First, check this link.
Then note the first comment, penned by a Leftist idiot who thinks that accurate communication is as important as tits on a hubcap:

Well this is basacally a rasist comment to put hate on more people the economic problem is not on illegal aliens” is on a system that rule the world i bet my life that this Doctor” employ humans slaves workers paying nickels for services.
From this source — the second commenter makes an excellent and accurate summation:

You don’t need to be using the term “racists” when you can’t even SPELL the word or “basically”. We are overrun by 100 million illegals, NOT the 12 million constantly touted by the press for the last 40 years. THEY get paid under the table, subverting American workers, and DON’T PAY INCOME TAXES! Not only THAT, the IRS is GIVING them huge IRS scam payouts, with protection and no audits. I put the blame squarely on Congress, especially the northeast states, and on the entire FEDERAL government for REFUSING to do their job of border control. THEY ARE OPENLY INVITING THESE ILLEGALS WITH JOBS, NO PROSECUTION, AND OPEN BORDERS. Taxpayers are paying for Bill Gates’ workers public schools, foodstamps, medical bills, border babies with monthly stipends for diapers and food, food stamps, SSI and social security payments, prisons, more teachers, more schools, more police, more highways, more courts, and FREE ATTORNEYS for the huge number of crimes, murders, rapes they commit. If war breaks out here in America, I’m coming for THEM first and then their benefactors.
JOE LEGAL vs JOSE ILLEGAL
You have 2 families… “Joe Legal” and “Jose Illegal”. Both families have 2 parents, 2 children and live in California.
“Joe Legal” works in construction, has a Social Security Number, and makes $25.00 per hour with payroll taxes deducted.
“Jose Illegal” also works in construction, has NO Social Security Number, and gets paid $15.00 cash “under the table”.
Joe Legal… $25.00 per hour x 40 hours = $1000.00 per week = $52,000 per year. Now take 30% away for state and federal tax. Joe Legal now has $31,231.00.
Jose Illegal… $15.00 per hour x 40 hours = $600.00 per week = $31,200.00 per year. Jose Illegal pays no taxes. Jose Illegal now has $31,200.00.
Joe Legal pays for Medical and Dental Insurance with limited coverage … $1000.00 per month = $12,000.00 per year. Joe Legal now has $19,231.00.
Jose Illegal has full Medical and Dental coverage through the state and local clinics at a cost of $0.00 per year. Jose Illegal still has $31,200.00.
Joe Legal makes too much money to be eligible for Food Stamps or Welfare so Joe Legal pays for food… $1,000.00 per month = $12,000.00 per year. Joe Legal now has $7,231.00.
Jose Illegal has no documented income and is eligible for Food Stamps and Welfare. Jose Illegal still has $31,200.00.
Joe Legal pays rent of $1,000.00 per month = $12,000.00 per year. Joe Legal is now in the hole -<$4,769.00>.
Jose Illegal receives a $500 per month Federal rent subsidy, which entirely pays his rent of $500.00 per month = $6,000.00 per year. Jose Illegal still has $31,200.00.
Joe Legal now works overtime on Saturdays and gets a part time job after work to make ends meet.
Jose Illegal has nights and weekends off to enjoy with his family.
Joe Legal’s and Jose Illegal’s children both attend the same school.
Joe Legal pays for his children’s lunches while Jose Illegal’s children get free government sponsored lunches.
Joe Legal’s children go home after school. Jose Illegal’s children have an after school ESL program which, again, is provided free of charge.
Joe Legal and Jose Illegal both enjoy the same Police and Fire Services, but Joe Legal paid for them and Jose Illegal did not pay.
Imagine that.
So why would both sides of the aisle agree to this “illegal amnesty for Mexicans” abortion-on-toast? Answer: money and power. And the ability to keep themselves entrenched into their positions so they can keep their money and power flowing incessantly.
Finally: sometimes there are inherently more truths expressed in comments than in the original articles themselves. This would be one of those times.
BZ
I’m sure everyone recalls Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano — Big Sis — saying that the border is secure, and that border security is better than ever. A rather declarative sentence, really.
Katie Pavlich
News Editor, Townhall
As the immigration reform Gang of Eight inside the Beltway prepares to announce a deal later this week, claiming border security will come before a path to citizenship for millions of illegals, Border Patrol agents have seen illegal border crossings double and warn the cutting of agent work hours will only result in less border security, not more.
“We’ve seen the number of illegal aliens double, maybe even triple since amnesty talk started happening,” an agent told Townhall, who asked to remain unnamed due to fears of retaliation within Customs and Border Protection [CBP], something he said is common. “A lot of these people, although not the majority, are criminals or aggravated felons. This is a direct danger to our communities.”
Imagine that! You even begin to speak about amnesty and crossings double! Who would ever have thought that the remotest of possibilities?
In response she now says:
Janet Napolitano: We shouldn’t wait until the border is secure to legalize illegals
posted at 10:41 am on March 27, 2013 by Allahpundit
No worries. She says the border’s already “as secure as it’s ever been,” even though her department has given up trying to measure that. Marco Rubio recently claimed that 10 million new illegals would cross the border over the next decade if there’s no new guest-worker program in place. Maybe Napolitano could quantify border control that way. Are things secure enough now to ensure that only nine million of them would make it? Eight million?
“I think that once people really look at the whole system and how it works, relying on one thing as a so-called ‘trigger’ is not the way to go,” she said at a Christian Science Monitor event. “There needs to be some kind of certainty in the bill so that people can know when they can legalize and then when the pathway to citizenship, earned citizenship, will open up.”
Says she.
So, to Janet Napolitano: were you lying then, or are you lying now? Because you are lying to the American public.
BZ
Even the rather liberal British realize that illegal immigration is harmful in a poor economy.
From the UKTelegraph.com:
In an article for The Telegraph, the joint chairmen of the cross party group on balanced migration, Frank Field, a former Labour minister, and Nicholas Soames, a former Conservative minister, say that David Cameron must do more to tackle “the elephant in the room” by restricting European immigration.
The MPs, two of the most influential politicians in the immigration debate, suggest that draconian action should now be considered “during periods of high unemployment” — such as now — to protect low-skilled British workers struggling to compete with foreigners for jobs.
One in five young British workers is currently unemployed, with about one million people aged 18 to 24 out of work.
Oddly enough, the UK seems to understand that not only illegal immigration, but immigration in general, jeopardizes the employment possibilities of true citizens in tempestuous fiscal times.
Not so the United States, in which Mr Obama, the Demorats and any number of Republicans want to, in essence, grant amnesty to literally millions of illegal Mexicans already violating US laws. Mexicans that are neither bringing money nor particularly necessary skillsets with them — but instead in many cases are bringing disease and crime and who then tend to commit crimes here, as many are already up into either various cartels or MS13 and then, in Fornicalia, car up into Surenos.
Do you not sense a trend here? That is, Europe is beginning to re-examine its Multi-Kulti and Socialist leanings, whilst here in the US the current Obaka Administration is willing to engage in the very experiment failing Europe.
Proving, once again, two things:
1. Everyone thinks they can do Socialism better than the last despot, and
2. Obama and his sycophants possess Historical Alzheimers; no one seems to learn from it.
BZ
I wish my sheriff were one of these involved but, on the Left Coast, it’s a Death Knell if you make anything other than a 100% PC statement regarding the issue. Better yet, staying completely silent is the best option — as is his default here. The state of Fornicalia is controlled by Leftists who solely vote Demorat — as the Supermajority in Sacramento testifies. My Sheriff, as of this writing, is conspicuously absent from the list below.
That said, I proffer this positive insight of county Sheriffs supporting the 2nd Amendment:
| Name | County | State | |
| 1 | Blake Dorning | Madison | Alabama |
| 2 | Ana Franklin | Morgan | Alabama |
| 3 | Andy Hughes | Houston | Alabama |
| 4 | Jay Jones | Lee | Alabama |
| 5 | Scott Mascher | Yavapai | Arizona |
| 6 | Joe Arpaio | Maricopa | Arizona |
| 7 | Tom Sheahan | Mohave | Arizona |
| 8 | Paul Babeu | Pinal | Arizona |
| 9 | Mark J. Dannels | Cochise | Arizona |
| 10 | Mike Moore | Boone | Arkansas |
| 11 | Adam Christianson | Stanislaus | California |
| 12 | Jon Lopey | Siskiyou | California |
| 13 | Tom Bosenko | Shasta | California |
| 14 | John D’Agostini | El Dorado | California |
| 15 | David Hencraft | Tehama | California |
| 16 | Dean Growden | Lassen | California |
| 17 | Dean Wilson | Del Norte | California |
| 18 | Mike Poindexter | Modoc | California |
| 19 | Thomas Allman | Mendocino | California |
| 20 | Mike Downey | Humboldt | California |
| 21 | Margaret Mims | Fresno | California |
| 22 | Greg Hagwood | Plumas | California |
| 23 | Bruce Haney | Trinity | California |
| 24 | Martin Ryan | Amador | California |
| 25 | Jerry Smith | Butte | California |
| 26 | Donny Youngblood | Kern | California |
| 27 | James W. Mele | Toulumne | California |
| 28 | Justin Smith | Larimer | Colorado |
| 29 | Terry Maketa | El Paso | Colorado |
| 30 | John Cooke | Weld | Colorado |
| 31 | Stan Hilkey | Mesa | Colorado |
| 32 | Lou Vallario | Garfield | Colorado |
| 33 | Rick Dunlap | Montrose | Colorado |
| 34 | Jeff Christopher | Sussex | Delaware |
| 35 | Bill Snyder | Martin | Florida |
| 36 | Frank McKeithen | Bay | Florida |
| 37 | Mike Scott | Lee | Florida |
| 38 | Rick Beseler | Clay | Florida |
| 39 | Michael Adkinson | Walton | Florida |
| 40 | Grady Judd | Polk | Florida |
| 41 | Stacy Nicholson | Gilmer | Georgia |
| 42 | Scott Berry | Oconee | Georgia |
| 43 | Roger Garrison | Cherokee | Georgia |
| 44 | Neil Warren | Cobb | Georgia |
| 45 | Butch Conway | Gwinnett | Georgia |
| 46 | Gary Gulledge | Paulding | Georgia |
| 47 | Joe Chapman | Walton | Georgia |
| 48 | Roy Klingler | Madison | Idaho |
| 49 | Kieran Donahue | Canyon | Idaho |
| 50 | Daryl Wheeler | Bonner | Idaho |
| 51 | Chris Goetz | Clearwater | Idaho |
| 52 | Doug Giddings | Idaho | Idaho |
| 53 | Doug McFall | Jerome | Idaho |
| 54 | Brian Brokop | Lewis | Idaho |
| 55 | Joe Rodriguez | Nez Perce | Idaho |
| 56 | Tom Carter | Twin Falls | Idaho |
| 57 | Dave Resser | Benewah | Idaho |
| 58 | Edward Motley | Edgar | Illinois |
| 59 | Mike Emery | McLean | Illinois |
| 60 | Jerry Parsley | Clark | Illinois |
| 61 | Brad Rogers | Elkhart | Indiana |
| 62 | Bill McCarthy | Polk | Iowa |
| 63 | Warren M. Wethington | Cedar | Iowa |
| 64 | Frank Denning | Johnson | Kansas |
| 65 | Denny Peyman | Jackson | Kentucky |
| 66 | Michael A. Helmig | Boone | Kentucky |
| 67 | John Snedegar | Bath | Kentucky |
| 68 | Scott F. Harrison | Powell | Kentucky |
| 69 | Chuck Korzenborn | Kenton | Kentucky |
| 70 | Charles A. Jenkins | Frederick | Maryland |
| 71 | Dar Leaf | Barry | Michigan |
| 72 | Ted Schende | Benzie | Michigan |
| 73 | Larry Stelma | Kent | Michigan |
| 74 | Robin Cole | Pine | Minnesota |
| 75 | Bill Rasco | DeSoto | Mississippi |
| 76 | Billy McGee | Forrest | Mississippi |
| 77 | Cecil Cantrell | Monroe | Mississippi |
| 78 | Brad A. DeLay | Lawrence | Missouri |
| 79 | Charles Heiss | Johnson | Missouri |
| 80 | Steve Cox | Livingston | Missouri |
| 81 | Mick Epperly | Barry | Missouri |
| 82 | Stephen Stockman | Mercer | Missouri |
| 83 | George R. Underwood | Oregon | Missouri |
| 84 | Michael Dixon | Osage | Missouri |
| 85 | Randee Kaiser | Jasper | Missouri |
| 86 | Tom Rummel | Sanders | Montana |
| 87 | Jay Doyle | Lake | Montana |
| 88 | Scott F. Howard | Powell | Montana |
| 89 | Chris Hoffman | Ravalli | Montana |
| 90 | Darby Harrington | Wibaux | Montana |
| 91 | Mike Linder | Yellowstone | Montana |
| 92 | Ed Kilgpore | Humboldt | Nevada |
| 93 | Benjamin D. Trotter | Churchill | Nevada |
| 94 | Tony DeMeo | Nye | Nevada |
| 95 | Douglas R Dutile | Grafton | New Hampshire |
| 96 | Dan Houston | Bernalillo | New Mexico |
| 97 | Shawn Menges | Catron | New Mexico |
| 98 | Patrick R Jennings | Chaves | New Mexico |
| 99 | Johnny Valdez | Cibola | New Mexico |
| 100 | Jim Maldonado | Colfax | New Mexico |
| 101 | Dennis A. Cleaver | De Baca | New Mexico |
| 102 | Todd Garrison | Dona Ana | New Mexico |
| 103 | Scott London | Eddy | New Mexico |
| 104 | Raul Holguin | Grant | New Mexico |
| 105 | Michael R Lucero | Guadalupe | New Mexico |
| 106 | Herman Martinez | Harding | New Mexico |
| 107 | Saturnino Madero | Hidalgo | New Mexico |
| 108 | Mark Hargrove | Lea | New Mexico |
| 109 | Rick Virden | Lincoln | New Mexico |
| 110 | Marco Lucero | Los Alamos | New Mexico |
| 111 | Raymond Cobos | Luna | New Mexico |
| 112 | Benny House | Otero | New Mexico |
| 113 | Joe Schallert | Quay | New Mexico |
| 114 | Joe Mascarenas | Arriba | New Mexico |
| 115 | Darren Hooker | Roosevelt | New Mexico |
| 116 | Ken Christesen | San Juan | New Mexico |
| 117 | Benjie Vigil | San Miguel | New Mexico |
| 118 | Robert Garcia | Santa Fe | New Mexico |
| 119 | Joe Baca | Sierra | New Mexico |
| 120 | Phillip Montoya | Socorro | New Mexico |
| 121 | Miguel Romero Jr | Taos | New Mexico |
| 122 | Heath White | Torrance | New Mexico |
| 123 | William Spriggs | Union | New Mexico |
| 124 | Louis Burkhard | Valencia | New Mexico |
| 125 | Tony Desmond | Schoharie | New York |
| 126 | Richard Devlin Jr. | Otsego | New York |
| 127 | Donald Smith | Putnam | New York |
| 128 | David Cole | Steuben | New York |
| 129 | Coy Reid | Catawba | North Carolina |
| 130 | Adell Dobey | Edgefield | North Carolina |
| 131 | Jerry Jones | Franklin | North Carolina |
| 132 | Charlie McDonald | Henderson | North Carolina |
| 133 | Ed McMahon | New Hanover | North Carolina |
| 134 | Jimmy Thornton | Sampson | North Carolina |
| 135 | Eddie Cathey | Union | North Carolina |
| 136 | Donnie Harrison | Wake | North Carolina |
| 137 | Carey Winders | Wayne | North Carolina |
| 138 | A.J. Rodenberg | Clermont | Ohio |
| 139 | Sam Crish | Allen | Ohio |
| 140 | Bob ‘Big Block’ Colbert | Wagoner | Oklahoma |
| 141 | Johnny Tadlock | McCurtain | Oklahoma |
| 142 | Roger LeVick | Jackson | Oklahoma |
| 143 | Glenn E. Palmer | Grant | Oregon |
| 144 | Gil Gilbertson | Josephine | Oregon |
| 145 | Tim Mueller | Linn | Oregon |
| 146 | Craig Zanni | Coos | Oregon |
| 147 | John Hanlin | Douglas | Oregon |
| 148 | John Bishop | Curry | Oregon |
| 149 | Larry Blanton | Deschutes | Oregon |
| 150 | Jim Hensley | Crook | Oregon |
| 151 | Pat Garrett | Washington | Oregon |
| 152 | Dan Staton | Multnomah | Oregon |
| 153 | Mike Winters | Jackson | Oregon |
| 154 | Brian Wolfe | Malheur | Oregon |
| 155 | Mitchell Southwick | Baker | Oregon |
| 156 | Frank Skrah | Klamath | Oregon |
| 157 | Jason Myers | Marion | Oregon |
| 158 | Bob Wolfe | Polk | Oregon |
| 159 | Jack Crabtree | Yamhill | Oregon |
| 160 | Jim Muller | Adams | Pennsylvania |
| 161 | Eric J. Weaknecht | Berks | Pennsylvania |
| 162 | Clinton J. Walters | Bradford | Pennsylvania |
| 163 | Jeffrey C. Krieg | Elk | Pennsylvania |
| 164 | Bunny Welsh | Chester | Pennsylvania |
| 165 | Al Cannon | Charleston | South Carolina |
| 166 | Chuck Wright | Spartanburg | South Carolina |
| 167 | Wayne DeWitt | Berkeley | South Carolina |
| 168 | Jim Matthews | Kershaw | South Carolina |
| 169 | James Metts | Lexington | South Carolina |
| 170 | Leon Lott | Richland | South Carolina |
| 171 | Jim Ruth | Bradley | Tennessee |
| 172 | Jim Hammond | Hamilton | Tennessee |
| 173 | Larry Smith | Smith | Texas |
| 174 | Terry Box | Collin | Texas |
| 175 | Joel W. Richardson | Randall | Texas |
| 176 | Jack Brandes | Austin | Texas |
| 177 | Johnny Brown | Ellis | Texas |
| 178 | Michael Cox | Hill | Texas |
| 179 | Bob Alford | Johnson | Texas |
| 180 | Earl Howell | McCulloch | Texas |
| 181 | Parnell McNamara | McLennan | Texas |
| 182 | David Medlin | Oldham | Texas |
| 183 | Tommy Gage | Montgomery | Texas |
| 184 | Dane Kirby | Fannin | Texas |
| 185 | Cameron M. Noel | Beaver | Utah |
| 186 | David Edmunds | Summit | Utah |
| 187 | James Tracy | Utah | Utah |
| 188 | Robert Dekker | Millard | Utah |
| 189 | Frank Park | Tooele | Utah |
| 190 | Joseph Yeates | Box Elder | Utah |
| 191 | G. Lynn Nelson | Cache | Utah |
| 192 | James Cordova | Carbon | Utah |
| 193 | Jerry Jorgensen | Daggett | Utah |
| 194 | Todd Richardson | Davis | Utah |
| 195 | Travis Mitchell | Duchesne | Utah |
| 196 | Greg Funk | Emery | Utah |
| 197 | James D. Perkins | Garfield | Utah |
| 198 | Steven White | Grand | Utah |
| 199 | Mark Gower | Iron | Utah |
| 200 | Alden Orme | Juab | Utah |
| 201 | Lamont Smith | Kane | Utah |
| 202 | Blaine Breshears | Morgan | Utah |
| 203 | Marty Gleave | Puite | Utah |
| 204 | Dale Stacey | Rich | Utah |
| 205 | Rick Eldredge | San Juan | Utah |
| 206 | Brian Nielson | Sanpete | Utah |
| 207 | Nathan Curtis | Sevier County | Utah |
| 208 | Jeff Merrell | Uintah | Utah |
| 209 | Todd Bonner | Wasatch | Utah |
| 210 | Cory Pulsipher | Washington | Utah |
| 211 | Kurt Taylor | Wayne | Utah |
| 212 | Terry Thompson | Weber | Utah |
| 213 | Merv Gustin | Duchesne | Utah |
| 214 | Than Cooper | Garfiled | Utah |
| 215 | James B. Nyland Sr. | Grand | Utah |
| 216 | Gene Ercanbrack | Morgan | Utah |
| 217 | Mike Lacy | San Juan | Utah |
| 218 | Kay P. Larsen | Sanpete | Utah |
| 219 | Phil Barney | Sevier | Utah |
| 220 | Kenneth Vanwagoner | Wasatch | Utah |
| 221 | Kirk Smith | Washington | Utah |
| 222 | Ken Bancroft | Asotin | Washington |
| 223 | Tom Jones | Grant | Washington |
| 224 | Dave Brown | Skamania | Washington |
| 225 | Brett Myers | Whitman | Washington |
| 226 | Ken Irwin | Yakima | Washington |
| 227 | Mike Harper | Roane | West Virginia |
| 228 | Ken Merritt | Wood | West Virginia |
| 229 | David A. Clarke Jr. | Milwaukee | Wisconsin |
Again, historically, Sheriff’s have the ability to make the logical argument as being the true foundations of local US law enforcement.
“THE GOVERNMENT DOES REQUIRE OUR PERMISSION TO EXIST.”
Digest that, if you will, you ignorant Leftists.
BZ
P.S.
As of this publishing, I find it disheartening that there are only 12 Texas Sheriffs on the list, whilst there are 17 Fornicalia Sheriffs on the list — considering there are only 58 counties in Fornicalia, and there are 254 in Texas. I submit: as goes Fornicalia so go Leftists. But, on the other hand, as goes Texas so go Conservatives.
I can certainly account for the larger Fornicalia county Sheriffs not being listed here: they have massive populations in urban areas primarily consisting of those dependent upon government Free Cheese largesse, with greater gang activity, higher “minority” loads (though, in Fornicalia, the Caucasoid is in truth the statistical minority), and held accountable to a Leftist Voting Block.
As in: NONE of these counties chiming in:
Census 2010: The Biggest Counties in California
| 2010 rank | 2000 rank | County | 2000 pop | 2010 pop | Raw change | % change |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1 | Los Angeles | 9 519 338 | 9 818 605 | 299 267 | 3.1 |
| 2 | 3 | San Diego | 2 813 833 | 3 095 313 | 281 480 | 10.0 |
| 3 | 2 | Orange | 2 846 289 | 3 010 232 | 163 943 | 5.8 |
| 4 | 6 | Riverside | 1 545 387 | 2 189 641 | 644 254 | 41.7 |
| 5 | 4 | San Bernardino | 1 709 434 | 2 035 210 | 325 776 | 19.1 |
| 6 | 5 | Santa Clara | 1 682 585 | 1 781 642 | 99 057 | 5.9 |
| 7 | 7 | Alameda | 1 443 741 | 1 510 271 | 66 530 | 4.6 |
| 8 | 8 | Sacramento | 1 223 499 | 1 418 788 | 195 289 | 16.0 |
| 9 | 9 | Contra Costa | 948 816 | 1 049 025 | 100 209 | 10.6 |
| 10 | 10 | Fresno | 799 407 | 930 450 | 131 043 | 16.4 |
| 11 | 14 | Kern | 661 645 | 839 631 | 177 986 | 26.9 |
| 12 | 12 | Ventura | 753 197 | 823 318 | 70 121 | 9.3 |
| 13 | 11 | San Francisco | 776 733 | 805 235 | 28 502 | 3.7 |
| 14 | 13 | San Mateo | 707 161 | 718 451 | 11 290 | 1.6 |
| 15 | 15 | San Joaquin | 563 598 | 685 306 | 121 708 | 21.6 |
| 16 | 17 | Stanislaus | 446 997 | 514 453 | 67 456 | 15.1 |
| 17 | 16 | Sonoma | 458 614 | 483 878 | 25 264 | 5.5 |
| 18 | 21 | Tulare | 368 021 | 442 179 | 74 158 | 20.2 |
| 19 | 19 | Santa Barbara | 399 347 | 423 895 | 24 548 | 6.1 |
| 20 | 18 | Monterey | 401 762 | 415 057 | 13 295 | 3.3 |