Monday, April 30, 2007

How Mexican meth took hold on a Wyoming Indian Reservation... and more. Welcome to the "Post-American America"

Too bad the Mexicans wouldn't rather ruin their own - oh, yeah... they already have. Well, too bad they don't have the guts to build a country they would actually LIKE to live in.
One could say the same for the Muslimes, too.
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Associated Press
Wind River Indian Res., Wyo. -- ...Like a cancer, a Mexican drug gang permeated the reservation and its families. It left behind a landscape strewn with broken lives. -- Some 12,000 Indians - members of the Northern Arapaho and the Eastern Shoshone tribes - live on 2.2 million acres, an area so vast many homes are separated by miles of barren land...
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Andy Selepak -- American Daily
Can a new film help derail the current push for amnesty for illegal aliens? Chris Burgard's new movie "Border" is so good that it could dramatically affect the public debate. But because you can't expect the major media to cover this shocking and poignant film, the challenge will be to make sure millions of Americans get a chance to see it.
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Tulsa World
Guymon, Okla. -- Guymon is all-American, but it's redefining itself after thousands of Hispanics came to town 12 years ago for jobs at a hog-processing plant. -- Stores advertise in Spanish. Authentic Mexican restaurants pepper street corners. The manager of Homeland is brushing up on his Spanish so he can talk to customers...
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Dennis Byrne -- Chicago Tribune
North Michigan Avenue merchants, joined by hundreds of nearby Gold Coast residents, today angrily marched in protest of a raid by heavily armed federal agents on a fake ID ring operating openly for months on the Magnificent Mile. -- Asked why they weren't angered by the presence of the ring, headed by a murder suspect...
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Tanya Hernandez -- LA Daily News
Fifteen years ago on April 26, 1992, widespread civil unrest erupted in Los Angeles, following the not-guilty verdict in the trial of the four white police officers accused of using excessive force in the arrest of a black motorist named Rodney King. What have we learned about race relations 15 years after the Los Angeles riots?

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