Tuesday, July 08, 2014

Dangerous Demonstrators at Murrieta's Blocked Immigration Road

By Douglas V. Gibbs

On Monday, July 7, over 200 protesters manned their posts in the late morning hours, well into the afternoon, to protect Murrieta from receiving another shipment of illegal immigrants infected with disease.  The streets were blocked, so that the protesters had to split into two groups at the areas where the police allowed them to, on two sides of the Border Patrol Station on Madison Avenue.  At the south end of the street near Fig Street, over a hundred protesters were gathered with no counter-protesters present.  On the north side of the area, a hundred yards away from the entrance into the Border Patrol Station, the group of a few dozen grew to well over a hundred.  At the north end the groups were split in two, one part being near the station entrance, and the other at the bottom of the road where the initial blockage of the road was established by Murrieta Police.  A group of counter-protesters were taped off away from the Murrieta demonstrators, wearing their Aztlan brown-shirt uniform.  The police department has done a great job, but one citizen found their methods to be curious.

George Rombach, a longtime student of my Constitution Class in Temecula, and a gentleman with a few collegiate recognitions including a law degree, found it curious that the police were so easily able to cut off motorized access to a public road, and cut off all foot traffic access anywhere near the border patrol station, unless one was a member of Murrieta's emergency response team, a city official, border patrol personnel, or the press.  So, George asked a member of the police about the permitting required to accomplish such a feet.  After the person George asked essentially claimed ignorance over the technicalities regarding the logistics of creating the buffer zone near the immigration facility, he went to the other side of the blockage and asked again.  Both officers, at the Fig Street end, and the Guava Street end, were unable to satisfy his inquiry.

Mr. Rombach, being the thorough person that he is, and curious regarding the presence of the California Highway Patrol along with Murrieta Police, decided to pack up temporarily and go down to the city offices to ask about the permits associated with the law enforcement shutdown of Madison Avenue.  At City Hall, he was again not given a straight answer, denied the opportunity to see such paperwork, and he was eventually satisfied that no permit that requested such a shutdown of the roadway existed.  The excuse for no paperwork being filed?  The police have the right to shutdown any road, and this included the California Highway Patrol which was also present during George's questioning back at the site, when they believe doing so would protect any danger to life and property.

Danger to life and property?  "What danger to life and property?" George asked.

"From the demonstrators," he was told.

His conversation revealed, however, that the city personnel he was questioning were not referring to the counter-protest, pro-amnesty crowd being shipped in from Los Angeles, but the peaceful citizens of Murrieta, and their allies from surrounding communities.  The government, an order that was not necessarily something that originated in the Murrieta Police Department, but either higher up in the city, or originating at the federal level, in the case of Murrieta, has determined that the protesters arriving to protect the City of Murrieta from an unlawful encroachment of federal power against the community with the delivery of ill, unlawfully present immigrants that have been shipped all the way from Texas, are dangerous and must be contained.

In other words, the good people of Murrieta are potential domestic terrorists.

If that is their line of thinking, then it is also no surprise that there were rumors of federal personnel in riot equipment en route to our location under the hot California sun on an illegally blocked street near an embattled border patrol station in the fine City of Murrieta.

This is only one of many issues exploding in America, poorly administered by the current President in the White House.  There are going to be others around the country, where other communities will become ground-zero for that issue just as Murrieta has become for the immigration issue.  This is only the beginning.  America will soon catch up to the resistance that Murrieta is engaging against the federal government's attempt to force its unconstitutional will upon American communities.

-- Political Pistachio Conservative News and Commentary

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