Gov eyes in-state tuition for illegals
Liberal tyrant ignores the will of the people and the legislature, in favor of his own desire to reward crim-aliens.
Governor Deval Patrick made good on a campaign promise Thursday when he announced he is looking into whether he can avoid the Legislature by unilaterally allowing illegal immigrants to pay in-state tuition at state colleges and universities.
Patrick's announcement touched off strong reaction on Beacon Hill, where House lawmakers two years ago defied House Speaker Salvatore DiMasi and defeated a bill that would have put all Massachusetts students on an even plain.
"We have some legal research done to see whether it is possible to address that question without legislation," said Patrick Thursday. "The answer to that is by no means clear."
Under the current system, undocumented high school graduates are not eligible for an in-state discount on tuition at the public institutions, even though many students have better grades and test scores than their American classmates.
Entire Article
ICE committee recommends challenge and attorney to handle it
Not in my back yard (unless they are mowing the lawn). Town officials work to pull lease on ICE.
Burlington-After three hours of presentations by two attorneys, and an hour of debate and discussion, an advisory subcommittee of Town Meeting has voted unanimously to recommend a challenge to the building inspector’s interpretation of the zoning bylaw that led to lease of office space by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency. The Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency (ICE), part of Homeland Security, has a 10-year lease on a 40,000-square-foot building in New England Executive Park. The building is to be the New England headquarters for ICE and will house about 120 employees, who are charged with finding and deporting illegal aliens. At issue is the process of bringing illegals to the building, holding them in secure rooms for one to two hours, processing them for deportation, and moving them on to county and municipal jails. Several members of the Board of Selectmen and some Town Meeting members have argued that such activity is a violation of the zoning bylaw governing the uses that may take place in the building, which is in an area zoned for office use.
Entire Article
Footage flap irks immigration critic
Framingham town employee censors footage critical of town.
FRAMINGHAM - A local opponent of illegal immigration said his civil rights were violated after his public access television show was pulled off the air by the town's cable station last week."This is an abuse of power," said Jim Rizoli, who leads a local anti-illegal immigration group and hosts a weekly TV show that targets illegal immigrants. He said his show was cut short last Thursday and replaced mid-broadcast with another program because it included 20 minutes of footage shot by the town's government cable channel. He said the town's director of media services, Ron Rego, told Rizoli that footage was the town's copyrighted material and could not be used for his own show. Rizoli said Rego doesn't control the copyright on town video footage, and questioned how Rego could block its broadcast. "Does Ron Rego own that material for the town? That's the crux of the question," said Rizoli. But Stephen Innis, the station's executive director, said Rizoli's use of town footage, with new graphics and commentary added by Rizoli, could confuse viewers that they were watching the government cable channel instead of the public access channel. "Basically, the deception of the viewer, that's what we're looking at right now," said Innis, who noted the station never received a complaint about the Rizoli show using copyrighted content. The footage, shot by the town's government channel, was from a June meeting of town officials and the local Brazilian community. Rizoli said he used the footage for about six months, and added new graphics and commentary to the segment. Rizoli said he has removed the footage from future broadcasts. Rego, when reached by phone, would not comment on the matter.
Entire Article
Worthington jurors confirm quarrel
Attorney plays the "race card" in last ditch effort to free convicted black rapist/murderer.
BARNSTABLE - By the end of an extraordinary two-day hearing yesterday, almost all of the members of the jury that convicted a trash hauler in a notorious slaying on Cape Cod had confirmed that two jurors angrily confronted each other during deliberations after one referred to the defendant as a "big black man.
"Whether the loud argument between a black female juror and a white female juror reflected racial strife that tainted the verdict or a misunderstanding about a "descriptive" phrase, however, remains in dispute.
In response to a question by a Barnstable Superior Court judge about the atmosphere in the jury room, one of five jurors who testified yesterday said the foreman, Dan Patenaude, had admonished jurors that Christopher M. McCowen's race was irrelevant - even though McCowen's lawyer said police targeted the defendant partly because he is black.
"We want to make sure that we get this right, totally right; race doesn't come into it," juror Matthew Maltby recalled the foreman saying after one of the jurors had referred to the defendant's race.
"And it didn't," Maltby added.
Entire Article
'Dapper' O'Neil, champion of personal politics, dies at 87

Former 14 term at large Boston City Councilman (1971-1999) and long time CofCC member, Albert “Dapper” O’Neil passed away last week. He was 87 years old.
“The Council of Conservative Citizens is the only organization I know of that does effective political work for the European-American majority. It deserves the support of every American who is concerned about the future of his country.” - “Dapper” O’Neil
Councilor for 28 years, devoted, galvanizing Dapper O'Neil, whose charming presence and lacerating tongue kept alive for decades a bygone era of Boston politics, died yesterday. Often the top vote-getter in City Council races, Mr. O'Neil became one of the more revered politicians in the city's history with his attentiveness to the smallest needs of constituents, even as his caustic statements about minorities, women, gays, and lesbians made him one of the most reviled.
Modeling himself on legendary Mayor James Michael Curley, Albert L. O'Neil was one of the few remaining links to a time when Irish Catholic men dominated Boston's political landscape. Mr. O'Neil died in his sleep in a West Roxbury nursing home. He was 87.
Entire Article
Ron Paul backers stage Boston Tea Party, raise millions
The Ron Paul Revolution reaches Boston.
Fund-raisers break one day republican record, despite doing it in the middle of a brutal Nor'Easter.
Ron Paul supporters marched through the snow yesterday from the State House to Faneuil Hall, then smashed the one-day fund-raising record for a Republican presidential candidate.
As of 10 last night, the supporters said, they had raked in about $5.2 million, surpassing the record $4.2 million they raised on Nov. 5.
Most of the donations were made over the Internet in what the supporters called a "money bomb" timed to coincide with the 234th anniversary of the Boston Tea Party. The last fund-raising blitz, which took in 40,000 donations, was timed to coincide with Guy Fawkes Day, which commemorates a British mercenary who tried unsuccessfully to kill King James I on Nov. 5, 1605.
"This basically shows that Ron Paul is a viable candidate," said Rachael McIntosh, a spokeswoman for what was dubbed Boston TeaParty07. "People are so engaged in this campaign because it's coming from the grass roots."
McIntosh said 400 supporters later marched to Faneuil Hall, where about 700 people listened to speeches by Rand Paul, the candidate's son; Carla Howell, a libertarian who ran unsuccessfully for Massachusetts governor in 2002; and others.
Supporters also reenacted the dumping of tea in Boston Harbor by tossing banners that read "tyranny" and "no taxation without representation" into boxes that were placed in front of an image of the harbor.
Entire Article
Man stabbed near heart in Framingham
Hispanic violent crime bleeding out into the suburbs. Suspects excuse for plunging a knife into the victims chest? “He disrespected me.”
FRAMINGHAM - A bloody homeless man was arrested early yesterday morning and charged with stabbing a Beaver Street resident, barely missing the victim's heart.The victim was taken to Boston's Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center after the stabbing reported at 2 a.m. yesterday, police spokesman Lt. Paul Shastany said. Police did not release the victim's name and his condition was unknown. Police found the victim outside 270D Beaver St. with multiple stab wounds, Shastany said. "It is very serious," the lieutenant said. "Some of the wounds appeared on his upper body, near his face. He also had a stab wound to the chest, just missing his heart."Eber A. Rivera, 23, of Framingham, was charged with assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, a knife; assault with the intent to murder or maim; assault with the intent to commit a felony; assault and battery on a disabled or injured person; and disturbing the peace in a fight, police said. Police are investigating a motive for the stabbing. They believe the victim and suspect might not have known each other before the violent encounter, Shastany said. Rivera told police he "had a beef" with the victim, whom he used a racial slur to describe. "He disrespected me," Rivera allegedly told police. After the stabbing, Rivera fled from 270 Beaver St. and bolted in front of a police cruiser driven by a responding patrolman. Officer Arthur Sistrand was on Beaver Street at the time the call came in, and started driving toward the crime scene without turning his blue lights on, Shastany said."Boom, there's a guy running out in front of him," the lieutenant said.Rivera then led the officer on a foot chase down the street and sidewalk."This guy is basically outrun," Shastany said. "He's covered with blood."Police used a state police patrol dog to search the area, but did not find the knife, Shastany said yesterday."The investigation is still ongoing," he said. Residents in the apartment building either declined comment or could not be reached.
Entire Article
Murder charges filed in Winchester double shooting case
Black violent crime bleeding out into the suburbs. Suspect in grusome double shooting is officially charged.
Almost two months after the deadly double shooting that rocked Winchester, the only man arrested in connection to the incident has been charged with first-degree murder.
Wally Jacques Simon, 30, of Medford was arrested shortly after the home invasion Oct. 24 that left Christopher Barbaro, 50, of 70 Irving St.dead and his brother Bryan Barbaro, 48, of the same address, severely injured.
Simon was charged in Woburn District Court with home invasion with a firearm and armed assault with the intent to murder. The first-degree murder charge is in addition to his other charges and will be prosecuted in Cambridge Superior Court. The arraignment was set for 2 p.m. Monday.
District Attorney Gerry Leone made the announcement after a Middlesex Grand Jury handed down an indictment.
“We allege that the defendant, who knew his victims, entered their home and shot both brothers, mortally wounding Christopher Barbaro,” Leone stated in a press release. “Gun violence knows no borders and this is another example of how the use of illegal weapons continues to tragically impact families and communities across our state.”
According to authorities, at about 12:30 a.m. on Oct. 24, Winchester Police responded to 70 Irving St.where they found Chris Barbaro with “apparent gunshot wounds” and Bryan Barbaro with a gunshot wound to the chest.
Entire Article
ACLU: Racism 'swept under the rug'
The social marxists in the ACLU accuse local police of non-compliance with a UN agreement by not reporting enforcement of minority committed crimes as "profiling." Since violent crimes, and traffic violations have identical racial figures as victim statements and emergency room records, Waltham's Daily News Tribune's hit piece on the subject offers no real evidence, and is forced to quote local race hucksters, like Framingham’s crim-alien spokesperson Vera Dias Freitas.
What this report left out was the fact that the best way to end racial disparities in arrests and prosecutions is for minorities to commit less crime.
The United States is doing little to comply with an international agreement to end racial discrimination and has downplayed widespread racism, charged an American Civil Liberties Union report released yesterday.
In 1994, the United States signed a United Nations treaty to end all forms of racial discrimination.
But according to the ACLU, when the United States updated the international community on its progress in April, it "swept under the rug" problems such as racial profiling, the disproportionate incarceration of minorities, and civil rights violations against immigrants.
Vera Dias-Freitas, a Framingham businesswoman who has lived in Massachusetts for 19 years, said that despite being an American citizen she has faced more discrimination and anti-immigrant sentiment in recent years.
"There are kids being beat up in school, storefronts being thrown stones at, things that didn't happen before," she said, attributing the change to increased media and public focus on illegal immigration.
Local and state governments are not doing enough to eradicate racism where it has been identified, said a panel of ACLU staff members and minority rights advocates at a State House press conference yesterday.
Among the examples of inaction cited by the report was a 2000 Massachusetts law, which found that 249 of 341 local police departments showed racial disparities in traffic stops, but allowed the departments to stop reporting disparities after one year.
Entire Article
Merry Holiday Comrade
Bizarre PC "holiday" poster illustrates the social Marxist infiltration of corporate America.
Boston based financial services giant State Street Corp. began in 1792. This company would never have lasted that long without the hard work and patronage of Bostonians. How do they repay this? Besides outsourcing whatever jobs that they can, they have spit in the face of their mainly Christian employees, by perverting Christmas into the politically correct, deconstructed abomination that we’re now all to familiar with. The following company-wide poster from the 2006 Christmas season is surreal, terrifying and even strangely comical. When we win, students will look at it in history books, with disbelief.
Gov eyes in-state tuition for illegals
Liberal tyrant ignores the will of the people and the legislature, in favor of his own desire to reward crim-aliens.
Governor Deval Patrick made good on a campaign promise Thursday when he announced he is looking into whether he can avoid the Legislature by unilaterally allowing illegal immigrants to pay in-state tuition at state colleges and universities.
Patrick's announcement touched off strong reaction on Beacon Hill, where House lawmakers two years ago defied House Speaker Salvatore DiMasi and defeated a bill that would have put all Massachusetts students on an even plain.
"We have some legal research done to see whether it is possible to address that question without legislation," said Patrick Thursday. "The answer to that is by no means clear."
Under the current system, undocumented high school graduates are not eligible for an in-state discount on tuition at the public institutions, even though many students have better grades and test scores than their American classmates.
Entire Article
ICE committee recommends challenge and attorney to handle it
Not in my back yard (unless they are mowing the lawn). Town officials work to pull lease on ICE.
Burlington-After three hours of presentations by two attorneys, and an hour of debate and discussion, an advisory subcommittee of Town Meeting has voted unanimously to recommend a challenge to the building inspector’s interpretation of the zoning bylaw that led to lease of office space by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency. The Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency (ICE), part of Homeland Security, has a 10-year lease on a 40,000-square-foot building in New England Executive Park. The building is to be the New England headquarters for ICE and will house about 120 employees, who are charged with finding and deporting illegal aliens. At issue is the process of bringing illegals to the building, holding them in secure rooms for one to two hours, processing them for deportation, and moving them on to county and municipal jails. Several members of the Board of Selectmen and some Town Meeting members have argued that such activity is a violation of the zoning bylaw governing the uses that may take place in the building, which is in an area zoned for office use.
Entire Article
Footage flap irks immigration critic
Framingham town employee censors footage critical of town.
FRAMINGHAM - A local opponent of illegal immigration said his civil rights were violated after his public access television show was pulled off the air by the town's cable station last week."This is an abuse of power," said Jim Rizoli, who leads a local anti-illegal immigration group and hosts a weekly TV show that targets illegal immigrants. He said his show was cut short last Thursday and replaced mid-broadcast with another program because it included 20 minutes of footage shot by the town's government cable channel. He said the town's director of media services, Ron Rego, told Rizoli that footage was the town's copyrighted material and could not be used for his own show. Rizoli said Rego doesn't control the copyright on town video footage, and questioned how Rego could block its broadcast. "Does Ron Rego own that material for the town? That's the crux of the question," said Rizoli. But Stephen Innis, the station's executive director, said Rizoli's use of town footage, with new graphics and commentary added by Rizoli, could confuse viewers that they were watching the government cable channel instead of the public access channel. "Basically, the deception of the viewer, that's what we're looking at right now," said Innis, who noted the station never received a complaint about the Rizoli show using copyrighted content. The footage, shot by the town's government channel, was from a June meeting of town officials and the local Brazilian community. Rizoli said he used the footage for about six months, and added new graphics and commentary to the segment. Rizoli said he has removed the footage from future broadcasts. Rego, when reached by phone, would not comment on the matter.
Entire Article
Worthington jurors confirm quarrel
Attorney plays the "race card" in last ditch effort to free convicted black rapist/murderer.
BARNSTABLE - By the end of an extraordinary two-day hearing yesterday, almost all of the members of the jury that convicted a trash hauler in a notorious slaying on Cape Cod had confirmed that two jurors angrily confronted each other during deliberations after one referred to the defendant as a "big black man.
"Whether the loud argument between a black female juror and a white female juror reflected racial strife that tainted the verdict or a misunderstanding about a "descriptive" phrase, however, remains in dispute.
In response to a question by a Barnstable Superior Court judge about the atmosphere in the jury room, one of five jurors who testified yesterday said the foreman, Dan Patenaude, had admonished jurors that Christopher M. McCowen's race was irrelevant - even though McCowen's lawyer said police targeted the defendant partly because he is black.
"We want to make sure that we get this right, totally right; race doesn't come into it," juror Matthew Maltby recalled the foreman saying after one of the jurors had referred to the defendant's race.
"And it didn't," Maltby added.
Entire Article
'Dapper' O'Neil, champion of personal politics, dies at 87

Former 14 term at large Boston City Councilman (1971-1999) and long time CofCC member, Albert “Dapper” O’Neil passed away last week. He was 87 years old.
“The Council of Conservative Citizens is the only organization I know of that does effective political work for the European-American majority. It deserves the support of every American who is concerned about the future of his country.” - “Dapper” O’Neil
Councilor for 28 years, devoted, galvanizing Dapper O'Neil, whose charming presence and lacerating tongue kept alive for decades a bygone era of Boston politics, died yesterday. Often the top vote-getter in City Council races, Mr. O'Neil became one of the more revered politicians in the city's history with his attentiveness to the smallest needs of constituents, even as his caustic statements about minorities, women, gays, and lesbians made him one of the most reviled.
Modeling himself on legendary Mayor James Michael Curley, Albert L. O'Neil was one of the few remaining links to a time when Irish Catholic men dominated Boston's political landscape. Mr. O'Neil died in his sleep in a West Roxbury nursing home. He was 87.
Entire Article
Ron Paul backers stage Boston Tea Party, raise millions
The Ron Paul Revolution reaches Boston.
Fund-raisers break one day republican record, despite doing it in the middle of a brutal Nor'Easter.
Ron Paul supporters marched through the snow yesterday from the State House to Faneuil Hall, then smashed the one-day fund-raising record for a Republican presidential candidate.
As of 10 last night, the supporters said, they had raked in about $5.2 million, surpassing the record $4.2 million they raised on Nov. 5.
Most of the donations were made over the Internet in what the supporters called a "money bomb" timed to coincide with the 234th anniversary of the Boston Tea Party. The last fund-raising blitz, which took in 40,000 donations, was timed to coincide with Guy Fawkes Day, which commemorates a British mercenary who tried unsuccessfully to kill King James I on Nov. 5, 1605.
"This basically shows that Ron Paul is a viable candidate," said Rachael McIntosh, a spokeswoman for what was dubbed Boston TeaParty07. "People are so engaged in this campaign because it's coming from the grass roots."
McIntosh said 400 supporters later marched to Faneuil Hall, where about 700 people listened to speeches by Rand Paul, the candidate's son; Carla Howell, a libertarian who ran unsuccessfully for Massachusetts governor in 2002; and others.
Supporters also reenacted the dumping of tea in Boston Harbor by tossing banners that read "tyranny" and "no taxation without representation" into boxes that were placed in front of an image of the harbor.
Entire Article
Man stabbed near heart in Framingham
Hispanic violent crime bleeding out into the suburbs. Suspects excuse for plunging a knife into the victims chest? “He disrespected me.”
FRAMINGHAM - A bloody homeless man was arrested early yesterday morning and charged with stabbing a Beaver Street resident, barely missing the victim's heart.The victim was taken to Boston's Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center after the stabbing reported at 2 a.m. yesterday, police spokesman Lt. Paul Shastany said. Police did not release the victim's name and his condition was unknown. Police found the victim outside 270D Beaver St. with multiple stab wounds, Shastany said. "It is very serious," the lieutenant said. "Some of the wounds appeared on his upper body, near his face. He also had a stab wound to the chest, just missing his heart."Eber A. Rivera, 23, of Framingham, was charged with assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, a knife; assault with the intent to murder or maim; assault with the intent to commit a felony; assault and battery on a disabled or injured person; and disturbing the peace in a fight, police said. Police are investigating a motive for the stabbing. They believe the victim and suspect might not have known each other before the violent encounter, Shastany said. Rivera told police he "had a beef" with the victim, whom he used a racial slur to describe. "He disrespected me," Rivera allegedly told police. After the stabbing, Rivera fled from 270 Beaver St. and bolted in front of a police cruiser driven by a responding patrolman. Officer Arthur Sistrand was on Beaver Street at the time the call came in, and started driving toward the crime scene without turning his blue lights on, Shastany said."Boom, there's a guy running out in front of him," the lieutenant said.Rivera then led the officer on a foot chase down the street and sidewalk."This guy is basically outrun," Shastany said. "He's covered with blood."Police used a state police patrol dog to search the area, but did not find the knife, Shastany said yesterday."The investigation is still ongoing," he said. Residents in the apartment building either declined comment or could not be reached.
Entire Article
Murder charges filed in Winchester double shooting case
Gov eyes in-state tuition for illegals
Liberal tyrant ignores the will of the people and the legislature, in favor of his own desire to reward crim-aliens.
Governor Deval Patrick made good on a campaign promise Thursday when he announced he is looking into whether he can avoid the Legislature by unilaterally allowing illegal immigrants to pay in-state tuition at state colleges and universities.
Patrick's announcement touched off strong reaction on Beacon Hill, where House lawmakers two years ago defied House Speaker Salvatore DiMasi and defeated a bill that would have put all
"We have some legal research done to see whether it is possible to address that question without legislation," said Patrick Thursday. "The answer to that is by no means clear."
Under the current system, undocumented high school graduates are not eligible for an in-state discount on tuition at the public institutions, even though many students have better grades and test scores than their American classmates.
Entire Article
ICE committee recommends challenge and attorney to handle it
Not in my back yard (unless they are mowing the lawn). Town officials work to pull lease on ICE.
Burlington-After three hours of presentations by two attorneys, and an hour of debate and discussion, an advisory subcommittee of Town Meeting has voted unanimously to recommend a challenge to the building inspector’s interpretation of the zoning bylaw that led to lease of office space by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency. The Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency (ICE), part of Homeland Security, has a 10-year lease on a 40,000-square-foot building in
Entire Article
Footage flap irks immigration critic
Framingham town employee censors footage critical of town.
FRAMINGHAM - A local opponent of illegal immigration said his civil rights were violated after his public access television show was pulled off the air by the town's cable station last week."This is an abuse of power," said Jim Rizoli, who leads a local anti-illegal immigration group and hosts a weekly TV show that targets illegal immigrants. He said his show was cut short last Thursday and replaced mid-broadcast with another program because it included 20 minutes of footage shot by the town's government cable channel. He said the town's director of media services, Ron Rego, told Rizoli that footage was the town's copyrighted material and could not be used for his own show. Rizoli said Rego doesn't control the copyright on town video footage, and questioned how Rego could block its broadcast. "Does Ron Rego own that material for the town? That's the crux of the question," said Rizoli. But Stephen Innis, the station's executive director, said Rizoli's use of town footage, with new graphics and commentary added by Rizoli, could confuse viewers that they were watching the government cable channel instead of the public access channel. "Basically, the deception of the viewer, that's what we're looking at right now," said Innis, who noted the station never received a complaint about the Rizoli show using copyrighted content. The footage, shot by the town's government channel, was from a June meeting of town officials and the local Brazilian community. Rizoli said he used the footage for about six months, and added new graphics and commentary to the segment. Rizoli said he has removed the footage from future broadcasts. Rego, when reached by phone, would not comment on the matter.
Entire Article
Worthington jurors confirm quarrel
Attorney plays the "race card" in last ditch effort to free convicted black rapist/murderer.
BARNSTABLE - By the end of an extraordinary two-day hearing yesterday, almost all of the members of the jury that convicted a trash hauler in a notorious slaying on Cape Cod had confirmed that two jurors angrily confronted each other during deliberations after one referred to the defendant as a "big black man.
"Whether the loud argument between a black female juror and a white female juror reflected racial strife that tainted the verdict or a misunderstanding about a "descriptive" phrase, however, remains in dispute.
In response to a question by a Barnstable Superior Court judge about the atmosphere in the jury room, one of five jurors who testified yesterday said the foreman, Dan Patenaude, had admonished jurors that Christopher M. McCowen's race was irrelevant - even though McCowen's lawyer said police targeted the defendant partly because he is black.
"We want to make sure that we get this right, totally right; race doesn't come into it," juror Matthew Maltby recalled the foreman saying after one of the jurors had referred to the defendant's race.
"And it didn't," Maltby added.
Entire Article
'Dapper' O'Neil, champion of personal politics, dies at 87

Former 14 term at large Boston City Councilman (1971-1999) and long time CofCC member, Albert “Dapper” O’Neil passed away last week. He was 87 years old.
“The Council of Conservative Citizens is the only organization I know of that does effective political work for the European-American majority. It deserves the support of every American who is concerned about the future of his country.” - “Dapper” O’Neil
Councilor for 28 years, devoted, galvanizing Dapper O'Neil, whose charming presence and lacerating tongue kept alive for decades a bygone era of Boston politics, died yesterday. Often the top vote-getter in City Council races, Mr. O'Neil became one of the more revered politicians in the city's history with his attentiveness to the smallest needs of constituents, even as his caustic statements about minorities, women, gays, and lesbians made him one of the most reviled.
Modeling himself on legendary Mayor James Michael Curley, Albert L. O'Neil was one of the few remaining links to a time when Irish Catholic men dominated Boston's political landscape. Mr. O'Neil died in his sleep in a West Roxbury nursing home. He was 87.
Entire Article
“The Council of Conservative Citizens is the only organization I know of that does effective political work for the European-American majority. It deserves the support of every American who is concerned about the future of his country.” - “Dapper” O’Neil
Councilor for 28 years, devoted, galvanizing Dapper O'Neil, whose charming presence and lacerating tongue kept alive for decades a bygone era of Boston politics, died yesterday. Often the top vote-getter in City Council races, Mr. O'Neil became one of the more revered politicians in the city's history with his attentiveness to the smallest needs of constituents, even as his caustic statements about minorities, women, gays, and lesbians made him one of the most reviled.
Modeling himself on legendary Mayor James Michael Curley, Albert L. O'Neil was one of the few remaining links to a time when Irish Catholic men dominated Boston's political landscape. Mr. O'Neil died in his sleep in a West Roxbury nursing home. He was 87.
Entire Article
The Ron Paul Revolution reaches Boston.
Fund-raisers break one day republican record, despite doing it in the middle of a brutal Nor'Easter.
Ron Paul supporters marched through the snow yesterday from the State House to Faneuil Hall, then smashed the one-day fund-raising record for a Republican presidential candidate.
As of 10 last night, the supporters said, they had raked in about $5.2 million, surpassing the record $4.2 million they raised on Nov. 5.
Most of the donations were made over the Internet in what the supporters called a "money bomb" timed to coincide with the 234th anniversary of the Boston Tea Party. The last fund-raising blitz, which took in 40,000 donations, was timed to coincide with Guy Fawkes Day, which commemorates a British mercenary who tried unsuccessfully to kill King James I on Nov. 5, 1605.
"This basically shows that Ron Paul is a viable candidate," said Rachael McIntosh, a spokeswoman for what was dubbed Boston TeaParty07. "People are so engaged in this campaign because it's coming from the grass roots."
McIntosh said 400 supporters later marched to Faneuil Hall, where about 700 people listened to speeches by Rand Paul, the candidate's son; Carla Howell, a libertarian who ran unsuccessfully for Massachusetts governor in 2002; and others.
Supporters also reenacted the dumping of tea in Boston Harbor by tossing banners that read "tyranny" and "no taxation without representation" into boxes that were placed in front of an image of the harbor.
Entire Article
Man stabbed near heart in Framingham
Hispanic violent crime bleeding out into the suburbs. Suspects excuse for plunging a knife into the victims chest? “He disrespected me.”
FRAMINGHAM - A bloody homeless man was arrested early yesterday morning and charged with stabbing a Beaver Street resident, barely missing the victim's heart.The victim was taken to Boston's Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center after the stabbing reported at 2 a.m. yesterday, police spokesman Lt. Paul Shastany said. Police did not release the victim's name and his condition was unknown. Police found the victim outside 270D Beaver St. with multiple stab wounds, Shastany said. "It is very serious," the lieutenant said. "Some of the wounds appeared on his upper body, near his face. He also had a stab wound to the chest, just missing his heart."Eber A. Rivera, 23, of Framingham, was charged with assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, a knife; assault with the intent to murder or maim; assault with the intent to commit a felony; assault and battery on a disabled or injured person; and disturbing the peace in a fight, police said. Police are investigating a motive for the stabbing. They believe the victim and suspect might not have known each other before the violent encounter, Shastany said. Rivera told police he "had a beef" with the victim, whom he used a racial slur to describe. "He disrespected me," Rivera allegedly told police. After the stabbing, Rivera fled from 270 Beaver St. and bolted in front of a police cruiser driven by a responding patrolman. Officer Arthur Sistrand was on Beaver Street at the time the call came in, and started driving toward the crime scene without turning his blue lights on, Shastany said."Boom, there's a guy running out in front of him," the lieutenant said.Rivera then led the officer on a foot chase down the street and sidewalk."This guy is basically outrun," Shastany said. "He's covered with blood."Police used a state police patrol dog to search the area, but did not find the knife, Shastany said yesterday."The investigation is still ongoing," he said. Residents in the apartment building either declined comment or could not be reached.
Entire Article
Murder charges filed in
Almost two months after the deadly double shooting that rocked
Wally Jacques Simon, 30, of
Simon was charged in Woburn District Court with home invasion with a firearm and armed assault with the intent to murder. The first-degree murder charge is in addition to his other charges and will be prosecuted in Cambridge Superior Court. The arraignment was set for 2 p.m. Monday.
District Attorney Gerry Leone made the announcement after a Middlesex Grand Jury handed down an indictment.
“We allege that the defendant, who knew his victims, entered their home and shot both brothers, mortally wounding Christopher Barbaro,” Leone stated in a press release. “Gun violence knows no borders and this is another example of how the use of illegal weapons continues to tragically impact families and communities across our state.”
According to authorities, at about 12:30 a.m. on Oct. 24, Winchester Police responded to
Entire Article
ACLU: Racism 'swept under the rug'
The social marxists in the ACLU accuse local police of non-compliance with a UN agreement by not reporting enforcement of minority committed crimes as "profiling." Since violent crimes, and traffic violations have identical racial figures as victim statements and emergency room records, Waltham's Daily News Tribune's hit piece on the subject offers no real evidence, and is forced to quote local race hucksters, like Framingham’s crim-alien spokesperson Vera Dias Freitas.
What this report left out was the fact that the best way to end racial disparities in arrests and prosecutions is for minorities to commit less crime.
The
In 1994, the
But according to the ACLU, when the United States updated the international community on its progress in April, it "swept under the rug" problems such as racial profiling, the disproportionate incarceration of minorities, and civil rights violations against immigrants.
Vera Dias-Freitas, a
"There are kids being beat up in school, storefronts being thrown stones at, things that didn't happen before," she said, attributing the change to increased media and public focus on illegal immigration.
Local and state governments are not doing enough to eradicate racism where it has been identified, said a panel of ACLU staff members and minority rights advocates at a State House press conference yesterday.
Among the examples of inaction cited by the report was a 2000
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Merry Holiday Comrade
Bizarre PC "holiday" poster illustrates the social Marxist infiltration of corporate
Boston based financial services giant State Street Corp. began in 1792. This company would never have lasted that long without the hard work and patronage of Bostonians. How do they repay this? Besides outsourcing whatever jobs that they can, they have spit in the face of their mainly Christian employees, by perverting Christmas into the politically correct, deconstructed abomination that we’re now all to familiar with. The following company-wide poster from the 2006 Christmas season is surreal, terrifying and even strangely comical. When we win, students will look at it in history books, with disbelief.

