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originally posted by: LDragonFire
a reply to: DarthFazer
According to the comments from the article no one can find this directive, so the entire article is most likely not true.
I have had to enroll 3 kids in school in the last 3 years and had to show birth certificates, social security cards and vaccination records and transcripts from there former school.
No vaccination records no school.
People will believe anything they read if it goes along with there ideology, no matter how dumb it is......
originally posted by: xuenchen
a reply to: amazing
But the administrators and teachers may be under a special directive.
originally posted by: LDragonFire
originally posted by: xuenchen
a reply to: amazing
But the administrators and teachers may be under a special directive.
Is the local press under special directive to not speak about it because its not in the local press?
originally posted by: xuenchen
originally posted by: Stormdancer777
a reply to: xuenchen
I can't take anymore, seriously, they can't ask the age?
Has everyone gone crazy?
Yes.
They've gone nuts !!
originally posted by: windword
a reply to: Stormdancer777
You shouldn't believe everything you read.
originally posted by: windword
a reply to: TiedDestructor
Your intuition tells you that adult illegal immigrants are being sneaked into middle school as children.......... for what purpose?
The Center for Immigration Studies (CIS) is a nonpartisan,[1] politically conservative[2] non-profit research organization that advocates immigration reduction in the United States. It was started as a spin-off from the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) in 1985.[3] As a 501(c)(3) organization, it is subject to limits or absolute prohibitions on engaging in political activities. The CIS's self-described mission is to "provid[e] immigration policymakers, the academic community, news media, and concerned citizens with reliable information about the social, economic, environmental, security, and fiscal consequences of legal and illegal immigration into the United States."[4] Media reports have questioned the accuracy of its factual assertions and its claim to nonpartisanship and noted its ties to extremist groups.
There's a reason for that. Although you'd never know it to read its materials, CIS was started in 1985 by a Michigan ophthalmologist named John Tanton — a man known for his racist statements about Latinos, his decades-long flirtation with white nationalists and Holocaust deniers, and his publication of ugly racist materials. CIS' creation was part of a carefully thought-out strategy aimed at creating a set of complementary institutions to cultivate the nativist cause — groups including the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) and NumbersUSA. As is shown in Tanton's correspondence, lodged in the Bentley Historical Library at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Tanton came up with the idea in the early 1980s for "a small think tank" that would "wage the war of ideas."