Now that peasant culture has come to America, and in particular to its sanctuary cities. In large swaths of Austin, for instance, you could easily think you are in another country – a shabby and backward part of Mexico. “I can take you to entire blocks where there are nothing but undocumented immigrants, or whatever you call them these days,” Francois told me. He noted that Austin suffers about 800 to 1,000 hit-and-run accidents every day, but that the public only hears about those causing death or serious injury.Suspected Illegal Immigrant Jailed for Horrific Hit-and-Run | Frontpage Mag
From her hospital bed in Austin, Texas, a young woman named Elizabeth English is putting on a brave face -- the victim of a hit-and-run driver from Mexico who was presumably in the country
illegally. English, shown in a photo on her bed giving a plucky thumbs-up, was riding her bicycle home at 10 p.m. when a Dodge Ram pickup ran over her on March 29. Pinned beneath the pickup, English was dragged nearly half a mile. Her ear-splitting screams alerted nearby residents who came running to help her. Yet the pickup's alleged driver, 41-year-old Artemio Avila, sped away and left English, horribly disfigured, lying in the street.
“She didn't look human. She looked like an animal initially," one witness said. The pavement had
ground away the skin on her back and most of her right buttocks. Part of her right pelvis was ground off, and her lower spine was exposed.
Now, the student of psychiatry at the University of Texas, Austin, is undergoing multiple surgeries and skin grafts. She is at high risk for infection, and medical staff have expressed concern she won't survive. Friends want to raise $100,000 to defray her medical expenses, and they quickly raised more than $41,000 through a "Go FundMe" account.
Avila, meanwhile, is being held in the Travis County Jail on $100,000 bond, charged with a third degree felony for failing to stop and render aid to a person he had seriously injured. Federal immigration authorities quickly placed a “hold” on him. He had previously been deported to Mexico in 2008, said a spokesman for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Interestingly, Avila's immigration status was a fact that only local NBC-affiliate KXAN bothered to report in politically correct Austin -- a college town, high-tech Mecca, and bastion of progressive politics. There is no word on what Avila was doing in Austin, the state's capital. But if he is like many of his kind in Austin, a sanctuary city, he probably felt comfortable in the metropolitan area's growing subculture of poor and uneducated Latinos, who are changing the states' demographics and culture. In Texas, “white Anglos” are now a slight minority (49%) of the
population.
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