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  1. #1
    mycountry's Avatar
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    Unbelievable Story "Quadruplets Stress Illegal Immigra

    This is a long story - but worth reading - I would like to find out the total $$$ this 1 family has cost the state of California!!
    6 + 4 = 1 Tenuous Existence
    An illegal immigrant couple with six children were already living in poverty. Then the quadruplets arrived. They're still in a daze.
    By Sam Quinones, Times Staff Writer
    July 28, 2006

    With two teenage daughters at home and triplets still in diapers, Angela Magdaleno's family overflowed from a one-bedroom apartment in South Los Angeles that they strained to afford.
    Diapers had to be changed 15 times a day, feedings held every three hours. One triplet, 3-year-old Alfredo Jr., needed special attention because he was born with liquid on his brain and partially paralyzed.
    Even simple events ? like going to the store ? required complex orchestration.

    And that was before the quadruplets arrived.

    On July 6, Magdaleno gave birth to two boys and two girls, drawing national media attention as a bewildered mother of 10 (with nine living at home). Now, she and her husband, Alfredo Anzaldo, 44, must figure out how to provide for everyone on Anzaldo's maximum pay of $400 a week as a carpet installer.

    As cameras flashed two weeks ago, capturing the 40-year-old mother with her newest progeny, she appeared dazed, even morose. They'd have to leave their $600-a-month apartment for something bigger. They'd have to buy a minivan with room for four more car seats.

    "I was afraid," she said. "I still feel like I can't believe it."

    U.S. immigrants' stories often are about reinvention and newfound prosperity, about leaving behind poverty and limitations.

    But that is not Magdaleno's story.

    Both Magdaleno and Anzaldo are illegal immigrants, settled for years in an immigrant enclave. Magdaleno has the same number of children as her parents, who were peasant farmers in Mexico. Like her parents, she is living in poverty and struggling to provide for her family.

    "It's not sweet," said her 36-year-old sister, Alejandra. "It's very sad. The life for girls back there in Mexico is the same as the one Angela has now. They marry and have children, and that's their lives."

    Neither Magdaleno nor her husband speaks English, though she has been in the United States 22 years and he 28. Even her teenage daughters speak mostly Spanish; their English vocabulary is limited.

    Yet all of Magdaleno's 10 children are U.S. citizens. The triplets receive subsidized school lunches. All the youngsters have had their healthcare bills covered by Medi-Cal, the state and federal healthcare program for the poor.
    Alfredo Jr. had been hospitalized all his life until recently. He's had three state-funded brain operations and will require several more, the family said. The couple receive $700 in monthly Social Security payments to help with his medical needs.
    "I thank this country that they gave me Medi-Cal," Magdaleno said. "There's nothing like that in Mexico."
    Magdaleno's existence contrasts sharply with that of her younger siblings, who followed her to Los Angeles but then left. They have settled in Lexington, Ky., had no more than two children each and built better lives than they had known before. Four bought houses. Their children speak English fluently.

    Magdaleno's sisters struggle in vain to understand her. "She still thinks like people in Mexico ? that's what I think," said her 38-year-old sister, Justina. "You have to think first of your living children instead of thinking of having more."

    Magdaleno struggles to explain. She said she was wearing a birth-control patch to keep from getting pregnant, then took it off when it made her nauseated.

    "I didn't want any more children," said Magdaleno, who used fertility drugs to conceive the triplets but said she did not use them in the case of the quadruplets.

    "Four is too many. I'm still trying to believe this happened to me."

    Angela Magdaleno's story began as many Mexican immigrant stories do: in a village where work was scarce and wages were low.

    She grew up in Los Positos, in the central Mexican state of Jalisco, the eldest of 10. For girls, life consisted of hard work, little schooling, no birth control and thus, said Alejandra, raising "all the children God gives you."

    Angela and Justina left school at fifth grade to work in fields and tortilla shops to help support their family.

    In 1984, hoping to make more money to send home, the girls were the first Magdalenos to cross illegally into the United States. Angela was 19. The sisters found work in sewing factories, and apartments in the growing Latino immigrant communities of South Los Angeles.

    Over the years, their eight siblings followed them.

    Angela married, had two daughters, then divorced.

    In 1990, she met Anzaldo, an immigrant from the state of Nayarit, Mexico, who had three daughters from relationships with two women ? one in the U.S. and one in Mexico. Anzaldo was working in auto shops.

    The couple married in 1992 and had a daughter together.

    Magdaleno then had a tubal ligation. She thought she was done having children. But a few years later, things changed.

    Anzaldo had only daughters, and the couple were getting older. He saw his chance at having a son slipping away.

    "I wanted a son," he said, "because I didn't have one."

    Magdaleno too had always wanted a boy. Anzaldo paid for an operation to reverse Magdaleno's tubal ligation. The couple thought they might return to Mexico after the child was born.

    But for several years, she didn't get pregnant, Magdaleno said.

    So she asked a woman who returned periodically to Mexico to bring her back fertility drugs. The woman supplied her with various pills and injections over several years, Magdaleno said.

    "I took a lot," she said. "I don't remember what they're called."

    Finally, in 2002, Magdaleno got pregnant ? with triplets.

    Talk of returning to Mexico ceased when their son, Alfredo, was born with hydrocephalus.

    Their life became cramped and chaotic, with seven people crammed into their one-bedroom apartment.

    Joanna, Magdaleno's oldest daughter, now 20, dropped out of high school and moved out with a boyfriend about the time Magdaleno became pregnant with the triplets. She now works in a factory making dolls for Disneyland, her mother said.

    As Angela was having children, her siblings were undergoing a transformation of a different kind. They were slowly leaving Los Angeles.

    Her sister Alejandra was the first to leave. In Los Angeles, she and her husband were barely able to make ends meet. As in Mexico, "there was little work and it's poorly paid," she said.

    Eight years ago, she and her family moved to Kentucky, where a friend said there was more work and were fewer Mexican immigrants bidding down the wages for unskilled jobs.

    In Kentucky, Alejandra picked tobacco. The work was hard and she didn't know the language. But soon, life improved. Over the years, she invited her siblings to join her. One sister married a man who managed a Golden Corral, a chain of all-you-can-eat buffets. Soon several Magdaleno siblings were working in Golden Corrals. Their husbands found work installing windows and as farm-labor contractors. They went to night school to learn English because few people in Lexington speak Spanish.

    Today, the Magdalenos in Lexington earn more than they did in Los Angeles, in a city where the cost of living is lower. Kentucky is now their promised land, and they talk about California the way they used to talk about Mexico.

    "What we weren't able to do in many years in California," Alejandra said, "we've done quickly here.

    "We're in a state where there's nothing but Americans. The police control the streets. It's clean, no gangs. California now resembles Mexico ? everyone thinks like in Mexico. California's broken."
    Justina was the last to leave Los Angeles, about the time Angela was pregnant with the triplets.

    She and her husband wanted better schools for their sons, 15 and 9.

    In Lexington, she said, "at the school there are just people who speak English. It's helped my children a lot."

    Justina, who came to the U.S. with Magdaleno, applied for legal residency under the 1986 amnesty law and is now a U.S. citizen. Magdaleno never applied.

    The sisters say they have urged Angela to come out to Kentucky ? at least to visit. She said she hasn't because her son has been hospitalized so much.

    Last year, however, she sent her daughter, Kelly, 17, to Kentucky for several months. Though American born and raised, Kelly hadn't been outside South Los Angeles.

    In Lexington, school was hard because few people spoke Spanish, and the city "barely had one Spanish radio station," Kelly said.

    Her cousins, she said in English, "use more educational words than here. My cousin is 7 years old, and he has a better reading level than me. He don't see picture books or drawings or anything like that. He just likes books with pure letters."

    Girls from Mexican-immigrant families in Kentucky, she saw, were in their mid-20s and still didn't have children.

    "I said, 'Damn, that's weird,' " Kelly said. "The girls right here in Los Angeles are like in Mexico. There are girls that are 14, they got kids."

    The family in Kentucky "is more in the United States than" her mother, Kelly concluded. "They want a better education for the kids. With less kids there's better possibility of you having something."

    Magdaleno, meanwhile, was raising six other children and using a variety of birth control methods ? the latest being the contraceptive patch.

    She said she was stunned when doctors told her that she was carrying quadruplets.

    "She didn't do this on purpose," said Dr. Kathryn Shaw, who delivered the couple's triplets and their quadruplets. "She was not at all elated, and not excited about the fact that they were quadruplets."

    All are healthy, Shaw said, but weighed between 3 and 4 pounds at birth. They remained at White Memorial Medical Center in East Los Angeles long enough to gain weight, then came home this week.

    Now Denise, Destiny, Andrew and Andrey are with the rest of the family.

    For Angela Magdaleno, their arrival ? 22 years after she left Mexico and entered the United States hoping for a different life ? has brought her full circle. Her older daughters, like girls in Mexico, have been drafted into helping raise the new children.

    "I don't have anything," she said. "Just children."


    http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me ... -headlines

  2. #2
    Senior Member nittygritty's Avatar
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    Just good hard working people looking for a better way of living! I guess you could say this woman is "laboring" hard doing her part at seeing that our country will have lots of taxpayers in the future, while at the same time trying to ensure her staying in this country, because what compassionate American would want to separate this woman from "all" her anchor babies? This way, she will never have to work hard at slave labor wages to care and feed her children, no our government will do that for her through welfare, food stamps, free housing and free healthcare! If just half of the illegal aliens are babie makers like this woman, in 10 yrs time we will definitely be a 3rd world country, and they will definitely be in charge of our government through their overwhelming voters block.
    Build the dam fence post haste!

  3. #3
    Senior Member crazybird's Avatar
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    Glad the guy got his son he so desperatly wanted. (said with total sarcism)

    I remember when I first saw this story on TV they said it was such a miricle since it was without fertility drugs. I realize it was years before...but I was under the impression that you really don't know how long the effects of these fertility drugs last. Especially since she was taking them without any Dr. involvement.

    When I was little we had a family next door who were of some relegion that wasn't main stream. The girls were never allowed to cut their hair, wear shorts or pants, etc. etc. The mom used to grease their hair and put them in braids. No TV, no radio.....but papa wanted a boy. They had I think 13 girls before he ever got HIS BOY. A few of the girls had disabilities. One committed suicide. A real sad deal just to say you had your male heir. Not to mention the last few births were with severe warnings that the mother might die. I know the 2 eldest married. One to a Chinese guy and the other to a muslim. Lord knows what their life is like now. In their favor.....none were government sponsored. Atleast at that time. I'm sure some have to be in institutions by now if they lived that long. But.....he got his boy.
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  4. #4
    Gale's Avatar
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    Quadruplets

    Well, gee I'm sorry but I cannot get up any sympathy for them, they have had all their children on the taxpayers money and the benefits to go with them and yet they never learned English. Yes, California has become Caliexico. When my family moved out there in 1950 there were no illegals just decendants of migrants from the beginning of CA. Now it is overloaded.

  5. #5
    opinion's Avatar
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    One thing I don't understand is that if these people come here to work as they claim, why are they on welfare, food stamps,wic, and medicare. If they are using these benefits it means that they didn't come here to work, why they are not deported?

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by opinion
    One thing I don't understand is that if these people come here to work as they claim, why are they on welfare, food stamps,wic, and medicaid? If they are using these benefits it means that they didn't come here to work, why they are not deported?
    Augustin Cebeda
    "Go back to Boston! Go back to Plymouth Rock, Pilgrims! Get out! We are the future. You are old and tired. Go on. We have beaten you. Leave like beaten rats. You old white people. It is your duty to die ... Through love of having children, we are going to take over."

  7. #7
    MW
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    My question is, why haven't the parents been deported yet? It is not like ICE doesn't know who, and where, they are. There has been a lot of publicity surrounding this story. Obviously the kids must leave with the parents, unless of course they want to sign custody over to someone else or the state.

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

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    opinion's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by MW
    My question is, why haven't the parents been deported yet? It is not like ICE doesn't know who, and where, they are. There has been a lot of publicity surrounding this story. Obviously the kids must leave with the parents, unless of course they want to sign custody over to someone else or the state.
    MW
    I guess because we our leaders who are running our country are "humanitarian" I don't blame them for that, the only problem is that they prefer to be humanitarian to people who come to take adavantage of this country, and not with its own citizens. We have a lot of problems here, millions of people in need, only that they don't complain, and demand, and we will have a lot more problems with these kind of people coming in, and our leaders ignore it.

  9. #9
    opinion's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by opinion
    Quote Originally Posted by MW
    My question is, why haven't the parents been deported yet? It is not like ICE doesn't know who, and where, they are. There has been a lot of publicity surrounding this story. Obviously the kids must leave with the parents, unless of course they want to sign custody over to someone else or the state.
    MW
    I guess because we our leaders who are running our country are "humanitarian" I don't blame them for that, the only problem is that they prefer to be humanitarian to people who come to take adavantage of this country, and not with its own citizens. We have a lot of problems here, millions of people in need, only that they don't complain, and demand, and we will have a lot more problems with these kind of people coming in, and our leaders ignore it.
    I tell you something, this is very sad, a friend of mine, American for many generations, her husband died, she is 60, very bad time for her to get a job, no time yet for her to collect her husband's social security, she had left the apartment where she lived with the husband, she has no health-insurance, she applied for some help, and they denied it because she owns an apartment. Her family, her husband, her, worked for this country all their lives. All these people who couldn't care less for this country, and only come here to milk-off the system anyway they can get all the benefits, and the citizens of this country don't get it when they need it? It is very sad, very frustrating.

  10. #10
    Senior Member moosetracks's Avatar
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    I have a cousin, 90 yrs. old, she gets her deceased husband's S.S., since the wages were not high at the time he worked, she gets $525 a month.

    She worked in retail long ago, but the S.S. office told her she would have to pick which S.S. to receive, hers or her husbands. Well of course she took his, he made more than she did.


    All future politicians I vote for, will have to prove to me they are for the American worker and for America!
    Do not vote for Party this year, vote for America and American workers!

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