| We Got the Message |
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| Written by Gary Gross |
| Friday, 25 January 2008 12:41 |
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After getting his ass handed to him on immigration reform the first time, John McCain started saying that he'd "gotten the message". He still insists that his bill wasn't amnesty, though, making conservatives wary of his immigration 'transformation'. This information should remove all doubt:
I've said many times that people didn't trust McCain's second attempt because La Raza (NCLR) had veto power over anything brought up. NCLR are open borders advocates. Add the hiring Juan Hernandez as his "Hispanic Outreach Director" to the NCLR debacle and you've got an immigration reform disgrace. It's pretty apparent that John McCain hasn't changed his views one iota. He's still the same pro-amnesty guy he's always been. McCain's actions tell us what his position is. His actions don't agree with his words, which is a polite way of saying that McCain shouldn't be trusted with immigration policy. He's as stubborn and prideful as anyone I've ever seen in public life. Frankly, I wouldn't trust him on immigration policy if my life depended on it. Here's part of what Mark Krikorian wrote back in 2004:
Here's more of Krikorian's writings:
Juan Hernandez certainly knew all about this policy and encouraged it. Now he's Team McCain's amnesty policy director? Why should people trust McCain on immigration? Other than his words, what's changed since McCain first teamed with Ted Kennedy on the first amnesty bill? Granted, he's repackaged everything but it hasn't been changed substantively. This hiring should be seen in this light too: It's just another instance of John McCain sticking his finger in the GOP's eye. This is him giving the GOP the finger. It's time the GOP thanked him for his years of public service, then tell him that they're moving in a fresh direction. We need to start down the path to maintaining our national sovereignty. It's time we stopped practicing Washington politics as usual. Instead, we should reject the insiders' games that McCain plays. Most importantly, we should fill John McCain's inbox with the message that we "got the message" he's sending on immigration reform and that we reject his message. Comments welcome at LFR. |








