Middle American News
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Diversity Notebook for December

By Wayne Lutton

"Kill All the White People in the World"
Mike Robb, 46, a popular tennis coach at Newport High School in Bellevue, Washington, is another casualty in America's failed experiment in Diversity. Robb had the left side of his head blown away from a shotgun blast leveled through his open car window fired by 18-year old Afro-American Samson Berhe. The teen pretended to need help and the white school teacher slowed his car down to offer assistance while driving home on West Marginal Way in Seattle.

Berhe, who had a long arrest record, told neighbors that he was on a mission. "He always say that he was gonna kill all the white people in the world," Anna Bell Perkins told police. "Samson had, like, some sort of complex against Caucasian people. And he said he wanted to kill them all and told me I could watch," another neighbor related. Just a couple of hours before his deadly attack, one of his friends recalled Berhe stating, "I got to shoot a cop or shoot a while person, you know, before I leave this world."

Police officers stopped Berhe and another man just three hours before the shooting and arrested Berhe's companion for possessing a stolen watch taken during a nearby burglary. Behre was released, despite an outstanding arrest warrant for a 2002 case involving a stolen van. But when the charges were filed, his last name was misspelled and the warrant was issued under that wrong name. Seattle Police Department spokesman Sean Whitcomb admitted that they had encountered Berhe in the weeks before the shooting. "Our officers would have taken the opportunity to arrest and book him," if his name had been spelled right, Whitcomb added.

Robb was a nationally known tennis umpire who made three trips to the U.S. Open. He and his wife, Elsa Robb, a French teacher, were the parents of a 14-month-old daughter, Louisa. Berhe has been charged with murder, which carries only a possible 25-to-31-year prison sentence. Are readers of MAN surprised that this case has received no national attention?


"Sanctuary" for a Murderer
Jenny Garcia, 18, a freshman at St. Edward's University, in Austin, Texas, was stabbed to death inside her family's Northwest Austin home, located in the quiet Champion's Forest subdivision. Her assailant was 20-year-old David Diaz Morales, an illegal alien. Morales has been charged with capital murder and robbery and remains in jail without bond.

The murdered teen's parents has filed suit against the city of Austin, charging that Austin's status as a so called "sanctuary city" led to the death of their daughter. Attorney Matt Burns said Austin's policy of prohibiting police and other local officials from referring cases to federal authorities for immigration law violations and deportation made it possible for Morales to attack Jenny Garcia. "The Austin police department has both informal and written procedures which actually prohibit police officers from cooperating with federal immigration authorities. Morales had been deported from this country once and re-entered, which is a felony offense. And prior to the murder of Ms. Garcia, Mr. Morales had also been arrested in the alleged sexual assault of a 12-year old," Burns noted.

There are more than a dozen so called "Sanctuary Cities" across the U.S., including Houston, Portland, Oregon, Chicago, and New York City. Supporters of this "Sanctuary" policy claim that if fosters "trust" between local officials and illegal aliens. Thus far, Congress has defeated proposals to deny certain types of federal funding to Sanctuary Cities in an effort to get them to cooperate with federal immigration authorities.

Diverse National Security Threats
Boosters of mass immigration loudly proclaim that "Diversity is Our Greatest Strength." In the real world, it is also a threat to national security. Within the past month a number of serious security leaks involving people of foreign ancestry have surfaced: Noshir Gowadia, 61, the "father" of the technology that protects the U.S. Air Force's B-2 Stealth bomber from heat-seeking missiles, has been arrested by the FBI and accused of selling U.S. military secrets to eight (un-named) foreign countries. The native of Mumbai, India was arrested at his home in Haiiku, Hawaii. Gowadia worked as a design engineer on military-related projects for Northrop Corporation from 1968-1986. He later set up his own defense-consulting firm, NSG, Inc., which received U.S. military contracts. During 2005, he is reported to have taken in $2.9 million for unknown purposes. The FBI reports that Gowadia sold American military technology secrets for money, which he stashed in a number of accounts, some located in foreign countries….An Arabic translator for the U.S. Army is charged with secretly helping Iraqi insurgents by taking classified documents home from Iraq to Brooklyn, NY, where he made a series of calls to people linked with the insurgency. A man using false identity of Almaliki Nour first sought political asylum in the U.S. in the late 1980s and became a U.S. citizen under that name in 2000. Three years later he got a job with a defense contractor as a translator and interpreter for an intelligence unit of the 82nd Airborne Division. The Department of Defense only recently discovered that the man known as Nour has apparently been working for Iraqi extremists all this time and had fabricated his name, birth date, family background and country of nationality. Federal authorities admit that they still aren't sure who he really is (they now call him Noureddine Malki) or where he is from (may be Lebanon or Morocco). Assistant U.S. Attorney John Buretta disclosed that the man received money from Sunni sheiks in Iraq while employed by the Titan Corp., a defense contractor that has recently been acquired by the New York-based government contractor L-3. He remains in jail and held without bail as a threat to American forces overseas….Four Chinese arrested in Los Angeles and charged with being spies for Communist China are believed to have funneled technology and military secrets to China since 1990. Chi Mak, his wife Rebecca Laiwah Chiu, Chi's brother, Tai Wang Mak, and his wife, Fuk Heung Li, covertly obtained U.S. Navy Aegis missile technology and sensitive data on U.S. submarines, including details related to our new Virginia-class attack submarines. The four have worked for the U.S. government and have been charged with theft of government property, with the charges likely upgraded to espionage, officials said. Chi and his wife were born in China and became naturalized American citizens. Tai and his wife are resident aliens who came here from China in May 2001.

Dangerous Alien-Enhanced Pastries
Behrouz Nahidmobarekeh, 49, a "hard working" cab driver and Middle Eastern native who entered the U.S. years ago on a student visa and never returned home, has been sentenced to five years in prison after video surveillance cameras caught him sprinkling his own dried feces on bread and cookies at a Fiesta grocery store in Dallas, Texas. Customers complained that the fresh-baked items smelled and tasted like manure. Behrouz complained that he had been insulted by store employees and "wanted to teach them a lesson." He also has a long drug record, including use of marijuana, cocaine, and heroin. He should have been expelled years ago when he flunked out of a community college. The presiding judge called the case, "raunchy, repugnant, repulsive, vile, and vulgar."





 


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