Anonymous ID: e21809 March 13, 2021, 6:52 p.m. No.13200871   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0877 >>1564 >>1605

https://www.glennbeck.com/glenn-beck-podcast/coming-saturday-ric-grenell-declassified-aliens-china-russian-collusion-ep-101

 

COMING SATURDAY: Ric Grenell DECLASSIFIED: Aliens, China & 'Russian Collusion'

 

THE GLENN BECK PODCAST

Anonymous ID: e21809 March 13, 2021, 6:57 p.m. No.13200916   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0921

>>13200894

36He said to them, “But now if you have a purse, take it, and also a bag; and if you don’t have a sword, sell your cloak and buy one. 37It is written: ‘And he was numbered with the transgressors’ b ; and I tell you that this must be fulfilled in me. Yes, what is written about me is reaching its fulfillment.”

 

Luke 22:36

Anonymous ID: e21809 March 13, 2021, 7:08 p.m. No.13200985   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13200965

>>13200973

This is an old article, but yeah…painting schools with murals of Trump's decapitated head?

Doesn't make sense to me anymore.

 

https://www.theamericanmirror.com/blog/2018/05/04/ca-school-mural-features-trumps-bloody-decapitated-head-on-a-spear/

Anonymous ID: e21809 March 13, 2021, 7:50 p.m. No.13201207   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1564

>>13201145

Trying to find out more about this case.

This perhaps is related? IDK?

But it seem that Undocumented Workers were caught cleaning Michael Chertoff's home in DC.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/spanish/mundo_usa/newsid_7780000/7780939.stm

 

Here is the Translation:

 

Undocumented people cleaned Chertoff

Michael Chertoff

The company charged $ 185 to clean Chertoff's house.

US Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff unknowingly used the services of a cleaning company that employed undocumented workers.

 

For several weeks, over a period of more than three years, the company cleaned Chertoff's home, located in Washington, D.C.

 

According to the American newspaper Washington Post, the Secret Service - part of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS, for its acronym in English) that Chertoff heads - verified the documents of the company's workers every time they came to work at the house. from the Secretary of Homeland Security.

 

However, the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) launched an investigation earlier this year that revealed that the cleaning company used by Chertoff hired the services of several undocumented workers.

 

Penalty fee

 

Company owner James Reid told the newspaper that there were never any problems with the employees cleaning at Chertoff's home, but the investigation revealed that some of them were undocumented.

 

According to the Washington Post, ICE fined Reid more than $ 22,000 for failing to verify his workers' documents.

 

Although DHS notes that each contractor must ensure that their workers have documents in order, Reid maintains that it is not fair for employers to be required to distinguish between real and false documents when the Secret Service itself is unable to distinguish between them.

 

After learning that the company employed undocumented workers, the Chertoff family disbanded their services.

Anonymous ID: e21809 March 13, 2021, 8:07 p.m. No.13201292   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1297

>>13201274

Translation part 1:

 

Almost seven years of management took Carlos Alvarado, Francisco Hurtado and Byron Vásquez to create the House of Culture of Guatemala in Los Angeles. Time has flown and on August 26 they will be 29 years of promoting Chapinas values ​​and culture.

 

“In 1976 when the Casa de la Cultura was formed, we were like 50,000 Guatemalans in Los Angeles, now we are like 300,000. The majority were workers in the maquilas and factories ”, Byron Vásquez tells La Opinion from his newly opened new offices in 1920 on Wilshire Boulevard.

 

A year later we held our first general assembly and formed the first board of directors, he recalls.

 

Guatemalans arrived in Los Angeles displaced by the 1976 earthquake that left 40,000 dead. A next wave came in escaping the armed conflict of 1985-1986. Later in 1990 there was another group of immigrants who allowed themselves to come after the signing of the peace accords signed to reach solutions to the problems generated by the civil war.

 

Byron Vasquez is the president of the House of Culture of Guatemala in Los Angeles Byron Vasquez is the president of the House of Culture of Guatemala in Los Angeles.

In this environment, Vásquez, president of the House of Guatemalan Culture, talks that they were born with the intention of offering their community music, theater, guitar and piano lessons, and painting and craft workshops. "The culture was a way of attracting them," he confides.

 

"Our community is very reserved and when we created the House of Culture we wanted to have a meeting place and promote the values ​​of our country," he says.

 

Currently they have incorporated marimba and zumba classes. And they carry out festivals such as Navideño or a Guatemala to Know. Also in their previous facilities they kept open a medical clinic.

Anonymous ID: e21809 March 13, 2021, 8:07 p.m. No.13201297   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13201274

>>13201292

Tranlation Part 2:

 

Art is part of the way that the House of Culture of Guatemala connects with its nationals. Art is part of the way that the House of Culture of Guatemala connects with its nationals.

Over time they began to see more needs in the community, and formed a social assistance center to support Guatemalans to educate themselves in all the procedures to fix their immigration status, an opportunity that was presented with the NACARA program, which suspended the deportation of Central American immigrants and other countries and gave them the option of political asylum.

 

"We wanted to teach them and give them the tools so that they did not spend on lawyers," he external.

 

To support themselves financially, they formed the Guatemala Trade Center, which conducts market research on Guatemalan companies. “With what these companies pay, we support the House of Culture. We do not receive funds from foundations or other institutions or governments, ”explains Vásquez.

 

The biggest challenge, he reveals, has been to maintain the credibility of the Casa de la Cultura and get people to support them and not take advantage of the needs of the Chapin immigrants.

 

GUATEMALA HOUSE OF CULTURE

 

What else do you want to do?

 

Vásquez says that the fight is for the Guatemalan immigrant to participate civically and for having greater political representation.

 

“We have to get more involved in politics, have more representation as other immigrant communities already have. If we do not do it, the rulers will not take us into account or attend to our needs ”, he maintains.

 

The only representative they have to date is Norma Torres, a Guatemalan immigrant who is a congresswoman. "But we need more in city councils and at other levels of government," she says.

 

She says that her wish would be to open more houses of Guatemalan culture that function as community centers in cities like San Francisco and Las Vegas where large flows of Guatemalans have arrived. “Through culture we keep our community integrated,” she observes.

 

NEW ADDRESS

 

The new address of the House of Culture is:

1930 Wilshire Blvd. Suite 705, Los Angeles CA 90057

The phone (213) 483-1774

 

The House of Culture of Guatemala also supports the indigenous artisans of its country with the sale of their artisan and artistic works.

If you want to help and buy Guatemalan crafts you can visit the site:

https://www.etsy.com/shop/MayanHeartArtisan

www.guatemalaenusa.net

 

The House of Culture of Guatemala helps them obtain asylum

 

The Guatemalan Claudia Liseth Ramos says that seven years ago she was desperate because where she went, they told her that they could not help her fix her immigration situation, they also wanted to charge her thousands of dollars. “Someone recommended me to go to the House of Culture and there my husband was charged $ 700 each for helping us apply for NACARA. We managed to obtain political asylum and now we have the residence, ”she explains.

 

Ramos says that seven years later they returned again to the House of Culture of Guatemala to see if her two children, aged 17 and 18, qualify.