Archive for May, 2017

National Reciprocity Is About the Right to Bear the Arms We Keep – Breitbart News

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We have the right to keep arms, perour Creator, and we have a right to bear them, per our Creator. Thomas Jefferson and James Madison made this clear.

Jefferson wrote, We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

The gist of his declaration was to remind King George III that colonists had certain rights thatwere theirs bybirth and could not be taken or even diminished by government.This was not to say government did not wrongly shackle the exercise of such rights. In fact, it was such shackling that led the colonists to break free and declare their independence from tyranny.

After the American Revolution, Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness were fleshed out in the Bill of Rights, where an enumeration of specific protections for specific rights was set forth. This included the right to freedom of speech and religion (First Amendment), the right to be secure in ones property (Third and Fourth Amendments), the right to be secure in ones person (Fourth Amendment), the right to keep and bear arms (Second Amendment), and many other rights. In fact, the enumeration of God-given rights included a protection on rights not enumerated, yet possessed by the people.

It is the Ninth Amendment which says, The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.

None of the amendments protecting Americans God-given rights are worded in a way that would indicate the rights are only viable in citizens hometowns or in their home states. For example, the First Amendment does not say, Congress shall make no law abridging freedom of speech in your home state. The Fourth Amendment does not say, The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated unless the people are outside the city limits of their hometowns.

It appears silly to think God-given rights to free speech and/or privacy are limited to a physical location. Yet this is what the left says about the rights protected by the Second Amendment; they claim that statesacting like various fiefdomscan morally and legitimately shackle the exercise of God-given rights for visitors passing through their states. In so doing, leftists conduct themselves as if the right to bear arms is only protected from infringement in ones hometown or home state. Once a gun owner begins to travel, he begins to lose rights.

When James Madison fashioned the Second Amendment as part of the Bill of Rights, whichwould be added to the Constitution, is it plausible that he thought, This right is different from all other God-given rights insomuch as it is only valid when the citizen exercising it is at home?

Rather, Montpelier reports that Madison handed the draft for what would become the Second Amendment to a congressional committee, and the wording, as ratified, said, A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.

Our right is not simply to keep arms but also to bear the arms we keep. This lies at the heart of national reciprocity.

AWR Hawkins is the Second Amendment columnist for Breitbart News and host of Bullets with AWR Hawkins, a Breitbart News podcast. He is also the political analyst for Armed American Radio. Follow him on Twitter: @AWRHawkins. Reach him directly at awrhawkins@breitbart.com.

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Migrant crisis: Mediterranean rescue as 30 drown – BBC News


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Migrant crisis: Mediterranean rescue as 30 drown
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At least 30 migrants, some of them young children, have drowned after falling into the sea off the Libyan coast, Italy's coastguard says. The overcrowded boat was carrying about 500 migrants when it suddenly listed, sending about 200 people into the ...
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Peace flags, Jurez jazz and the world migrant crisis – NMPolitics.net

Unusual sights and sounds rose from the Mexican bank of the Rio Grande between Ciudad Jurez, Mexico and El Paso, Texas. Stretched between two old black railroad bridges crossing the cemented and water-poor but trash-rich channel, which passes for the Big River in this section of the rios tormented journey to the Gulf of Mexico, 60 small white flags upheld by metallic poles, clasping wooden shoes and writers verses, stood on a spring evening as a jazz combo kicked out the jams.

Heath Haussamen / NMPolitics.net

Aview from a park in El Paso, Texas, looking across the Rio Grandetoward Ciudad Jurez, Mexico.

Nearby, street graffiti proclaimed, The Most Beautiful Border of the World.

The creation of Mexico Citys Betsabee Romero, the flags and shoes represented the aspiration for peace and symbolized the weary feet of migrants whove traversed this land for generations, the artist said in an interview. Explaining her concept, Romero said she was inspired by Mexican writers and artists such as Juan Rulfo, Octavio Paz and Frida Kahlo, as well as events registered on this particular patch of Mother Earth, including the 2010 shooting death of 15-year-old Sergio Hernandez by a U.S. Border Patrol agent.

This was a place with a lot of histories and when I was here people told me about them, Romero said.

Romeros exposition capped off a three-day forum held earlier this month in Jurez dedicated to the cultural rights of migrants across the globe. Co-sponsored by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), the Chihuahua state government, the Colegio de Chihuahua, the Autonomous University of Ciudad Jurez and the Autonomous University of Chihuahua, the gathering analyzed and debated often overlooked strands of the contemporary immigration question including ethnicity, religion, language, food and other dimensions of human identity.

In a lively encounter, academics, Mexican government officials, media makers, artists, and members of non-governmental organizations assembled at the Paso del Norte Cultural Center and nearby university campuses, where they put U.S. and European immigration policies under the microscope, debated human rights violations and Mexican immigration policy, and contemplated how the academy can play a changing and more meaningful role in one of the pressing yet contentious issues of our time.

In a press release announcing the forum, UNESCOs Mexico office said the United Nations estimates approximately 250 million people will live in a country other than their origin in 2017, a number representing a 45 percent increase since 2000.

Nuria Sanz, director of UNESCO in Mexico City, summed up the challenges confronting anthropologists and other researchers who, increasingly, must go outside the normal academic box to study and analyze the movements of peoples thatare transforming the planet.

How can social science capture something that is transitory? she asked. How are disciplines rapidly crossed?

The migration issues touchboth sides of the U.S.-Mexico border.Guillermina Nunez-Mchiri, professor of anthropology and director of womens and gender studies at the University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP), reflected on her experiences in the colonias (underdeveloped settlements lacking in basic infrastructure and services) of southern New Mexicos Doa Ana County, where many Mexico-born farmworkers found homes after the 1980s. Nunez-Mchiris research for the U.S. Census was a homecoming for her: She had spent part of her childhood in Hatch, New Mexico, as the daughter of Mexican parents who followed the farm harvests in the U.S. Southwest.

Despite her years in Hatch, Nunez-Mchiri found she had to establish trust and rapport with frequently suspicious residents who didnt know her and wondered why on earth they should open their fragile homes and busy lives to a stranger asking a lot of questions. Gradually, however, residents identified with the probing womans life story and cultural background and accepted the researchers sincerity, inviting her to come in and eat before opening up their worlds.

The UTEP professor outlined findings from her New Mexico projects notably the existence of colonias in one of the most developed countries of the world; the weight of widespread depression among inhabitants; the presence of numerous residences of mixed citizenship status; and the persistence of driving while brown violations, or frequent police stops of drivers with old cars and a certain ethnic look.

On the other hand, Nunez-Mchiri said, she noticed the emergence of new community leaders, mainly women, who began to connect their neighbors to services and organize against illegal police checkpoints.

She discovered that a huge issue was entrapment, or the confinement of communities. At first entrapment was due to geographic and climatic factors, punctuated by the temporary isolation brought on by New Mexicos notorious summer flash floods that trap people living down mud-prone roads, Nunez-Mchiri said. Later, she detected a more permanent form of entrapment triggered by the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacksand the subsequent intensification of law enforcement patrols, checkpoints and high-tech detection strategies throughout the borderlands.

The 21stcentury security net was readily evident as this reporter drove down El Pasos Paisano Drive, which parallels the fenced-off border, while heading to the Jurez migration forum. There, as traffic whisked by, Border Patrol agents had a man detained near two stopped civilian cars, one of which appeared to have crashed.

In return for data, Nunez-Mchiri pledged to the interviewees that her research would be accessible and produce documents thatcould go to agencies and institutions with power to impact their lives. According to the UTEP scholar, perhaps the most important words she heard from the colonia residents was a basic message: We exist. Tell them we are here. Tell them we exist.

In this spirit, Nunez-Mchiri said the foreign-born children of undocumented parents who were brought to the U.S. as youngsters or the Dreamers, as they are now popularly known have delivered a big lesson learned in turn from the likes of Martin Luther King, Dolores Huerta and Harvey Milk.

What we learned from our young people is if they dont go public, they dont exist. If we dont come out, we dont exist, she said.

Touching on the traumas of entrapment, Rodolfo Rubio, researcher for Juarezs Colegio de Chihuahua, described the current mood among many migrants living in the United States without legal status.

Migrants dont go out in public. They are cooped up in their homes, afraid of being deported, Rubio said. If they were invisible before, now they are even more invisible.

Participants inthe Jurez forum differed in their assessments of whether a truly massive deportation of immigrants without legal status from the U.S. will occur under the Trump administration. Rubio reminded the audience that deportations soared to 2.3 million under the Obama administration, but perhaps did not garner as much attention because the U.S. president was deemed cool.

Now, under the TrumpAdministration, there is a continuation of this (deportation) project, but we have a more aggressive discourse, he said.

The Mexican scholar continued, Im not saying a massive deportation wont occur, but it is impossible under present circumstances the discourse of Trump could have an effect (on migration), but we dont have (hard evidence) to say whether this is the case.

U.S. media outlets reported last week that the 41,318 arrests of immigrants by U.S. Customs and Immigration Enforcement in the period between Jan.22 and March 29 of 2017 represented a 38 percent increase from the comparable time frame in 2016. At the Jurez forum, Wilfrido Campbell, until recently the head of the Jurez office of Mexicos National Migration Institute, reported that 34,900 Mexicans were repatriated to his country from Jan.1 to March 27 of this year.

Putting a global perspective on migration, the University of Barcelonas Nadia Ribas arrived in Jurez equipped with stunning visuals depicting the daily realities of tens of millions of people in the modern world, torn from their homes by war, political strife and economic collapse. Ribas graphics detailed the latitudes and longitudes of displacements, detention centers, fatal shipwrecks, border walls, refugee camps, and even confined migrant work zones on every continent except Greenland and Antarctica.

Defining the dots and colors on her maps as stains of suffering, Ribas contended, the world is falling into a strategy of encampment.

A global migrant crisis, from the waters of the Mediterranean to the fords of the Rio Grande, and from the sands of the Sahara to the mountains of Afghanistan and Pakistan, is challenging definitions of borders, rights and national identities, according to the Spanish sociologist. For instance, she cited the predicament of homeless deportees from the U.S. living in Tijuana, including individuals who dont really speak Spanish and arent from Mexico in the commonly understood sense of the term.

Political complexities aside, Ribas quoted a Syrian refugee as expressing an emblematic aspiration of peoples in movement: We want only to get to the other side and give security to our children.

(For a recent map portraying the migrant crisis in Europe,click here.)

The surge in racism and xenophobia sweeping different nations was a subject tackled by Swanie Potot, a French researcher with the University of Nice who studies the situation of about 20,000 eastern European Roma, or gypsies, who have moved to France in recent years. Living in shantytowns, many earn a living by scrounging for recyclable trash to sell much like the so-called pepenadores of Mexico and Latin America.

Besides enduring regular government demolitions of their homes, the Roma encounter widespread discriminatory attitudes, Potot told this reporter.

Although ample media attention recently spotlighted the anti-immigrant rhetoric of unsuccessful French presidential candidate Marine Le Pen and her National Front party, anti-Roma postures are widespread and even held by leaders of the Socialist Party, Potot said.

Because they are Roma they are looked at more as ethnic than economic migrants, Potot added. (Discrimination) is expressed by politicians who say these people cant be integrated into France because they are different than us.

Potot contrasted the Roma with immigrants from the United Kingdom who live in her hometown and, not unlike the white undocumented Irish or Polish immigrants in the U.S., get by under the radar.

I live in Nice. We have a strong English immigration but people dont talk about English immigration, she said.

Conversely, the trend of increasingly restrictive and exclusionary immigration policies in European Union member states is being met by an upsurge of pro-immigrant movements in France, Spain and elsewhere, according to both Potot and Ribas.

There is a boom in solidarity, Ribas said, but (activists) arent people in the social movements. They are new (activists).

Riveting the Jurez forum were accounts of forced displacements of entire populations. Victor Quintana, a veteran social activist and former Mexican lawmaker who now serves as secretary of social development for the state government of Chihuahua, had frank words about the displacement of people in his home state.

Quintana told the story of El Manzano, Chihuahua, an indigenous village in the Sierra Tarahumara where residents took up arms against an organized criminal group in March 2015. The inhabitants were initially successful in repelling their enemies, Quintana said, but soon fled their homes after realizing they did not have enough force to fight off criminal reinforcements likely on the way.

The incident raised deep questions about the right not to migrate, the right to return, and the incapacity of the government to guarantee either, Quintana said.

Even though we dont have an Islamic state in Mexico, we have something similar: a narco-state with displacement, forced migration, he added.

Rodolfo Garcia, author and researcher for the University of Zacatecas, maintained that Mexicos 12 million emigrants were really expelled because of the countrys social, political and economic conditions. Garcia warned about a health care crisis confronting older migrants repatriated back to Mexico at a time when the countrys national health care systems are falling apart and pensions remain in the hands of speculators.

Rubio provided additional context to the drama of longtime migrants deported from the United States. Citing the Migration Survey of the Northern Border regularly conducted by the Colegio de la Frontera Norte (Colef) and associates, he reported that the number of repatriated persons on Mexicos northern border who were defined as long-term migrants jumped from 67,567 in 2007 to 202,338 in 2016. The migrants interviewed were mostly men whod worked during their stay in the U.S., with the percentage of English speakers growing over the years, including persons who only speak English.

The Jurez immigration specialist challenged Trump Administration insistences that the majority of migrants currently being deported are criminals, adding that 99 percent of the migrants without legal status in the U.S. who were interviewed by Mexican researchers on the countrys northern border were deported for violating U.S. immigration laws.

Garcia revealed thorny roadblocks in researching the post-return conditions of migrants, especially in violence-torn, rural areas of states like Michoacan. The Zacatecas academic recounted findings of a study partially funded by the McArthur Foundation that examined the lives of 1,800 returned migrants in Michoacan, Guerrero, Puebla, Oaxaca, Chiapas, and Zacatecas between 2013 and 2015.

Researchers found returnees had problems enrolling in school, integrating back into the family and community and coping with the status of perceived failure. A returned migrant has the stigma of a failed person, Garcia said, and related behaviors include outbreaks of domestic violence.

The most dramatic experiences encountered by the researchers, he said, were undesired encounters with two organized crime groups in some rural communities, where delinquents demanded to review the questionnaires, engaged in extortion and attempted to charge the infamous cuota, or turf fee, in return for permission to work. Subsequently, researchers were forced to abandon some communities in favor of new ones, Garcia said. Social scientists merely experienced a taste of the violence that many communities live with every day, he said.

Several migrant action initiatives were mulled at Mays Jurez forum. Chihuahua Social Development Secretary Victor Quintana said governments can start by establishing hospitable places for migrants and attending to their cultural rights. Along these lines, the Chihuahua state government will support a new multi-service migrant center in Jurez slated to open near the the Santa Fe Bridge that connects to El Paso in June, he said.

From the NGO side, Juarense Alfonso Herrera spoke about the ongoing struggle of ex-braceros and their family members, survivors of the 1942-64 guestworker program between Mexico and the U.S., to reclaim their dignity and finally get compensated for the 10 percent paycheck deductions that were intended to be paid to the workers after their return to Mexico but never were received by many.

I think the academy should lend its support, Herrera said. (Ex-braceros) are living social death, exposed to a lack of access to health care, social services.

UTEPs Guillermina Nunez-Mchiri talked about a Mayan immigrant community organization in San Francisco that formed as a response to racism, and a roving theater group in El Paso that takes the hard issues of the day to schools, domestic violence shelters and other venues where people gather.

The ethics, accountability and social utility of academic migrant research was a big topic debated at the meet, with many participants urging a closer relationship between the academy and migrant communities and organizations.

University researchers have the obligation not only to ethically contribute, but propose projects for the community as well, Rodolfo Garcia said.

In an interview, UNESCO Mexico Director Nuria Sanz said she had already noticed among academics a shift in how to work and how to include ethics and better questioning in surveys. The UN official said a work plan devised from the forum will be published by her agency within the next couple of months. Aimed at promoting the cultural rights of migrants, the plan will take into account academia, government institutions and NGOs, discussing how to analyze and include cultural rights in agendas, she added.

Kent Paterson is an independent journalist who covers issues in the U.S./Mexico border region.

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Peace flags, Jurez jazz and the world migrant crisis - NMPolitics.net

Macron Urges More EU Integration on Migrant Crisis – Asharq Al-awsat English

French President Emmanuel Macron meets Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France on May 21, 2017. (Reuters)

French President Emmanuel Macron urged on Sunday the European Union to exert more efforts to tackle the migrant crisis, noting that it has disregarded Italys warning about the asylum seekers.

Macron reiterated ahead of a working dinner at the Elysee Palace with visiting Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni that he wishes to work quickly within the EU to strengthen rules to protect workers against social dumping and improve regulations on public procurement.

In a nod to Italy, which has received more than 45,000 people arriving by boat from North Africa so far this year alone, Macron said the EU also had to better share the burden of the high migration flows across the Mediterranean in recent years.

The EU has seen some 1.6 million refugees and migrants from the Middle East, Africa and beyond reach its shores in 2014-2016. Most first arrived in flimsy boats in Greece but now head mainly to Italy. Many have died at sea.

We did not quite hear the warnings that Italy sent us, Macron said. I want us to address a real reform of the right of asylum and of our current regulations to better protect those countries most subject to this migratory pressure.

Gentiloni urged the EU to draw up a common migration policy, and also called for the euro zone monetary union to move toward a fiscal and banking union.

It wont be a quick process but the important thing is to be able to start and to go in the right direction, he said.

Macrons meeting with Gentiloni comes after one with German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin on Monday to draw up a roadmap for deeper EU integration.

He also met with European Council President Donald Tusk on Wednesday in Paris.

The two-day G-7 summit is meanwhile scheduled for next weekend in Taormina, Italy. US President Donald Trump is expected to attend as part of his first foreign trip.

Asharq Al-Awsat is the worlds premier pan-Arab daily newspaper, printed simultaneously each day on four continents in 14 cities. Launched in London in 1978, Asharq Al-Awsat has established itself as the decisive publication on pan-Arab and international affairs, offering its readers in-depth analysis and exclusive editorials, as well as the most comprehensive coverage of the entire Arab world.

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Trump Justice budget targets illegal immigration – Politico (blog)

President Donald Trump is proposing to trim the Justice Departments overall budget in the coming year, but he wants to boost funding for a crackdown on illegal immigration.

The Trump administration is proposing a $27.7 billion for the Justice Department in fiscal 2018, down $1.1 billion, or about 4 percent, from the continuing resolution the previous year.

But the administration proposed nearly $145 million in additional funding for immigration enforcement, adding 75 immigration judges along with about 375 support personnel, 70 new assistant U.S. attorneys focused on immigration and border crime, 40 deputy marshals, and new funds for prison space to detain more illegal immigrants.

With this budget we are also implementing the presidents promise to secure our borders and restore a lawful immigration system, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein told reporters at a Justice Department briefing Tuesday. While dramatic progress has been made at the border in recent months, much remains to be done, and its critical that we focus on increased enforcement of our criminal immigration laws and that we enforce all immigration laws efficiently.

Weve asked all federal prosecutors to increase their focus on this area by making several immigration offenses a higher priority, Rosenstein said.

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Congress does not have to follow the presidents budget suggestions, but the document is considered a statement of the administrations priorities. Trump is also proposing nearly $4 million in additional funding for 40 new civil litigation positions that would address immigration-related matters, such as lawsuits challenging Trump policies or involving land seizures required to build the wall Trump has promised to erect on the Mexican border.

The budget proposal sent to Congress also contains language targeting so-called sanctuary cities by requiring that localities comply with federal immigration detainer requests in order to receive Justice or Homeland Security Department funding.

However, the Justice Departments top budget official said there is no funding for a wall at the U.S.-Mexico border.

We do not have border wall money in the Department of Justice budget, said Assistant Attorney General for Administration Lee Lofthus.

Most of the cuts in the Justice Department budget involve grant programs or one-time funding, like money related to the presidential campaign or building projects.

One of the grant programs targeted for elimination compensates state and local governments for the cost of housing foreign nationals who wind up in prison.

For years, the Justice Department has recommended the end of the State Criminal Alien Assistance Program, but Congress regularly adds the funds back. The budget that passed earlier this month put $210 million into that reimbursement program.

Asked why the Justice Department would propose cutting that account when Attorney General Jeff Sessions has repeatedly complained about the burdens of illegal immigration, a Justice official said the Trump team wants to end the program for the same reason the Obama administration did.

The SCAAP program is an after-the-fact reimbursement program. It reimburses state and locals for what happens when we dont strictly enforce the law, when we dont have proactive enforcement programs, said DOJ controller Jolene Lauria. We only have a limited amount of resources. We want to enhance those that proactively prevent and prosecute those illegal aliens that cross the border. So for us, its not in contravention because we want to do it on the proactive side.

New legislative language in the budget proposal targets sanctuary cities, amending an existing statute to force state and local jurisdictions to comply with "detainer" requests, which ask localities to hold suspected undocumented immigrants up to 48 hours beyond their release time.

The provision could encounter resistance from law enforcement and elected officials, some of whom have questioned the constitutionality of the requests.

The revised statute would also require local jails to share more information about people in custody, including whether the individual is removable from the U.S. and the person's home address.

Under the reworked measure, the Homeland Security and Justice departments would be able to condition federal grants on compliance.

In January, Trump issued an executive order that included language billed as a crackdown on so-called sanctuary cities, threatening their federal funding.

Last month, a judge issued an injunction against part of that order, directing that it not be applied beyond the funding restrictions contained in a specific section of federal law focused on policies that interfere with local officials communications with the feds.

On Monday, the Justice Department asked the judge to dissolve that injunction, saying that it was unnecessary. But the budget proposal released Tuesday makes clear that the administration wants Congress to strengthen the requirements facing cities.

Ted Hesson contributed to this report.

Josh Gerstein is a senior reporter for POLITICO.

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