June 28, 2007
Fred Thompson on Cuban-Americans
My wife and I have a standing joke when we watch Law & Order whenever District Attorney Branch comes on. I always say "You know, he used to be a ..."
And the Missus interrupts "...a US Senator."
I hope that a year or so from now, as we're watching Law & Order repeats on TNT, that I can look at my wife, smile, and say " You know, that guy's the President of..."
"...the United States of America."
A Good DayPosted on June 28th, 2007
By Fred in ImmigrationThis has been a good day for America.
For a while, it didn’t look like Washington was going to listen to us regarding real immigration reform. Thankfully, we’ve been spared a serious mistake, but I wonder if things would have turned out the way they did without the work done by the bloggers, talk radio and the American people. Rush, Hannity, Laura Ingraham, RedState, Powerline, Pajamas Media and a lot of others have done a great job. Take that, Fairness Doctrine.
I’m up in New Hampshire today. Met some great people and got to help the state GOP up in the Granite State. I did want to clarify something coming out of my time yesterday in Columbia, South Carolina.
Anybody who knows my track record or has read some of the things I’ve written about the Cuban-American community knows where I stand. While the communist dictatorship has been a tragedy for Cuba, America has been in some ways, at least, the beneficiary.
One of those benefits is the presence of the great Cuban-American artist, Gloria Estefan. She co-wrote a song called “No hay mal que por bien no venga” which I understand translates something like — there’s no bad that doesn’t bring some good. The bad that is Castro’s tyranny has given America one of the greatest communities in the Western Hemisphere.
And no one knows better than that community that the Castro regime remains dedicated to infiltrating American institutions to spread his ideology of tyranny. Castro admitted it himself in an interview with CNN in 1998.
This is why the Cuban government rightfully remains on the State Department’s terrorist list for its continued support of terrorism. It’s also why we must oppose the illegal immigration of Castro’s agents into the United States while welcoming the vast majority who immigrate legally and with legal intentions.
It seems to me that few Americans understand the threat that the illegal entry by Cuban spies represents to our country, though Cuban-Americans have never forgotten or stopped pointing it out. Ambassador Otto Reich, the former Assistant Secretary of State for the Western Hemisphere has called Castro’s efforts to penetrate U.S. intelligence networks “relentless.”
The best-known incident involving Cuban espionage, which many believe may have provided U.S. secrets to hostile Middle Eastern regimes, is probably that of former Defense Intelligence Agency analyst Ana Belen Montes — convicted of espionage in 2002. Now, our intelligence picture has been further complicated by the emergence of oil-funded Hugo Chavez and his anti-American, pro-Castro regime. We know that Cuban intelligence officers, for instance, are in South America — presumably training Venezuelans and others in the intelligence arts.
Our national security is too important an issue to let folks twist words around for a one-day headline. Cuban-Americans are among the staunchest opponents of illegal immigration, and especially so when it’s sponsored by the Castro regime. We know we have a porous southern border in which they can currently slip through easily. Our enemies know it too.
All of us should be rightfully concerned about Castro and his ideological pal Chavez sending agents and provocateurs into the United States through Mexico. I’m sure that Cuban-Americans share this concern as well.
We’ve seen today what the voice of the people can do in Washington. Let’s hope similar voices can do the same thing for Cuba.
Posted by Val Prieto at June 28, 2007 09:17 PM
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Comments
This cat has got my vote. Hand me a bumper sticker and a lawn sign!
Abe "El Consigliere" Cardenas
Posted by: Abe Cardenas
at June 28, 2007 09:33 PM
It's funny how the Clintonistas intentionally miscontrued Fred Thompson's initial remarks about the potential threat from Castroite terrorists infilitrating our country, basically by conflating Cuban agents with civilians fleeing castro's merciless despotism. Fred is acutely tuned to the plight of helpless Cubans and the evil nature of the castro regime- something we can count on Mrs. Bill Clinton to routinely to to try to placate and ignore.
Posted by: Lucha Libre
at June 28, 2007 09:40 PM
I'm with Fred, all the way. But watch how the media will try to eat him alive once he's officially in.
Posted by: jsb
at June 29, 2007 09:20 AM
The most amazing thing I've read about this was on NRO where Geraghty took the exact same tack as the Clinton people. He doesn't seem to believe in reading the whole thing before writing about it. Poor form.
Posted by: TBinSTL
at June 30, 2007 04:40 AM
oops! forgot the link:
http://hillaryspot.nationalreview.com/post/?q=NWIwY2ZhYmZiZGE1NDI4NDZhMWViNzM4NWU0MWM4Y2I=
Posted by: TBinSTL
at June 30, 2007 04:41 AM
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