Sunday, April 1, 2018

BERTRAND DAILY REPORT 04/01/2018 GOVERNOR 'MOONBEAM' WELCOMES INVADERS ! ARREST HIM!!!

The Bertrand Report The War For Our Mind & Soul Continues



Ed Note:

California has become America's sore eye and officially a Third World state.............

On the march to further reduce California to ruin, 1,500 illegal aliens are walking from Central America through Mexico with the full support of the Mexican Government. This display of arrogance, as if it is their Right to enter California, is on the same level as the Muslim invasion to Europe.

History of illegal migration into the United States has always resulted a sense of entitlement by illegals to usurp (1) the Constitution (2) the creation of the Mexican / American Farm Workers Union a.k.a. United Farm Workers Union demands for more pay (3) and to bypass all legal entry immigration laws for their families and friends remaining in Mexico / Central America.

Mexicans clashed with the Filipinos  during the 20's over farming jobs but later came together under the United Farm Worker's Union led by Cesar Chavez and his "Si Se Puede" girlfriend Dolores Huerta of whom to this day attempts to keep the La Raza anti-White curriculum in the Tucson School District.  

"Like tens of thousands of their fellow countrymen of the 1920s and 30s, they (Filipinos) crossed the Pacific filled with dreams of adventure, better-paying jobs, access to higher education and personal and social advancement. What most found on their arrival in America were economic oppression, brutal working conditions and racial exclusion (by Mexicans)." 

They come from countries where they are oppressed and come to America to oppress the citizens by taking jobs, welfare and medical benefits costing Americans dearly, while a legal line of immigrants wait for years to enter America...not to oppress, but to contribute to our way of life.

The LEGAL immigrant usually never hides among their own people in tight communities, like California, but live among Americans that share their same values.

The ILLEGAL immigrant hides in tight communities, essentially creating a community of fear, because they know I.C.E. could show-up at anytime.

To their rescue is Governor Jerry Brown, a man that has incredibly destroyed California and created a tight knit community, but without the fear factor, declaring war on the federal government if I.C.E. begins a round-up.

However, the Trump administration made it clear to Jerry Brown and the Oakland Mayor that warned illegal aliens that I.C.E. was coming, "the federal government will act accordingly and if you stand in our way, you will be arrested,"  something to that effect..

If AG Sessions does NOT act on what is happening in California, the state will continue to waste away and will eventually isolate themselves as poverty ridden rat hole.

Governor Jerry brown has ruined California and he must be removed....

Citizen Border Organizations need to be ready at Calexico when these 1,500 show-up for refuge in California. And we know, that number will grow as the 1,500 continue their march through Mexico.

It is NOT out of the realm of possibilities for a "Citizen's Arrest" of Jerry Brown and Delores Huerta, both can be expected to be there with open arms to these illegal invaders.

Yes I know....this is Easter Sunday and Jesus died on the cross and I should show some compassion, but wasn't it Jesus's own race of people that condemned him to death? 

Isn't it a race of people that want all Whites dead because we are in the way of their take-over of land that is not theirs? These same race of people believe in Jesus Christ while shouting "Si Se Puede" (Yes We Can) take your land.

Americans share much compassion for those that enter legally while most immigrants DO NOT have a rebellious political agenda aligned with the Communist Democrat Party.

---Dave Bertrand

**************************************************************************************************************************************


Will Gov. Jerry Brown Meet The 1500 Invaders in Calexico With Welcome Home Baskets and a California Green Card?

by Jeff Schwilk

I just spoke to my Border Patrol contact in San Diego and he said he has never seen anything like this in his 20+ years as a Border Patrol Agent!  This is a mass organized invasion from Mexico.
 
A group of about 1500 Central American illegal aliens is walking and being bussed through Mexico towards the U.S. border, with the blessing and assistance of the Mexican Government.  Reportedly, more illegal aliens are joining into the group as they move north from town to town.  My contact said the latest he has heard is they are headed for Mexicali and the Calexico Port of Entry.  We should have more details on Monday on their latest route and ETA.
 
Obviously this is a coordinated, organized effort by foreign criminals and open border operatives to try to infiltrate our sovereign nation.  They are testing President Trump to see if he was serious about securing our border and ending the mass invasion of our nation from Mexico.  They think he won’t dare stop them when they arrive at the border. 
 
We call on the Trump Administration to immediately issue a public statement that these ILLEGAL aliens will under no circumstances be allowed to enter our country and will not be granted any fake asylum or refugee status.  They are criminals who have already trespassed in to one country (Mexico) and fully intend to illegally enter our country.   We will not tolerate such border anarchy.   President Trump should issue a strong warning to Mexico and the organizers of this stunt that they are to turn around now and go back home and that they will not be allowed in our country without prior permission under any circumstances.
 
Stories and photos here:
 
 
 
    
 
Jeff Schwilk
 
Border & Immigration Security Analyst
 
Founder, San Diegans for Secure Borders
 

*************************************************************************************
Submitted by: Capt. Dave Case (Ret.)


    Sad. My California was once a great State with good people and unlimited opportunity. The good people are leaving. The Socialists have taken the opportunity. California is a joke - a sad joke of what was once a great State with wonderful climate, beautiful beaches, rich farm land, fabulous mountains, filled with people of unbridled optimism. No longer.

Dave Case


This is an article from  Victor Davis Hansen, a Senior Fellow at the  Hoover Institute at Stanford University  (Emphasis added by Mr. Hansen)


   The last three weeks I have traveled about,  taking the pulse of the more forgotten areas of  central California. I wanted to witness, even if  superficially, what is happening to a state that  has the highest sales and income taxes, the most  lavish entitlements, the near-worst public  schools (based on federal test scores), and the  largest number of illegal aliens in the nation,  along with an over regulated private sector, a  stagnant and shrinking manufacturing base, and  an elite environmental ethos that restricts  commerce and productivity without curbing  consumption.

  
      During this  unscientific experiment, three times a week I  rode a bike on a 20-mile trip over various rural  roads in southwestern FresnoCounty . I also  drove my car over to the coast to work, on  various routes through towns like San Joaquin ,  Mendota, and Firebaugh. And near my home I have  been driving, shopping, and touring by intent  the rather segregated and impoverished areas of  Caruthers, Fowler, Laton, Orange Cove, Parlier, and Selma . My own farmhouse is now in an area  of abject poverty and almost no ethnic  diversity; the closest elementary school (my  alma mater, two miles away) is 94 percent  Hispanic and 1 percent white, and well below  federal testing norms in math and  English.

      Here are some  general observations about what I saw (other  than that the rural roads of California are fast  turning into rubble, poorly maintained and  reverting to what I remember seeing long ago in  the rural South). First, remember that these  areas are the ground zero, so to speak, of 20  years of illegal immigration. There has been a  general depression in farming - to such an  extent that the 20- to-100-acre tree and vine  farmer, the erstwhile backbone of the old rural   California , for all practical purposes has  ceased to exist.

  
      On the  western side of the Central Valley , the effects  of arbitrary cutoffs in federal irrigation water  have idled tens of thousands of acres of prime  agricultural land, leaving thousands unemployed.  Manufacturing plants in the towns in these areas  - which used to make harvesters, hydraulic  lifts, trailers, food-processing equipment -  have largely shut down; their production has  been shipped off overseas or south of the  border. Agriculture itself - from almonds to  raisins - has increasingly become corporatized  and mechanized, cutting by half the number of  farm workers needed. So unemployment runs  somewhere between 15 and 20  percent.

  
      Many of the  rural trailer-house compounds I saw appear to  the naked eye no different from what I have seen  in the Third World . There is a Caribbean look  to the junked cars, electric wires crisscrossing  between various outbuildings, plastic tarps  substituting for replacement shingles, lean-tos  cobbled together as auxiliary housing, pit bulls  unleashed, and geese, goats, and chickens  roaming around the yards. The public hears about  all sorts of tough California regulations that  stymie business - rigid zoning laws, strict  building codes, constant inspections - but  apparently none of that applies out  here.

  
      It is almost as if  the more California regulates, the more it does  not regulate. Its public employees prefer to go  after misdemeanors in the upscale areas to  justify our expensive oversight industry, while  ignoring the felonies in the downtrodden  areas,  which are becoming feral and beyond the ability  of any inspector to do anything but feel  irrelevant. But in the regulators' defense,  where would one get the money to redo an ad hoc  trailer park with a spider web of illegal bare  wires?

  
      Many of the  rented-out rural shacks and stationary  Winnebagos are on former small farms - the  vineyards overgrown with weeds, or torn out with  the ground lying fallow. I pass on the cultural  consequences to communities from  the loss  of thousands of small farming families. I don't  think I can remember another time when so many  acres in the eastern part of the valley have  gone out of production, even though farm prices  have recently rebounded. Apparently it is simply  not worth the gamble of investing $7,000 to  $10,000 an acre in a new orchard or vineyard.  What an anomaly - with suddenly soaring farm  prices, still we have thousands of acres in the  world's richest agricultural belt, with  available water on the east side of the valley  and plentiful labor, gone idle or in disuse. Is  credit frozen? Are there simply no more farmers?  Are the schools so bad as to scare away  potential agricultural entrepreneurs? Or are we  all terrified by the national debt and uncertain  future?

  
       California coastal  elites may worry about the oxygen content of  water available to a three-inch smelt in the  Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, but they  seem to have no interest in the epidemic dumping  of trash, furniture, and often toxic substances  throughout California 's rural hinterland.  Yesterday, for example, I rode my bike by a  stopped van just as the occupants tossed seven  plastic bags of raw refuse onto the side of the  road. I rode up near their bumper and said in my  broken Spanish not to throw garbage onto the  public road. But there were three of them, and  one of me. So I was lucky to be sworn at only. I  note in passing that I would not drive into   Mexico and, as a guest, dare to pull over and  throw seven bags of trash into the environment  of my host.

  
      In fact, trash  piles are commonplace out here - composed of  everything from half-empty paint cans and  children's plastic toys to diapers and moldy  food. I have never seen a rural sheriff cite a  litterer, or witnessed state EPA workers  cleaning up these unauthorized wastelands. So I  would suggest to Bay Area scientists that the  environment is taking a much harder beating down  here in central California than it is in the  Delta. Perhaps before we cut off more irrigation  water to the west side of the valley, we might  invest some green dollars into cleaning up the  unsightly and sometimes dangerous garbage that  now litters the outskirts of our rural  communities.

      We hear about  the tough small-business regulations that have  driven residents out of the state, at the rate  of 2,000 to 3,000 a week. But from my  unscientific observations these past weeks, it  seems rather easy to open a small business in   California without any oversight at all, or at  least what I might call a "counter business." I  counted eleven mobile hot-kitchen trucks that  simply park by the side of the road, spread  about some plastic chairs, pull down a tarp  canopy, and, presto, become mini-restaurants.  There are no "facilities" such as toilets or  washrooms. But I do frequently see lard trails  on the isolated roads I bike on, where trucks  apparently have simply opened their draining  tanks and sped on, leaving a slick of cooking  fats and oils. Crows and ground squirrels love  them; they can be seen from a distance  mysteriously occupied in the middle of the  road.

  
      At crossroads,  peddlers in a counter-California economy sell  almost anything. Here is what I noticed at an  intersection on the west side last week:  shovels, rakes, hoes, gas pumps, lawnmowers,  edgers, blowers, jackets, gloves, and caps. The  merchandise was all 
new. I doubt whether in  high-tax California sales taxes or income taxes  were paid on any of these stop-and-go  transactions.

[The hi lighted paragraphs are ways in which at least some of the nearly 47% of U.S. non tax payers are able to get by]

  
      In two  supermarkets 50 miles apart, I was the only one  in line who did not pay with a social-service  plastic card (gone are the days when "food  stamps" were embarrassing bulky coupons). But I  did not see any relationship between the use of  the card and poverty as we once knew it: The  electrical appurtenances owned by the user and  the car into which the groceries were loaded  were indistinguishable from those of the upper  middle class.

  
      By that I  mean that most consumers drove late-model  Camrys, Accords, or Tauruses, had iPhones,  Bluetooths, or BlackBerries, and bought  everything in the store with public-assistance  credit. This seemed a world apart from the  trailers I had just ridden by the day before. I  don't editorialize here on the logic or morality  of any of this, but I note only that there are  vast numbers of people who apparently are not  working, are on public food assistance, and  enjoy the technological veneer of the middle  class. California has a consumer market surely,  but often no apparent source of income. Does the  $40 million a day supplement to unemployment  benefits from Washington explain some of  this?

  
      Do diversity  concerns, as in lack of diversity, work both  ways? Over a hundred-mile stretch, when I  stopped in San Joaquin for a bottled water, or  drove through Orange Cove, or got gas in  Parlier, or went to a corner market in  southwestern Selma, my home town, I was the only  non-Hispanic - there were no Asians, no blacks,  no other whites. We may speak of the richness of  "diversity," but those who cherish that ideal  simply have no idea that there are now countless  inland communities that have become  near-apartheid societies, where Spanish is the  first language, the schools are not at all  diverse, and the federal and state governments  are either the main employers or at least the  chief sources of income - whether through  emergency rooms, rural health clinics, public  schools, or social-service offices. An observer  from Mars might conclude that our elites and  masses have given up on the ideal of integration  and assimilation, perhaps in the wake of the  arrival of 11 to 15 million illegal  aliens.

  
      Again, I do not  editorialize, but I note these vast  transformations over the last 20 years that are  the paradoxical wages of unchecked illegal  immigration from Mexico, a vast expansion of  California's entitlements and taxes, the flight  of the upper middle class out of state, the  deliberate effort not to tap natural resources,  the downsizing in manufacturing and agriculture,  and the departure of whites, blacks, and Asians  from many of these small towns to more racially  diverse and upscale areas of  California.

  
       Fresno 's California State University campus is embroiled  in controversy over the student body president's  announcing that he is an illegal alien, with all  the requisite protests in favor of the DREAM  Act. I won't comment on the legislation per se,  but again only note the anomaly. I taught at  CSUF for 21 years. I think it fair to say that  the predominant theme of the Chicano and Latin  American Studies program's sizable curriculum  was a fuzzy American culpability. By that I mean  that students in those classes heard of the sins  of America more often than its attractions. In  my home town, Mexican flag decals on car windows  are far more common than their American  counterparts.

  
      I note this  because hundreds of students here illegally are  now terrified of being deported to Mexico . I  can understand that, given the chaos in Mexico  and their own long residency in the United  States . But here is what still confuses me: If  one were to consider the classes that deal with  Mexico at the university, or the                                 visible  displays of national chauvinism, then one might  conclude that Mexico is a far more attractive  and moral place than the United  States.

  
       So there is a  surreal nature to these protests: something  like, "Please do not send me back to the culture  I nostalgically praise; please let me stay in  the culture that I ignore or deprecate." I think  the DREAM Act protestors might have been far  more successful in winning public opinion had  they stopped blaming the U.S. for suggesting  that they might have to leave at some point, and  instead explained why, in fact, they want to  stay. What it is about America that makes a  youth of 21 go on a hunger strike or demonstrate  to be allowed to remain in this country rather  than return to the place of his  birth?

 
  
      I think I know  the answer to this paradox. Missing entirely in  the above description is the attitude of the  host, which by any historical standard can only  be termed "indifferent." California does not  care whether one broke the law to arrive here or  continues to break it by staying. It asks  nothing of the illegal immigrant - no  proficiency in English, no acquaintance with  American history and values, no proof of income,  no record of education or skills. It does  provide all the public assistance that it can  afford (and more that it borrows for), and  apparently waives enforcement of most of   California 's burdensome regulations and civic  statutes that increasingly have plagued  productive citizens to the point of driving them  out. How odd that we over-regulate those who are  citizens and have capital to the point of  banishing them from the state, but do not  regulate those who are aliens and without  capital to the point of encouraging millions  more to follow in their footsteps. How odd - to  paraphrase what Critias once said of ancient  Sparta - that California is at once both the nation's most unfree and most free state, the  most repressed and the wildest.

  
       Hundreds of thousands sense all that and  vote accordingly with their feet, both into and  out of California - and the result is a sort of  social, cultural, economic, and political  time-bomb, whose ticks are getting  louder.

 
  
 
  Victor Davis Hanson is a  senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, the  editor of "Makers of Ancient Strategy: From  the Persian Wars to the Fall of Rome" , and the  author of "The Father of Us All: War and History,  Ancient and  Modern.   "
From The Desk of  Capt. Dave Bertrand (Ret.)  Int'l Airline Freight Captain (DC-8 & B-727 & First Officer DC-10), Veteran U.S. Army S. Korea (Military Police Comms Chief) Vietnam era Sergeant, State Law Enforcement Background, Int'l Aircraft Repo/Recovery, Bondsman Fugitive Recovery, DHS Trained (Former) Counter-Terrorism Instructor, Political Analyst and Activist to help "Make America Great Again. 

My mission is to slice through the propaganda, encourage everyone to write  and share important news among our network of patriots, military, law enforcement and selected news media sources (we trust). We are the pulse of America and we will prevail.

No comments:

Post a Comment