Archives for: August 2008
They Paved A Parking Lot and Put Up A Paradise
August 14th, 2008
The Los Angeles City Council unanimously approved an ordinance Wednesday 8/13/08 requiring certain home improvement stores to develop plans for dealing with day laborers who congregate nearby in search of jobs.
The ordinance mandates that proposed big-box stores obtain conditional-use permits, which could then require them to build day-labor centers with shelter, drinking water, bathrooms and trash cans.
Home Depot, Lowes and other big box home improvement stores will have to pay 100% of the cost for materials and labor to construct shelters in their store parking lots. Of course you would think that the employers of the Illegal’s would contribute a percentage of funding or that the laborers building the shelters would be those who would use them. As we all know logic does not prevail in California’s state government.
Stores would not have to make a plan if the city determined that there were not significant numbers of day laborers in the area or that they were not expected to generate increased trash or noise or impede traffic. The ordinance would apply only to stores of 100,000 square feet or more.
"We welcome it," said Pablo Alvarado of the Los Angeles-based National Day Laborer Organizing Network. "We need it. The workers deserve it.” Marvin Stewart, president of the Minuteman Project, said the ordinance was another example of how the city condones illegal immigration. "All of this is flying in the face of what the city is supposed to be doing in terms of upholding the law," Stewart said.
Is Pablo Alverado correct when he says that illegal alien day laborers deserve shelter? Illegals are using our schools, hospitals, welfare, housing and legal systems so why not provide them with free shelter at the local Home Depot or Lowes as well.
There is a bigger problem here rather than the immigration issue. Home Depot and Lowes have to define what a safe shelter is, how to build it and what is should contain.
Here are some quotes from the U.S. Army Field Manual, No. 21-76, “Shelters.” I hope this helps the CEO’s and contractors working for Home Depot and Lowes.
“A shelter can protect you from the sun, insects, wind, rain, snow, hot or cold temperatures, and enemy observation. It can give you a feeling of well-being. It can help you maintain your will to survive. In some areas, your need for shelter may take precedence over your need for food and possibly even your need for water. For example, prolonged exposure to cold can cause excessive fatigue and weakness (exhaustion). An exhausted person may develop a "passive" outlook, thereby losing the will to survive. The most common error in making a shelter is to make it too large. A shelter must be large enough to protect you. It must also be small enough to contain your body heat, especially in cold climates.”
Additionally:
It must be large enough and level enough to lie down comfortably, have camouflaged escape routes, provide protection against wild animals and rocks and dead trees that might fall, be free from insects, reptiles, and poisonous plants and blend in with the surroundings
A warning to all Big Box home improvement centers located in US sanctuary cities. Get ready to build. While drawing up your blueprints consider building overnight accommodations with plenty of amenities such as: televisions, radios, stoves, refrigerators, food, magazines, scenic views and personal assistants so your Illegals can be entertained well enough to stay off the streets at night reducing the crime in your communities. If you’re not sure if your store is in a sanctuary city, click on this link: http://www.ojjpac.org/sanctuary.asp
Consumers of Lowes and Home Depot who support sanctuary cities should consider helping these stores foot the bill and labor costs by purchasing building supplies from these stores to build additional shelters on your driveways and in your backyards.
Your comments on this article are always appreciated.
How Many Surface To Air Missiles Can Be Transported Before Breaking The Law?
August 6th, 2008
A military jury on August 6, 2008 convicted Osama bin Laden's driver of supporting terrorism but acquitted him on more serious charges of conspiring with al Qaeda to wage murderous attacks, in the first U.S. war crimes trial since World War Two.
The ACLU Executive Director Anthony D. Romero stated "Any verdict resulting from such a flawed system is a betrayal of American values. The rules for the Guantánamo military commissions are so flawed that justice could never be served. From start to finish, this has been a monumental debacle of American justice. The judgment against Hamdan undoubtedly will be challenged in legitimate courts, but there is no appeal from the judgment of future generations. This system was devised to permit the prosecution of alleged wrongdoing by detainees, while continuing to cover up the wrongdoing by government interrogators. Trials that are shrouded in secrecy and tainted by coercion are the very antithesis of American justice."
Not mentioned by most of the media was that Yemeni captive Salim Hamdan was transporting two surface to air missiles in the trunk of his car. In his defense he could have said that he didn't know how they got there or they weren't his, just like a drug dealer getting busted for speeding with the goods stowed in the glove box of his automobile. Carrying two missiles, well I guess that defense wouldn't hold any water. They are just to big to not know they are there.
So why was Salim Hamdan transporting these weapons in the first place? You know as well as I what the master plan was but the ACLU and the US military court failed to comprehend the meaning of conspiracy. For those few who need a definition: Conspiracy (political), a plot to overthrow a government or other power.
Defense lawyers said the partial acquittal affirmed their faith in the military officers on the jury but did nothing to remedy fundamental flaws in a system designed to convict on all counts.
Here in the USA citizens are protected by code Sec. 926A, Interstate transportation of firearms:
Not withstanding any other provision of any law or any rule or regulation of a State or any political subdivision thereof, any person who is not otherwise prohibited by this chapter from transporting, shipping, or receiving a firearm shall be entitled to transport a firearm for any lawful purpose from any place where he may lawfully possess and carry such firearm to any other place where he may lawfully possess and carry such firearm if, during such transportation the firearm is unloaded, and neither the firearm nor any ammunition being transported is readily accessible or is directly accessible from the passenger compartment of such transporting vehicle: Provided, That in the case of a vehicle without a compartment separate from the driver's compartment the firearm or ammunition shall be contained in a locked container other than the glove compartment or console.
So, fair warning to all...If you are planing to transport any number of surface to air missiles in the future, make sure to safely put them in a locked box somewhere that can not be readily accessed and by all means make sure they are unloaded. If you are still unsure of the rules and regulations, call ACLU Executive Director Anthony D. Romero or the US military court system for advice. Maybe they will come over and inspect your vehicle for compliance and while they are there, (just to be safe) tell them you are not conspiring to do anything wrong.
Your comments on this article are always appreciated.
