal immigration activists patrol the U.S.-Mexico border in San Diego County this summer, legal groups plan to monitor the patrols' activities for human rights or other violations.

At the Casa Familiar community center in San Ysidro yesterday, representatives from four legal organizations announced plans to train legal observers to shadow the civilian patrol groups if they set up along the border.

One group has announced an event in the Campo area in mid-July, and another group has plans to start patrols that could stretch to Imperial County in mid-September.

The observers shadowing the California patrollers will "observe, report and record any encounters or acts of violence between the migrants and the vigilantes," said Lilia Velasquez, a San Diego attorney with the American Immigration Lawyers Association.

The monitoring will be similar to what legal observers trained by the American Civil Liberties Union did in Arizona in April during the Minuteman Project. That monthlong event attracted hundreds of civilian border-patrollers, some of them armed, who watched for undocumented immigrants and made reports to authorities.

Called "vigilantes" by President Bush and other critics, the Minutemen have nonetheless inspired dozens of spinoffs around the country. The leaders of these groups say the federal government has not done enough to curb illegal immigration.

The American Immigration Lawyers Association, the ACLU of San Diego & Imperial Counties, the San Diego La Raza Lawyers Association and the National Lawyers Guild of San Diego created the local observer program.

Like the volunteer ACLU observers in Arizona, legal observers in California will carry cellular phones, two-way radios, video cameras and still cameras, said William Aceves, a law professor and board member of the ACLU. The observers will be prohibited from engaging in any confrontation or activism.

Members of the Minuteman Project were also instructed to avoid confrontation, although one young volunteer from San Diego chafed organizers when he approached an undocumented immigrant and had him pose for a photo holding an offensive T-shirt.

The relatively peaceful outcome of the Arizona event was helped by the presence of legal observers, said Kate Yavenditti of the National Lawyers Guild.

"The presence of legal observers serves as a deterrent to potential legal or violent activity," she said.

The news that there will be legal observers in California didn't sit well with Andy Ramirez of Chino, whose Friends of the Border Patrol group plans to start patrols Sept. 16, Mexican Independence Day.

"More like legal nuisances," Ramirez said. "What I would like to do is if these legal groups have issues, I would invite them to sit down with me at a round table and discuss these things with me. Our number is listed."

Other local groups are also trying to counter the civilian patrols. Tomorrow, immigrant rights groups calling themselves Gente Unida – United People – will hold an anti-Minuteman rally at San Ysidro Community Park.

Earlier this week, the American Friends Service Committee, a human-rights group affiliated with the Quaker faith, announced it would partner with similar groups in other border states to lobby lawmakers for pro-immigrant reforms, including access to permanent residency for undocumented immigrants already working in the United States.

"We are concerned about vigilantes. We are concerned about the Minutemen, but that is not our top agenda item," said the American Friends' border program director, Christian Ramirez. "We want to focus on the issue of reforming immigration policies. Vigilantism is an outgrowth of failed immigration policies."

Original: 2 IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENTS