As I traversed the Internet last night after coming home from seeing the Temptations in concert, I came across this article that I found oh so very interesting, and disturbing. It (from my perspective) shows we have been and are being duped into playing the part of nurse maid to Mexicans populace.

Mexican Government Fuels Illegal Immigration
Last Update: 6/23/2006 6:31:34 PM

By Deroy Murdock - Scripps Howard News Service



Mexican politicians are the cheekiest participants in today's immigration debate. South of the border, officials consider Uncle Sam responsible for nurturing Mexico's poor. Thus, they demand, America must welcome illegal Mexican immigrants. Far be it for Mexico's leaders to improve conditions below the Rio Grande so that their constituents might stay home.

President Bush's immigration stance "hurts and injures the interests of Mexicans who, for various reasons, must leave our country," said Federal Deputy Eliana Garcia Laguna.

Deputy Heliodoro Diaz Escarraga calls it "totally anachronistic to impose penalties on our migrants or erect walls as if we were in the Cold War."
One Mexican congressional panel called U.S. immigration policy "racist, xenophobic, and profoundly violative of human rights." Mexico's government also has published instruction manuals to help its citizens unlawfully enter America.

The Center for Immigration Studies' George Grayson, who collected these remarks, laments that "Mexican authorities seldom if ever talk about their failure to uplift the poor who constitute approximately half of Mexico's 107.5 million people, particularly when their nation is contiguous to the world's largest market and abounds in oil, natural gas, gold, silver, beaches, seafood, water, historic treasures, museums, industrial centers, and wonderful people."

Alberto Saracho of Mexico's IDEA Foundation is refreshingly candid about why his countrymen flee.

"There are institutions, some established in the colonial years, that still curb people's freedom to work, produce, and prosper," Saracho says. "The oligopolistic public-notary system charges steep fees to certify mandatory paperwork. Our tax code guarantees special privileges for many groups. This has made the state more an obstacle than a friend to progress."

The Harvard-educated Saracho has analyzed Mexico's post-1980 economic performance. His results are grim.

In constant 2000 dollars, the World Bank reports, Mexican per-capita GDP was $7,758 in 1980. It inched upward to $8,661 in 2003. Over that period, Chile trailed then topped Mexico, from $4,620 to $9,706. Former laggard South Korea leapfrogged from $4,556 to $16,977.

Using Economist Intelligence Unit data, Saracho found that, between 1987 and 2004, manufacturing productivity grew 183.3 percent in Chile, 196.6 percent in South Korea, and 307.6 percent in China. Meanwhile, like a tequila-soaked worm, Mexico advanced 2.7 percent.
Registering a Mexican business takes 58 days, versus 48 in China, 27 in Chile, 22 in South Korea, and five here. During nearly two months of procedures, Mexican officials have numerous opportunities to encourage "tips" to speed things. Mexico's Private Sector Center for Economic Studies calculates that, in 2004, 34 percent of businesses paid "extra-official" sums to functionaries and parliamentarians totaling $11.2 billion. As the late Carlos Hank Gonzalez - Mexico City's once-humble, eventually loaded, former mayor - put it: "Show me a politician who is poor, and I will show you a poor politician."

Among 159 nations Transparency International surveyed last year, Mexico is the 65th most honest place to do business, tied with Ghana. While America is 17th (a pathetic showing, incidentally, for Earth's leading economy), Chile and Japan tie for 21st, while South Korea and Italy tie for 40th. Businessmen in this poll perceive even Cuba, No. 59, as less corrupt than Mexico.
College-educated Mexicans want out. The Pew Hispanic Center last August discovered that 62 percent of Mexico's best and brightest would leave for America if possible. Only 35 percent would remain. Of course, Mexicans, credentialed and otherwise, keep coming without permission. About .5 percent of Mexico's population settles here annually. This is like 1.5 million Americans relocating to Canada every year.

While visiting Manhattan recently, Saracho discussed Mexico's double standard toward aliens (legal and otherwise). Illegal immigrants legally have starred in mass protests across America. But under the Mexican Constitution's Article 33, "Foreigners may not in any way participate in the political affairs of the country."

Foreigners may not own acreage within 20 miles of the Atlantic or Pacific. Instead, they must lease from banks that actually hold land titles. They also must wait longer than Mexicans for drivers' licenses. Naturally, applications are in Spanish, not English.
While arguments rage over erecting a wall on the border, perhaps Americans can agree on this: Every few miles, Washington should install huge mirrors. They should face south, so Mexican officials can reflect on the root causes of Mexico's misfortune.


(New York commentator Deroy Murdock is a columnist with the Scripps Howard News Service and a senior fellow with the Atlas Economic Research Foundation in Arlington, Va.)