Thursday, January 22, 2015

To A.C.L.U.: Anti-Cybercrime Technology Training Programs Will Boost Colorado's Biotechnology Industry

Biometric, combined with nanochip encryption technology for ATM machines, debit cards and retail scanners are probably better than the existing technology that threatens our economy with cybercrime. I agree with the anti-cybercrime position in President Obama's State of the Union Address.

Colorado could design, manufacture and provide this globally with the FTC, BBB, Department of Immigration, Workforce Development Center, Department of Labor, CU Boulder and CU Denver. This would help our Mexican, permanent residents who are underemployed/often unemployed, illiterate, homeless, repeatedly human trafficked, day laborers. They could be supervised by bilingual, GLBT-inclusive, job-sharing, Mexican-American, disabled veterans, who are former U.S. Special Forces.

The day laborers would hopefully get full-time employment, medical benefits, GED literacy, with drug testing every month. After four years of that, they should be put into a bilingual university environment, with a full ROTC scholarship. This will reduce the juvenile crime, adult illiteracy and homelessness rates.

As Colorado requires federal funding in the amount of $250 million U.S.D. for this, let's gather for another class-action lawsuit against the federal government. We can't participate in continually enslaving, abusing and neglecting our poor Mexican elderly, or their challenged, battered children who were all malnourished, and repeatedly assaulted while homeless, including in utero.


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