• Hit and run of multiple cyclists

    From AMuzi@21:1/5 to All on Fri Mar 7 08:09:25 2025
    https://ktla.com/news/local-news/hit-and-run-driver-plows-into-bicyclists-handing-out-red-cards-in-boyle-heights/

    of note, perp's auto has a bicycle carrier on the back.
    --
    Andrew Muzi
    [email protected]
    Open every day since 1 April, 1971

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From AMuzi@21:1/5 to John B. on Fri Mar 7 20:56:55 2025
    On 3/7/2025 7:06 PM, John B. wrote:
    On Fri, 7 Mar 2025 08:09:25 -0600, AMuzi <[email protected]> wrote:

    https://ktla.com/news/local-news/hit-and-run-driver-plows-into-bicyclists-handing-out-red-cards-in-boyle-heights/

    of note, perp's auto has a bicycle carrier on the back.


    I wonder about the "red cards". My experience with "immigrants" is
    somewhat limited but my experience has been that "They" knew more
    about the Immigration Laws then I (a citizen) did :-)

    Illegals have more motivation!

    --
    Andrew Muzi
    [email protected]
    Open every day since 1 April, 1971

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From AMuzi@21:1/5 to Frank Krygowski on Fri Mar 7 21:53:03 2025
    On 3/7/2025 9:02 PM, Frank Krygowski wrote:
    On 3/7/2025 9:56 PM, AMuzi wrote:
    On 3/7/2025 7:06 PM, John B. wrote:
    On Fri, 7 Mar 2025 08:09:25 -0600, AMuzi
    <[email protected]> wrote:

    https://ktla.com/news/local-news/hit-and-run-driver-
    plows-into- bicyclists-handing-out-red-cards-in-boyle-
    heights/

    of note, perp's auto has a bicycle carrier on the back.


    I wonder about the "red cards". My experience with
    "immigrants" is
    somewhat limited but my experience has been that "They"
    knew more
    about the Immigration Laws then I (a citizen) did :-)

    Illegals have more motivation!

    So do legal immigrants, which should be no surprise.


    As is often said, liars need excellent memories to keep
    their stories straight.

    My broad experience with immigrants among my family,
    employees and customers I can't say they concerned
    themselves much with various 'rights' they could falsely
    claim. They just had their papers in order. And slept well.

    --
    Andrew Muzi
    [email protected]
    Open every day since 1 April, 1971

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Jeff Liebermann@21:1/5 to AMuzi on Fri Mar 7 20:56:28 2025
    On Fri, 7 Mar 2025 21:53:03 -0600, AMuzi <[email protected]> wrote:

    On 3/7/2025 9:02 PM, Frank Krygowski wrote:
    On 3/7/2025 9:56 PM, AMuzi wrote:
    On 3/7/2025 7:06 PM, John B. wrote:
    On Fri, 7 Mar 2025 08:09:25 -0600, AMuzi
    <[email protected]> wrote:

    https://ktla.com/news/local-news/hit-and-run-driver-
    plows-into- bicyclists-handing-out-red-cards-in-boyle-
    heights/

    of note, perp's auto has a bicycle carrier on the back.


    I wonder about the "red cards". My experience with
    "immigrants" is
    somewhat limited but my experience has been that "They"
    knew more
    about the Immigration Laws then I (a citizen) did :-)

    Illegals have more motivation!

    So do legal immigrants, which should be no surprise.


    As is often said, liars need excellent memories to keep
    their stories straight.

    My broad experience with immigrants among my family,
    employees and customers I can't say they concerned
    themselves much with various 'rights' they could falsely
    claim. They just had their papers in order. And slept well.

    That wasn't the case when my parents and I arrived in the USA via
    Ellis Island in about 1953. This was the tail end of Senator Joe
    McCarthy and the Red (Russian) Scare: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McCarthyism>
    the HUAC: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_Un-American_Activities_Committee>
    and the associated cold war Communist witch hunts. From my parents
    point of view, and from that of most immigrants from Europe, the
    committee was a copy of Hitler and Friends had done before WWII. If
    you were a socialist, communist, gypsy, anarchist, or even a pacifist,
    you would be "denounced" by the committee or by some random person,
    and deported to some place unpleasant. <https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/denounce>
    "to tell someone in authority about a person's illegal activities,
    especially illegal political activities"

    No trial was needed. For the freshly minted immigrants to the USA,
    this was a very real concern (or fear). My parents and friends were
    seriously worried. I was also worried, but because I really didn't
    understand what was happening, I just followed their example. For a
    time, we became very wary of neighbors, police, officials, anyone in
    authority, etc.

    My extended family did their best to try and "fit in" and become an
    American. We learned to juggle the knife and fork like Americans,
    instead of just holding the fork in the left hand and the knife in the
    right. We spent quite a bit of effort learning to read and write
    English and understand American slang. At the time, I was a 5+ year
    old and had no difficulty learning all the languages required to
    communicate with the neighbors, relatives, schools, and of course, the Americans. However, in public, all the immigrants made it a point to
    only speak English. My original native languages were German and
    Polish, which my insisted should only be spoken indoors at home or at
    a relatives house. Anywhere else, it was "speak English or say
    nothing".

    This is 2nd hand from various relatives. None of the immigrants spoke
    about "rights". If they were Jewish, and lived in the wrong
    countries, they literally had no rights. Having rights in the USA
    seemed so improbable to some immigrants that they literally did not
    believe that it was possible. I was told that one immigrant received
    a summons for some minor legal matter. My parents caught up with him
    as he was busy disposing of his possessions and preparing to leave the
    country. He explained that it was better to leave than to get thrown
    in an American concentration camp.

    I can go on forever with such stories but I would prefer to do
    whatever I did on Friday evening before I discovered computers. I
    think it's sufficient to say that being an immigrant can be a very
    traumatic experience, full of bad information and misinterpretations.
    It's no surprise that they do strange and difficult to explain things.


    --
    Jeff Liebermann [email protected]
    PO Box 272 http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
    Ben Lomond CA 95005-0272
    Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From AMuzi@21:1/5 to Jeff Liebermann on Sat Mar 8 08:04:11 2025
    On 3/7/2025 10:56 PM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
    On Fri, 7 Mar 2025 21:53:03 -0600, AMuzi <[email protected]> wrote:

    On 3/7/2025 9:02 PM, Frank Krygowski wrote:
    On 3/7/2025 9:56 PM, AMuzi wrote:
    On 3/7/2025 7:06 PM, John B. wrote:
    On Fri, 7 Mar 2025 08:09:25 -0600, AMuzi
    <[email protected]> wrote:

    https://ktla.com/news/local-news/hit-and-run-driver-
    plows-into- bicyclists-handing-out-red-cards-in-boyle-
    heights/

    of note, perp's auto has a bicycle carrier on the back.


    I wonder about the "red cards". My experience with
    "immigrants" is
    somewhat limited but my experience has been that "They"
    knew more
    about the Immigration Laws then I (a citizen) did :-)

    Illegals have more motivation!

    So do legal immigrants, which should be no surprise.


    As is often said, liars need excellent memories to keep
    their stories straight.

    My broad experience with immigrants among my family,
    employees and customers I can't say they concerned
    themselves much with various 'rights' they could falsely
    claim. They just had their papers in order. And slept well.

    That wasn't the case when my parents and I arrived in the USA via
    Ellis Island in about 1953. This was the tail end of Senator Joe
    McCarthy and the Red (Russian) Scare: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McCarthyism>
    the HUAC: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_Un-American_Activities_Committee>
    and the associated cold war Communist witch hunts. From my parents
    point of view, and from that of most immigrants from Europe, the
    committee was a copy of Hitler and Friends had done before WWII. If
    you were a socialist, communist, gypsy, anarchist, or even a pacifist,
    you would be "denounced" by the committee or by some random person,
    and deported to some place unpleasant. <https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/denounce>
    "to tell someone in authority about a person's illegal activities,
    especially illegal political activities"

    No trial was needed. For the freshly minted immigrants to the USA,
    this was a very real concern (or fear). My parents and friends were seriously worried. I was also worried, but because I really didn't understand what was happening, I just followed their example. For a
    time, we became very wary of neighbors, police, officials, anyone in authority, etc.

    My extended family did their best to try and "fit in" and become an
    American. We learned to juggle the knife and fork like Americans,
    instead of just holding the fork in the left hand and the knife in the
    right. We spent quite a bit of effort learning to read and write
    English and understand American slang. At the time, I was a 5+ year
    old and had no difficulty learning all the languages required to
    communicate with the neighbors, relatives, schools, and of course, the Americans. However, in public, all the immigrants made it a point to
    only speak English. My original native languages were German and
    Polish, which my insisted should only be spoken indoors at home or at
    a relatives house. Anywhere else, it was "speak English or say
    nothing".

    This is 2nd hand from various relatives. None of the immigrants spoke
    about "rights". If they were Jewish, and lived in the wrong
    countries, they literally had no rights. Having rights in the USA
    seemed so improbable to some immigrants that they literally did not
    believe that it was possible. I was told that one immigrant received
    a summons for some minor legal matter. My parents caught up with him
    as he was busy disposing of his possessions and preparing to leave the country. He explained that it was better to leave than to get thrown
    in an American concentration camp.

    I can go on forever with such stories but I would prefer to do
    whatever I did on Friday evening before I discovered computers. I
    think it's sufficient to say that being an immigrant can be a very
    traumatic experience, full of bad information and misinterpretations.
    It's no surprise that they do strange and difficult to explain things.



    I believe you but experiences vary a lot.

    All four of my grandparents immigrated at the beginning of
    the 1900s, lived in Italian neighborhoods and spoke little
    English. They were Resident Aliens, not citizens, all their
    lives. (in the 20th century, aliens had to register annually
    but there were few or no other impediments to their lives).

    In 1934, my eldest aunt on my mother's side wrote to the
    President, as my grandfather's work was cut to half time and
    he was very close to losing his house for nonpayment. She
    was a sixth grader and the only person in the family with
    adequate English. By whatever good luck, their mortgage was
    extended. My mother and all her siblings voted straight
    democrat all their lives.

    p.s. all my uncles in both families served in WWII. My
    father, the youngest, turned 18 as the war ended and did not.

    Back to the original link, the subject of the cyclist's
    efforts are illegal aliens, not actual immigrants.
    --
    Andrew Muzi
    [email protected]
    Open every day since 1 April, 1971

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From AMuzi@21:1/5 to Jeff Liebermann on Sat Mar 8 09:41:04 2025
    On 3/7/2025 10:56 PM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
    On Fri, 7 Mar 2025 21:53:03 -0600, AMuzi <[email protected]> wrote:

    On 3/7/2025 9:02 PM, Frank Krygowski wrote:
    On 3/7/2025 9:56 PM, AMuzi wrote:
    On 3/7/2025 7:06 PM, John B. wrote:
    On Fri, 7 Mar 2025 08:09:25 -0600, AMuzi
    <[email protected]> wrote:

    https://ktla.com/news/local-news/hit-and-run-driver-
    plows-into- bicyclists-handing-out-red-cards-in-boyle-
    heights/

    of note, perp's auto has a bicycle carrier on the back.


    I wonder about the "red cards". My experience with
    "immigrants" is
    somewhat limited but my experience has been that "They"
    knew more
    about the Immigration Laws then I (a citizen) did :-)

    Illegals have more motivation!

    So do legal immigrants, which should be no surprise.


    As is often said, liars need excellent memories to keep
    their stories straight.

    My broad experience with immigrants among my family,
    employees and customers I can't say they concerned
    themselves much with various 'rights' they could falsely
    claim. They just had their papers in order. And slept well.

    That wasn't the case when my parents and I arrived in the USA via
    Ellis Island in about 1953. This was the tail end of Senator Joe
    McCarthy and the Red (Russian) Scare: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McCarthyism>
    the HUAC: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_Un-American_Activities_Committee>
    and the associated cold war Communist witch hunts. From my parents
    point of view, and from that of most immigrants from Europe, the
    committee was a copy of Hitler and Friends had done before WWII. If
    you were a socialist, communist, gypsy, anarchist, or even a pacifist,
    you would be "denounced" by the committee or by some random person,
    and deported to some place unpleasant. <https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/denounce>
    "to tell someone in authority about a person's illegal activities,
    especially illegal political activities"

    No trial was needed. For the freshly minted immigrants to the USA,
    this was a very real concern (or fear). My parents and friends were seriously worried. I was also worried, but because I really didn't understand what was happening, I just followed their example. For a
    time, we became very wary of neighbors, police, officials, anyone in authority, etc.

    My extended family did their best to try and "fit in" and become an
    American. We learned to juggle the knife and fork like Americans,
    instead of just holding the fork in the left hand and the knife in the
    right. We spent quite a bit of effort learning to read and write
    English and understand American slang. At the time, I was a 5+ year
    old and had no difficulty learning all the languages required to
    communicate with the neighbors, relatives, schools, and of course, the Americans. However, in public, all the immigrants made it a point to
    only speak English. My original native languages were German and
    Polish, which my insisted should only be spoken indoors at home or at
    a relatives house. Anywhere else, it was "speak English or say
    nothing".

    This is 2nd hand from various relatives. None of the immigrants spoke
    about "rights". If they were Jewish, and lived in the wrong
    countries, they literally had no rights. Having rights in the USA
    seemed so improbable to some immigrants that they literally did not
    believe that it was possible. I was told that one immigrant received
    a summons for some minor legal matter. My parents caught up with him
    as he was busy disposing of his possessions and preparing to leave the country. He explained that it was better to leave than to get thrown
    in an American concentration camp.

    I can go on forever with such stories but I would prefer to do
    whatever I did on Friday evening before I discovered computers. I
    think it's sufficient to say that being an immigrant can be a very
    traumatic experience, full of bad information and misinterpretations.
    It's no surprise that they do strange and difficult to explain things.



    Not discounting their fears, nor official excess, there was
    an actual problem, if not crisis. Not only Harry Hopkins
    and the Rosenbergs, but Alger Hiss's payroll records and
    reports to Moscow were brought to light in the Venona Papers
    in the 1990s along with hundreds of other Soviet agents
    inside the US military and government.

    Sen McCarthy was an asshole and insufferable and a drunk,
    but he actually was right on that point.

    And for general ineptitude, a few hundred Nazis in Alabama
    were designing and building our military missiles and space
    program at the same time.

    --
    Andrew Muzi
    [email protected]
    Open every day since 1 April, 1971

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From zen cycle@21:1/5 to Frank Krygowski on Sat Mar 8 13:00:35 2025
    On 3/8/2025 12:20 PM, Frank Krygowski wrote:
    On 3/8/2025 9:04 AM, AMuzi wrote:
    On 3/7/2025 10:56 PM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:

    That wasn't the case when my parents and I arrived in the USA via
    Ellis Island in about 1953.  This was the tail end of Senator Joe
    McCarthy and the Red (Russian) Scare:
    <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McCarthyism>
    the HUAC:
    <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_Un-American_Activities_Committee>
    and the associated cold war Communist witch hunts.  From my parents
    point of view, and from that of most immigrants from Europe, the
    committee was a copy of Hitler and Friends had done before WWII.  If
    you were a socialist, communist, gypsy, anarchist, or even a pacifist,
    you would be "denounced" by the committee or by some random person,
    and deported to some place unpleasant.
    <https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/denounce>
    "to tell someone in authority about a person's illegal activities,
    especially illegal political activities"

    No trial was needed.  For the freshly minted immigrants to the USA,
    this was a very real concern (or fear).  My parents and friends were
    seriously worried.  I was also worried, but because I really didn't
    understand what was happening, I just followed their example.  For a
    time, we became very wary of neighbors, police, officials, anyone in
    authority, etc.

    My extended family did their best to try and "fit in" and become an
    American.  We learned to juggle the knife and fork like Americans,
    instead of just holding the fork in the left hand and the knife in the
    right.  We spent quite a bit of effort learning to read and write
    English and understand American slang.  At the time, I was a 5+ year
    old and had no difficulty learning all the languages required to
    communicate with the neighbors, relatives, schools, and of course, the
    Americans.  However, in public, all the immigrants made it a point to
    only speak English.  My original native languages were German and
    Polish, which my insisted should only be spoken indoors at home or at
    a relatives house.  Anywhere else, it was "speak English or say
    nothing".

    This is 2nd hand from various relatives.  None of the immigrants spoke
    about "rights".  If they were Jewish, and lived in the wrong
    countries, they literally had no rights.  Having rights in the USA
    seemed so improbable to some immigrants that they literally did not
    believe that it was possible.  I was told that one immigrant received
    a summons for some minor legal matter.  My parents caught up with him
    as he was busy disposing of his possessions and preparing to leave the
    country.  He explained that it was better to leave than to get thrown
    in an American concentration camp.

    I can go on forever with such stories but I would prefer to do
    whatever I did on Friday evening before I discovered computers.  I
    think it's sufficient to say that being an immigrant can be a very
    traumatic experience, full of bad information and misinterpretations.
    It's no surprise that they do strange and difficult to explain things.



    I believe you but experiences vary a lot.

    All four of my grandparents immigrated at the beginning of the 1900s,
    lived in Italian neighborhoods and spoke little English. They were
    Resident Aliens, not citizens, all their lives. (in the 20th century,
    aliens had to register annually but there were few or no other
    impediments to their lives).

    In 1934, my eldest aunt on my mother's side wrote to the President, as
    my grandfather's work was cut to half time and he was very close to
    losing his house for nonpayment. She was a sixth grader and the only
    person in the family with adequate English. By whatever good luck,
    their mortgage was extended. My mother and all her siblings voted
    straight democrat all their lives.

    p.s. all my uncles in both families served in WWII. My father, the
    youngest, turned 18 as the war ended and did not.

    My Polish grandparents arrived when your Italian ones arrived. They did become citizens, but they certainly suffered discrimination.

    Back to the original link, the subject of the cyclist's efforts are
    illegal aliens, not actual immigrants.

    There have been plenty of tales of legal immigrants and even U.S.
    citizens suffering arrest and imprisonment because they didn't look "American" enough - IOW white enough.

    Not tales, documented incidents:

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/trump-s-ice-agents-arrest-puerto-rican-military-veteran-in-deportation-raid/ar-AA1xNWx9

    "They did not ask me for documentation for my American workers,
    Portuguese workers, or white workers,"








    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From AMuzi@21:1/5 to zen cycle on Sat Mar 8 12:42:41 2025
    On 3/8/2025 12:00 PM, zen cycle wrote:
    On 3/8/2025 12:20 PM, Frank Krygowski wrote:
    On 3/8/2025 9:04 AM, AMuzi wrote:
    On 3/7/2025 10:56 PM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:

    That wasn't the case when my parents and I arrived in
    the USA via
    Ellis Island in about 1953.  This was the tail end of
    Senator Joe
    McCarthy and the Red (Russian) Scare:
    <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McCarthyism>
    the HUAC:
    <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_Un-
    American_Activities_Committee>
    and the associated cold war Communist witch hunts.  From
    my parents
    point of view, and from that of most immigrants from
    Europe, the
    committee was a copy of Hitler and Friends had done
    before WWII.  If
    you were a socialist, communist, gypsy, anarchist, or
    even a pacifist,
    you would be "denounced" by the committee or by some
    random person,
    and deported to some place unpleasant.
    <https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/
    denounce>
    "to tell someone in authority about a person's illegal
    activities,
    especially illegal political activities"

    No trial was needed.  For the freshly minted immigrants
    to the USA,
    this was a very real concern (or fear).  My parents and
    friends were
    seriously worried.  I was also worried, but because I
    really didn't
    understand what was happening, I just followed their
    example.  For a
    time, we became very wary of neighbors, police,
    officials, anyone in
    authority, etc.

    My extended family did their best to try and "fit in"
    and become an
    American.  We learned to juggle the knife and fork like
    Americans,
    instead of just holding the fork in the left hand and
    the knife in the
    right.  We spent quite a bit of effort learning to read
    and write
    English and understand American slang.  At the time, I
    was a 5+ year
    old and had no difficulty learning all the languages
    required to
    communicate with the neighbors, relatives, schools, and
    of course, the
    Americans.  However, in public, all the immigrants made
    it a point to
    only speak English.  My original native languages were
    German and
    Polish, which my insisted should only be spoken indoors
    at home or at
    a relatives house.  Anywhere else, it was "speak English
    or say
    nothing".

    This is 2nd hand from various relatives.  None of the
    immigrants spoke
    about "rights".  If they were Jewish, and lived in the
    wrong
    countries, they literally had no rights.  Having rights
    in the USA
    seemed so improbable to some immigrants that they
    literally did not
    believe that it was possible.  I was told that one
    immigrant received
    a summons for some minor legal matter.  My parents
    caught up with him
    as he was busy disposing of his possessions and
    preparing to leave the
    country.  He explained that it was better to leave than
    to get thrown
    in an American concentration camp.

    I can go on forever with such stories but I would prefer
    to do
    whatever I did on Friday evening before I discovered
    computers.  I
    think it's sufficient to say that being an immigrant can
    be a very
    traumatic experience, full of bad information and
    misinterpretations.
    It's no surprise that they do strange and difficult to
    explain things.



    I believe you but experiences vary a lot.

    All four of my grandparents immigrated at the beginning
    of the 1900s, lived in Italian neighborhoods and spoke
    little English. They were Resident Aliens, not citizens,
    all their lives. (in the 20th century, aliens had to
    register annually but there were few or no other
    impediments to their lives).

    In 1934, my eldest aunt on my mother's side wrote to the
    President, as my grandfather's work was cut to half time
    and he was very close to losing his house for nonpayment.
    She was a sixth grader and the only person in the family
    with adequate English. By whatever good luck, their
    mortgage was extended. My mother and all her siblings
    voted straight democrat all their lives.

    p.s. all my uncles in both families served in WWII. My
    father, the youngest, turned 18 as the war ended and did
    not.

    My Polish grandparents arrived when your Italian ones
    arrived. They did become citizens, but they certainly
    suffered discrimination.

    Back to the original link, the subject of the cyclist's
    efforts are illegal aliens, not actual immigrants.

    There have been plenty of tales of legal immigrants and
    even U.S. citizens suffering arrest and imprisonment
    because they didn't look "American" enough - IOW white
    enough.

    Not tales, documented incidents:

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/trump-s-ice-agents-arrest- puerto-rican-military-veteran-in-deportation-raid/ar-AA1xNWx9

    "They did not ask me for documentation for my American
    workers, Portuguese workers, or white workers,"





    An obvious error and it will be promptly rectified if it
    hasn't been already. Meanwhile, we're deporting illegal
    Russians, who do not have the vaunted BIPOC status, along
    with all the rest.

    I regularly get citations for no seal belt. Since there's
    never a good ending to arguing with police or sheriffs, I
    take the ticket, say thank you and write the Court. They
    citations are always dismissed. (1965 = exempt)


    --
    Andrew Muzi
    [email protected]
    Open every day since 1 April, 1971

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Catrike Ryder@21:1/5 to AMuzi on Sat Mar 8 14:16:23 2025
    On Sat, 8 Mar 2025 12:42:41 -0600, AMuzi <[email protected]> wrote:

    On 3/8/2025 12:00 PM, zen cycle wrote:
    On 3/8/2025 12:20 PM, Frank Krygowski wrote:
    On 3/8/2025 9:04 AM, AMuzi wrote:
    On 3/7/2025 10:56 PM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:

    That wasn't the case when my parents and I arrived in
    the USA via
    Ellis Island in about 1953.� This was the tail end of
    Senator Joe
    McCarthy and the Red (Russian) Scare:
    <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McCarthyism>
    the HUAC:
    <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_Un-
    American_Activities_Committee>
    and the associated cold war Communist witch hunts.� From
    my parents
    point of view, and from that of most immigrants from
    Europe, the
    committee was a copy of Hitler and Friends had done
    before WWII.� If
    you were a socialist, communist, gypsy, anarchist, or
    even a pacifist,
    you would be "denounced" by the committee or by some
    random person,
    and deported to some place unpleasant.
    <https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/
    denounce>
    "to tell someone in authority about a person's illegal
    activities,
    especially illegal political activities"

    No trial was needed.� For the freshly minted immigrants
    to the USA,
    this was a very real concern (or fear).� My parents and
    friends were
    seriously worried.� I was also worried, but because I
    really didn't
    understand what was happening, I just followed their
    example.� For a
    time, we became very wary of neighbors, police,
    officials, anyone in
    authority, etc.

    My extended family did their best to try and "fit in"
    and become an
    American.� We learned to juggle the knife and fork like
    Americans,
    instead of just holding the fork in the left hand and
    the knife in the
    right.� We spent quite a bit of effort learning to read
    and write
    English and understand American slang.� At the time, I
    was a 5+ year
    old and had no difficulty learning all the languages
    required to
    communicate with the neighbors, relatives, schools, and
    of course, the
    Americans.� However, in public, all the immigrants made
    it a point to
    only speak English.� My original native languages were
    German and
    Polish, which my insisted should only be spoken indoors
    at home or at
    a relatives house.� Anywhere else, it was "speak English
    or say
    nothing".

    This is 2nd hand from various relatives.� None of the
    immigrants spoke
    about "rights".� If they were Jewish, and lived in the
    wrong
    countries, they literally had no rights.� Having rights
    in the USA
    seemed so improbable to some immigrants that they
    literally did not
    believe that it was possible.� I was told that one
    immigrant received
    a summons for some minor legal matter.� My parents
    caught up with him
    as he was busy disposing of his possessions and
    preparing to leave the
    country.� He explained that it was better to leave than
    to get thrown
    in an American concentration camp.

    I can go on forever with such stories but I would prefer
    to do
    whatever I did on Friday evening before I discovered
    computers.� I
    think it's sufficient to say that being an immigrant can
    be a very
    traumatic experience, full of bad information and
    misinterpretations.
    It's no surprise that they do strange and difficult to
    explain things.



    I believe you but experiences vary a lot.

    All four of my grandparents immigrated at the beginning
    of the 1900s, lived in Italian neighborhoods and spoke
    little English. They were Resident Aliens, not citizens,
    all their lives. (in the 20th century, aliens had to
    register annually but there were few or no other
    impediments to their lives).

    In 1934, my eldest aunt on my mother's side wrote to the
    President, as my grandfather's work was cut to half time
    and he was very close to losing his house for nonpayment.
    She was a sixth grader and the only person in the family
    with adequate English. By whatever good luck, their
    mortgage was extended. My mother and all her siblings
    voted straight democrat all their lives.

    p.s. all my uncles in both families served in WWII. My
    father, the youngest, turned 18 as the war ended and did
    not.

    My Polish grandparents arrived when your Italian ones
    arrived. They did become citizens, but they certainly
    suffered discrimination.

    Back to the original link, the subject of the cyclist's
    efforts are illegal aliens, not actual immigrants.

    There have been plenty of tales of legal immigrants and
    even U.S. citizens suffering arrest and imprisonment
    because they didn't look "American" enough - IOW white
    enough.

    Not tales, documented incidents:

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/trump-s-ice-agents-arrest-
    puerto-rican-military-veteran-in-deportation-raid/ar-AA1xNWx9

    "They did not ask me for documentation for my American
    workers, Portuguese workers, or white workers,"





    An obvious error and it will be promptly rectified if it
    hasn't been already. Meanwhile, we're deporting illegal
    Russians, who do not have the vaunted BIPOC status, along
    with all the rest.

    I regularly get citations for no seal belt. Since there's
    never a good ending to arguing with police or sheriffs, I
    take the ticket, say thank you and write the Court. They
    citations are always dismissed. (1965 = exempt)

    Got it... "seat belt".. It took me a minute. I've not had police
    trouble with the gun on my bike. but I once had a "citizen" tell me he
    was going to report me. That was back when I only had a black sock
    covering it. Nowdays it's better concealed.

    --
    C'est bon
    Soloman

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From AMuzi@21:1/5 to Catrike Ryder on Sat Mar 8 13:50:17 2025
    On 3/8/2025 1:16 PM, Catrike Ryder wrote:
    On Sat, 8 Mar 2025 12:42:41 -0600, AMuzi <[email protected]> wrote:

    On 3/8/2025 12:00 PM, zen cycle wrote:
    On 3/8/2025 12:20 PM, Frank Krygowski wrote:
    On 3/8/2025 9:04 AM, AMuzi wrote:
    On 3/7/2025 10:56 PM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:

    That wasn't the case when my parents and I arrived in
    the USA via
    Ellis Island in about 1953.  This was the tail end of
    Senator Joe
    McCarthy and the Red (Russian) Scare:
    <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McCarthyism>
    the HUAC:
    <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_Un-
    American_Activities_Committee>
    and the associated cold war Communist witch hunts.  From
    my parents
    point of view, and from that of most immigrants from
    Europe, the
    committee was a copy of Hitler and Friends had done
    before WWII.  If
    you were a socialist, communist, gypsy, anarchist, or
    even a pacifist,
    you would be "denounced" by the committee or by some
    random person,
    and deported to some place unpleasant.
    <https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/
    denounce>
    "to tell someone in authority about a person's illegal
    activities,
    especially illegal political activities"

    No trial was needed.  For the freshly minted immigrants
    to the USA,
    this was a very real concern (or fear).  My parents and
    friends were
    seriously worried.  I was also worried, but because I
    really didn't
    understand what was happening, I just followed their
    example.  For a
    time, we became very wary of neighbors, police,
    officials, anyone in
    authority, etc.

    My extended family did their best to try and "fit in"
    and become an
    American.  We learned to juggle the knife and fork like
    Americans,
    instead of just holding the fork in the left hand and
    the knife in the
    right.  We spent quite a bit of effort learning to read
    and write
    English and understand American slang.  At the time, I
    was a 5+ year
    old and had no difficulty learning all the languages
    required to
    communicate with the neighbors, relatives, schools, and
    of course, the
    Americans.  However, in public, all the immigrants made
    it a point to
    only speak English.  My original native languages were
    German and
    Polish, which my insisted should only be spoken indoors
    at home or at
    a relatives house.  Anywhere else, it was "speak English
    or say
    nothing".

    This is 2nd hand from various relatives.  None of the
    immigrants spoke
    about "rights".  If they were Jewish, and lived in the
    wrong
    countries, they literally had no rights.  Having rights
    in the USA
    seemed so improbable to some immigrants that they
    literally did not
    believe that it was possible.  I was told that one
    immigrant received
    a summons for some minor legal matter.  My parents
    caught up with him
    as he was busy disposing of his possessions and
    preparing to leave the
    country.  He explained that it was better to leave than
    to get thrown
    in an American concentration camp.

    I can go on forever with such stories but I would prefer
    to do
    whatever I did on Friday evening before I discovered
    computers.  I
    think it's sufficient to say that being an immigrant can
    be a very
    traumatic experience, full of bad information and
    misinterpretations.
    It's no surprise that they do strange and difficult to
    explain things.



    I believe you but experiences vary a lot.

    All four of my grandparents immigrated at the beginning
    of the 1900s, lived in Italian neighborhoods and spoke
    little English. They were Resident Aliens, not citizens,
    all their lives. (in the 20th century, aliens had to
    register annually but there were few or no other
    impediments to their lives).

    In 1934, my eldest aunt on my mother's side wrote to the
    President, as my grandfather's work was cut to half time
    and he was very close to losing his house for nonpayment.
    She was a sixth grader and the only person in the family
    with adequate English. By whatever good luck, their
    mortgage was extended. My mother and all her siblings
    voted straight democrat all their lives.

    p.s. all my uncles in both families served in WWII. My
    father, the youngest, turned 18 as the war ended and did
    not.

    My Polish grandparents arrived when your Italian ones
    arrived. They did become citizens, but they certainly
    suffered discrimination.

    Back to the original link, the subject of the cyclist's
    efforts are illegal aliens, not actual immigrants.

    There have been plenty of tales of legal immigrants and
    even U.S. citizens suffering arrest and imprisonment
    because they didn't look "American" enough - IOW white
    enough.

    Not tales, documented incidents:

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/trump-s-ice-agents-arrest-
    puerto-rican-military-veteran-in-deportation-raid/ar-AA1xNWx9

    "They did not ask me for documentation for my American
    workers, Portuguese workers, or white workers,"





    An obvious error and it will be promptly rectified if it
    hasn't been already. Meanwhile, we're deporting illegal
    Russians, who do not have the vaunted BIPOC status, along
    with all the rest.

    I regularly get citations for no seal belt. Since there's
    never a good ending to arguing with police or sheriffs, I
    take the ticket, say thank you and write the Court. They
    citations are always dismissed. (1965 = exempt)

    Got it... "seat belt".. It took me a minute. I've not had police
    trouble with the gun on my bike. but I once had a "citizen" tell me he
    was going to report me. That was back when I only had a black sock
    covering it. Nowdays it's better concealed.

    --
    C'est bon
    Soloman

    Sorry sometimes I type faster than I can type.

    --
    Andrew Muzi
    [email protected]
    Open every day since 1 April, 1971

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Catrike Ryder@21:1/5 to AMuzi on Sat Mar 8 15:30:48 2025
    On Sat, 8 Mar 2025 13:50:17 -0600, AMuzi <[email protected]> wrote:

    On 3/8/2025 1:16 PM, Catrike Ryder wrote:
    On Sat, 8 Mar 2025 12:42:41 -0600, AMuzi <[email protected]> wrote:

    On 3/8/2025 12:00 PM, zen cycle wrote:
    On 3/8/2025 12:20 PM, Frank Krygowski wrote:
    On 3/8/2025 9:04 AM, AMuzi wrote:
    On 3/7/2025 10:56 PM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:

    That wasn't the case when my parents and I arrived in
    the USA via
    Ellis Island in about 1953.� This was the tail end of
    Senator Joe
    McCarthy and the Red (Russian) Scare:
    <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McCarthyism>
    the HUAC:
    <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_Un-
    American_Activities_Committee>
    and the associated cold war Communist witch hunts.� From
    my parents
    point of view, and from that of most immigrants from
    Europe, the
    committee was a copy of Hitler and Friends had done
    before WWII.� If
    you were a socialist, communist, gypsy, anarchist, or
    even a pacifist,
    you would be "denounced" by the committee or by some
    random person,
    and deported to some place unpleasant.
    <https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/
    denounce>
    "to tell someone in authority about a person's illegal
    activities,
    especially illegal political activities"

    No trial was needed.� For the freshly minted immigrants
    to the USA,
    this was a very real concern (or fear).� My parents and
    friends were
    seriously worried.� I was also worried, but because I
    really didn't
    understand what was happening, I just followed their
    example.� For a
    time, we became very wary of neighbors, police,
    officials, anyone in
    authority, etc.

    My extended family did their best to try and "fit in"
    and become an
    American.� We learned to juggle the knife and fork like
    Americans,
    instead of just holding the fork in the left hand and
    the knife in the
    right.� We spent quite a bit of effort learning to read
    and write
    English and understand American slang.� At the time, I
    was a 5+ year
    old and had no difficulty learning all the languages
    required to
    communicate with the neighbors, relatives, schools, and
    of course, the
    Americans.� However, in public, all the immigrants made
    it a point to
    only speak English.� My original native languages were
    German and
    Polish, which my insisted should only be spoken indoors
    at home or at
    a relatives house.� Anywhere else, it was "speak English
    or say
    nothing".

    This is 2nd hand from various relatives.� None of the
    immigrants spoke
    about "rights".� If they were Jewish, and lived in the
    wrong
    countries, they literally had no rights.� Having rights
    in the USA
    seemed so improbable to some immigrants that they
    literally did not
    believe that it was possible.� I was told that one
    immigrant received
    a summons for some minor legal matter.� My parents
    caught up with him
    as he was busy disposing of his possessions and
    preparing to leave the
    country.� He explained that it was better to leave than
    to get thrown
    in an American concentration camp.

    I can go on forever with such stories but I would prefer
    to do
    whatever I did on Friday evening before I discovered
    computers.� I
    think it's sufficient to say that being an immigrant can
    be a very
    traumatic experience, full of bad information and
    misinterpretations.
    It's no surprise that they do strange and difficult to
    explain things.



    I believe you but experiences vary a lot.

    All four of my grandparents immigrated at the beginning
    of the 1900s, lived in Italian neighborhoods and spoke
    little English. They were Resident Aliens, not citizens,
    all their lives. (in the 20th century, aliens had to
    register annually but there were few or no other
    impediments to their lives).

    In 1934, my eldest aunt on my mother's side wrote to the
    President, as my grandfather's work was cut to half time
    and he was very close to losing his house for nonpayment.
    She was a sixth grader and the only person in the family
    with adequate English. By whatever good luck, their
    mortgage was extended. My mother and all her siblings
    voted straight democrat all their lives.

    p.s. all my uncles in both families served in WWII. My
    father, the youngest, turned 18 as the war ended and did
    not.

    My Polish grandparents arrived when your Italian ones
    arrived. They did become citizens, but they certainly
    suffered discrimination.

    Back to the original link, the subject of the cyclist's
    efforts are illegal aliens, not actual immigrants.

    There have been plenty of tales of legal immigrants and
    even U.S. citizens suffering arrest and imprisonment
    because they didn't look "American" enough - IOW white
    enough.

    Not tales, documented incidents:

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/trump-s-ice-agents-arrest-
    puerto-rican-military-veteran-in-deportation-raid/ar-AA1xNWx9

    "They did not ask me for documentation for my American
    workers, Portuguese workers, or white workers,"





    An obvious error and it will be promptly rectified if it
    hasn't been already. Meanwhile, we're deporting illegal
    Russians, who do not have the vaunted BIPOC status, along
    with all the rest.

    I regularly get citations for no seal belt. Since there's
    never a good ending to arguing with police or sheriffs, I
    take the ticket, say thank you and write the Court. They
    citations are always dismissed. (1965 = exempt)

    Got it... "seat belt".. It took me a minute. I've not had police
    trouble with the gun on my bike. but I once had a "citizen" tell me he
    was going to report me. That was back when I only had a black sock
    covering it. Nowdays it's better concealed.

    --
    C'est bon
    Soloman

    Sorry sometimes I type faster than I can type.

    You don't have to apologize to me. Look at all the mistakes and goofs
    I make.

    --
    C'est bon
    Soloman

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)