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View Full Version : Arizona wants aerial drones & more helicopters patrolling border



Lacrimi de Chiciură
25th May 2010, 00:58
The governor of Arizona, Janice Brewer, wrote a letter to Obama requesting unmanned aerial drones for use along the border. We see this move towards further militarizing the border while the state's SB 1070 lets police arrest people on reasonable suspicion of being illegal, i.e. not speaking English or not being white. This, while the state moves to eradicate ethnic studies in schools. This, while people around the world are calling for a boycott against Arizona and hundreds of thousands protest in the streets against Arizona's new anti-immigrant measures.

As the governor notes that these drones have been "assets" in "Operation Iraqi Freedom" and "Operation Enduring Freedom," we see that techniques used on the foreign battlefield will make their way back home for domestic use. We saw this earlier this century, as secret police techniques first experimented with and perfected in the occupation of the Phillipines came back for use on domestic subversives. We will see an increasingly militarized domestic regime.

http://money.cnn.com/2010/05/24/news/economy/predator_arizona_border/


NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Unbowed bya raft of boycottsover her immigration policy, Arizona Gov. Janice Brewer has requested helicopters and unmanned aerial vehicles from the White House to patrol the border region with Mexico.
Brewer, in a letter to President Obama, asked that the National Guard reallocate reconnaissance helicopters and robotic surveillance craft to the "border states" from other parts of the country.
The governor specifically asked for OH-58 Kiowa helicopters, used by the military for reconnaissance, noting that Arizona currently has only four of them "available for border missions."
"These helicopters are extremely valuable assets in supporting law enforcement efforts on the ground," she wrote. "The number available, though, is inadequate to provide the kind of support needed on the Arizona border."
The governor said that a fleet of eight to 10 Kiowa helicopters "would enable us to double our border coverage to 2,000 hours per year. To be effective, these additional aircraft must be equipped for day and night operations."
Her letter included a map showing the state-by-state allocation of Kiowa helicopters, as well as newer Lakota helicopters.
The governor also requested "wider deployment of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) along our nation's southern border." UAVs are flying, remote-controlled robot drones that are widely used in Iraq and Afghanistan.
There are several different military models that fall under that description, including the Hunter, Predator, Reaper and Global Hawk, but the governor didn't request a particular type.
"I am aware of how effective these assets have become in Operations Iraqi and Enduring Freedom, and it seems UAV operations would be ideal for border security and counter-drug missions," said the governor.
Her letter was dated May 20, the day that Mexican President Felipe Calderon met with Obama at the White House, condemned Arizona's new immigration law before Congress and later attended a state dinner
The new law, which goes into effect in July, requires police to "determine the immigration status" of anyone under "reasonable suspicion" of being an illegal alien. The most significant detail in this law is that it shifts this responsibility -- normally accorded to federal immigration authorities - to state police.
The governor, who signed the bill into law on April 23, maintains she is trying to pick up the slack for the federal government in cracking down on illegal immigration, including drug and human trafficking, along the border.
The boycott
But the law's opponents are concerned that it endorses racial profiling. Gerry Miller, chief legislative analyst for Los Angeles, said in a May 11 analysis that the Arizona law will "promote racial profiling, discrimination and harassment." Obama, during a press conference with Calderon, called the bill a "misdirected expression of frustration."
The city council of Los Angeles is boycotting (http://money.cnn.com/2010/05/13/news/economy/arizona_boycott_immigration/index.htm?postversion=2010051315) doing business with and traveling to the state of Arizona. Estimates of the economic impact range from $10 million to $56 million.
But boycotting Arizona isn't so simple. The Arizona Corporation Commission, which oversees for the state's electric and water utilities, said the state's power plants supplies 25% of Los Angeles. In response to the boycott, Arizona Corporation Commissioner Gary Pierce offered to pull the plug (http://money.cnn.com/2010/05/20/news/economy/arizona_los_angeles_boycott/index.htm?postversion=2010052119) on the City of Angels -- though he emphasized that this would require renegotiations between the city and the power plants.
Further complicating the matter, Los Angeles is part owner of two of the Arizona power plants.

"I am confident that Arizona's utilities would be happy to take those electrons off your hands," wrote Pierce to Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa.
But so far, the power remains on.
Brewer spokesman Paul Senseman noted recently that the Constitution "specifically prohibits economic blockades by a state or city against another."

Agnapostate
25th May 2010, 02:28
If it's considered problematic that there are swarms of lower-class brown-skinned people who don't speak English in Arizona, perhaps the white populists should advocate deporting many of the inhabitants of the Navajo reservation, since thousands speak only Southern Athabaskan.

Sperm-Doll Setsuna
25th May 2010, 02:44
Arizona just won't stop, will they?

Antifa94
25th May 2010, 02:45
it's a goddamn police state like west germany in '78.
DEATH TO FASCISM!

LimitedIdeology
25th May 2010, 06:10
Glad to see we are building our own Iron Curtain....

I just think all White Americans should leave; they are immigrants. The original populace might be hard to find (You know, the >30 million that were killed in bringing "civilization" to the continent).

Rusty Shackleford
25th May 2010, 06:13
so its a fucking war in arizona now? why the hell do they need to cite Iraq and Afghanistan as being a basis for having drones.

whats next? armed drones and daily reports of militants being killed in "suspected" drone strikes in mexico?

Martin Blank
25th May 2010, 06:17
Y'know, maybe I've been too hard on the "Third Worldists", like the Monkey Smashes Heaven types. I guess I can be fair and go along with the "One Big Gulag" being imposed on the good Christian white folks of Arizona. Let's see how such an experiment would turn out.

Zapatas Guns
25th May 2010, 06:45
So now not only will Hispanics be stopped for paper work, Hispanics, other ethnic minorities, and women will have their history stricken from the history books (new Texas educational mandates) Texas law makers say that Latinos, blacks, and women just did not contribute enough in history to make the cut for history books. UN FREAKING BELIEVABLE :mad: . Compound that issue with Texas seeking to follow AZ and one up them by already saying that students should learn creationism in class. (I can't see how any science teacher worth their licks can do that with a straight face :cursing:).

Now the border is an Orwelian police state. Nazi thugs asking for paper work. I suppose the next step for these pricks is to make everyone wear a sash with a color that matches your race.

America, land of the free home of the slave.

The Red Next Door
25th May 2010, 07:05
How low can you go, arinazizona?