Comment worth noting: Peter Huston responds

If you are just arriving at RRW and don’t know what this is all about, please read last night’s post first, here.   Mr. Huston whose blog I quoted has sent this very thoughtful and interesting reponse to my post and our ‘comments worth noting’ category is especially appropriate for a comment such as this one that shouldn’t be lost in the bowels of this blog where readers might never see it. 

If I were to have a conversation in person with Mr. Huston it would be a long one because he says so many things that interest me, but I will have a few brief comments at the end.  Here is Mr. Huston:

Ann, 

First let me say that although I disagree with much of what you say, I think it’s good that you say it. As you said recently in your post where you introduced people to my blog, “Let the debate begin.” And the more debate, the more discussion there is, the more likely it is that a complete range of views and a full set of facts is likely to emerge. You write about important issues and you bring to light important problems, problems that I hope will be corrected in part through your efforts.

Secondly, let me say that although I disagree with many of Una Hardester’s opinions, and at times I do think she makes the mistake of presenting her opinions as facts and seeing them as such, I hope we will all agree that the world needs people who are willing to work and work hard to make things better. And, I think we will all agree that Una is such a person, just as you are.

Therefore let me just clarify that I am not an expert on the program or what happened with Artan Serjanej. I believe what I wrote is correct but my real interest in this case is how to prevent domestic violence against refugee women, as well as other domestic violence victims, male, female, foreign and domestic. Should people consider it important to find out what really happened with Mr. Serjanej and this program I expect that he should be easy to contact as he is an attorney and therefore should be licensed with the American Bar Association. I do not plan to do so, but suggest that anyone who actually wishes to judge this situation and evaluate it completely should make an attempt to get both sides of the story. I have never met Mr. Serjanej. I have never attended the program under discussion. I based my comments only the newspaper reports and Una’s responses and not on any particular insider knowledge.

My impression is that it would have been better to try to work with him, as a 43 year old former refugee turned attorney willing to volunteer does sound like a very valuable addition to a refugee center, particularly one with a high turnover rate among volunteers as this one does. But never having met the man, I cannot really say if that is the case or not. 

What I will say is that idealism is a double edged sword. Through idealism you get people like Una who are willing to work, work hard, and work for free to help refugees and make the world a better place. On the other hand, as someone who feels very strongly that the prevalence and form of domestic violence, like any other human activity, can and is shaped in part by culture, a statement that from what I understand Una disagrees with (Una correct me please if I mis-state your views here, as if I have to tell you . . . ), I also think that the very idealism that causes people to work with refugees sometimes gets in the way of them arriving at an accurate assessment of what is needed to help them. Which is why we need a constructive discussion as part of the debate on these issues and I thank you, Ann, for helping to foster one.

As I allude to briefly on my blog, when I was 23, and was an idealistic young peace activist, I went off to Taiwan to see the world and teach English. I found it an eye-openingly unpleasant experience in some ways. For instance, it forced me to realize that my political views were often naive and unrealistic. For instance, I actually remember having a mild argument with a young Costa Rican policeman who was in Taiwan for counter-insurgency warfare training to resist Sandinista incursions on his border. (Costa Rica is an unusual nation in that it has no army and therefore uses the police for this task.) I began by asserting that he could not possibly understand the political situation in Central America, a place I had never and still have not visited but where he lived, as he disagreed with my views which were the ones most intelligent people I knew home in the USA held and, furthermore, asserted that the Sandinistas could not be crossing his border and killing his people and they did not do such things. Make a long story short, he won by claiming to have seen the bodies, and we wound up getting drunk together and watching bootleg porno tapes that he had borrowed from a friend as a Costa Rican leftist woman insisted that these tapes were a sign of the corruption that America brought to the world but she got shouted down to as they were her tapes and she had brought them.

Which probably has nothing to do with anything at all but I hope you will agree makes an interesting story.

On the other hand, this experience also opened my eyes to other things too. For instance at the time, should one wish, in Taiwan you could actually visit an area of Taipei where prostitution was legal and one could see the girls standing outside the brothels put on view for customers. And I choose the word girls consciously as they were often about 14 and, being Asian, looked even younger, and in some cases were. (When the brothel owners purchased a pre-pubescent girl, they would actually forcibly inject her with hormones to speed up the onset of menarche and the development of breasts.) Although this sort of thing is much less common in Taiwan today, and forced underground instead of being done openly, this is also among the actual fates and hazards that women refugees in southeast Asia face today.

And when I think that for each Burmese woman newly arrived in the United States who I’ve laughed, joked with and tutored in English there’s another one somewhere in the world who is in forced sexual slavery somewhere in a dark room in Southeast Asia, it makes me feel ill until I stop that thought and move on to something else.

Ann, I know we agree that the refugee resettlement system in the USA needs a closer examination and discussion, and I know you believe that the less money spent on resettling refugees the better, and I know you and I disagree over the numbers to bring here, but I hope we can focus our energies on how best to focus and guide the energies of young, idealistic volunteers to best give real assistance to the refugees who are here now instead of merely mocking them, a practice that I foolishly started on my blog because I was distracted by concern for someone who is in a bad situation.

Anyway, morals of the story (or stories):

1) I am not an authority on the problem between Serjanej and this program although I described events as I understood them.

2) I was very upset when I wrote that as someone I care about, a refugee, is still enmeshed in a domestic violence situation and I am concerned about her emotional and physical well-being and therefore was low on patience. I feel as though with you and Una Hardester and others focusing much energy on words that I wrote, many of which were poorly chosen and poorly typed, you are forgetting that there is an actual, living, breathing person out there who is in trouble and in a very ugly situation and that she is not alone and that there are many refugees who are in similar situations who are not aware of where to turn for help, and these things are difficult even when the people involved know where to turn for help. I hope you will join me in praying that all turns out well for her.

3) Yes, young idealists sometimes do foolish things but what would the world be like without them? Of course, they need guidance, but their drive and energy is unparalleled.

4) Don’t listen to Costa Rican leftist women when they insult your country for watching the bootleg American porno tapes which they owned, brought to the gathering and then personally placed in the V.C.R.

5) Please remember that although the issue is complex, and we must care for our own needs too, the refugees who come here come here because their previous situation was often worse that most Americans can imagine.

I hope we can assist each other in coming up with positive solutions and proposals for real complex problems. 

Peter Huston

Ann’s response:

I could write a book in response, but because I don’t have all week or even all morning, Mr. Huston’s comment gives me an opportunity to repeat some of my core beliefs on the refugee program.  It would be better if I could relate them to Mr. Huston’s points in his comment but since I am short on time, here they are:

First, culture matters, not everyone in the world wants to come to the US and be like us, many want to come and bring some very bad aspects of their culture here.   The problem is then compounded when many in the refugee industry have adopted this idea of cultural relativism.  A prime example of that in recent times has been the discussion on female genital mutilation.  Believe it or not, there are some supposed women intellectuals in the US who believe that the heinous practice is none of our business.  And beyond even the tolerance issue on our part is the issue that some cultures will simply refuse to accept our values.  Muslims, for the most part, are here to change America.

I bet the decision to shut down Mr. Serjanej’s program came from the top of USCRI because what he is saying doesn’t fit their political agenda—to hell with whether it might save some women from abuse.  And, by the way, this is the sort of thing that has puzzled me from day one—-refugee welfare is not the first concern of the big volags.

I also believe strongly that local American citizens have rights too—they have a right to say that they like the culture they grew up with and want to preserve it without being told they are “racists” or “xenophobes.”  They should be given a say about the direction some federal program is taking their community.

Then there is the question of sheer numbers, we simply cannot absorb the millions who wish to come here without destroying what we have, so those few we do invite should be people eager to take advantage (advantage in the best sense of the word) the many opportunities a free society offers.  Please watch the NumbersUSA link at the top of this page to see what I mean.

The third core point I want to make is that the Refugee Resettlement Program is seriously flawed.   It is not good government policy to hand out millions of tax dollars each year to unaccountable non-profit groups.  We plan at RRW to continue to show examples of the fraud and corruption that I believe is woven throughout the program to the detriment of the refugees and the taxpayer.

And, finally, there is some bigger motive afoot here.  This isn’t just a bunch of do-gooders at the highest levels of government pushing for more immigrants to get into the US because they themselves love America and want to share it with the world.  Those true humanitarians working in the refugee community are being duped and the refugees are the pawns.  This is about doing away with borders and creating a world government—ostensibly a socialist one where ‘brilliant’ elitists will tell all of the rest of us riffraff how to live our lives. And, they, the elitists, are happy to keep us busy talking about who is being a good person to whom.   Ask Una’s big boss at USCRI, she knows what I’m talking about.

Mr. Huston, heartfelt thanks for your comment!

Comment worth noting: Need temporary stop to resettlement

This is a comment from Ralph Parker who apparently works with refugees in the Atlanta area.  This is what he says about the robbery of a Bhutanese refugee girl which I reported yesterday here.

Wanted to update your readers. I have been a volunteer with the family whose daughter was robbed at gunpoint.

Finally the resettlement agency is going to move the 4 families in the unsafe apartment and area they are in. There are 2 other families whose agency has not responded to a request to move their clients to a safer place.

All the Bhutanese families in this complex want to move. There was no excuse for 3 refugee agencies placing people in an apartment complex with almost a one mile walk to public transportation. The facts are that in urban America there are no safe areas, when apartments are concerned for low income folks. Even the place where they are moving has had problems but is better and there will be 30+ Bhutanese families there. We estimate a Bhutanese population of 1200-1500 in Atlanta and we will have the largest Bhutanese population in America. There is still about 50% unemployment and there have been evictions.

I agree the program is seriously flawed and we need to have a temporary stop to resettleemnt. As you can imagine the girl was quite shaken as were all the families. They knew we were having economic issues but assumed they would be safe in America. Given our large population, we haven’t suffered like Jacksonville as there have been only a few incidents but it will get worse.

As I have stated before, the Bhutanese are the most special group I have worked with in my 12 years as a volunteer. They are so humble and spiritual. I encourage your readers to actually meet and work with a family.

I understand concerns about other ethnic groups, but this one is so different as case workers can attest to.

Mr. Parker, some years back (I’m still tracking down the link) the Atlanta paper did an investigation about refugees being placed in apartment buildings that just happened to be owned by resettlement agency bigwigs.   Is there any evidence of this practice still going on as a possible explanation for why agencies are placing refugees in certain buildings?  The only other plausible explanation is that they are cheap and want to use as little of their own funds as possible.

The only plausible reason the resettlement agencies (well, the top ten contractors who hire the local resettlement agencies anyway) to continue to encourage as a big a stream of refugees to the US as they can get is because their funding (from the taxpayer) is linked to how many refugees they resettle—they are paid by the head.   It is all about the quantity they bring in and not about the quality of life for refugees.

For quality of life and how it could be, readers, go here, and see what I said about how refugee resettlement could be done. And, here is the link to the group’s blog, Refugee Resettlment Support.  These folks will bring a smile to your face.

Comment worth noting: What’s up with Lutheran refugee agency in Phoenix?

From time to time, we are hearing directly from refugees themselves and we welcome those exchanges.   Surely I will be accused of “hating Lutherans” again for posting this, but last night we received this comment from someone who appears to be a refugee in Phoenix:

Luthren agancy in phoenix trating poeple with out respact and have not vist them for 3 monthes 

I am assuming our refugee reader is referring to the Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Services affiliate in Phoenix, note here in this list of LIRS affiliates.  LIRS gives the agency’s address in Phoenix and in other places it is listed in Tucson.  The mission statement for Lutheran Social Services (or Ministry) of the Southwest is:

“Showing kindness, doing justice and serving those in need.”

I assume I have the right agency, it’s confusing because they seem to have two names, Lutheran Social Services of the Southwest and Lutheran Social Ministries of the Southwest.  I don’t know why these resettlement agencies (volags) change their names or use other names.   It makes me wonder if they are trying to confuse the public for some reason.

Anyway here is their Federal Form 990 (2007 is the most recent year they have submitted) and Wow! Check this out!    Their net income for that year was $9,231,260 and they received $8,403,189 from government grants—that is you, the taxpayer.  That is a whopping 91% of this “religious” organization’s income coming from taxpayer funds.   And, because they are a non-profit, you have no say over how they manage that money.  There is virtually zero oversight.

By the way, this is how you tell the “religious left” from the “religious right”—a truly conservative Christian organization will take no government funding.

I’m digressing.  So, as I asked at the outset, does anyone know what the heck is going on in Phoenix also the location of the 4 Liberian refugee boys raping their 8 year old neighbor?

Comment worth noting: FAIR is looking for help stopping government health care for illegal aliens

This comment was posted at an old post (here) by reader Toni Hagen and would likely not be seen by most readers so I’m posting it below.  Although we primarily report on legal immigration  reform issues, we also bring you the occasional illegal alien news.  This plea for help is timely since all the talk these days is of health care reform and how much it will cost.  I just went to FAIR’s website and this is on the site but there is more.

Help FAIR [Federation for American Immigration Reform] Stop Congress from giving YOUR Tax Dollars to Illegal Aliens!

Last week, Democratic Leaders in the U.S. House of Representatives unveiled their 1,018 page health care reform bill, entitled the “America’s Affordable Health Choices Act of 2009″ (H.R. 3200). While Congressional Leaders have repeatedly claimed that this Obama-backed health care bill will not cover illegal aliens, FAIR’s analysis has shown that the legislation actually contains several loopholes that would give taxpayer-funded health insurance to illegal aliens and give illegal aliens handouts – in the form of so-called “affordability credits” to pay for health insurance!

While the House Ways & Means Committee was considering this bill last Thursday, July 16, Rep. Dean Heller (R-NV) attempted to close these loopholes. Heller offered an amendment that would have done two important things:

First, the Heller Amendment would have required that any participant in the “public” plan created under the bill must prove they are not an illegal alien by demonstrating eligibility through the Income and Eligibility Verification System (IEVS) and the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) system. This part of the Heller Amendment would have ensured that American taxpayers wouldn’t be forced to foot the bill to enroll illegal aliens in the government-run, taxpayer-subsidized “public” plan created under the health care bill!

Second, the amendment would have required each recipient of the “affordability credit” created under the bill to also have their eligibility verified by the IEVS and SAVE systems. This part of the Heller Amendment would have ensured that illegal aliens who buy private insurance could not receive taxpayer-funded handouts to help offset (or, perhaps, completely pay for) the cost of their insurance premiums.
Incredibly, the House Ways and Means Committee voted on a party-line basis to reject the Heller Amendment! This astonishing vote directly contradicts the will of the American people, 80% of whom oppose covering illegal aliens under this health care bill. (Rasmussen Reports). Many lawmakers apparently don’t seem to care about the views of the people they were elected to serve.

The health care bill is now moving to the House Energy and Commerce Committee for further consideration. That committee twice postponed consideration of the bill this week because moderate Democrats are concerned about some of the provisions – and cost – of the bill. That gives us a chance to get the Energy and Commerce Committee to fix what the Ways & Means Committee would not. This may be our last chance to ensure that the House bill doesn’t provide taxpayer-funded benefits to illegal aliens! We can make a difference before this bill moves to the floor for consideration by the entire U.S. House of Representatives.

Here’s what you can do:
1.) The following is a list of all of the 26 Democrats on the House Ways & Means Committee who voted against the Heller Amendment. If the name of your Representative is on this list, or there is one from your state, be sure to call them! If there are no members from your state, call two or three that are closest to your state geographically and tell them:

You don’t support taxpayer-funded health care benefits for illegal aliens.
You are very upset at how they voted on the Heller Amendment.
You expect Congress to include meaningful verification procedures before people can access taxpayer-funded health care benefits.

A WORD OF WARNING: the offices you call may try to tell you that SECTION 246 of the bill will prevent illegal aliens from getting benefits. DO NOT BELIEVE IT!! That section is meaningless because the bill doesn’t contain any means to enforce that provision. The Heller Amendment would have put the necessary enforcement tools in place to prevent this giveaway to illegal aliens, but the following members opposed putting those tools in place!

Charlie Rangel (D-New York) 202-225-4365
Xavier Becerra (D-California) 202-225-6235
Shelley Berkley (D-Nevada) 202-225-5965
Earl Blumenauer (D-Oregon) 202-225-4811
Joseph Crowley (D-New York) 202-225-3965
Artur Davis (D-Alabama) 202-225-2665
Danny Davis (D-Illinois) 202-225-5006
Lloyd Doggett (D-Texas) 202-225-4865
Bob Etheridge (D-North Carolina) 202-225-4531
Brian Higgins (D-New York) 202-225-3306
Ron Kind (D-Wisconsin) 202-225-5506
John Larson (D-Connecticut) 202-225-2265
Sander Levin (D-Michigan) 202-225-4961
John Lewis (D-Georgia) 202-225-3801
Jim McDermott (D-Washington) 202-225-3106
Kendrick Meek (D-Florida) 202-225-4506
Richard Neal (D-Massachusetts) 202-225-5601
Bill Pascrell (D-New Jersey) 202-225-5751
Earl Pomeroy (D-North Dakota) 202-225-2611
Linda Sanchez (D-California) 202-225-6676
Allyson Schwartz (D-Pennsylvania) 202-225-6111
Pete Stark (D-California) 202-225-5065
John Tanner (D-Tennessee) 202-225-4714
Mike Thompson (D-California) 202-225-3311
Chris Van Hollen (D-Maryland) 202-225-5341
John Yarmuth (D-Kentucky) 202-225-5401

Comment worth noting: we hear from Maruf’s sister

For new readers this may be getting a little complicated, but we have been following the case of the Somali missing youths since it first became public knowledge back in November and this is a very important turn of events in the story.

Yesterday we learned that the 4th Somali to leave Minneapolis and join al-Shabaab, Zakaria Maruf, is reportedly dead in Somalia.   It looks like the second and third young men to die may have been killed by their Jihadi handlers possibly to keep them quiet, and I will report as soon as I see news about how Maruf may have died.

Who are the recruiters in the US and who paid the boys’ airfares back to Africa?  That is the crucial question, the question the FBI is trying to answer.  Family and friends of the dead men are pointing a finger at the local mosque and are accusing CAIR (Council on American Islamic Relations) of trying to sidetrack the investigation.  See my post here on how the families need help!

On Sunday, the New York Times feature story fingered Zakaria Maruf as the “recruiter.”  I suggested here that it sounded like he was being made the “fall guy.”   Well, if it is true that he is now dead, possibly killed by Al-Shabaab, I guess that would throw the NYT theory out the window.  Here MPR yesterday also suggests he was recruiting.   He might have been a talker and a bragger but he sure doesn’t sound like the mastermind.  So who told the NYT reporter that he was the “recruiter?”

Last night we had a comment from Maruf’s sister, Nabila Maruf, who confirms that her brother had no money and no real knowledge of Somalia before leaving for Africa.  She appears to be saying there is no way he was any sort of key figure in this, so again, who told the NYT that he was?

My brother did’t know anything about back home. When we left home, he was very little at the time. so what would he be fighting for? He knew the struggle and what my family went through when we came from somalia. and he never told anyone one, “Let’s go fight in the war.” he didn’t even have enough money to buy a ticket to go back because he couldn’t keep a job. so whoever told him thoughs things probably gave him the money to go back. because my family didn’t even know that he was gping back home.

Come on mainstream reporters:  Dig!   Go around CAIR!  Go around the Imams!  This is a huge story, go to the families.

To reporters:    In case you missed it , most of the mainstream media did, it is an American (a white man) in Somalia, a leader of Al-Shabaab, who recently mocked Obama’s speech to the Muslim world, here, and promised more violence in the name of Allah.   He would definitely know how to appeal to Americans to join the international Jihad.