Results 11 to 20 of 24
Thread Information
Users Browsing this Thread
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
-
10-19-2011, 11:51 PM #11
He most likely said this without a smile. They know what they are doing dumping the trash across our National Border. They don't have a reason to want them back in mexico they just want the money sent back from their tax funded welfare and the wages they steal from U.S. Citizens. They should take back their anchor babies.
Read more: http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/news/2 ... o/#comment#ixzz1bI4JoDwX
-
10-20-2011, 05:31 AM #12Guest
Send them all back and build the fence and the problem will be solved.
-
10-20-2011, 05:51 AM #13Banned
- Join Date
- Nov 2008
- Location
- Arizona
- Posts
- 1,966
Calderdumbrum is an idiot crackhead. We are not deporting 6 year olds and dumping them in Mehico by themseves. That is flat out to much mezcal and coca on his pea sized brain. But wait obama will back him up and say the republicans do it. And he and his minions only heard about it two weeks ago.
Yeah! Conservatives run Guns and Deport 6 year olds to Mehico. Give me a freaking break.
A good conservative does not give up his weapons and ammo. No way , and no how And if a six year old Mexican kid is not an anchor by this time. I mean hell. I'm sure, At least 99 percent are claimed to be.
-
10-20-2011, 02:49 PM #14
Added to Homepage with amended title--
http://www.alipac.us/article-6688--0-0.htmlJoin our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)
-
10-20-2011, 03:18 PM #15
I don't understand why only one person in our government, has spoken out against this meddling buzzard. the criminals that are being sent back to Mexico, is his problem and not ours
that's where they belong, so DEAL WITH IT CALDERON.
-
10-20-2011, 07:00 PM #16
- Join Date
- Jan 1970
- Location
- Texas
- Posts
- 554
Calderon's desperate. The cartels are on the brink of an overthrow. He's looking for a scapegoat. Whether or not his government is overthrown, he'll be soon gone.
'58 Airedale
-
10-20-2011, 07:05 PM #17If he hasn't already he will most likely make a deal with the druggies and just be a figure head.
Originally Posted by Tom2
-
10-20-2011, 07:20 PM #18
Re: Mexican President Says US Deportations Feed Violence in
Ya know if they're old enough to steal American jobs they're old enough to make they're way back across the desert, hop the train and make it back to South America, so were these children abandoned by they're parents when border patrol showed up? Yes that must be it, at least that's the way I'll tell it!The Mexican leader went on to say that it is "truly inhumane and scandalous" that U.S. authorities are apprehending and deporting alone and "without any protection" children as young as 6.Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at http://eepurl.com/cktGTn
-
10-20-2011, 09:50 PM #19
AGAIN, "The reason the ILLEGALS have the Anchors and feature the YOUNG ILLEGALS, furnishing a opportune SOB story, is to stay in the U.S. to receive the benefits, their Anchors are nothing more than throwaways for their agenda; if they were important to the parents they would take their children with them when they returned to their HOME countries . They do not want to be Citizens of the U.S. only to the extent that it would allow the ILLEGALS to remain in the U.S. for our tax money and they will return to their home countries or invade some other country as soon as they have drained the U.S. Dry."
-
10-20-2011, 10:48 PM #20
He's still complaining.
~~~
Mexican president: US dumping criminals at border
By MARK STEVENSON
(October 20th, 2011 @ 6:00pm)
Comments:2
Associated Press
MEXICO CITY (AP) - Mexican President Felipe Calderon accused the United States on Thursday of dumping criminals at the border because it is cheaper than prosecuting them, and said the practice has fueled violence in Mexico's border areas.
U.S. officials earlier this week reported a record number of deportations in fiscal year 2011, and said the number of deportees with criminal convictions had nearly doubled since 2008.
"There are many factors in the violence that is being experienced in some Mexican border cities, but one of those is that the American authorities have gotten into the habit of simply deporting 60 (thousand) or 70,000 migrants per year to cities like Ciudad Juarez or Tijuana," Calderon told an immigration conference.
Among these deportees "there are many who really are criminals, who have committed some crime and it is simply cheaper to leave them on the Mexican side of the border than to prosecute them, as they should do, to see whether they are guilty or not," Calderon said. "And obviously, they quickly link up with criminal networks on the border."
On Tuesday, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Director John Morton said his agency deported nearly 400,000 individuals during the fiscal year that ended in September, the largest number of removals in the agency's history.
Morton announced the 2011 numbers in Washington, saying about 55 percent of those deported had felony or misdemeanor convictions. Officials said the number of those convicted of crimes was up 89 percent from 2008. The vast majority of migrants, and deportees, are from Mexico.
There are no records to substantiate whether U.S. authorities opt for deporting undocumented Mexican nationals who have committed crimes instead of prosecuting them in the U.S.
The U.S. embassy declined to comment on Calderon's speech.
When Mexicans without documents finish their prison terms in the United States, they're bused to the border and freed. Mexican officials in Tijuana have said some deportees turn to petty crime but couldn't say if they were feeding drug cartels.
The Associated Press in the past year has repeatedly asked the Mexican government to document the impact of leaving deportees with criminal records at the border. The AP filed a freedom of information request asking Mexico's Foreign Ministry how many times the U.S. had notified Mexico it was deporting a convicted criminal and how many people arrested for drug trafficking in Mexico had prior records in the U.S. The foreign ministry said it didn't have such numbers. The office of Calderon's former security spokesman Alejandro Poire did not respond to similar queries.
The United States and Mexico are experimenting with new methods of alerting Mexico about deportations, and U.S. officials say they warn Mexico when former inmates are considered particularly dangerous.
Mexicans with criminal records in the U.S. can't be detained in Mexico if they have not violated the law in their home country, and some Mexican border cities complain they don't have any easy way to run criminal background checks on deported inmates to see if they have pending charges.
One deported criminal, Martin Estrada Luna, is accused of becoming a leader of a cell of the Zetas drug cartel in the border state of Tamaulipas just 18 months after he was deported from the United States. Estrada, who had a long rap sheet of mostly theft and property crimes in Washington state, is now in custody in Mexico City, where he is accused for masterminding the killing of more than 250 people.
Calderon also lashed out at what he called "absurd" and "irrational" immigration laws in the United States.
"To the extent to which they continue to put absurd curbs on migration, to the degree to which they continue to persecute migrants in the United States in an irrational way that sometimes violates their human rights, in that measure American society will continue to lose competitiveness..." he said.
That was an apparent reference to tough immigration laws like the one implemented in Alabama in late September. While courts have blocked some provisions of the law, judges let stand provisions that allow police to check a person's immigration status during a traffic stop.
Under the measure, courts also can't enforce contracts involving illegal immigrants, such as leases, and it is a felony for an illegal immigrant to do business with the state for basic things like getting a driver's license.
Calderon said immigration shouldn't be seen as a threat or invasion; he noted that net migration of Mexicans to the United States is approaching zero, as fewer people leave and more come back.
Rafael Fernandez de Castro, head of the International Relations studies at the Monterrey Technological Institute, told the conference that about 200,000 Mexicans per year are returning to their country, and that Mexican schools are facing a new problem: tens of thousands of Mexican children are coming back each year with little or no Spanish.
"In the last couple of school years in Mexico, literally tens of thousands of children have turned up with last names like Sanchez, Fernandez, or Hinojosa and, it must be said, they don't speak Spanish, they speak English," Fernandez de Castro said. "We have to ask California and Texas how they managed to integrate these Mexican children who went to the United States and didn't speak English."
http://ktar.com/category/world-news-art ... at-border/Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at https://eepurl.com/cktGTn


LinkBack URL
About LinkBacks



Reply With Quote
278,000 illegal noncitizen voters: ALIPAC's We Told You So Moment
07-17-2026, 02:26 PM in illegal immigration Announcements