Kudos and sincere gratitude to this newspaper for the in-depth and professional coverage - from both the news department and the editorial page - of the recent Vicente Fox/Robert Pastor infomercial for open borders at Kennesaw State University on May 12.
Repeated thanks to KSU for giving willing Americans the opportunity to see and hear these characters for themselves.
Fox is the former president of Mexico and Pastor has proposed a "North American Parliament" and is often described as the father of the "North American Union."
The money quote of the day came from Fox, who said, "My dream is that we will not have a border." It should serve as a constant and brilliant reminder of the radical goal of the well-funded un-American crazies here who relentlessly strive to portray millions of illegal alien wage thieves as merely victims of geography. Not to mention the inherent dangers of surrendering our own right to loudly demand vigilant security on those borders.
In addition to peddling the creation of a North American community similar to the European Union, nearly every speaker at the four-hour event pushed for a repeat of the illegal alien amnesty of 1986. It should be noted that tacitly allowing millions of illegals into our nation and then legalizing them later amounts to nothing less than an official open-borders policy in slow motion.
Mexican citizen and former Hispanic liaison for the failed McCain presidential campaign Juan Hernandez was one of those speakers. His comments on the amnesty of 1986 were that it was the right thing to do, we should do it again and that we should repeat the cycle in about "20 or 25 years."
MDJ readers are among the few who got the entire story on the day's discussion or the open-borders plan.
The Associated Press, which covered the Fox visit, somehow overlooked the borderless continent sales pitch and reported that Fox was "encouraged that the Obama administration accepts some U.S. responsibility for drug violence ravaging Mexico..."
The readers here can make up their own minds on what counts as news suppression, but don't be at all surprised at the fact that most average Americans are clueless on the subject and have for years been intentionally shielded from the scheme.
Big names in talk radio have also blacked-out the issue.
In an effort to marginalize apparently too-aware listeners on his daily nationwide radio broadcast, conservative radio host Sean Hannity reportedly plays the theme song from the old "Twilight Zone" TV series to dismiss any caller with the temerity to encourage conversation about the North American Community agenda.
Broadcasting from Atlanta, nationally syndicated "Talkmaster" and self-proclaimed "high priest of the church of the painful truth," Neal Boortz, will alternate between haughtily maligning any caller to his radio show who brings up the topic to confessing that he finds "the whole thing boring" when presented with unwanted, verifiable evidence of the little reported plan to merge the economies, regulations and infrastructures of the U.S; socialist Canada and that paradise to our south, Mexico.
Before she was cut off in the first five seconds, a recent female caller to the Boortz show who offered information on "the North American Union" was loudly criticized with "you have drunk the Kool-Aid!" from Boortz, who is failing his listeners - and his countrymen - with his hesitation to allow on-air discussion on "pooling sovereignty."
A Libertarian, Boortz says he opposes the unrestricted immigration policy advocated by the Libertarian Party.
Long-time regular listeners may be wondering if Boortz has failed to do his show prep or perhaps does not oppose an even more nationally suicidal doctrine advocated by the post-American political, academic and media elite he is quite willing to attack on other issues.
This one is.
The terrible truth is that the crime of illegal immigration, America's intentionally unsecured borders and the fact that many with great influence would trade Ben Franklin's Republic for the free flow of people and an improved quarterly profit report are all elements of the same wealth redistribution issue.
It does require a certain amount of courage, curiosity and research to articulate that dangerous fact.
As Boortz boasts: "Somebody's gotta say it."
Kudos as well to Cobb resident John Litland and Ronnie Hall of Ball Ground, who gave up their own business on May 12 to utilize their right of free speech and assembly to politely protest Fox and Robert Pastor and their mission at KSU. They showed what "great Americans" really look like.
While it is still allowed.
D.A. King of Marietta is president of the Georgia-based Dustin Inman Society, which advocates for secure American borders. On the Web: (http://www.TheDustinInmanSociety.org)