← Autodidact Archive · Original Dissent · Lady_America
Thread ID: 8164 | Posts: 4 | Started: 2003-07-16
2003-07-16 15:54 | User Profile
It seems everyone is on the band wagon to get some sort of reparation from the government.
My question is can we, the white majority who are losing their country to mass legal and illegal immigration, ALSO sue for reparations against the government for bringing in the non-European or allowing illegal immigrants in this country and changing the face of OUR country?
**Hundreds of thousands of people, many of them U.S. citizens ([color=red]who really were these US citizens[/color]), were forcibly sent to Mexico in the 1930s to protect jobs for white residents, according to a lawsuit against the city and county by a civil rights group. ([color=red]can German-Americans who were also detained and others sent to camps during WWII in the US also be eligible for some sort of reparation?)[/color]
The suit, filed Tuesday in Los Angeles Superior Court on behalf of an estimated 400,000 people of Mexican descent, seeks monetary damages for the "irreparable loss" families suffered when they were allegedly uprooted. ([color=red]I believe the Japanese-American received some sort of reparation. Why not German-Americans during this time?)[/color]
The Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund and the Beverly Hills law firm of Kiesel, Boucher & Larson sought class-action status in the suit, claiming the program was a "coordinated, aggressive campaign to remove people of Mexican ancestry from California in large numbers."
County and city officials working with federal immigration authorities violated the constitutional rights of the alleged victims by expelling them from the United States, according to the suit.
City Attorney Rocky Delgadillo had not yet seen the suit and could not comment, according to his aides.
One of the plaintiffs, Emilia Castaneda, said she was 9 when she was forced to leave her home in the city's Boyle Heights neighborhood in 1935. She said she was loaded onto a train and sent to Mexico.
She returned to the United States nearly a decade later, when the country was immersed in World War II and once again in need of workers.
An estimated 60 percent of those sent to Mexico, including Castaneda, were U.S. citizens, according to the Los Angeles Times.
The suit alleges that the plaintiffs were expelled to eliminate job competition for "Americans" during the Depression, and to reduce the amount of money "that would have otherwise been spent to help aid destitute ([color=red]were these people illegal immigrants?) [/color]individuals of Mexican ancestry." **
2003-07-22 02:08 | User Profile
I'm wholeheartedly against reparations for blacks and Mexicans but more than ready for repatriation for both races to their respective lands. :th:
[url=http://www.tnbsolution.com]TNBsolution[/url]
2003-07-22 03:35 | User Profile
Are we supposed to know what TNB stands for?
2003-07-22 03:58 | User Profile
Are we supposed to know what TNB stands for?
According to the [url=http://www.tnbsolution.com/afn/]FAQ[/url], "TNB" stands for Typical N*gger Behavior. :o