May 1, 2010

An Iraqi Eterna: A Thoughtful Gift From Saddam Hussein To His Commanding Officers

 

If there is one thing we can say about Saddam Hussein, it's BOY DID HE LOVE WATCHES! Clearly there are many other things we could say about the deceased and disgraced former leader of Iraq, but we'll leave that to other venues. 

Saddam, like many other middle-eastern monarchs are varying legitimacy, had a taste for the finer things in life.  Hell, his daily wearer was a solid gold Rolex President completely covered in diamonds.

Knowing this, it should come as no surprise that Saddam had a few other manufacturers in on the production of everlasting horological tributes to not his country or to his people, but what any good and righteous leader would want, tributes to his own face.

Today we have found a very rare, very interesting, and very ugly Eterna that was produced for Saddam to give to his commanding officers.  This custom-made Eterna is all original, and the picture of Saddam on the dial is not after-market, Eterna themselves produced it in their factory.  The watch features a quartz movement (chosen for accuracy, we're sure).

This is a rare and interesting watch if we've evern seen one, and while it may not be our cup of tea, for curiosa collectors, this is a grail find.  Click here for the details of this

GT40 builder switches focus to classic Honda motorcycle

via Autoblog by Jeremy Korzeniewski on 5/1/10

Filed under: , , ,

Honda CB450

There are quite a few automotive enthusiasts who also have a passion for motorcycles, a fact evidenced by the Honda CB450 you see above. This machine was built by Johann Keyser, who is also the man responsible for those sweet Gulf Oil-themed GT40 replicas that have graced our pages in the past.

As you can see, Keyser was going for a retro Norton Manx look with his Honda cafe custom, and by all accounts he appears to have succeeded with flying colors. The most obvious visual cues are the tank and seat, which were sourced from Omar's Dirt Track Racing, as were the aluminum rims and stainless spokes. Note too the two-into-one exhaust on the right side.

Dropped handlebars and a classic silver paint job complete the look. Perhaps the most impressive feat, though, is that Keyser decided to tackle the project in the first place. "The bike was standing outside for 20-plus years, and even the wheels were rusted solid," says Keyser. "There was green moss growing on the bike, and the once silver motor was completely green." Looks pretty dang nice, considering.

[Source: Bike EXIF]

GT40 builder switches focus to classic Honda motorcycle originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 01 May 2010 18:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hundreds seek to fill vacant positions at Pro's Ranch Market

PHOENIX -- Job hunters turned out in the hundreds to fill recently-vacant positions at Pro's Ranch Market stores, where a federal audit led to the firing of some 300 workers.

Roxanne Nieves, one of the many that came out in search of a job, said she came to apply after she heard about the layoffs.

"We heard they are firing a lot of illegal people, so we're here to apply," she said.

Nonetheless, she and many others felt guilty about taking the jobs of the people who had just been fired.

"To me, it's pretty hard to see everybody losing jobs," one job hunter said. 

About 300 of the 1,500 total employees at the six Phoenix supermarkets were let go this week after an Immigration and Customs Enforcement audit found them to be working illegally.

Attorney Julie Pace said the company has I-9 forms on everyone and uses E-Verify to check employees' eligibility to work, but that is not always enough.

"The company wouldn't know if someone is using counterfeit documents," Pace said.

Pace also called on the federal government to help companies comply with hiring laws.

"We need an easy program for employers to use to hire people -- safe, easy, quick -- so we don't have to deal with ICE audits," she said.

Pro's Ranch Market is among some 1,600 U.S. businesses, including 84 in Arizona, that have undergone ICE audits since July 2009. 

ICE says the goal is to reduce demand for illegal employment and protect job opportunities for the nation's lawful workforce.

Rising Tory star Philippa Stroud ran prayer sessions to 'cure' gay people

 

Conservative high-flyer Philippa Stroud founded a church that tried to 'cure' homosexuals by driving out their 'demons

Philippa Stroud

Philippa Stroud, the Conservative parliamentary candidate for Sutton and Cheam, has founded US-style evangelical churches in Bedford and in Birmingham. Photograph: Graeme Robertson

A high-flying prospective Conservative MP, credited with shaping many of the party's social policies, founded a church that tried to "cure" homosexuals by driving out their "demons" through prayer.

Philippa Stroud, who is likely to win the Sutton and Cheam seat on Thursday and is head of the Centre for Social Justice, the thinktank set up by the former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith, has heavily influenced David Cameron's beliefs on subjects such as the family. A popular and energetic Tory, she is seen as one of the party's rising stars.

The CSJ reportedly claims to have formulated as many as 70 of the party's policies. Stroud has spoken of how her Christian faith has motivated her to help the poor and of her time spent working with the destitute in Hong Kong. On her return to Britain, in 1989, she founded a church and night shelter in Bedford, the King's Arms Project, that helped drug addicts and alcoholics. It also counselled gay, lesbian and transsexual people.

Abi, a teenage girl with transsexual issues, was sent to the church by her parents, who were evangelical Christians. "Convinced I was demonically possessed, my parents made the decision to move to Bedford, because of this woman [Stroud] who had come back from Hong Kong and had the power to set me free," Abi told the Observer.

"She wanted me to know all my thinking was wrong, I was wrong and the so-called demons inside me were wrong. The session ended with her and others praying over me, calling out the demons. She really believed things like homosexuality, transsexualism and addiction could be fixed just by prayer, all in the name of Jesus."

"T" said he moved to Bedford because he believed the church could help him stop having homosexual thoughts. "I was trying to convince myself that a change was possible but, at the same time, a part of me didn't believe it was possible," he said. "The church's approach was not that it was sinful to be homosexual but that it was sinful to act on it. The aim is to get a person to a position where they don't have these sinful emotions and thoughts."

"T" said it was only after he "took a break" from the church that his depression lifted. "It was the church's attitude towards my sexuality that was the issue," he recalled.

"My impression is that she genuinely cares about people," he said of Stroud. "Her personal beliefs may get in the way sometimes, but she is a positive person."

Stroud and her husband, David, a minister in the New Frontiers church, allied to the US evangelical movement, left the project in the late 1990s to establish another church in Birmingham. Angela Paterson, who was an administrator at the Bedford church, said: "With hindsight, the thing that freaks me out was everybody praying that a demon would be cast out of me because I was gay. Anything – drugs, alcohol or homosexuality, they thought you had a demon in you."

Kacey Jones, a hostel resident, said she was told to end her lesbian relationship or leave the church. "Philippa was still around when I first moved in," Jones said. "There was a 'discipleship house' for Christians struggling with issues, including their sexuality. They told me my feelings weren't normal. I didn't want to be gay, I wanted to be like everybody else, get married, have kids and please my parents."

Stroud wrote a book, God's Heart for the Poor, in which she explains how to deal with people showing signs of "demonic activity". Stroud, who declined to talk to the Observer, writes: "I'd say the bottom line is to remember your spiritual authority as a child of God. He is so much more powerful than anything else!"

In the book she discusses the daily struggle of running the hostel. "One girl lived in the hostel for some time, became a Christian, then choked to death on her own vomit after a drinking bout. Her life had changed to some extent, but we wondered whether God knew that she hadn't the will to stick with it and was calling her home."

One resident featured in the book, Mary, was in an abusive relationship. "We discovered further layers of the tangle when she admitted to previous lesbian relationships and to being on the receiving end of abuse from her family," Stroud writes, adding: "No wonder she was in such a mess!"

The Conservatives have tried to win over gay voters after a string of controversial comments by party members. The shadow home secretary, Chris Grayling, said owners of B&B accommodation should have the right to turn away gay couples. Julian Lewis, the shadow defence minister, said he was against lowering the age of consent from 18 to 16 for homosexuals.

Revelations about Stroud's past are likely to make the party's task even more difficult. "This reinforces our long-held suspicions that those out of sight, but with their hands on the levers of power, have deeply reactionary ambitions," said Keith Porteous Wood, executive director of the National Secular Society.

Ben Summerskill, chief executive of the Stonewall group, said: "If Mrs Stroud has been praying to rid Britain of its homosexuality, she clearly hasn't been praying hard enough. It would be highly regrettable if someone who continued to hold these views held any significant office in government."

Thai cabinet set for emergency meeting on crisis

 

(AFP) – 16 hours ago

BANGKOK — Thailand's cabinet was set for an emergency meeting Sunday on a long-running standoff with anti-government "Red Shirts" in Bangkok after a warning it could deteriorate into an "undeclared civil war."

Deputy premier Suthep Thaugsuban, in charge of national security, told reporters Saturday the meeting would be held at a Bangkok military base as ministers mull how to end protest rallies that began in mid-March.

Thailand is reeling from its worst political violence in almost two decades in the capital, where 27 people have died and nearly 1,000 have been injured in a series of clashes, but the government has rejected suggestions of outside mediation.

Amid simmering tensions top think-tank the International Crisis Group (ICG) said Thailand must consider mediation help from other countries to avoid a slide into further violence.

"The Thai political system has broken down and seems incapable of pulling the country back from the brink of widespread conflict," the ICG report, which was released late Friday, said.

"The stand-off in the streets of Bangkok between the government and Red Shirt protesters is worsening and could deteriorate into an undeclared civil war," it added.

The Department of Special Investigation said it seized bullets, grenade parts and official government security documents Saturday in a raid on the Bangkok apartment of one Red leader, Suporn Attawong.

However, Jatuporn Prompan, another core Red leader, used an evening news conference to accuse authorities of planting the material.

The demonstrations are the latest chapter in years of turmoil pitting the ruling elite against the Reds, who say the government came to power illegitimately in 2008.

Many of the Reds come from Thailand's rural poor and urban working classes and support former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted in a 2006 coup and now lives overseas to avoid a jail term for corruption.

Protest leaders on Saturday slammed management at a Bangkok hospital, saying its chaotic evacuation of patients after it was stormed by Red Shirts was a ploy to make the protesters look bad.

The Reds have faced heavy criticism after about 100 supporters raided Chulalongkorn hospital Thursday evening under the mistaken belief it sheltered security forces preparing a crackdown.

The Reds, who have occupied sections of Bangkok for over a month in their bid to force snap elections, claim the hospital was used in an April 22 grenade attack on a pro-government rally that killed one person and wounded dozens.

The government said the grenades were fired from inside the Reds' camp -- an accusation the movement has denied.

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva vowed to prosecute those who were involved in the hospital incident.

New York-based Human Rights Watch issued a statement on Saturday calling for all sides to "negotiate a political solution before the situation escalates."

"Thailand is spiralling further into political violence as protesters, counter-protesters, and security forces respond tit for tat against attacks and provocations," said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch.

About 70 bomb and grenade attacks have been carried out by unknown parties in Bangkok since the Reds began the street protests in mid-March, according to the rights group.

UN warns Congo to end ‘rule by rape’

 

James Reinl, United Nations Correspondent

  • Last Updated: May 01. 2010 8:42PM UAE / May 1. 2010 4:42PM GMT

Some of Congo’s women have had to undergo surgery after being violated, as well as psychological treatment.Roberto Schmidt / AFP

NEW YORK // Responding to brutal rape sprees during political turmoil in Guinea, Kenya and the Democratic Republic of Congo, members of the UN Security Council edged towards tougher policies on tackling sexual violence during wars and instability, last week.

Margot Wallström, the UN’s recently appointed envoy on sexual violence in conflict, urged council members to tackle a scourge that has seen countless women violated during eras of instability and violence “from the Trojan War to the nuclear age”.


But human rights groups accuse the 15-nation body of dawdling on the issue for the past decade and warned that its failure to grasp the issue was leaving women in turbulent areas at ongoing risk of rape and other forms of sex attack.

They point to the scores of women who suffered rape, mutilation and sex slavery during an opposition protest in September last year. The atrocities occurred in a stadium in the Guinean capital, Conakry, at the hands of forces loyal to the military junta leader, Captain Moussa Dadis Camara. Women and girls were carried away to barracks and officers’ homes to serve as sex slaves for several days, according to UN reports. Others were raped at the scene. Some suffered hideous assaults with rifles.


Incidents of rape shot up during the post-election violence in Kenya at the end of 2007. Kathleen Cravero, from the UN Development Programme, declared at the time that “battles are fought on women’s bodies as much as on battlefields”.

Ms Wallström, fresh from visiting Congo last month, described the turbulent African nation as “the rape capital of the world”, with about 8,000 women raped by soldiers or militia members in the country’s east last year.


“While the Congo’s mothers, daughters and sisters walk in shame, their rapists walk free. Victims are doubly victimised by this injustice,” Ms Wallström told council members last Tuesday. 

“Yet Congo has a robust legal framework and a zero tolerance declaration … the laws must be implemented and the strategy made operational,” she said.

The statistics are shocking: about 14 women are sexually assaulted in the Congo daily – with 1,244 violated during the first three months of this year, according to the UN. Over the past 14 years, through some of the country’s most violent recent history, at least 200,000 cases of sexual violence have been recorded.


Attempts to combat widespread acts of rape during wartime have gathered momentum over recent years, with sexual violence during the Rwandan genocide of 1994 and the Bosnian War in the early 1990s catalysing efforts to prosecute those behind the atrocities.

According to Ms Wallström, rape is not simply committed randomly by soldiers in “the fog of war”, but is often a deliberate and orchestrated policy during conflict “aimed to destroy not only people, but their sense of being a people”.


“Rule by rape is used by political and military leaders to achieve political, military and economic ends,” said Ms Wallström, a former Swedish MP. “Such crimes present a security crisis that demands a security response.”

Seeking to “plug gaps” in international efforts against war-time rape, Ms Wallström called for more data on such crimes and the creation of a “list of shame” of armies and militias that used forced sex during military offensives.


Peacekeeping patrols to protect women collecting firewood in Sudan’s western province of Darfur, and a similar scheme to escort their Congolese counterparts safely to marketplaces, have reduced incidents of rape, said Ms Wallström, but such “ad hoc methods … must be replaced by systematisation”.

The Security Council needs to build the protection of women into the rules it lays out for peacekeeping operations, she said, while outlining plans to create an early-warning system that will predict when conflicts are likely to lead to widespread sexual violence.


The UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon’s latest report on women and peace and security suggested a set of 26 indicators for Security Council members to use as a basis for preventing and protecting women from rape and other sex attacks during conflict.

But council members agreed that the proposals need “technical and conceptual development before they could become operational” and postponed a decision until October, said Yukio Takasu, Japan’s UN envoy who held the body’s rotating presidency for April.


Marianne Mollmann, the women’s rights advocate at the New York-based pressure group, Human Rights Watch, criticised council members for the delay, saying there was “no excuse for waiting another minute to take steps we know are needed”.

“Women in conflict-ridden countries deserve more than a commitment to collecting data when the Security Council looks at what it has done in the past 10 years to address their plight,” she said. “We expect UN member states to follow through to empower women as peacemakers and to stop rape in war.”

26 year-old having a child with his 72 year-old grandmother

via Guyism by Chris Spags on 4/29/10

Have you ever dreamed of committing incest AND are you a big fan of “Tales from the Crypt”? Well then, you have much in common with this 26 year-old named Andrew Bailey who’s having a surrogate child with his new girlfriend, his 72 year-old grandmother. Yeah.

Bailey tells Yahoo’s New Zealand bureau that he’s “always been attracted to older women and I think [grandmother Pearl Carter] is gorgeous. Now I’m going to be a dad and I can’t wait.”

The story of how the two met is undeniably bizarre. Carter was an 18 year-old who gave up Bailey’s mother, Lynette, for adoption in Indiana.

After Bailey’s mother died of brain cancer, he set out to find his biological grandmother, hoping to find family. Once he tracked down Carter’s address, he wrote her a letter. Then they talked over the phone. Then he emailed her a photo and they arranged to meet in person.

In 2006, they met for the first time. According to Yahoo, here’s what happened during their first meeting:

‘From the first moment that I saw him, I knew we would never have a grandmother-grandson relationship,’ Pearl remembers happily. ‘For the first time in years I felt sexually alive.’

I called Phil into my bedroom, sat him on the bed, and then I leant over and kissed him,’ Pearl says.

‘I expected rejection but instead he kissed me back.’

‘Making love to Pearl was a real eye-opener. It was love combined with all this sexual tension that had been building up,’ Phil openly explains.

In related news, I no longer have the desire to finish these raisins I was eating.

Carter used her retirement money to find a $54,000 surrogate who could give birth to the pair’s first child (See her thoughts on the situation here). Because if Carter somehow got pregnant, that’d probably just make things weird.

Best of luck to the happy couple. May there be many an awkward Mother’s Day for the loving family in the future.

‘I’m in love with my grandson and we’re having a baby’ [Yahoo Xtra]

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The top 29 Cities for Men…so weird that Tucson didn’t make the cut.

MNT-29-CITIES-V1

Dovie Lee Kerner, 47, Had Sex with Horse, Pig and Dog... and Gave Dog STD

 

​Ladies and gentlemen, we are about to blow up your freak meter: Meet Dovie Lee Kerner, a 47-year-old damsel from Plumville, Pennsylvania with sexual energy to burn. She apparently likes to romp so much she'll take on all comers...

Jack-Russell-terrier.jpg

A white trash feat not accomplished since the invention of incest: Dovie's also accused of giving her ex-boyfriend's Jack Russell terrier a sexually transmitted disease

​Even four-legged creatures she might serve for dinner that night. Like various barnyard animals.
Police first learned of her sensual proclivities when they received a confidential call from her ex-boyfriend. He wanted to know if it was illegal in the great state of Pennsylvania to do the nasty with animals. When told yes, he mentioned that he had a video of Dovie Lee getting barenaked with a horse.
Now the boyfriend is probably not Mr. Well-Adjusted either. First off, he's the guy walking around with a cell phone video of his woman having sex with a horse. Secondly, he also told police that Dovie Lee had given him -- and his dog -- a sexually transmitted disease. She's also accused of having sex with a pig.
Consider it a Gooberific feat not witnessed since the invention of incest.
Dovie's now charged with possession of obscene and sexual materials, disorderly conduct, and sexual intercourse with an animal.
Alas, we know you're dying to see her picture, but we couldn't find one. We'll update when we do.

See our last episode involving bestiality:
Gary Riley Charged with Raping His Neighbor's Dog.

Congressional Hopeful Pat Bertroche Thinks Illegal Immigrants Should Be Micro-Chipped

from Guanabee by Fidel Martinez

pat_bertrochePat Bertroche, a candidate in the Republican primary ticket for Iowa’s 3rd Congressional District, thinks that the U.S. government should implant micro-chips into illegal immigrants before deporting them.

Bertroche, a physician, made his comments at a Tama County Republican forum this Monday, where he spoke alongside six other candidates. His exacts words were:

I think we should catch ’em, we should document ’em, make sure we know where they are and where they are going. I actually support micro-chipping them. I can micro-chip my dog so I can find it. Why can’t I micro-chip an illegal? That’s not a popular thing to say, but it’s a lot cheaper than building a fence they can tunnel under.

We’d be careful there, Dr. Bertroche. Someone might make the assumption that you’re comparing illegal immigrants to animals. Also, we’re no law experts, but we’re pretty sure that putting a tracking device inside someone against their will is a violation of human rights.

3rd District GOP hopefuls take tough stances on immigration [Cedar Rapids Gazette]

What’s the Best Booze for Cocktail X?

via Drinkhacker.com by Christopher Null on 4/26/10

So you want to drink a martini. Congrats on making up your mind.

Now comes the hard part: Which gin do you use? Or what do you put in your Manhattan? Or your Mojito?

The answers, according to a contest, now in its first year, called the Ultimate Cocktail Challenge, are Tanqueray, Rittenhouse Rye, and Don Q Cristal, in that order.

Rather than simply reviewing spirits on their own, this cocktail competition evaluated spirits in popular recipes — dozens of them, in fact — to see which paired best with the other ingredients. The results: A unique and interesting way to look at spirits.

The results are of course just as subjective as any other booze review (and some of these spirits I don’t really recommend at all), but they’re certainly worth a look at least to get you thinking. Here’s the complete winners’ list. Get more information and a complete breakdown of scores here.

BEST GIN in a…

  • Aviation – TANQUERAY NO. 10
  • Dry Martini – TANQUERAY LONDON DRY
  • Gin & Tonic PLYMOUTH
  • Negroni – TANQUERAY LONDON DRY
  • Tom Collins TANQUERAY LONDON DRY

BEST VODKA in a…

  • Bloody Mary – VERMONT WHITE
  • Cosmopolitan – CHOPIN
  • Vodka Martini – ORZEL
  • Vodka & Tonic – TITO’S HANDMADE

BEST TEQUILA in a…

  • Margarita w/Cointreau – MILAGRO REPOSADO
  • Paloma – TRES AGAVES REPOSADO
  • Tequila Sunrise – TRES AGAVES BLANCO

BEST RUM in a…

  • Daiquiri – BANKS 5 ISLAND
  • Mai Tai – PLANTATION GRANDE RESERVE
  • Mojito – DON Q CRISTAL

BEST COGNAC/BRANDY in a…

  • Brandy Alexander – MARTELL CORDON BLEU
  • Brandy Julep – MARTELL CORDON BLEU
  • Sidecar – REMY MARTIN VSOP
  • Stinger – REMY MARTIN VS

BEST SCOTCH WHISKY in a…

  • Blood & Sand – HIGHLAND PARK 12
  • Rob Roy – MACALLAN FINE OAK 10
  • Rusty Nail – MACALLAN FINE OAK 10
  • Scotch Sour – HIGHLAND PARK 12

BEST NORTH AMERICAN WHISKEY in a…

  • Manhattan – RITTENHOUSE BOTTLED-IN-BOND RYE
  • Mint Julep – RITTENHOUSE BOTTLED-IN-BOND RYE
  • Old-Fashioned – WOODFORD RESERVE DISTILLER’S SELECT BOURBON
  • Sazerac – RITTENHOUSE BOTTLED-IN-BOND RYE
  • Whiskey Sour – WOODFORD RESERVE DISTILLER’S SELECT BOURBON

BEST ORANGE LIQUEUR in a…

  • Cosmopolitan – COINTREAU
  • Margarita – COINTREAU
  • Sidecar – PATRON CITRONGE

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Turned the music venue into a ppv venue for the Mayweather fight.

Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

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16 Awesomely Nerdy Hoodies

via FashionablyGeek by Jonathan Fallon on 4/30/10


Hoodies are more than just windbreakers. They are also becoming more and more like costumes to promote nerdy interests like video games, comics and Sci-Fi films. Check out these 16 examples from the hoodie portfolio.

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You're not getting into my pants..unless you love Jesus.

Fart-Absorbing Blanket - Who needs this product????

via Neatorama by John Farrier on 5/1/10


(YouTube Link)

It’s called the “Better Marriage Blanket” and is supposed to absorb noxious bodily odors. The advertisement claims that the carbon fabric lining of this blanket keeps flatulence beneath the covers. It also suggests that the blanket would make a great wedding or anniversary gift.

Link via Geekologie

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A Chinese man has died after an eel that was inserted in his rectum gnawed away at his intestine.

swampeels

The 59 year-old chef–whose name has not been disclosed– was taken to a Sischuan hospital with severe anal bleeding, abdominal pain. Local doctors, unable to figure out what was causing the symptoms obtained permission from the family to conduct a laparotomy– a surgical incision into the abdominal wall done to examine the abdominal organs.

Once inside, the doctors found a 50cm long, dead Asian swamp eel stuck in the man’s rectal region. The slithery fish had bit it’s way through the intestine. The man was then taken to the intensive care unit, but died ten days later from internal bleeding and sepsis.

But how did the eel end up in the man’s anus? According to reports, the chef had consumed copious amounts of eel the day before, but doctors couldn’t figure out how a live eel ended up in his rectum. Eventually, his friends confessed to have inserted the live eel up his anus as a joke after the man passed out from drinking heavily. Man, with friends like those…

Saturday Night Special: Venus De Swampo


Because there’s nothing as fertile as the swamp.

(submitted by X)

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Anger over Ariz. immigration law drives US rallies

APTOPIX_Immigration_Protests.sff_CAJR108_20100501151107 CHICAGO (AP) - Angered by a controversial Arizona immigration law, tens of thousands of protesters - including 50,000 alone in Los Angeles - rallied in cities nationwide demanding President Barack Obama tackle immigration reform immediately.

"I want to thank the governor of Arizona because she's awakened a sleeping giant," said labor organizer John Delgado, who attended a rally in New York where authorities estimated 6,500 gathered.

From Los Angeles to Washington D.C., activists, families, students and even politicians marched, practiced civil disobedience and "came out" about their citizenship status in the name of rights for immigrants, including the estimated 12 million living illegally in the U.S.

Police said 50,000 rallied in Los Angeles where singer Gloria Estefan kicked off a massive downtown march. Estefan spoke in Spanish and English, proclaiming the United States is a nation of immigrants.

(AP) People gather during a march for federal immigration reform and against Arizona's controversial...
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"We're good people," the Cuban-born singer said atop a flatbed truck. "We've given a lot to this country. This country has given a lot to us."

Public outcry, particularly among immigrant rights activists, has been building since last week when Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer signed the legislation last week. The law requires local and state law enforcement to question people about their immigration status if there's reason to suspect they're in the country illegally. It also makes it a state crime to be in the United States illegally.

The law's supporters say it's necessary because of the federal government's failure to secure the border, but critics contend it encourages racial profiling and is unconstitutional.

"It's racist," said Donna Sanchez, a 22-year-old U.S. citizen living in Chicago whose parents illegally crossed the Mexican border. "I have papers, but I want to help those who don't."

Organizers estimated about 20,000 gathered at a park on Chicago's West Side and marched, but police said about 8,000 turned out.

(AP) People march past the Brooklyn Bridge, seen in the background, during an immigration rally in New...
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The event resembled something between a family festival - food vendors strolled through with pushcarts - and a political demonstration with protesters chanting "Si se puede," Spanish for "Yes we can." A group of undocumented students stood on a stage at the Chicago park and "came out" regarding their immigration status.

Juan Baca was among those students. Baca, 19, whose parents brought him from Mexico illegally when he was 4 months old, said he has had to drop out of college and work several times already because he can't qualify for financial aid.

"It's been a struggle," he said. "I missed the mark by four months."

Obama once promised to tackle immigration reform in his first 100 days, but has pushed back that timetable several times. He said this week that Congress may lack the "appetite" to take on immigration after going through a tough legislative year. However, Obama and Congress could address related issues, like boosting personnel and resources for border security, in spending bills this year.

At the White House, U.S. Rep. Luis Gutierrez, an Illinois Democrat, was among 35 people arrested in a demonstration of civil disobedience against the Arizona law.

(AP) Manuel Vazquez, 20, of Raleigh, North Carolina, front, attends a May Day immigration reform rally...
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In Dallas, police estimated at least 20,000 attended a Saturday rally. About a dozen people there carried signs depicting the Arizona governor as a Nazi and Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio, known for his tough illegal immigration stance, as a Klansman. Organizers were asking sign holders to discard those placards.

Juan Hernandez, the Hispanic outreach coordinator for Arizona Sen. John McCain's unsuccessful presidential run, attended the Dallas rally. He said Arizona was once considered by those south of the border to be a model state with particularly close ties to Mexico.

"It went beyond what most states do," he said. "Now they are a state that goes beyond what the Constitution says you should do."

Juan Haro, 80, was born and raised in Denver, where about 3,000 people rallied. He said he thinks Arizona's new law targets Mexicans.

"This country doesn't seem to be anti-immigrant," said Haro, whose family is originally from Mexico. "It seems to be anti-Mexican."

(AP) Wearing a shirt saying "Fix the Immigration System 4 Me," Francisco Pavon, 2, is held by his...
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In downtown Miami, several hundred flag-waving demonstrators - many with Cuban and Honduran flags, but mostly American ones - called for reforms.

Elsewhere, an estimated 7,000 protesters rallied in Houston, about 5,000 gathered at the Georgia state Capitol in Atlanta and at least 5,000 marched in Milwaukee. About 3,000 attended a Boston-area march.

And in Ann Arbor, Mich., more than 500 people held a mock graduation ceremony for undocumented immigrant students near the site of Obama's University of Michigan commencement speech.

In Arizona, police in Tucson said an immigration rights rally there drew at least 5,000 people. Several thousand people gathered in Phoenix for a demonstration Saturday evening.

A smattering of counterprotesters showed up at rallies. In Tucson, a few dozen people showed up in support of the new law and Brewer. A barricade separated about two dozen counterprotesters from a pro-immigrant rights rally in San Francisco.

The counterprotesters there carried signs that read, "We Support Arizona" and "We Need More Ice At This Fiesta," an apparent reference to the federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency.

May 1 - International Workers Day - is a traditional date for political demonstrations. Immigration advocates latched onto that tradition in 2006, when more than 1 million people across the country - half a million alone in Chicago - protested federal legislation that would have made being an illegal immigrant a felony. That legislation ultimately failed.

Who knew? Jesus is rides along in a Mexican Dodge.

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