Middle American News
P.O. Box 20608
Raleigh, NC 27619
manews@manews.org

Americans Die For Open Borders

mericans continue to die at alarming rates for the open-borders immigration policies imposed by their commercial and political elites.

Last month South Korean national Cho Seung-Hui, who had been granted permanent resident alien status by U.S. immigration authorities, went on a shooting rampage at Virginia Tech, killing 32 and wounding several others before taking his own life. He left behind notes and videos expressing hatred for those he called "rich kids," and expressing solidarity with "the weak and defenseless."

The immigrant had a history of trouble-making.

In December 2005, more than a year before Cho's mass murder spree, a district court in Montgomery County, Virginia, ruled that he was "an imminent danger to self or others" and placed him under a temporary detention order for psychiatric evaluation.

Yet no one in authority questioned why a potentially dangerous mentally ill foreigner was allowed to remain in the U.S. No one in the court system or the college sought to re-examine Cho's immigration eligibility.

Faculty at Virginia Tech had complained about his strange and perverse behavior, which reportedly included using his cell phone to take pictures of women's legs under their desks.

Cho was order by the court to Carilion St. Albans Behaviorial Health Center in Radford, Virginia, where officials who examined him concluded that Cho was not suicidal and could be released from custody. Despite his behavioral history, he was set free with orders from a judge that Cho should undergo mental health counseling on an out-patient basis.

In an America ruled by open-borders political elites, mentally ill aliens are not automatically processed for deportation, even though it would alleviate the burden of having to care for sick aliens and protect citizens from possible harm. Under current immigration law, though it is routinely ignored by the authorities entrusted with enforcing it, aliens with a history of mental illness are generally ineligible for admission to the U.S. But under current practice, once aliens achieve the status of permanent legal residents, they enjoy considerable protections against deportation.

Cho's murderous rampage is evidence enough that those protections are a serious danger to Americans.





America's Immigrant Mass Murderers

Here are some of America's most infamous immigrant murderers and would-be murderers, nearly all of them welcomed to the country by generous U.S. elites eager make America conform to an ideogical vision of multiculturalism and diversity. (Yeah, we know, there are native-born killers, too. So why import any more of them?)

Cho Seung Hui, South Korean national, legal resident U.S. alien, killed 32 at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, VIrginia, April 2007

Mohammad Atta, and 18 accomplices, all foreign nationals, most from Saudi Arabia, entered the U.S. legally on student visas, murdered an estimated 3,000 in the terror attacks of September 11, 2001

Lee Boyd Malvo, born in Kingston, Jamaica, convicted in sniper attacks that killed 10 people in the Washington, D.C. area, in October, 2002

Ramzi Yousef, Sheik Omar Abdel-Rahman, El Sayyid Nossair, Mahmud Abouhalima, Mohammad Salameh, Nidal Ayyad Ajaj, and Abdul Rahman Yasin, all Middle Eastern immigrants, planned the first bomb attack on the World Trade Center in New York that killed six and injured more than 1,000 in February 1993

Colin Ferguson, born in Kingston, Jamaica, murdered six and wounded 19 others on the Long Island Rail Road in New York in December 1993

Mir Aimal Kasi, a Pakistani national, entered the U.S. with easily obtainable fake papers he bought in Karachi, and shot CIA workers as they sat in their cars in traffic near the agency's headquarters in Langley, Virginia, killing two and wounding three

Abu Kamal, a Palestinian teacher, shot seven tourists on the 86th floor of the observation deck of the Empire State Building, killing one, February 1997

Hesham Mohamed Hadayet, an Egyptian national and legal U.S. immigrant, shot and killed two people at the El Al Airlines ticket counter at Los Angeles International Airport in July, 2002

Mohammed reza Taheri-azar, born in Tehran, Iran, immigrated to the U.S. with his parents in 1985, tried to kill nine students at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, by running them down with a rented SUV in March 2006


 


Current Issue