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  1. #1
    Senior Member Populist's Avatar
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    Mexican officials visit U.S. on immigration fact-finding mis

    Mexican officials visit U.S. on immigration fact-finding mission
    By JON GAMBRELL
    Tuesday, July 31, 2007 5:43 PM CDT

    LITTLE ROCK - Mexican immigration experts visiting the United States to see how this country deals with illegal immigrants say the U.S. is not the only country with a porous southern border.

    In Mexico, immigration officials struggle to handle a growing number of immigrants from Guatemala, Honduras and other countries who seek low-wage Mexican jobs that have been abandoned for better-paying jobs in the United States.

    "Mexico is a country of both transit and destination," said Gabriel Perez Duperou, deputy director of Sin Fronteras, an immigrants rights group based in Mexico City. "But for Mexico, it's not logical to demand a policy from a country to respect human rights if we are not respecting the human rights of immigrants."

    In part to learn and critique, a group of Mexican governmental officials and academics visited Arkansas as part of a three-city tour of how the United States handles immigration enforcement. The group traveled to El Paso, Texas, to see how officers patrol the border and to visit a jail for those arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

    The group also visited Washington, D.C., visiting with officials from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

    In Little Rock, the group met Tuesday with the Winthrop Rockefeller Foundation to discuss a report it conducted about the economic benefits of Arkansas' burgeoning Hispanic immigrant population. Census estimates show more than 141,000 Hispanics now live in the state, which has one of the fastest rates of growth in the nation.

    "It is a lot of immigration. But what is more _ the resources they use from the government or what they are making?" said Guadalupe Pena Trigueros, a professor of immigration studies at Mexico's National Autonomous University. "I see a positive result (here), that they are giving more to the state than what they are consuming."

    Overall, most Mexicans see that positive effect and wonder why the U.S. Congress struggled in trying to pass a recent immigration package to create some form of a guest worker program.

    However, Mexican President Felipe Calderon acknowledges the need to provide better treatment to the migrants, said Ana Cecilia Oliva Balcarcel, director of international affairs for Mexico's National Institute of Migration. Oliva acknowledged many of those migrants end up staying in Mexico's southern states, working construction jobs and other menial labor.

    Mexico created a program to provide documentation for those working in the southern state and is working to decriminalize being an illegal immigrant, Oliva said. However, she said police and labor abuses do continue.

    "We've been working to eliminate the corruption," Oliva said. "We still miss some."

    Officials have pledged to improve Mexico's own detention centers for immigrants, responding to criticism that illegal Central American migrants are denied the respect Mexico demands for its citizens in the United States.

    "It's important to regulate immigration through our country," Oliva said. "We can't put up walls. We're never going to put them up."

    On the Net:

    Mexican Consulate in Little Rock: http://portal.sre.gob.mx/littlerock/

    National Institute of Migration: http://www.inami.gob.mx/

    A service of the Associated Press(AP)

    http://www.pbcommercial.com/articles/20 ... nriu81.txt
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  2. #2
    Senior Member NoIllegalsAllowed's Avatar
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    How we handle immigration enforcement is simple.

    We jail our Border Patrol agents.

    We tell Border Patrol to "stand down".

    We have ICE only do raids once in a blue moon.

    We give illegals more rights than citizens and make sure they know it.

    And now look we only have 35-40 million illegals at least in the country...
    Free Ramos and Compean NOW!

  3. #3
    Senior Member AngryTX's Avatar
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    What are the chances of them taking back some of "their" citizens???

  4. #4
    Administrator Jean's Avatar
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    In part to learn and critique, a group of Mexican governmental officials and academics visited Arkansas as part of a three-city tour of how the United States handles immigration enforcement.
    I think the word should be nonenforcement instead of enforcement.
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  5. #5
    MW
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    "It's important to regulate immigration through our country," Oliva said. "We can't put up walls. We're never going to put them up."
    Of course you're not going to fence your Northern borders, because that would mean you'd have to pay for it! With all the corrupt Mexican politicians with their finger in the pie, there is nothing left for meaningful border control.

    "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing" ** Edmund Burke**

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  6. #6
    Senior Member SOSADFORUS's Avatar
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    Propaganda, to make us feel bad about not legalizing their poor citizens, HELLLOOO NOT WORKING, DEPORT NOW!!!!
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  7. #7
    MW
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    In Mexico, immigration officials struggle to handle a growing number of immigrants from Guatemala, Honduras and other countries who seek low-wage Mexican jobs that have been abandoned for better-paying jobs in the United States.
    How is it that the folks illegally immigrating into Mexico can feed their families on the money they make in Mexico yet the Mexicans can't?

    I'm starting to think this is more about greed on the Mexicans part, and less about feeding the family. What we have here is the "domino theory." The domino effect suggests that some change, small in itself, will cause a similar change nearby, which then will cause another similar change elsewhere. If Mexico would stop others from moving in (illegals) and taking the low-wage jobs made available by the folks illegally migrating to the U.S., the country's wages would start to improve. It's all about supply and demand. As long as the businesses in Mexico have someone filling the low-wage jobs left open by departing Mexicans, there is no reason to raise wages enough to keep the Mexican population content.

    Illegal immigration is all about greed, everyone wants more and better than the currently have - this includes corporate America!

    "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing" ** Edmund Burke**

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