Who’s Gonna Build Your Wall - Maybe Not Golden State Fence Company
Posted in Advocacy, Commentary, News
Sunday, August 26th, 2007 by James S. Huggins

Yesterday, I posted about Tom Russell’s song, Who’s Gonna Build Your Wall. (Scroll down to see that post, including a video and song lyrics.)

Today, someone wrote me about it, and included a note about some wall contractor actually hiring illegal immigrants. So I went looking and found the details.

Here is one news report about Golden State Fence Company:

December 15, 2006
Firm Contracted to Build Fence on US-Mexico Border is Fined for Hiring Illegal Workers

One of the firms working on the US-Mexico Border Fence has been fined $5 million for hiring illegal immigrants. This controversy was ironically predicted by comedians such as George Lopez, who jokingly says in his new act, “They want to build a fence along the border to keep out Mexicans, but who’s gonna build it?” Answer: Mexicans.

The Golden State Fence Company will not only pay a major fine, but two of its executives will have to serve jail time for the hirings.

Lou Dobbs also wrote about it:

U.S. Border Fence Built By Illegal Aliens

Comedy routines once again became reality today when a California company agreed to pay a $5 million fine for employing illegal aliens to build the border fence between San Diego and Tijuana.

About a third of Golden State Fence Company’s 750 workers are illegals and the company was repeatedly caught with lots of undocumented workers on the payroll, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

I don’t know if Tom Russell was thinking about Golden State Fence Company when he wrote his song . But maybe he was.

       

For information on how one Pittsburg law firm helps Corporate America scam the H-1B Visa system to avoid hiring Americans, and hire foreigners instead, see here http://www.myephemerae.com/scamming-the-h-1b-visa-system.

Who’s Gonna Build Your Wall (A Song by Tom Russell)
Posted in Advocacy, Commentary, News
Saturday, August 25th, 2007 by James S. Huggins

(Depending on your browser security you settings, may need to click twice to start the video. If you are receiving this via email, or want to open the YouTube page with the video, just click here: http://youtube.com/watch?v=LZkAoosVLkA)

I saw Tom Russell perform this song the other night on Letterman. It has been rattling around in my head every since. I don’t post it because I agree with it. I post it because it can stimulate discussion.

         

Who’s Gonna Build Your Wall
by Tom Russell

I got 800 miles of open border
Right outside my door
There’s minutemen in little pickup trucks
Who declared their own dang war

Now the government wants to build a barrier
Like old Berlin, 8 feet tall
But if Uncle Sam sends the illegals home
Who’s gonna build the wall

Who’s gonna build your wall, boys
Who’s gonna mow your lawn
Who’s gonna cook your Mexican food
When your Mexican maid is gone

Who’s gonna wax your floors tonight
Down at the local mall
Who’s gonna wash your baby’s face
Who’s gonna build your wall

Now I ain’t got no politics
So don’t lay that rap on me
Left-wing, right-wing, up-wing, down me [?]
I see strip malls from sea to shining sea

It’s the fat cat white developer
Who’s created this whole damn squall
It’s a pyramid scheme of dirty jobs
And who’s gonna build your wall

Who’s gonna build your wall, boys
Who’s gonna mow your lawn
Who’s gonna cook your Mexican food
When your Mexican maid is gone

Who’s gonna wax your floors tonight
Down at the local mall
Who’s gonna wash your baby’s face
Who’s gonna build your wall

We’ve got fundamentalist Muslims
We’ve got fundamentalist Jews
We’ve got fundamentalist Christians
That’ll blow the whole thing up for you

But as I travel around this big old world
There’s one thing that I most fear
It’s a white man in a golf shirt
With a cell phone in his ear

Who’s gonna build your wall, boys
Who’s gonna mow your lawn
Who’s gonna cook your Mexican food
When your Mexican maid is gone

Who’s gonna wax your floors tonight
Down at the local mall
Who’s gonna wash your baby’s face
Who’s gonna build your wall

    

Another version - Tom in Performance
http://youtube.com/watch?v=-HFhi7RSNm8 

    

For information on how one Pittsburg law firm helps Corporate America scam the H-1B Visa system to avoid hiring Americans, and hire foreigners instead, see here http://www.myephemerae.com/scamming-the-h-1b-visa-system.

Oscar the Cat
Posted in News, Personal Interest
Thursday, July 26th, 2007 by James S. Huggins

As many of you know, I have a cat, a beautiful, all black female named Spot. So this story about Oscar caught my eye.

http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/357/4/328
  
The NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL of MEDICINE
  
Volume 357:328-329 Number 4
  
A Day in the Life of Oscar the Cat
 
David M. Dosa, M.D., M.P.H.
  
  Oscar the Cat awakens from his nap, opening a single eye to survey his kingdom. From atop the desk in the doctor’s charting area, the cat peers down the two wings of the nursing home’s advanced dementia unit. All quiet on the western and eastern fronts. Slowly, he rises and extravagantly stretches his 2-year-old frame, first backward and then forward. He sits up and considers his next move.

  In the distance, a resident approaches. It is Mrs. P., who has been living on the dementia unit’s third floor for 3 years now. She has long forgotten her family, even though they visit her almost daily. Moderately disheveled after eating her lunch, half of which she now wears on her shirt, Mrs. P. is taking one of her many aimless strolls to nowhere. She glides toward Oscar, pushing her walker and muttering to herself with complete disregard for her surroundings. Perturbed, Oscar watches her carefully and, as she walks by, lets out a gentle hiss, a rattlesnake-like warning that says “leave me alone.” She passes him without a glance and continues down the hallway. Oscar is relieved. It is not yet Mrs. P.’s time, and he wants nothing to do with her.

  Oscar jumps down off the desk, relieved to be once more alone and in control of his domain. He takes a few moments to drink from his water bowl and grab a quick bite. Satisfied, he enjoys another stretch and sets out on his rounds. Oscar decides to head down the west wing first, along the way sidestepping Mr. S., who is slumped over on a couch in the hallway. With lips slightly pursed, he snores peacefully — perhaps blissfully unaware of where he is now living. Oscar continues down the hallway until he reaches its end and Room 310. The door is closed, so Oscar sits and waits. He has important business here.

  Twenty-five minutes later, the door finally opens, and out walks a nurse’s aide carrying dirty linens. “Hello, Oscar,” she says. “Are you going inside?” Oscar lets her pass, then makes his way into the room, where there are two people. Lying in a corner bed and facing the wall, Mrs. T. is asleep in a fetal position. Her body is thin and wasted from the breast cancer that has been eating away at her organs. She is mildly jaundiced and has not spoken in several days. Sitting next to her is her daughter, who glances up from her novel to warmly greet the visitor. “Hello, Oscar. How are you today?”

  Oscar takes no notice of the woman and leaps up onto the bed. He surveys Mrs. T. She is clearly in the terminal phase of illness, and her breathing is labored. Oscar’s examination is interrupted by a nurse, who walks in to ask the daughter whether Mrs. T. is uncomfortable and needs more morphine. The daughter shakes her head, and the nurse retreats. Oscar returns to his work. He sniffs the air, gives Mrs. T. one final look, then jumps off the bed and quickly leaves the room. Not today.

  Making his way back up the hallway, Oscar arrives at Room 313. The door is open, and he proceeds inside. Mrs. K. is resting peacefully in her bed, her breathing steady but shallow. She is surrounded by photographs of her grandchildren and one from her wedding day. Despite these keepsakes, she is alone. Oscar jumps onto her bed and again sniffs the air. He pauses to consider the situation, and then turns around twice before curling up beside Mrs. K.

  One hour passes. Oscar waits. A nurse walks into the room to check on her patient. She pauses to note Oscar’s presence. Concerned, she hurriedly leaves the room and returns to her desk. She grabs Mrs. K.’s chart off the medical-records rack and begins to make phone calls.

  Within a half hour the family starts to arrive. Chairs are brought into the room, where the relatives begin their vigil. The priest is called to deliver last rites. And still, Oscar has not budged, instead purring and gently nuzzling Mrs. K. A young grandson asks his mother, “What is the cat doing here?” The mother, fighting back tears, tells him, “He is here to help Grandma get to heaven.” Thirty minutes later, Mrs. K. takes her last earthly breath. With this, Oscar sits up, looks around, then departs the room so quietly that the grieving family barely notices.

  On his way back to the charting area, Oscar passes a plaque mounted on the wall. On it is engraved a commendation from a local hospice agency: “For his compassionate hospice care, this plaque is awarded to Oscar the Cat.” Oscar takes a quick drink of water and returns to his desk to curl up for a long rest. His day’s work is done. There will be no more deaths today, not in Room 310 or in any other room for that matter. After all, no one dies on the third floor unless Oscar pays a visit and stays awhile.

Note: Since he was adopted by staff members as a kitten, Oscar the Cat has had an uncanny ability to predict when residents are about to die. Thus far, he has presided over the deaths of more than 25 residents on the third floor of Steere House Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Providence, Rhode Island. His mere presence at the bedside is viewed by physicians and nursing home staff as an almost absolute indicator of impending death, allowing staff members to adequately notify families. Oscar has also provided companionship to those who would otherwise have died alone. For his work, he is highly regarded by the physicians and staff at Steere House and by the families of the residents whom he serves.
 
Source Information
  Dr. Dosa is a geriatrician at Rhode Island Hospital and an assistant professor of medicine at the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University — both in Providence.

Pictures of New Born Pandas
Posted in News, Personal Interest
Sunday, July 22nd, 2007 by James S. Huggins

We’ve always had some fascination with Pandas. Recent efforts to breed them have had some success. Six pandas were born in captivity in China in 2006. They grow from a birth weight of 100 grams (3.5 ounces) to a full grown weight of 160 kilos (352 pounds).

Pictures of new born pandas have been making the email rounds recently. This blog has those pictures.

www.darkroastedblend.com/2007/07/newborn-pandas-cute.html

May I See Your Papers Please - How the Immigration Law Will Create a National ID
Posted in Advocacy, News, Privacy
Wednesday, June 27th, 2007 by James S. Huggins

The feds tried it with drivers licenses. The Real ID Act wants to mandate that every state create a driver’s license so complex it would be a nightmare to administer. State after state (16 so far) is saying “no”.

Now they are doing the same thing using immigration as the justification. I mean, you want to be sure that only real Americans get work don’t you? Don’t you? Then you won’t mind if we create a new national ID to be sure. But don’t worry. It can’t hurt you … at least not any more than that old Social Security Number can. It will only be used for this one thing. And I have a bridge I want to sell you.

Check out this analysis from Caroline Fredrickson (director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s Washington Legislative Office):

Immigration is a hot topic these days, and everyone seems to be talking about the many problems with the Senate’s immigration reform bill. Unfortunately, for some reason there has been very little talk about several of the bill’s key provisions that would undermine the civil liberties of all Americans.

For instance, Title III of the bill expands the error-plagued Employment Eligibility Verification System (EEVS), creating a vast federal database to verify the eligibility to work of all job applicants in America — including U.S. citizens. This expansive system would contain extraordinary amounts of personal information on everyone who seeks or holds a job, all of it keyed to a person’s Social Security number. If the immigration bill passes as written, all Americans will need to have their eligibility to work approved by the Department of Homeland Security. Invariably, DHS will confuse the files of people with similar names or use outdated or erroneous information to deny people the right to work, creating a ‘No Work List’ similar to the government’s ‘No Fly List.’ They have testified that they will need to “manually reverify” the work-eligibility of eight percent of all workers.

EEVS itself is based on the abject failure known as the Basic Pilot Verification System, used by only 16,000 of the nation’s 8.4 million employers. Technological snafus, database errors and bureaucratic bungling in that pilot project have caused, and will continue to cause, delays and financial losses to both employers and potential employees. Expanding this program nationwide will only exacerbate these problems.

Bad enough? I don’t think so.

There is another amendment from Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY). If it passes, it would require every American to carry a “hardened” Social Security card containing the their personal, biometric information like their DNA or fingerprint. With this amendment you could be force to carry not one, but two, national ID cards — a Real ID compliant drivers’ license and the “hardened” Social Security card. As Fredrickson notes:

These IDs would become a key part of a system of identity papers, databases, status and identity checks and access control points — an “internal passport” that would be used to track and control law-abiding Americans’ movements and activities.

If you think it’s a bad idea, you can make a difference. Make a call. See here for info: https://secure.eff.org/site/Advocacy?alertId=303&pg=makeACall 

And don’t say I didn’t warn you.

Scamming the H-1B Visa System
Posted in Advocacy, News, Personal Interest, Technology
Monday, June 25th, 2007 by James S. Huggins

(Note that if you are clicking on my blog, depending on your browser security you may need to click twice to start the video. If you are receiving this via email, or want to open the YouTube page with the video, just click here: http://youtube.com/watch?v=TCbFEgFajGU )

[If you care about immigration, be sure to watch the video to see how lawyers are helping business cheat Americans out of jobs.] 

One of the ways foreign workers can work in the USofA is through the use of an H-1B visa. The visa ostensibly exists because there is a “shortage” of Americans who can do the job.

For years and years, those of us in Corporate IT have known that there is not a shortage of skilled, capable technology workers, despite the lamentations of the business lobby. The claims of a shortage is a sham designed to allow more H-1B visas.

The business lobby has countered that there are “rules” designed to protect the American worker and that H-1B visas are only granted with an American worker cannot be found.

About 2 months ago I found the website of Professor Norm Matloff. Long a critic of the H-1B system, Dr. Matloff has documented the system abuses at some length. His lengthy report (entitled On the Need for Reform of the H-1B Non-Immigrant Work Visa in Computer-Related Occupations and written at the request of the University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform) provides extensive documentation of the lack of a shortage and the abuses of the system to just hire cheap labor and discriminate against older American workers.  

[If you or someone in your family is directly affected by this, I strongly encourage you to at least skim the report and check out his website. It is an eye-opener. In my view, Dr. Matloff's data shows that contrary to claims, it isn't America's decline in technology which requires us to use these visas. Rather, it is the prevalent use of these visas which is, in part, responsible for the decline!]

His various reports and documents have confirmed what I have known for some time.

Now, a YouTube video has done even more. This video provides excerpts from a law firm’s seminar in which a panel explains how to technically comply with the law all the while skirting the intention of the law. In particular, they explain how to advertise for Americans but ensure that they will never find one.

Take the 5-minutes to watch this to learn how the system really works.

As you listen to the debate on immigration reform, and as you listen to the business lobby cry in their soup about the lack of qualified Americans, remember this video. There are plenty of qualified Americans. Business just doesn’t want to hire them and is scamming the system, the government and the American public.

How Did I Let This Happen?
Posted in Advocacy, Commentary, News
Sunday, June 17th, 2007 by James S. Huggins

As I read Sunday’s Washington Post there was an article that caught my eye: The War Inside.

(For the one page version click http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/06/16/AR2007061600866_pf.html)

This story is about the men we have sent to fight for us, to risk their lives, in many, many cases to return missing arms, legs, eyes, disfigured for the remainder of their lives, and even to return dead in a flag draped coffin we are not allowed to see.

These men have returned with severe mental challenges.

And, as this story documents, the system can’t even keep their records straight.

Ignore the military big shots who think that real men don’t have mental problems.

Ignore the bureaucrats who want to control costs by denying diagnosis.

The system you and I spend billions for can’t even keep their records straight.

This story is part of a series the Washington Post is doing.

As I read it I realize that things are this way, in part, because of me. Because I didn’t help hard enough to elect other people. Because I didn’t write and call often enough those we did elect. I can blame the government, but I elect the government.

This story is a story of the embarrassingly shameful way you and I are treating these men.

How did I let this happen?

Illegal Employers and Edgar Velázquez
Posted in Advocacy, News, Personal Interest
Friday, May 25th, 2007 by James S. Huggins

A story in the Providence Journal (also accessible from this site) tells the story of Edgar Velázquez. An illegal immigrant, he was apparently employed by a tree care service. The owner reportedly knew he was illegal and paid him in cash, under the table. When he was working, without the protective headgear required for such work, a chainsaw blade “kicked back and sliced through his nose, left eyelid and forehead”.

The story indicates that his employer then arranged for immigration to deport him to avoid the issues of this accident.

One year ago, Edgar Velázquez slashed his face open with a chainsaw while working for a Warwick tree service company. The saw blade struck a fence, kicked back and sliced through his nose, left eyelid and forehead, leaving a flayed crimson channel and nearly exposed bone. Though a surgeon repaired his face, his wounds reopen and ooze, he said, and his pain lingers.

At the time, Velázquez was in the country illegally from Mexico, working for William J. Gorman Jr., owner of Billy G’s Tree Care. Velázquez said Gorman hired him despite knowing of his undocumented status.

Soon after his injury, Velázquez learned that he was entitled to seek compensation from his employer for his medical bills, permanent disfigurement and weekly benefits.

But Velázquez never had his day in court.

State law entitles undocumented workers to workers’ compensation benefits — as is true in many other states — but on the day of Velázquez’s scheduled hearing, on Aug. 2, immigration agents arrested him outside the J. Joseph Garrahy Judicial Complex in Providence. Less than one month later, the 20-year-old was sent back to Mexico.

“I was about to get into the courthouse when Mr. Gorman said my name. He speaks a little Spanish. He says, ‘Edgar, Edgar, stop!’ So I turned around and Immigration was there. And then he [Gorman] laughed, and he said, ‘Now Edgar, I’m sending you back to Mexico — I have no use for you now,’ ” Velázquez said in a phone interview from Mexico. “He said, ‘Edgar, adiós.’ ”

more here …

I found this story at WorkingImmigrants.com which has much more information as background.

As that site notes, “There is quite a lot of passion around the issue of ‘illegal immigrants,’ but far too little passion around the issue of ‘illegal employers.’”

Are You Trying to Marry Someone in the Military?
Posted in News, Personal Interest
Sunday, May 20th, 2007 by James S. Huggins

It can be a problem, especially because you are here and s/he is there.

Montana has the answer. You can get married in Montana with a double proxy wedding. Both of you appoint a proxy to act on your behalf and the proxies do all the work. They take the vows for you. Neither of you have to be there.

Think I’m kidding? Read the article.

Please Let Us Take Care of Your Dogs … We’ll Kill Them for You
Posted in News, Personal Interest
Saturday, May 19th, 2007 by James S. Huggins

I monitor the web and new for information about people named “Huggins”. It is one of my many curiosities.

As a result of that monitoring, this news story, with a “Frank Huggins”, showed up in my inbox today.

Dogs Put To Sleep While Owner In Hospital
Man Plans Many Lawsuits

May 18, 2007

FORSYTH COUNTY, Ga. — A Georgia man said he is suing the Forsyth County’s animal control for killing his two dogs while he was in the hospital.

Mitchell Greenway’s dogs, Misti and Dakota, were euthanized in January when Greenway was in a hospital after having a heart attack.

He said he could only now bring himself to talk about it. Greenway also said he is lost without his beloved dogs.

“This is the first time I’ve been able to talk about it without tearing up,” Greenway said. “I just want to make sure this never happens to another individual.”

He admitted he signed a release that handed the dogs over to animal control but said in his condition, he didn’t realize what he was doing.

“I should have never been asked to sign a legal document in the condition I was in,” he said.

The release for Forsyth County Animal Control clearly stated the dogs might be euthanized if they could not be adopted or if the shelter was lacking space. After four days, that’s just what happened. Both Misti and Dakota were put to sleep.

“I basically didn’t want to live anymore because I didn’t have my dogs. And I just don’t know how to put it. I felt so alone without my dogs,” said Greenway.

Forsyth County Animal Control and the sheriff’s office, which supervises animal control, said they made every effort to find another solution.

“He said he had no relatives to take care of the dogs, no neighbors, no one to take care of the dogs,” said Capt. Frank Huggins.

But Greenway’s neighbor, Doug Green, said he told animal control he would help and said the woman at the shelter made him a promise that they would be loved and well fed.

Animal control said it is sorry.

“We’re sorry it happened, but it happened and we can’t reverse that now,” said Huggins.

Greenway said he not only plans to sue animal control and the sheriff’s department but also the hospital. He said the doctors and nurses pressured him to sign the release to animal control.



 

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