March 10, 2008
In Los Angeles, Hispanic Gangs Ethnically Cleansing Black Neighborhoods
By
Brenda Walker
If Washington wanted to
develop a
vibrant underworld of
vicious criminal gangs, it couldn't do any better
than the immigration system now in place. The
permissiveness toward lawbreaking
border-crossers combined with the
pure numbers of immigrants who cannot possibly be
assimilated in such bulk has created a witches' brew
of crime-spawning social
pathology. The worst creatures are the Hispanic
gangsters who kill
innocent Americans in order to
illustrate aptitude for savagery.
A recent heart-breaking
example:
the slaughter on March 2 of 17-year-old
Jamiel Shaw, Jr. The South Los Angeles high
school student was shot dead just a few doors from home
by two Latino men who jumped from a car and demanded to
know to which gang he belonged. When he didn't answer,
they shot him down. His
father heard the shots and went outside to see his
boy bleeding on the sidewalk. [A
youth 'on track' until fatal gunfire, By Paloma
Esquivel, Paul Pringle and Francisco Vara-Orta, LA
Times, March 4, 2008]
Jamiel had no gang
connections. He was apparently just another random
victim of Hispanic gangsters killing blacks to drive
them out of their corner of Aztlan. The
promising football star had received inquiries from
Stanford and
Rutgers universities about a possible athletic
scholarship. His mother, Army Sgt. Anita Shaw, was
called home from her second tour of duty in Iraq after
the murder of her son.
The family is crushed.
Dad Jamiel Sr. said they have "simply lost
everything."
No arrests have been
made in the case. The family is asking the public for
help in bringing the killers to justice.
The murder has some
similarities to the barbaric shooting of 14-year-old
Cheryl Green in December of 2006. The
eighth-grade student is said to have strayed into the
territory of the 204th Street Latino gang, known for its
anti-black racism; she was certainly
killed because of her race and because of America's
refusal to enforce immigration law.
Two Hispanic men, both
members of the 204th Street gang, were
arrested a few months later for Cheryl's murder.
One, Ernesto Alcarez, is apparently an
illegal alien.
The other gangster,
Jonathan Fajardo, is the
son of immigrants from Belize. He is also accused in
the killing of a witness in connection with the Green
shooting. Christopher Ash, 25,
died of multiple stab wounds and a slit throat.
The City of the Angels
recently experienced a daytime gang battle that brought
out the police SWAT team and closed down dozens of
blocks for six hours. Several schools were locked down
for that time.
Veteran L.A. Police Department officials
described the bizarre midday shootings—and the
widespread disruption they caused—as highly unusual even
in an area known for gang activity. It left the
neighborhood littered with shell casings and its
residents fearful.
Police blamed the
incident on the notorious Avenues gang, which has cast a
wide shadow over districts north of downtown L.A. for
decades and continues to be active despite several
high-profile attempts by authorities to shut it down. [Gang
mayhem cripples large area, LA Times,
February 22, 2008]
Los Angeles used to be a
wonderful American city. Now that it has
become Mexican (in the words of former Mayor Hahn),
LA is a preview of the future America. It should alarm
many more citizens into
pro-sovereignty activism.
Gangs are the inevitable
blowback from importing millions of
excess, unskilled workers from the third world, who
end up in
bitter competition with one another and
home-grown citizens. Normal family dynamics are
scrambled by the immigration process. Young children may
gain inordinate power compared to elders
by their ability to speak English, and the
generation gap is magnified to an unhealthy degree.
Young people feel culturally estranged from older family
members and bond with other kids in similar
circumstances. The situation is completely predictable
as an environment for gang formation.
Los Angeles is Ground
Zero for gangs in the country. The County is home to as
many as 1,200 gangs with 80,000 members. The cost could
be $2 billion annually for all of their destructive
criminal activity. [Who'll
stop the gangs?, LA Times, February 27,
2008]
In the city of Los
Angeles, a
2005 estimate put Hispanic gang membership as the
most numerous at over 23,000, while black gangs amounted
to fewer than 16,000.
Apart from strictly gang
crime, a report from The Economist detailed how
blacks suffer disproportionately in hate crimes in LA.
In over 400 such crimes in 2006, blacks in the County
were victims 59 percent of the time, while they comprise
just nine percent of the population. In 70 percent of
the time, the perps were Hispanic. [When
black and brown collide, August 2, 2007]
Because of the brutal
gang crimes that shock and worry the public, the city
government occasionally presents a public relations
event or
expensive new social program to create the
appearance that something is being done. The recent
gang conference, which set up a program to exchange
a handful of police officers with El Salvador, was one
of the former. Sheriff Baca used the
occasion to sound concerned.
"Over the last decade,
in Los Angeles County, we've lost more than 5,800 people
to gang violence in comparison to less than 500 people
to natural disasters,"
[Sheriff] Lee Baca said at the second annual
International Chiefs of Police Summit on Transnational
Gangs which opened here earlier in the day. [Official:
Los Angeles haunted by gang violence, China
View, March 4, 2008]
Funny thing—none of the assembled expert
police officers suggested that the notoriously
criminal-friendly
Special Order 40 might be rescinded to fight gang
violence more effectively.
LA's own sanctuary law
prohibits police from asking about immigration
status and removes what would be a very useful tool for
officers. In her
2005 Congressional testimony, scholar
Heather Mac Donald noted specific instances where
Special Order 40 protected criminals and allowed
them to commit more crimes.
It doesn't help people
outside the area understand what's going on when the
local newspaper of record is at times downright
secretive in revealing the cultural identity of the
perps. (Los Angeles residents don't need a diagram about
who does the crimes.) Gleaning the demographic facts
about crime from the LA Times can require the
considerable detective skills.
For example, a report
about the Feb 22 shootout had only one little hint about
who the Avenues gang might be.
The Avenues gang has
cast a long shadow in these poor, largely Latino
sections north of downtown L.A. [Gang
mayhem cripples large area]
Even the profoundly corrupt Southern
Poverty Law Center states forthrightly that the Avenues
gangsters are a bunch of Mexicans.
Although the Avenues gang goes back a
half century, it only fell heavily under the control of
the Mexican Mafia in the 1980s, eventually becoming
fundamentally racist as a result. (Police point out
that, ironically, the Avenues now sling dope for the
Mexican Mafia, which the gang's leaders in decades past
looked down upon as a "black thing.") [L.A.
Blackout, SPLC Intelligence Report, Winter 2006]
On the other hand, the LA Times
now has an online blog, the
Homicide Report, which provides crime notices that
clearly state ethnic identities. It is sobering reading.
The violence that makes
headlines gets all the attention. But the fear imposed
by crime can be pervasive and deadening to the spirit.
Consider the loss of freedom required to protect
children when gangs rule the neighborhood:
Marie Keith, who is black, moved from
South Los Angeles with her three daughters in 2000,
believing she'd come to Torrance. One day black children
playing on the street began screaming that "the 204s
were coming."
Keith watched as gang
members drove through, shooting. Black youths dived
behind walls.
Since then, Keith's
children have not been allowed to play in front of their
apartment. When she has to travel more than half a
block, she drives. [How
a community imploded, LA Times, March 4,
2007, by Sam Quinones]
No American should have to live in such
conditions. No citizen child should have to stay indoors
to be safe from rampaging foreigners. Living with a
reasonable expectation of protection against crime is
part of inhabiting a first-world country. We spend a lot
of money on police and prisons.
Hispanic gangsters are
reconquistas with baggy pants and tattoos. They
are ethnically cleansing black citizens out of parts of
LA now, but indications are more of the same for the
rest of us—first through the Southwest, next in
America as a whole. Crime works well as a technique
of the low-intensity warfare that is part and parcel of
immigration as
invasion.
Sounds apocalyptic? The
social pathology in Los Angeles proves that we have
exceeded the level of immigration we can accommodate.
When Hispanic gang
members routinely drive around looking for random black
people to kill, then America has far too many
immigrants.
Brenda Walker (email
her) lives in Northern California and publishes
two websites,
LimitsToGrowth.org and
ImmigrationsHumanCost.org.
She
admires the poetry of Jesse Jackson, and in that spirit,
suggests that immigration should be ended, not mended.