By D.A. King
By D.A. King
Here to read the rest and to see the CoC letters.
By D.A. King
“Journalism is printing what someone else does not want printed: everything else is public relations.” Attributed to George Orwell.
According to the federal government, only seven states host more illegal aliens than Georgia. The leftist Georgia Budget and Policy Institute says we are home to more illegals than Lawful Permanent Residents (“green card” holders). Pre-Biden/Harris/Mayorkas, the estimates on how many “undocumented workers” live in our state varied, but after nearly four years of illegal open borders, use of about 500,000-600,000 is a conservative ‘guesstimate.’
This is no way to run a state.
Absent the promised federal protections of defended and secure borders, it does not require an advanced political degree to recognize that our state and local governments should be doing everything possible to drive illegal aliens out of Georgia.
This writer has spent the last nineteen legislative sessions under the Gold Dome in Atlanta to that end. Working together with lawmakers, we have put a long list of statutes in place designed to make Georgia inhospitable to the federal offense of illegal immigration.
But many of them are not enforced. Enforcement is the task of the executive branch of government.
To noodle out what is really going on with illegal immigration in Georgia, it helps to realize that there are essentially two sides to our current immigration crisis: Pro-enforcement and anti-enforcement.
This writer is pro-enforcement. I have been researching and actively fighting illegal immigration for more than two decades. I am not well-liked at the Gold Dome. I am not a member of any political party.
I am grateful to publisher Will Davis who has kindly consented to allowing me to send educational commentary columns for readers of this newspaper. My goal is to provide a better understanding of illegal immigration in Georgia.
To that end, we recently published a column that highlighted Georgia’s Dual Enrollment (DE) program.
To recap, DE is a taxpayer-funded arrangement in which high school students – mostly 11th and 12th graders – can attend taxpayer-funded public college classes and get both high school and college credit. They do not pay a dime in tuition or for books and fees. The budget for 2025 is north of $91 million. It is intended as a head start on an employment career for the students. There is nothing in the Dual Enrollment program that excludes illegal aliens from taking the zero cost classes provided Georgia taxpayers.
Maybe Republican lawmakers have forgotten that federal law says illegal aliens are not eligible for employment anywhere in the nation.
Suggestion: Ask your state lawmakers why they are using our tax dollars to fund a college education for illegal aliens in the name of “workforce expansion.”
Dual Enrollment vs Instate Tuition for illegal aliens
The DE program is separate and quite different than the “shall we provide instate tuition to the annual illegal aliens who have already graduated our highs schools?” question.
Instate tuition is significantly lower (but not free, like DE) than the out-of-state tuition rate. How much lower? A look at the Middle Georgia State University website shows that total instate tuition and fees for a fifteen-hour class load is $3641. The out-of-state rate is $10,316. That is a difference of $6675.00. That is per semester.
Instate tuition is intended to benefit Georgians in Georgia. An American student living in Michigan (for example) who wants to attend Middle Georgia State College must pay the much higher out-of-state tuition rate.
Believe it or not, prodded by the extremely powerful Georgia Chamber of Commerce lobbyists in Atlanta, some GOP state lawmakers annually push for instate tuition for illegal aliens for whom then-President Barack Obama illegally invented the “DACA” program in 2012.
In March of 2019, the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit found that illegal aliens with Obama’s DACA are not eligible to enter the United States, are removable (deportable) and do not have “lawful presence.” The decision was unanimous.
“We have continuously and clearly taken the position in ongoing legal cases that DACA does not confer legal status…” says Georgia Attorney General Chis Carr.
Shorter: Illegal aliens with DACA are illegal aliens – but Obama gave them a work permit anyway.
Suggestion: Ask your state legislators if they support allowing any illegal aliens to pay $6675.00 less in tuition per semester at Middle Georgia State than Americans and legal immigrants who live in other U.S. states.
I respectfully advise that you start with Rep. Dale Washburn (R-Macon), as he is the number two signer on the most recent legislation (HB 131) aimed at rewarding and welcoming illegal aliens with the much lower tuition rate. Is that pro-enforcement?
D.A. King is president of the Georgia-based Dustin Inman Society. X/Twitter: @DAKDIS
A version of the above essay was published in the Monroe County/ Macon Reporter on October 23, 2024.
By D.A. King
The below is from the “Straight Talk” radio show on WGIG, WTKS and iHeart radio Scott Ryfun host, Feb 20, 2024 Hour 3. The show goes from Savannah to Florida as well as the online coverage.
Low quality audio below. The poll being discussed is here.
Transcript by Rev.com
My cost: $24.00 and about an hour of my time.
Scott Ryfun host:
[inaudible 00:00:00] mentioned the, uh, the new poll that is out, came out this morning, commissioned by the Dustin Inman Society and the, uh, the head of the new Dustin Inman Society is with us this morning, D.A. King.
How are you, sir?
D.A. King:
I’m just fine, Scott. Thank you very much for having me on your radio broadcast.
Scott Ryfun host:
Absolutely, absolutely. Talk to us a little bit about this poll, um, Landmark poll that was put out, uh, surveying 500 Republican primary voters.
D.A. King:
I will. Let me, let me kind of set this up with, with asking your radio audience to try to imagine the howling headlines in national and Georgia newspapers if the Republicans running the state of Georgia were to ignore or violate any of the federal laws that provide benefits to people in the country illegally.
Scott Ryfun host:
Sure, yes. They’d be screaming.
D.A. King:
That being said, um, most people don’t understand that the government of Georgia, led by governor Brian Kemp is in, it, it – I’m gonna be as polite if I can, ignoring a host of laws put in place on the state-level over the last 19 years that will make Georgia as unattractive to illegal immigration as possible. So, that, that, that kind of sets the stage.
What we’ve done is we have spent a lot of money, donor money and a lot of work and effort trying to create a p- a picture for the elected officials here in Georgia, not all of them, some of them are very good on the issue, trying to get people to recognize that most Republican voters in Georgia want the Georgia laws in place enforced so as to make us less attractive to the border rush that the Biden administration is conducting.
Scott Ryfun host:
Yeah, and it’s just that simple. I mean, when we look at these numbers, it’s not, it’s not close. I mean, it is, it is an overwhelming number of Republican voters, primary voters who we’re talking about, uh, make up the majority of the House and Senate in the state. Uh, they oppose a lot of these measures, uh, in, again, huge numbers.
D.A. King:
It is a huge majority. It is not, I, I’m grateful for your going over the poll earlier. I listened and I, I’m, I’m like you. Ih- this is unsurprising, but we had to do this to try and perhaps jerk the attention of our legislature to illegal immigration in Georgia before we run into crossover today and then the end of the legislative session. So, so that said, please know that the House and the Senate leadership has, has moved a resolution through both chambers condemning the president, rightfully, condemning the border, um, crisis, rightfully, and, and, and, uh, making it clear that they don’t approve of what’s going on on illegal immigration on a national level and thanking the governor for sending more, um, 20 more National Guard troops to the border. That’s great and fine.
At the same time, people should realize that the House and the Senate are both considering, and the Senate has passed several laws, that actually dismantle in-place laws here in Georgia, um, th- th- aimed at illegal immigration and those are the ones that, that, th- that they’re not ignoring.
Uh, I’ll give you an example. We have, and it is dry and boring stuff, I know, but we have laws that I’ve worked very hard a long time ago in Georgia that say if you move to Georgia and you wanted to apply for an occupational license, that you have to go through a process to show the state on a, in a sworn affidavit under penalty of false swearing, that essentially, you are not an illegal alien.
Scott Ryfun host:
Hm.
D.A. King:
Well, the licensing process doesn’t take a long time but it takes longer than no licensing process which is what several bills, especially in the Senate, are aimed at and that is eliminating the licensing process which eliminates that verification of lawful presence that I just told you about.
Scott Ryfun host:
Mm-hmm.
D.A. King:
And it’s just almost impossible to get these guys to pay attention because they’re being told what to do by the special interest in the business community.
Scott Ryfun host:
Do, do, uh, do you have a tough time making them see the hypocrisy of being upset about the border, sending troops to the border, but yet allowing the results of a loose border to prosper freely in this state?
D.A. King:
I, I have a very difficult time. There were no, a generation of legislators years ago that would come to me for advice and guidance because I’m more educated on the issue that they are.
Scott Ryfun host:
Mm-hmm.
D.A. King:
Well- most, not all, most of the people running the gold dome right now from the top down do not want to talk about this at all and the answer to your question, do I have a hard time, yes, and I can tell you why. And that is because I am pretty much the only voice, uh, urging people running our government in Georgia to pay attention to illegal immigration in Georgia. So I’m grateful for your, for your time on the radio because I want to urge your conservative, Republican listeners who are in the car or at their home office or whatever, if you don’t get busy and help us make this point, you will not have the state that you really want in a couple of more years, whether or not the Dems take over sooner or later.
Scott Ryfun host:
Now, y- y- who, who is it that really, I mean, you talk about the special interests, who are the special interests?
D.A. King:
(laughs)
Scott Ryfun host:
I mean, I think we need to name some names here.
D.A. King:
Sure. I’m, I’m, I’m happy to say the Metro Atlanta Chamber of Commerce, the Georgia Chamber of Commerce. There’s a, there’s a group called, um, BIG, Business Immigration and Georgia, run by a, a coaltion of the Georgia Chamber and a very far left refugee industry worker. You have, I don’t know if people know but ah- g- w- big Ag, agriculture (laughs) is a b- is the biggest industry in Georgia and believe it or not, there’s a lot of people working in agriculture who would like to use black market labor in a higher degree than they already are and they do not take kindly to laws that make Georgia unattractive to illegal immigration.
I, I, I’m speaking a little quicker than normal because I wanna make another point.
Scott Ryfun host:
Okay.
D.A. King:
I have been fighting in-state tuition for illegal aliens in that Gold Dome for the last, I think there’s five bills, I can’t even remember, five or six sessions, and invariably, some years it’s more than one bill, some years it’s just one bill, but there’s always a Republican sponsor behind a bill to give in-state tuition to people in the country illegally. Currently the effort is limited to DACA recipients who are illegal aliens, they are inadmissible and removable from these United States, all right?
So I’m down there like a moron fighting and, and w- and happily winning the in-state tuition battle, which it’s, it’s, it’s hard and you-
Scott Ryfun host:
Mm-hmm.
D.A. King:
… get called some names but at the same time, Georgia has in place something called Dual Enrollment. A dual enrollment program allows high school students to attend college classes without paying any tuition, no fees, no books. Georgia taxpayers paying every bit of that. And the student gets, I think it’s a terrific program for the most part, the student gets college credit for his college classes taken while he’s in high school and gets the high school credit for it.
Well, guess what? There is no exclusion in place to make sure that illegal alien high school students are not getting a completely free ride on this Dual Enrollment program by getting a college education while they’re in high school.
Scott Ryfun host:
Wow.
D.A. King:
I’m worried about in-state tuition after they graduate, the state is giving them free college education while they’re in high school.
Scott Ryfun host:
(laughs) Joke’s on you in that case. But, uh-
D.A. King:
Well, I, I, I hope not. So I’m, I’m here, I’m here to ask for some help. I’m-
Scott Ryfun host:
Okay.
D.A. King:
… I’m asking your listeners to pay attention, to make sure that when you go, if you’re a Republican and active, if you go to those meetings for the first Tuesday lunch at the Women’s Club or, or the Saturday breakfast, if you see a state-elected official, especially a Republican who is allowed to get out of the meeting without being asked directly, “What are you doing about illegal immigration in Georgia?” If people will start doing that, I will personally come to their house and was their car.
Scott Ryfun host:
All right, (laughs) that’s a fair deal. That is a fair deal, uh, and I’m sure you do a fine job. So, yeah, m- people, ask your legislators, what are they do- I mean, we had Jesse Petrea on last week and you know Jesse Petrea is right up there doing what he can do. Um-
D.A. King:
Th- th- that, that’s true and, and to that, sorry to interrupt, but-
Scott Ryfun host:
No, go ahead.
D.A. King:
… tomorrow, tomorrow we have a hearing in the House Public Safety and Homeland Security Committee on Representative Jesse Petrea, a dear friend of mine. We worked together th- oh- on his bill, House Bill 1105, 1105, the Georgia Criminal Alien Track and Report Act, and that name might sound familiar if anybody can remember way back to 2018 gubernatorial primary probably a point for a, a, a different, a different show, but Jesse’s bill has its first vote tomorrow in committee. It’s in the Georgia, excuse me, the House Public Safety Committee. If you can call your representative folks in Radioland, please make sure that people that in the government to understand that we are paying attention and you want this bill passed. All it does is put penalties, criminal penalties into existing law on, um, laws that give sanctuary policies here in Georgia, we have two of them. One of them is 19 years old. I worked on this is 2006. There has never been anybody, um, fined or sanctioned for this in law enforcement who are, the, the b- more than half, excuse me, a little more, a little less than half of the jailers, jailer means sheriff in this state are ignoring the laws in place on, on laws against sanctuary policies in their jails.
Scott Ryfun host:
Wait, did you say half? I didn’t realize it was that widespread.
D.A. King:
There’s 159 using that, using that, there might be a few more jails, like, Smyrna has a jail and it’s not a county-
Scott Ryfun host:
Yeah.
D.A. King:
… but, really n- 159 counties, we’re using a number in committee that, that Jesse used the other day of 90 who say they’re in compliance. 90 of 159. These are county sheriffs, an independent constitutional office here in Georgia. People are not outraged enough because they don’t know about it.
Scott Ryfun host:
Yeah.
D.A. King:
But now that I’ve told them, if you’re not outraged now, folks, you know, y- y- just continue to talk about the border, the border, the border, because all that the, most of the elected officials under the gold dome want to talk about is the border, that way you’re not thinking about what they’re not doing here in Georgia.
Scott Ryfun host:
Wow, no, that’s, that’s a great point, great point, D.A.
Well, we’ve gotta wrap this up, but, uh, any, any final remarks?
D.A. King:
Yeah. Thanks a lot and, uh, people can go to our website, see the poll and, and please sign up for alerts so we can direct you on what phone calls to make to the legislature.
Scott Ryfun host:
All right, that’s newdustininmansociety.org. It is the latest blog post on that website. Uh, check it out for yourself. It won’t shock you but it will, it will bring some reality to you.
D.A., we appreciate it, thanks a bunch.
D.A. King:
Thank you, Scott.
Scott Ryfun host:
D.A. King, again, newdustininmansociety.org. We’ll be back with more straight talk after thi-
By D.A. King
Action needed! NO! to HB 1117!
Current Georgia law requires all law enforcement officers to be U.S. citizens. HB 1117 would change the law so that LEOs don’t have to be citizens – they could be only “U.S. nationals.”
Unless my smeller is awry, far-left lobbyist named Darlene Lynch is behind HB 1117. She is hooked up with the refugee industry and the Georgia Chamber of Commerce (see GA Chamber DEI) and has been pushing to change the law for three years so that foreign nationals could be cops. She first pushed to allow foreigners with green cards to be eligible. We stopped that move with this.
Now the goal is changing it to U.S. nationals. This is merely a game of increments so that the table is set for the next change which would eventually end up like California – illegal aliens as cops. Really.
HB 1117 is a bad bill with powerful sponsors.
I am guessing it can at least be delayed. It has a hearing today (Tuesday, Feb 13) in House Public Safety and Homeland Security committee upon House adjournment, which means somewhere in the noon hour.
Former head of GA DHS Rep Bill Hitchens is the lead sponsor. Former state trooper Rep Eddie Lumsden is signer #2 and committee chair Rep J Collins is #3.
Democrat Yasmine Neal is #5.
Calls against the bill may stop a vote today to provide time to expand the resistance.
I recommend calling Chairman Collins’ office early and often this morning (Tuesday, Feb 13): 404-656-5132. Or now – they have voice mail!
Just leave a polite, short message with the staffer.
“Georgia law enforcement officers should be U.S. citizens. This bill starts us down a slippery slope. Please tell Rep Collins to hold back on this bad idea….NO to HB 1117!”
Thanks if you can help. I just saw this bill tonight.
dak
By D.A. King
__________
_______
I added educational hyperlinks to the below letter – dak.
_______
October 18, 2024
VIA U.S. REGULAR MAIL & E-MAIL
Leroy Chapman, Jr., Editor in Chief THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTION 223 Perimeter Center Pkwy NE Atlanta, Georgia 30346
Re: Demand for Retraction and Apology
Dear Mr. Chapman, Jr.:
I write on behalf of my client, the Dustin Inman Society (DIS), to demand an immediate retraction and apology for the defamatory statements published in your October 7, 2024, article titled “Democrats in this Georgia district are backing a write-in candidate” by Tia Mitchell.
Through use of internet links, the AJC article wrongfully characterizes the Dustin Inman Society as a “Marietta-based anti-immigration hate group.” This characterization is false, defamatory, and published with actual malice. The Dustin Inman Society pushes for secure borders, is not “anti-immigration” and its proprietors do not hate anyone. Rather, DIS advocates for enforcement of U.S. immigration laws and actively opposes unlawful immigration. This distinction is crucial and well-known to staff at your publication.
I paste the offending paragraph from the AJC story:
“A search of activity under her birth name, Karen Sacandy, which Stamper legally changed in 2019, showed that she previously was aligned with a Marietta-based anti-immigration hate group. The group’s website often linked to Sacandy’s activities, like a letter seeking information about the state’s Immigration Enforcement Review Board and a copy of a letter to the editor supporting legislation to prevent immigrants claiming asylum from obtaining driver’s licenses.”
HEMMER WESSELS MCMURTRY PLLC
250 Grandview Drive, Suite 500, Ft. Mitchell, KY 41017 ● Phone 859.344.1188 ● Fax 859.578.3869
October 18, 2024 Page 2
We note the AJC informs readers that the Dustin Inman Society “often” linked to Karen Sacandy/Kate Stamper activities — but produces only two occasions.
Your story, for which DIS founder and president D.A. King was not contacted, informs readers that Sacandy/Stamper “was aligned” with the Dustin Inman Society. We note that polls show that a majority of Americans oppose the federal offense of illegal immigration. Since the letter posted on the DIS site was a published missive to the editor at the Cherokee Tribune, we must ask: does this make that newspaper a “Cherokee County-based anti-immigration hate group”?
Your characterization demonstrates a reckless and vindictive disregard for the truth, rising to the level of actual malice as defined in New York Times Co. v. Sullivan. Actual malice in defamation law refers to publication of a statement with knowledge that it is false or with reckless disregard of whether it is false or not. Your repeated mischaracterization of the Dustin Inman Society, despite having been corrected on numerous occasions, clearly meets this standard.
The Dustin Inman Society’s position on immigration is clear and public:
1. It supports sustainable levels of legal immigration through established channels.
2. It opposes unlawful immigration due to various societal concerns, including: – Strain on public resources and services
– Potential and real public safety issues
– Economic impacts on low-wage American workers and America’s poor
– Challenges to the rule of law
3. The Dustin Inman Society defends legal immigrants when media attempt to blur the difference between them and illegal aliens.
Moreover, the Dustin Inman Society’s board includes lawful immigrants who have navigated the proper channels for authorized immigration. This fact alone should dispel any notion that the organization is “anti-immigration.” As he has informed you multiple times over much of the last two decades, D.A. King’s sister is a real, legal immigrant.
While we acknowledge that the Southern Poverty Law Center has designated the Dustin Inman Society as an “anti-immigrant hate group that denigrates all immigrants,” your article presents the “anti-immigration hate group” characterization as the Atlanta Journal Constitution’s independent assessment and statement of fact.
This smear is not only demonstrably false and ignores Mr. King’s many communications to you advising you of the truth, but also demonstrates an exceedingly unprofessional failure to fact-check and verify information before publication.
We demand that the Atlanta Journal Constitution:
October 18, 2024 Page 3
1. Immediately publicly retract the defaming statement in the October 7, 2024, article.
2. Publish a prominent apology, equal in visibility and placement to the original defamatory article.
3. Cease and desist from further defamatory characterizations of the Dustin Inman Society.
Failure to comply with these demands may result in further legal action. We expect your prompt attention to this matter and await your timely response.
Sincerely,
Todd V. McMurtry
cc: James Abely, Esq.
Contact info for the Georgia delegation in Washington DC here. Just click on their name.
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