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View Full Version : Before the Minutemen, there was Klan Border Patrol



refuse_resist
13th December 2006, 02:50
The Franchise
by Susy Buchanan and David Holthouse

Although Chris Simcox and Jim Gilchrist are seen as the fathers of the Minuteman movement, citizen vigilante border patrols are not a new concept. Simcox and Gilchrist are following in the footsteps of other anti-immigrant activists before them, and it is well-trodden ground.

Klansmen were on the Mexican border 28 years before the Minutemen co-opted the concept. And they were talking about the Hispanic immigration threat more than five decades before that.

In 1926, Klan Imperial Wizard H.W. Evans warned that "to the South of us thousands of Mexicans, many of them Communist, are waiting a chance to cross the Rio Grande and glut the labor marts of the Southwest."

In an article that traces the history of the Klan in San Diego from the 1920s through the 1970s, The Journal of San Diego History describes an atmosphere of fear that persisted for decades. "Any Mexican worker who challenged authority or appeared suspicious of one thing or another would forfeit his life," Mercedes Acasan Garcia, a maid during the 1920s, said in a 1979 interview. Garcia tearfully recalled lynchings, whippings and burnings of Hispanics. "Since they were ragged wetbacks, nobody cared who they were and nothing was done about it."

With such a history of anti-immigrant violence, Klan boss David Duke and his California leader, Tom Metzger, had little trouble directing the energies of their followers to the Mexican border a half century later.

In 1977, after shoring up their ranks with Marines from nearby Camp Pendleton, the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan kicked off its Klan Border Watch. Klansmen were supposed to drive the border from Texas to the Pacific Ocean in a caravan, instructed to report suspicious people to the Border Patrol. Media attention was huge, and cameras at times outnumbered Klansmen eight to one. The event wasn't much more than a publicity stunt, although Metzger boasted of leading 500 volunteers from four states.

Metzger split with Duke in 1979, critical of what he saw as Duke's showmanship and inveterate womanizing. But, in the spring of 1980, Metzger formed his own rogue Klan chapter and led a "security force" of around 40 Klansmen to John Landes Park in Oceanside, vowing to rid it of Mexicans. Metzger's followers carried black shields emblazoned with "KKK" in white letters. They wielded bats, chains and nightsticks and wore hockey masks and helmets. Some brought attack dogs. Protesters met the Klansmen at the park and pelted them with rocks. Seven people were injured.

That same year, Metzger parlayed the attention he had gained, along with growing anti-immigrant sentiment, into a victory in the Democratic primary for his local congressional district. He got some 33,000 votes, although he lost the general election handily.

Today, Metzger is dismissive of the staying power of the Minutemen. "They remind me of the big splash about the militias a few years ago," he told the Intelligence Report. "When the Murrah Building in OKC went up they all disappeared. The Minutemen are similar and when the blood really flows on the border, most will be long gone. They go out of their way to claim not to be racist. They are hypocrites of the worst order. They go on and on that they want no racists among them. What a joke."


Intelligence Report
Fall 2005

http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport...cle.jsp?sid=360 (http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?sid=360)

WUOrevolt
13th December 2006, 21:31
I wouldnt necessarily characterize the new minuteman project as any different than the klan border patrols. Have you seen the pictures of the nazi demonstrators with the minutemen?

Guerrilla22
13th December 2006, 22:46
Same racist assholes, different time period.

Floyce White
15th December 2006, 06:47
And before the Klan, there was Cesar Chavez.

Some people literally worship former Farm Workers Union president Cesar Chavez--without knowing that he organized vigilante patrols to find and arrest undocumented migrants in border areas. He claimed to be trying to "protect" the wages of US residents. You may want to read this article Veteran Farmworker Exposes Cesar Chavez as Frontman for Bosses (http://www.plp.org/cd99/cd0804.html#Veteran%20PLP%20Farmworker%20Exposes%2 0Cesar%20Chavez%20As%20Frontman%20For%20Bosses).

This same information can be found in many bourgeois-press sources. For example, here's a link to an opinion piece in by Ruben Navarrette in the San Diego Union-Tribune, The Arizona Minutemen and Cesar Chavez (http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/op-ed/navarrette/20050330-9999-lz1e30navar.html). Navarrette says:

"Here's the ironic part: Despite the fact that Chávez is these days revered among Mexican-American activists, the labor leader in his day was no more tolerant of illegal immigration than the Arizona Minutemen are now. Worried that the hiring of illegal immigrants drove down wages, Chávez--according to numerous historical accounts--instructed union members to call the Immigration and Naturalization Service to report the presence of illegal immigrants in the fields and demand that the agency deport them. UFW officials were even known to picket INS offices to demand a crackdown on illegal immigrants."

Cheung Mo
15th December 2006, 15:21
Solution to illegal immigrants in the U.S.: Let them in, but institute the death penalty for anyone who hires them to get around labour laws.`

Floyce White
21st December 2006, 01:22
Why not just workers themselves carry out such penalties for all those who try to hire others?

Guerrilla22
21st December 2006, 01:30
Why not just let anyone who wants to come here come here? Its not like the uS government and it's citizens are the rightful occupants of the land.

groundinghubris
21st December 2006, 02:08
Originally posted by Floyce [email protected] 15, 2006 06:47 am
And before the Klan, there was Cesar Chavez.

Some people literally worship former Farm Workers Union president Cesar Chavez--without knowing that he organized vigilante patrols to find and arrest undocumented migrants in border areas. He claimed to be trying to "protect" the wages of US residents. You may want to read this article Veteran Farmworker Exposes Cesar Chavez as Frontman for Bosses (http://www.plp.org/cd99/cd0804.html#Veteran%20PLP%20Farmworker%20Exposes%2 0Cesar%20Chavez%20As%20Frontman%20For%20Bosses).

This same information can be found in many bourgeois-press sources. For example, here's a link to an opinion piece in by Ruben Navarrette in the San Diego Union-Tribune, The Arizona Minutemen and Cesar Chavez (http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/op-ed/navarrette/20050330-9999-lz1e30navar.html). Navarrette says:

"Here's the ironic part: Despite the fact that Chávez is these days revered among Mexican-American activists, the labor leader in his day was no more tolerant of illegal immigration than the Arizona Minutemen are now. Worried that the hiring of illegal immigrants drove down wages, Chávez--according to numerous historical accounts--instructed union members to call the Immigration and Naturalization Service to report the presence of illegal immigrants in the fields and demand that the agency deport them. UFW officials were even known to picket INS offices to demand a crackdown on illegal immigrants."
Wow those same old rumors still floating around? Being in Calif with Cesar and Delores Huerta for a short time, I remember very well the rumors to try and discredit the movement. None of which are based on anything other then the statements of later known informants.
Put the crap to rest please. and using the links was not very surprised to see that the writter of the Arizona Minutemen and Cesar Chavez article is against immigration, to the point, in his own words, his speechs lead him to be invited to join the minutemen.

Now theres a credible source. I guess though we should be grateful that his conscience would not allow him to become a member.

I find it hypocritical that while the minutemen want to secure our southern borders, they find no need to try to stop the influx of slavery from eastern euro and asia. in fact those illegals never get much news at all.

no human is illegal, no human is an alien.

Floyce White
5th January 2007, 00:24
If I were you, I wouldn't try to match your "being in California" with mine. I've had plenty of in-person conversations with California communists over the years--including the long-time communist farm worker who wrote the aforementioned article.