By Daniel Greenfield @ Sultan Knish Blog
Things are not happy in Monterey
County. The California county, which Kamala won by 63%, is considered a
‘sanctuary’ for illegal aliens by the Department of Homeland Security.
But
that sanctuary status was recently violated and local officials are
outraged. So is the Solidarity Network: a pro-illegal alien group that
‘monitors’ immigration enforcement arrests.
Monterey County
Board of Supervisors Chair Chris Lopez responded by announcing that a
maternal health walk was cancelled. “Monterey County deeply values the
contributions of our immigrant workers and families that strengthen our
local communities and economy,” Monterey County Supervisor Luis Alejo
posted. The Monterey Solidarity Network promised to fight.
“A
family man was taken from the street as he was taking his son to
school,” the pro-illegal organization that had vowed to fight against
President Trump’s immigration enforcement fumed. “How is ripping a man
from his family, outside of his home, terrorizing his children,
considered ‘compassionate’?”
Considering the arrested man’s past relationship with a child: it might be very compassionate.
Back
in the first year of the Obama administration, Monterey County was
being enriched with exciting customs and two Mexican immigrants in the
local city of Greenfield decided to transact a beautiful custom when the
father of a 14-year-old girl traded her for 160 cases of beer, 100
cases of soda, 50 cases of Gatorade and assorted other foods along with
$16,000.
Sadly the happy prospective nuptials between man and
child were not to last because Marcelino de Jesus Martinez, the girl’s
father, didn’t get his soda and beer, and called the cops on Maragrito
de Jesus Galindo, his prospective son-in-law and failed provider of
drinks.
Martinez had traded his daughter for beverages that he
didn’t receive, and now he wanted a refund and perhaps his daughter back
to trade for something better, maybe sandwiches or a lifetime of meals
at Red Lobster.
The police arrived and arrested everyone
involved on the grounds that Monterey County is pretty open-minded, but
it wasn’t quite that open-minded. At least back then.
Greenfield Police Chief Joe Grebmeier said that selling girls as young as 12 has “become a local problem.”
“When
I’m in Mexico, I have to respect Mexican laws. When you’re in the
United States, you have to respect United States laws. That’s the bottom
line,” he told CNN.
Three years later Grebmeier was ousted and
the exact borders of Mexico and California have become debatable. The
majority of the Greenfield City Council is Mexican and a good deal of
local officials are as likely to follow Mexican laws as American ones.
While the media forgets, ICE has a long memory. They came, they saw and they arrested
Maragrito de Jesus Galindo to the outraged protests of the pro-illegal
alien activists at Solidarity Now who told reporters that they’re trying
to find the soda groom a lawyer.
Even though he might well prefer a 14-year-old to a lawyer.
“Historically,
immigrants have been scapegoated for many societal ills, and the
current administration is trying that same old tactic. We urge the
community to remember that immigrants have built this country, and that
they are the backbone of the local agricultural and hospitality
industries,” Monterey’s Solidarity Network complained.
And apparently the local beverage child trafficking industry.
ICE
wasn’t scapegoating immigrants for societal ills since trading children
for beer is not an American custom, as the media spent the worst part
of a month in 2009 explaining to us.
This particular “societal ill” is not American and is being shielded by California officials.
ICE
decided that the local family man might be better off in his home
country where, as the media claimed at the time, selling children for
beer is a “normal and honorable” custom.
Meanwhile California could do without its custom of sanctuary areas and pro-illegal activists.
Monterey’s
Solidarity Network urges anyone to report ICE raids. This could be
characterized as interference with federal law enforcement. And while
some pro-illegal groups operate outside the law, the local Solidarity
Network raises money through the Watsonville Law Center: a 501(c)(3)
tax-exempt nonprofit. That’s something that the IRS could put a stop to
any time.
For now, ICE must chase men who practice their
“traditional custom” of buying underage girls in exchange for beverages
despite the interference of sanctuary counties and a sanctuary state.
From
Gov. Gavin Newsom on down, the state’s rulers turn away from witnessing
child abuse and instead use every possible leverage to prevent
immigration authorities from doing their job.
“A family man was
taken from the street,” the Solidarity Network mourned. But perhaps the
citizens of Greenfield, Monterey County and California are better off
for it.
The larger question is whether the custom of selling
girls as young as 12 years old in Monterey County, which its old police
chief described as a “local problem” has gone away or is being covered
up. And unless federal law enforcement looks into it, we may never
really know.
Sanctuary cities don’t just shield illegal aliens, they shield some of the worst crimes imaginable.
There should be no sanctuary and no safe spaces for men who trade girls for beer.
Once
upon a time we understood that. Perhaps one day, Americans will be
unable to believe that a political party and a state government did
everything possible to protect such men.
Daniel Greenfield is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. This article previously appeared at the Center's Front Page Magazine. Click here to subscribe to my articles. And click here to support my work with a donation. Thank you for reading.
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