We wish all our members, families and friends of the Queens Village Republican Club a most happy and meaningful Fourth of July. As we celebrate our national holiday, it’s important to keep it’s meaning in mind, which was so eloquently expressed by Frederick R. Bedell Jr., Grand Knight of St. Anastasia Knights of Columbus Council #5911.
Remember the Reason for the Fourth of July
By Frederick R. Bedell Jr.
The Fourth of July is a day of great importance. In 1776 we fought as a people for a birth of a new nation founded on Democracy. Since then we have fought many wars and many lives were lost for the cause of democracy. In this democracy, we have the right to speak our minds and the right to vote for those who will represent our rights of freedom and justice for all.
So the next election, please get out and vote. Let not our ancestors, who have died for what most of us hold most dear, and that is freedom, to have died in vain. As it says in the Declaration of Independence, “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights, that among them these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” So, let freedom ring on the 4th of July. Remember this too: The 4th of July is not just a day off, for store sales and barbecues but a day to celebrate our day of independence from tyranny.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE June 24, 2019 CONTACT: Joseph Concannon PHONE: 347-946-1931
CATTLE CARS, ZYKLON B & US REPRESENTATIVE OCASIO-CORTEZ’S EVOCATIVE IMAGERY
REPUBLICAN STATE COMMITTEE CANDIDATES HOWARD NEIMAN AND
EVANGELINE BALASKAS SPEAK OUT
Fresh
Meadows, NY – The Queens
Republican Patriots unequivocally condemn the disturbing comments of NY’s 14th
District US Representative, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who equated American detention
centers for the thousands of persons uncontrolledly amassing and seeking
illegal entry at our southern borders with “concentration camps”, a term
universally and infamously recognized as the key staging point for the vicious
Nazi campaign to exterminate innocent Jews throughout Europe.
Even more
so, Queens Republican Patriots decry the astonishing silence of an intimidated
Democratic leadership in Congress as well as the absence locally of our Queens
GOP leadership to confront Representative Ocasio-Cortez’s comments.
Detention centers
at our border were started under the Obama Administration in keeping with US
law requiring all unvetted immigrants illicitly seeking entry at our border to be
processed and, as appropriate, released with future court dates (for which most
do not show up).
Children can
be separated from their parents for several reasons, including the adults
accompanying them cross our border illegally and are placed in adult
facilities, to enable community-based alternatives for juveniles1
and to determine if the children are victims of human trafficking. Detention centers for accompanied and
unaccompanied minors are designed as much as possible to keep children
comfortable, safe and well cared for, with video games, computers, and outdoor
sports facilities.
It is
disingenuous to ignore the fact that our government seeks humane treatment of
all who arrive illegally at our border within the realities of overwhelming
numbers, shortage of best residential options and failure of Congress to
allocate needed funds to rapidly build desired residential options that
simultaneously address the needs of immigrants and the needs of a lawful
society.
Evangeline
Balaskas (R-25AD), Queens Republican Patriots (QRP) candidate for Republican NY
State Committee, said: “Representative Ocasio-Cortez’s comments equating the
humane treatment of adults and children here illegally to the systematic
rounding up, torture, and extermination of millions of Jews is beyond ignorant
and dangerous. Some Democrats say not to take her words seriously. But we have to. She is equating America to
Nazi Germany and using her position and popularity to sow discord, spread
propaganda, and undermine our national security.”
Dr. Howard
Neiman (R-25AD), Ms. Balaskas’ co-QRP candidate for Republican NY State
Committee, an Orthodox Jewish community leader, noted: “Words enter the brain,
evoke imagery which evokes behavior. Representative Ocasio-Cortez was not
unaware of the imagery she was stirring into the American psyche. It is hard to
imagine she is not aware of the world’s pervasive concentration camp imagery –
cattle cars, Arbeit Macht Frei, zyklon B, mountains of children’s shoes. But, she clearly knowingly evoked this vile
imagery to score a political point. In
war terminology, let’s say she was hugely and disingenuously “disproportionate”. Congresswoman Ocasio-Cortez’s words pierced the
souls of her 14th District constituents, several thousand of whom
may very well be Nazi concentration camp survivors.”
Hate crimes
against Jews in NYC are up 82% in 2019, Jews suffering disproportionately as
over 50% of documented hate crimes are anti-Jewish2. Queens
Republican Patriots are speaking up for our Jewish family and friends even when
the entire national Democratic establishment falters and the establishment
Queens GOP offers not a word of outrage or solace to their constituents.
Queens
Republican Patriots call upon Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to retract those words
and apologize to America and specifically the Jewish people.
Queens Republican Patriots also call upon our Congressional leaders to lead and denounce comments, such as those by Representative Ocasio-Cortez, that enable antisemitism.
Be there to speak
out:
Stop Pelosi’s lies and obstruction.
Tell her to stop thwarting President Trump’s agenda to Keep America Great!
Tell her that we support President Trump and his America First policies.
Tell her that her Party has been taken over by extreme leftist lunatics,
anti-American, anti-Semitic, Anti-Christian traitors and socialists.
Tell her “Build the Wall”
Stop illegal immigration
Save our city, state, and country
Speak up and get organized. Take back New York City.
“Only 7 Black
Students Got Into Stuyvesant, N.Y.’s Most Selective High School, Out of 895
Spots,” blared the headline in The New York Times. Eliza Shapiro’s
March 18 article caused a hurricane of media-driven rage and rendered the
Leftist Twitterati apoplectic. Predictably, NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio (D) and
Gotham’s Schools Chancellor Richard Carranza used this occasion to split the
Big Apple along racial lines. They renewed their call to eliminate the
Specialized High School Admissions Test (SHSAT), which measures students’
preparedness for Stuyvesant, Brooklyn Tech, Bronx Science, and New York’s other
Specialized High Schools. Since the SHSAT is written into state law, its fate
lies with policymakers in Albany, not with the mayor or his equity-obsessed
de-education chancellor.
Pro-SHSAT advocates loudly and persistently have defended
the objective, merit-based exam. In response State Senator John Liu (D –
Queens), chairman of the NYC Education Committee, announced a series of
listening sessions titled “School Diversity and Specialized High School
Admissions Community Forums.” Liu promised such a gathering in each of Gotham’s
five boroughs.
Pro-SHSAT parents and alumni dominated hearings in Queens
and Brooklyn, with few anti-SHSAT activists in attendance. In contrast to the
SHSAT supporters’ calls for consistent, standardized tests, SHSAT detractors
argued that diversity through race-based admission would provide better
education.
SHSAT fans showed up in force for a conclave in the Bronx
last month. Liberal, elitist SHSAT opponents largely stayed away. Perhaps
traveling to New York’s lowest-income borough was too far a leap from their
cushy bubbles in Manhattan and Brooklyn’s tonier precincts.
Unexpectedly, black Bronxites tried to slap the city to its
senses. They defended the SHSAT and shared inspirational stories of how it
opened doors for them.
Eleanor George, a Bronx resident and Bronx Science alumna,
applauded the test. She recalled her years at I.S. 131, known more warmly as
The Albert Einstein School. Located in the Bronx’s Soundview neighborhood, this
middle-school campus was mainly black and Hispanic. Many students there called
the nearby projects home. George remembered a guidance counselor visiting her
class and “lauding the praises” of vocational high schools. When George went home
that day, she told her mother that she aspired to attend a vocational high
school.
The next day, her mother confronted the Einstein School’s
principal: “How dare you only offer vocational high schools” to George and her
classmates. The guidance counselor soon returned to the class and told students
about the Specialized High Schools, including Bronx Science. Einstein offered
George and some of her classmates free test-preparation lessons in the morning,
before school. George scored very high on the SHSAT. She was accepted to Bronx
Science’s Class of 1978, as was her friend who lived in a housing project and
achieved that year’s highest SHSAT score. George pondered what her friend’s
fate would have been if her mother had not advocated for her.
George, who became a teacher, also said that many Bronx
Science students in the 1970s received the same test-preparation courses that
she did. Restoring such instruction, she argued, would have positive results
for many black students who are improperly nurtured today.
Next, Joan Cargill, a Bronx Science alumna, took the stage
at Liu’s May 17 forum. Cargill addressed “Inspiration, being inspired, the lack
of inspiration, and the need to bring it back.” She spoke about growing up in
the Bronx as the daughter of Jamaican immigrants. Cargill, then 9, learned that
a friend’s cousin was accepted to Bronx Science. This news inspired her to
attend the school that yielded eight Nobel Laureates. “The test can’t go away,”
Cargill pleaded. “In a society where everyone wins a trophy, all I had was the
test. My parents had no money. It was the competitiveness I needed, as a girl
whose parents worked all the time.”
A black woman named Lisa Benton told a story that could make
an actuary cry. And it did.
Benton explained how her uncle, the son of a Savannah,
Georgia sharecropper, took Stuyvesant’s test in 1932. He did well and was
accepted. However, the admissions officers scoffed at the notion that a
sharecropper’s son could possess such smarts. So, the young man had to re-take
the exam. The farmer’s son met the required score and entered one of NYC’s most
successful anti-poverty institutions.
“If he could pass this test in 1932,” Benton said, “I know
in 2019, kids of color can pass this test.” Seeing this man’s niece so
eloquently tell this tale movingly confirmed that Specialized High Schools
elevate New Yorkers, so that they and their progeny can climb to previously
unimaginable heights.
“Hearing Lisa Benton’s story brought tears to my eyes,” said
Jon Roberts, a local actuary, mathematician, and education-reform activist.
“Her uncle struggled to overcome the injustice and discrimination that were so
prevalent in 1932. He earned the right to attend Stuyvesant through study and
hard work, despite being poor and black during the Great Depression.”
Roberts added, “If admission were determined by subjective
criteria, then he never would have been admitted to Stuyvesant, despite being
qualified. But the test-only policy defeated anti-black racism and let Lisa’s
uncle attend. Only a test can overcome human bias. We must keep the test-only
policy for the Specialized High Schools.”
As for School Chancellor Carranza, he told the New York
State Assembly Education Committee last month: “I refuse to believe there are
no smart black and brown children.” Too bad he is so race-obsessed that he
cannot let these precocious children meet their natural-born, God-given
potential. Instead, he plays race-based numbers games with their future.
Carranza also counts adult racial beans, often at the
expense of “implicitly biased” Caucasians. As a New York Post headline
put it, “White Out: Carranza ‘demoted’ execs because ‘of their skin color.’”
For Carranza, race, not classroom excellence, is the primary factor in
Department of Education employment decisions. New Yorkers will learn plenty
more about Carranza’s color-driven worldview as he defends himself in a $90 million lawsuit filed by three white, female DOE employees. They
claim that Carranza denied them promotions and, instead, offered them to
allegedly less-qualified minority staffers.
At the same State Assembly hearing, Public Advocate Jumaane
Williams (D – New York City) testified that eliminating the SHSAT is like
“Saying your kids are too dumb to pass,” which “makes people believe their
communities are somehow dumber than others.” The uplifting Bronx tales shared
at Liu’s forum would prompt anyone who heard them to fight against Carranza’s
anti-SHSAT jihad, which is built on an assumption of black and Hispanic
intellectual incapacity.
Meanwhile, de Blasio has abrogated his mayoral duties to
pursue a self-humiliating presidential bid. A recent survey revealed that he
enjoys the support of 0 percent of Democrats and, among 600 Iowans
polled, not even one wanted him, even as a second choice.
Instead of romping through Iowa corn fields, de Blasio should have sat in
Lehman College’s Lovinger Theatre in the Bronx. He might have been moved to
fire Carranza and install someone ready for the hard work necessary to repair
Gotham’s dysfunctional government schools. America’s largest city desperately
needs a leader who can address the rampant under-education of so many black
boys and girls, abandon twisted policies that push them down in the name of
equity, and, instead, lift every child — up, up, and away.
Manhattan-based political commentator Deroy Murdock is a Fox
News contributor and a senior fellow with the London Center for Policy Research.
Queens-based education reformer Charles Vavruska is a parent activist and
evangelist for the local Specialized High School Admissions Test.