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Rights and Liberties

An Immigration Policy Ruled By Fear

By John Tirman, AlterNet. Posted June 17, 2006.


In the years since 9/11, our government's rabid fear of terrorists has led to cruel, disproportionate and foolish policies.
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[Editor's Note: This story is part of a series of Audits of the Conventional Wisdom, a project of the Center for International Studies at MIT.]

The attacks of September 11, 2001, transformed the landscape of global security, none more than borders and immigration. The topography of citizenship, belonging, and suspicion instantly changed for Arab and Muslim communities in the United States. They drew the sharp attention of U.S. law enforcement and intelligence services, and that continues. But the public's focus has swung south to scrutinize the U.S.-Mexican border as a source of insecurity. For the most part, the alarms about immigrants as threats are exaggerated. And the policy choices driven by these concerns -- much larger border security measures in particular -- are costly in a globalized economy and unnecessary for security in any case.

The ferocious law-enforcement reaction to 9/11 overwhelmed Arab and Muslim communities. At the same time, other immigrants, legal or not, were affected, and most of those migrants are from Latin America, particularly Mexico. So the initial focus of attention, reflecting the ethnicity of the 9/11 attackers, actually affected a much broader swath of people in or hoping to enter the U.S. Only now are we seeing the consequences of this sweeping vigilance.

Muslims in America, about equally from South Asia, the Middle East and North Africa, and Southeast Asia, were targeted along with their institutions. Several hundreds or thousands of men were detained for months or longer without being charged with crimes, and many were deported for minor infractions. Muslim charities were targeted by the FBI, with many of them closed down and a number of them prosecuted. Transnational labor migration was sharply curtailed. Student visas were more difficult to obtain. Mosques were and are under constant surveillance. Many Muslims and Christian Arabs felt intimidated about speaking out on foreign policy and security issues, particularly the Iraq war and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

The rationale for the U.S. government's action was that these people potentially support terrorism. Yet we now know, through the Report of the 9/11 Commission, that there were no domestic conspiracies of any significance at the time of the attacks, and there have been none revealed since. Of the more than 400 U.S. prosecutions of individuals on terrorism-related charges, virtually none charged were involved in a plot against America. "Another 500 people have been charged with immigration violations," said a Washington Post investigation last year, "after an initial report linking them to a terrorism or homeland security threat." Still, little or nothing has come to light suggesting a domestic conspiracy -- nor, indeed, terrorists coming into the country illegally.

Insecure borders

The effort to round up Muslim and other Arab men continues. It is preventative in many of its features, as with the Palmer raids of the 1920s: "a broad-based approach," writes legal scholar David Cole, seeking "to neutralize all persons who [the Justice Department] thought might pose a potential future threat. This preventive approach, unmoored from concepts of individual culpability, would prove to be a recurring feature of law enforcement in times of crisis." This legal aggressiveness, notably, proceeds simultaneously with efforts to tighten airport and seaport security, which have been roundly criticized as inadequate, inept, or fraught with corruption.

It also proceeds while the attention of the public has shifted. Due to a harsh immigration control bill passed by the House of Representatives -- which would make entry by unauthorized immigrants an aggravated felony -- a sharp, new focus on the security of the U.S. Mexican border is apparent.

Several factors are shaping the increasingly fractious debate about Mexican immigration. Security is most prominent: many politicians and commentators have posed the Mexican border as a security threat. Migration has long had security implications, but mostly linked to "social" security -- jobs, welfare, etc. Today it is the threat of terrorism that frames debate. The fear -- thus far, unfounded -- that al Qaeda will sneak across the "unguarded" 2,000-mile border accounts for the urgency. In fact, the House bill is called the Border Protection, Antiterrorism, and Illegal Immigration Control Act of 2005.


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John Tirman is Executive Director of MIT's Center for International Studies.

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bad to worse
Posted by: rsaxto on Jun 17, 2006 3:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Instead solving problems the Bushies are making problems go from bad to worse. Their every "solution" is a ghastly move toward worse conditions and restricted civil liberties. It is simply cancer devouring the health and well being of most of us to magnify the greed of the selfish few. Impeach this negative process by Impeaching its criminal creators.

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Putting out fire with gasoline---
Posted by: fool-on-the-hill on Jun 17, 2006 6:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
---that's what this criminally inept/corrupt administration is doing on every front! When will the people rebel? Or have we become such a nation of clowns and cowards that we are no longer capable of it? (That's certainly what the Bushites are counting on.)

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» RE: Putting out fire with gasoline--- Posted by: Subcommandante Nada
The reality of the North American Union
Posted by: chica on Jun 17, 2006 7:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This whole article is a distraction and a barely disguised advocation of the idea to link together the north american continent (Mexico, USA, and Canada) into one economic system. A google search of North American Union should reveal to you how far along this project is. For example, NASCO (North American Super Corridor Coalition) is beginning construction of a super highway from Mexico through the US to Canada. The implications of this are HUGE and it is not being debated in public for obvious reasons. The formation and reality of the the new North American Union with its own currency, is projected to be completed by 2010. We are coalescing into the one world government while we look the other way. Is Bush right.... is our constitution just a "god damned piece of paper"?

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» No one said Posted by: harris
» RE: No one said Posted by: EagleMB
not so
Posted by: profmarcus on Jun 17, 2006 7:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
deep in their darkest heart of hearts, the bushies may be afraid, but it's not the terrorists they are afraid of... they are afraid of losing the power to control the people and the power to control the vast majority of the world's wealth and resources... the terrorist fear is their creation and their frenzied, fearful response only helps serve their aim - keep the populace so afraid that they (we) will be willing to cede whatever paltry freedom we have left to them, all in the name of keeping us "safe..." what a gigantic crock of rhinoceros dung... our fear is rapidly leading to our enslavement...

And, yes, I DO take it personally

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For Sale: The United States of America
Posted by: kathat on Jun 17, 2006 8:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
From August Review:
The global elite march in three essential columns: Corporate, Political and Academic. In general, the goals for globalism are created by Corporate. Academic then provides studies and white papers that justify Corporate's goals. Political sells Academic's arguments to the public and if necessary, changes laws to accommodate and facilitate Corporate in getting what it wants.

Every bit of thirty-five years of research indicates that there is a relatively small yet diverse group of global players who have been the planners and instigators behind globalization for many decades. The primary driving force that moves this "clique" is greed; the secondary force is the lust for power. In the case of the academics who are key to globalism, a third force is professional recognition and acceptance (a subtle form of egoism and power.)

In modern history, the pinnacle of global drivers has been the Trilateral Commission. Founded in 1973 by David Rockefeller and Zbigniew Brzezinski, this group is credited with being the founder of the New International Economic Order that has given rise to the globalization we see today.
The pernicious influence of the Commission and its dominance of the U.S. Executive branch remains unchallenged to this day. Commission members are not elected nor representative of the general population of the U.S., yet they effectively dominated the Executive Branch of the U.S. government.

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jgdyogiangel@aol.com
Posted by: jgdewey on Jun 17, 2006 9:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have taught illegal immigrants for 20 years in downtown Los Angeles. This recent wave of anti immigrants has left me exasperated at Americans as never before. Using them as slave labor for years, turning our backs to their existence because business needed them, and now hating and fearing them and using them as scapegoats is beyond hypocrisy. There really isn't any word in the English language to contain it. The word illegal isn't sacred. Just ask a tax lawyer, or a good defense lawyer what legal and illegal has become in America. I wish instead that the word moral or immoral would be batted around a little more. A line was drawn in the sand somewhere. This is yours, this is mine. On one side are the have nots on the other the have too much. The irony is the have too much's claim to be Christian and to follow Christ. The have too little's cross the line to get the basic necessities for their families. The Christian have too much's yell foul, loudly over and over. Increasingly our actions and our claim to being morally superior than the rest of the world don't match. We spend our excess money, on supersizing our houses, our cars and our waists. We extoll plastic surgery, shopping as recreation, and celebrate movies that are trash. Enter some rather decent God fearing folks, looking for food and we are all agog. How dare the riff raff spoil our party. It's hard to watch anymore.

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» reality bites Posted by: kathat
» You're the friggin bigot here Posted by: YogiBear
» RE: jgdyogiangel@aol.com Posted by: feller
ordinary migration??
Posted by: kathat on Jun 17, 2006 9:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"But otherwise there is little cause for alarm from immigrants. Economic opportunity, social cohesiveness, and national safety are not threatened by the ordinary labor migration that has enriched the United States for three centuries. "
Ordinary labor migration is not the issue....it has in fact increased to millions each year since a couple of years after NAFTA was implemented. Traditionally migrant laborers went home afterwords. Now they stay and want citizenship.
If this is not threatening to us, then how come we feel threatened? This is not about 'ordinary' labor migration !!!!

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How has AlterNet become a hole in the wall that collects fetid opinion?
Posted by: Sojourner on Jun 17, 2006 9:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So objections to illegal immigration are really a right-wing plot fostered by 9/11?

Funny thing, though, is that the same objections to illegal immigration have existed for as long as the US has existed (and probably even longer, as I’m sure that the laws against illegal immigration were on King George’s books even before the Declaration of Independence).

The minute you have a nation, there are laws against illegal immigration. That is, a nation is defined by its borders. In the absence of secure borders, we have Swiss cheese and not a nation. That antedates 9/11 and to argue that it’s an expression of 9/11 takes AlterNet readers for fools.

Further, enforcing the law is something this writer believes should be done selectively? Enforce the law against those I don’t like; don’t enforce the law against my friends? That’s what I identify as right-wing. And it’s what is sending its followers to jail, at long last.

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Fear
Posted by: electriclady281 on Jun 17, 2006 10:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't think that BushCo fears anything, but they do use fear to manipulate both Americans citizens and other countries. They have recently begun to be aware that Latin America specifically is not willing to play hanky-panky with them; therefore the recent push for strengthening the School of the Americas, a prime destablizer of Latin America, and the denunciation of democratically-elected leaders in the non-American America. I don't think Americans have learned to fear Bushco yet. I think that they will, and I think that it will be too late.

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A Simple Soloution
Posted by: SamFox on Jun 17, 2006 11:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
would be to do as Mexico does. They enforce THEIR laws against illegals. It is a FELONY IN MEXICO (2 years in prison) to be illegal. Naturailzed citizans can't hold office. Take that Arnold! Mexico has military troops on their borders. We are getting tired of bleeding hearts giving this country away. The ports to Dubeye is just one example of the sell out of the USA to new world order s-heads like Carter, both Bushes, Cinton and others. All proud members of the Benidict Iscarriot Club, they should be arrested and tried for treason!

The bottem, often ignored, line is THESE ARE ILLEGAL LAWBREAKERS!! They have NO RIGHTS! NONE, ZERO, NADA!

Even Ceasar Chavaze was against illegal immigration. Too many workers drives down wages he said. No wonder they aren't making as much money! DUUHHH!!!

Check out newswithviews.com. Link on Frosty Wooldrige and Devvy Kidd. (Devvy also has a lot to say about the "Fed' Reserve and how it's hurt US.) You will get a truer pic. than from 'maistream' media. Since when was a sewer pipe the mainstream? Also check out ALIPAC and Numbers USA. There is a lot here you won't get even on Fox News. Wanna hear about the fun you can have from the leprasy, TB, hepititus (brought in by a small but significant % of illegals)...the murders, rapes, hit and runs...MS-13 and other criminal gangs highly populated by ILLEGAL ALIENS?

The USA is being SOLD OUT by new world order shills in the 'White' House and Congress. (White no longer, it's been painted a dingy brown conincidently the same shade as BS!)

Yers fer Original Intent Costitutional Government restored,

SamFox

PS-Check out constitutionparty.org

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SURPRISE! Corporate Sanctions Missing from Solutions!
Posted by: fairleft on Jun 17, 2006 11:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wow, another Alternet article on immigration that mentions lots of 'solutions' but doesn't mention the only one the left opposition to illegal immigration always puts first and foremost: Employer Sanctions! John Tirman, by the way is Executive Director of the MIT Center for International Studies, a corporate/foundation funded thinktank/foundation.

Security is most prominent: many politicians and commentators have posed the Mexican border as a security threat. ... Today it is the threat of terrorism that frames debate.

Security is most prominent in mainstream politics, which is not allowed to recognize what is most prominent in the real world: the bottom half of America angry about loss of jobs and destruction of wages.

The security anxieties mix with the more ordinary opposition to Mexican migrants, a longstanding tendency in American history.

Race-baiting alert! Translation of above: "the people opposed to illegal immigration are racists who hate Mexicans."

... the overall impact of immigration, including unauthorized workers, is a net positive for the U.S. economy

No it isn't, it is a net positive for short-run corporate profits because low wages temporarily = high profits. But with anything resembling a big picture you'll see that destroying middle-class and union-wages jobs is a big net negative for the US economy. Mass immigration, illegal and legal, is part of that negative.

The effect of unauthorized immigrants on wages of American workers, another hot-button issue, is uncertain.

No, it's certain. (by the way, note the use of 'unauthorized' rather than illegal) Illegal immigration has a negative direct impact on US workers without a high school diploma, and on all young US high school grads. See the following: http://www.cis.org/articles/2006/back206.html.

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Factual fool
Posted by: jbwestwood on Jun 17, 2006 6:48 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Facts are often harsh and, as Daniel P Moynihan said, you're entitled to your own opinion but not your own facts. Consider these: A. USA cannot absorb all who wish to come here. B. To control entry we must have effective GATES. C. National sovereignty demands, but we do not know, who among us is citizen who is alien. D. Identification of citizens/aliens requires registration by tamper proof biometric cards or visas. E. Without registration we will not know the social or economic cost of aliens. F. The USA must use sovereignty to prevent its national extinction through unfettered immigration. G. Legislative solutions for this extremely serious problem will require never ending vigilance by middle class voters if they are to avoid reduction of their living standard to slavery status by handmaiden lawmakers.

Globalization must be viewed as an economic not as a social phenomenom/scourge. It has been initiated and preserved by a multinational business quest for cheap labor. Continued population growth, resource depletion, and environmental destruction presage future problems of such magnitude as to be arguably beyond human correction. GET REAL FOR YOUR GRANDCHILDREN'S SAKE!!!

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A myth explodes!
Posted by: jbloggz on Jun 18, 2006 1:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Cheney and his not so merry men often claim that their policies have prevented further attacks on America. What they fail to understand is that the terrorists, so called, have won anyway! They have arranged for a government to instill swingeing new laws against the US population. The human rights and freedoms that Americans hold dear, enough to mention in their anthem, have gone. This climate of of fear has produced the old 'form a wagon circle' mentality which will remain in place for years to come. No! America is not the land of the free, it has become a tawdry inward looking, fearful nation. Worse still it is reviled by the outside world and now it's threats are looking like just that, 'empty talk'! The way innocents have been so casually slaughtered and ill treated, tortured and abused naturally give good cause for immigrants to be concerned. I just wonder why they bother to go to a country where, they're never going to be welcom anyway. The government cannot even rescue it's own citizens in times of crisis, Katrina tells you that. I regret to say there is no knight in shining armor, who'll come and save em. The politicians are so deeply entwined, it would take a full blown revolution to remove them, as voting will simply not do the job. The politicians do not represent their people, only their own greedy self interests. Money as they say is the root of all evil and it's ingrained in US politics. So the terrorists now knowing that 'fortress America' is working so well for them, they can concentrate on knocking the US off it's fine pedestal abroad AND that is succeeding very nicely!

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» Reflect Posted by: feller
Gutless gatekeeping and "praising with faint damns."
Posted by: axolotl_helix on Jun 18, 2006 2:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is the kind of article that really worries me.
It appears on its face to be critical of the Bush administration's policies, but it is arguing within the context of the government-created fantasy world. At best, it would be a valid but unsound argument (one that starts from false premises.) The yellow journalism is showing through his layers of whitewash.

I have read many such articles written by intelligent people who ought to know better by now; so I question their motives.

It's not just that these are 'dumb' articles, or 'poorly written-' and if I called them that, I'd be guilty of the same thing they are. They are sophisticated in their disingenuousness.

They are constantly asking questions like "Are these policies effective...?" and if it is possible for a question to be a lie- that is exactly what is going on here.

"Our government's rabid fear of terrorists?" GMAFB.

They don't fear terrorists; they fund terrorists. 9/11 was an excuse, and "keeping America safe" a flimsy rationalization for putting normal American citizens under control and surveillance, launching wars of aggression to occupy and control strategically valuable land, increasing the size of our war machine and destroying what was left of the Bill of Rights. A means to an end.

The author has swallowed the conservative talking points unexamined and regurgitated this flabby pseudo-critique that completely misses the point.
He is typing from inside the Bush administration's Designated Free Speech Zone, and he isn't even rattling the fence.

Here are the negative words he uses when describing immigration and antiterrorism policies:

"exaggerated"..."costly"..."unnecessary"..."roundly criticized as inadequate, inept, or fraught with corruption"..."difficult" "uncertain"..."now seen as poorly planned and managed"..."ineffective"..."haphazardly punitive"..."unnecessary"..."disproportionate"..."mistakes"

The strongest statement there is "fraught with corruption," but notice how he weasels out of saying that himself, instead conspicuously noting that it is "criticized as..." (Criticized by other people. Not him; not here.) He won't even own up to directly calling the DHS "poorly planned and managed-" and I could call it a lot worse than that.

The War on Terror is a lie. The War on Immigrants is a distraction. And the war in Iraq is a fucking atrocity.

This is just as bad as the people still calling the invasion of Iraq a "mistake."

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United States of America, not Mexico
Posted by: feller on Jun 18, 2006 5:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
couontries have borders. deal with it. they have rules for who can enter and who can't. Deal with it.

we do have immigration laws that allow qualifed persons to enter. deal with it. and we are a primarily anglo-saxon culture, based on english, english common law and english values that has done well because immmigrants have assimilated into anglosaxon culture. it is a cultural identity, not a racial indentity.

we have lingering problems, like the segregation of many afroamericans, particularly young men. let's deal with that first. they are more important than solving mexico and central america's demographic problems.

ship condoms and birth control pills en masse to our southern neighbors. that would soldve much of their problem.

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Terrorism
Posted by: vkobaya on Jun 18, 2006 6:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Truth is it is just a code word for hate the minorities. But in Bush's mind the American people, the common people, everyone except for his wealthy, eletist friends are also minotities to be hated and feared, even those morons who vote for him. He believes it is a terrorist act to vote against him, oppose him, protest him, say, write or publish anything against his 4th Reich of Amerika. In fact, I would say that Bush regards voting in an American election or any election worldwide to be an act of terrorism. Except of course, that he wants the Iraqi and Afghani people to enjoy the fruits of democracy and vote in the elections he rigs in their country.

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» Ah, memories... Posted by: harris
Translation: We need an immigration policy that is good for business and bad for everyone else
Posted by: YogiBear on Jun 18, 2006 1:39 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There was so much bias in this piece I can't even begin to address it all. But taking one paragraph at random:

The fear -- thus far, unfounded -- that al Qaeda will sneak across the "unguarded" 2,000-mile border accounts for the urgency.

Unfounded? Didn't the FBI stop a terrorist plot at the Canadian border in the Clinton years? Just because we haven't caught any coming across the Mexico border yet, doesn't mean that those fears are unfounded. Buy a dictionary.

The security anxieties mix with the more ordinary opposition to Mexican migrants,

You mean illegal immigrants, don't you? Or does it make your case stronger to pretend everyone is upset with all migrants, even though you'd be hard pressed to find one in a hundred who are.

Related to issues of overwhelmed border area hospitals and schools, competition for low-skilled jobs, and the effect on wages, this opposition focuses its ire on the 10-12 million who are "illegals."

Illegal alien is an ICE term. 10-12 million is a conservative estimate. It could be as high as 20 million.

While the overall impact of immigration, including unauthorized workers, is a net positive for the U.S. economy,

i.e. the rich

the localized effects can be difficult for border states,

Or any state that has a large influx of illegals, such as North Carolina.

particularly as government support for social services has declined over time.

And governmental surpluses are eaten up by increasing amounts of poor folks who are screwed over by our offshoring, outsourcing, and inshoring (unpunished illegal labor) policies. Poor folks use far more governmental services, so allowing unchecked migration, legal or illegal is a huge strain on social services and the middle class taxpayers who don't have tax shelters.

The effect of unauthorized immigrants on wages of American workers, another hot-button issue, is uncertain.

Uncertain if you're securely in the pocket of big business interests. Even the most pro-globalization economists admit that there is a a wage-depression effect.

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Same Old Shit!
Posted by: Steven Wanzell on Jun 19, 2006 9:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What equitable policy can we really expect from a society made up mostly of racist xenophobes?

Steven Wanzell
artist/activist/ex-American
www.wanzellarts.com.ar

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» Your Royal "Activist" Posted by: feller
» You know, Posted by: harris
» Come to Posted by: harris
» Troll Posted by: YogiBear
Stop What?
Posted by: mite on Jun 23, 2006 3:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Lets see, we have a war against Drugs for the past 30 years, a war against terror, and a war against the people of the U.S. by the Elite and we all keep enjoying our comforts and addictions to money, wealth, and easy lives.
Before we know it we all will be in slave labor camps working for nothing and we deserve all that is coming our way. If you think our government cares about our lives your a couple of french fry's short of a happy meal. We can't have a government when we have NO Constitution. Yes! No more Constitution it was destroyed in 1947. It has all been a lie people.

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