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  1. #1
    Senior Member zeezil's Avatar
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    Mexico Complains Of Too Many Repatriated Mexicans

    Mexico Complains Of Too Many Repatriated Mexicans
    Mon, 04/07/2008 - 15:28 — Judicial Watch Blog


    The U.S. border state leading the battle against illegal immigration with unprecedented tough laws has received complaints from Mexico’s government that too many Mexicans have been repatriated and the country is overwhelmed with demands for housing, jobs and schools.

    Fed up with the devastating effect of illegal immigration, Arizona has enacted the nation’s toughest laws to curb the problem and evidently its working. State legislators have passed laws barring illegal immigrants from receiving government services, posting bail for serious crimes and winning punitive damages in lawsuits. This year a new law makes it illegal for businesses to hire undocumented workers and those that do can be shut down.

    The state legislator who sponsored the work bill, Representative Russell Pearce, says the law’s undeniably positive effects include smaller class sizes, shorter emergency room waits and an overall huge savings to taxpayers. The Republican congressman drafted the bill because studies revealed that illegal immigration cost Arizona taxpayers over $2 billion annually, not including the toll of crime and destruction: http://www.azconservative.org/PearceOn200.htm

    It turns out that enough illegal immigrants have either fled the U.S. or been deported that officials in the Mexican state of Sonora, which shares an extensive border with Arizona, have complained that too many of their fellow countrymen have returned. They miss the remittances sent from the U.S. as well as smaller class sizes in local schools.

    Mexican government officials knew Arizona’s tough employment verification law would become their worst nightmare, which explains why they tried blocking it. Earlier this year a delegation of nine legislators from Sonora toured Tucson and held a news conference to say that their beloved state cannot handle the demand for housing, jobs and schools resulting from illegal Mexican workers returning home.

    One baffled Mexican legislator, Leticia Amparano Gamez, asked in Spanish “how can they pass a law like this?â€
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  2. #2
    Senior Member miguelina's Avatar
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    [quote]One baffled Mexican legislator, Leticia Amparano Gamez, asked in Spanish “how can they pass a law like this?â€
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    "

  3. #3
    Senior Member tencz57's Avatar
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    Does Everyone in Mexico think like Juan Hernandez ?
    Nam vet 1967/1970 Skull & Bones can KMA .Bless our Brothers that gave their all ..It also gives me the right to Vote for Chuck Baldwin 2008 POTUS . NOW or never*
    *

  4. #4
    Senior Member Bowman's Avatar
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    I know some American Hispanics who would be happy to take the place of these Mexican politicians and show them how to run a country. Tony Dolz is one example.
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  5. #5
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    Then keep them on your side of the fence!
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  6. #6
    Senior Member florgal's Avatar
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    Boo Hoo, wah wah. Too bad, Mexico! Get a grip, suck it up - there will be lots more coming home! Make room!!!!!!!

  7. #7
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    It sucks doesn't it Mexico! Now you know how Americans feel when their respectable neighborhoods and communities are destroyed when they are turned into third world barrios because of your illegal invading squatters!
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  8. #8

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    This bears repeating. It is a fake news report, but as usual, The Onion speaks more truth than the MSM. It gave me a good laugh, anyway.

    http://www.theonion.com/content/node/47978

    Illegal Immigrants Returning To Mexico For American Jobs

    May 3, 2006 | Issue 42•18


    MEXICO CITY—As dozens of major American corporations continue to move their manufacturing operations to Mexico, waves of job-seeking Mexican immigrants to the United States have begun making the deadly journey back across the border in search of better-paying Mexican-based American jobs.

    "I came to this country seeking the job I sought when I first left this country," said Anuncio Reyes, 22, an undocumented worker who recrossed the U.S. border into Mexico last month, three years after leaving Mexico for the United States to work as an agricultural day laborer. "I spent everything I had to get back here. Yes, it was dangerous, and I miss my home. But as much as I love America, I have to go where the best American jobs are."


    A group of Mexican workers make the dangerous trek home across the Rio Grande for their lunch break.

    Reyes now works as a spot-welder on the assembly line of a Maytag large-appliance plant and earns $22 a day, most of which he sends back to his family in the U.S., who in turn send a portion of that back to the original family they left in Mexico. Like many former Mexican-Americans forced by circumstance to become American-Mexicans, Reyes dreams of one day bringing his relatives to Mexico so that they, too, may secure American employment in Mexico.

    Despite the considerable risk illegal immigrants face in returning across the border, many find the lure of large U.S. factory salaries hard to resist—at 15 percent of the pay of corresponding jobs in America, these positions pay three times what Mexican jobs do.

    Still, the danger is very real. When 31-year-old illegal Arizona resident Ignacio Jimenez sought employment at an American plant in Mexico, he was shot at by Mexican border guards as he attempted to illegally enter the country of his citizenship, pursued by U.S. immigration officials who thought he might be entering the country illegally, and fired upon again by a second group of U.S. Border Patrol agents charged with keeping valuable table-busing and food-delivery personnel inside American borders.

    "It was a nightmare," Jimenez said. "Many became disoriented and panicked, and some were mixed in with immigrants going the other way across the Rio Grande and ended up swimming to the wrong country."

    He added: "My cousin almost drowned. They fished him out and sent him back to wash dishes at T.G.I. Friday's."

    Many say the trip across the border as illegal Mexican-American emigrants offers them a chance to land the American jobs in Mexico they never have been able to get as illegal Mexican-American immigrants in the U.S.

    "It has always been my goal to have a good American job," Johnson Controls technician Camilla Torres, 27, said. "Many Mexicans now see Mexico as the land of opportunity. Mexicans will not stop trying to get here, no matter how much the Mexicans wish we would not."

    Indeed, the trend of illegal re-emigration is causing great resentment among the local Mexican population, and tension between Mexicans and illegally re-entered Mexicans—dubbed repatriados—continues to build.

    "I hate these Mexicans, always coming back here to Mexico from America and taking American jobs from the Mexicans who stayed in Mexico," said 55-year-old former Goodyear factory manager Juan-Miguel Diaz, who lost his job to a better-trained repatriado last March. "Why don't they go back to where they went to?"

    Still, Jimenez, Reyes, and hundreds of others say they have no choice.

    "The American Dream is alive and well in Mexico," Reyes said. "If I work hard, save my money, and plan well, I will be able to send my children to a good school—and who knows? If they study hard, perhaps they will get jobs someday at the new plant General Motors is building in China."

  9. #9
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    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  10. #10
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    I'm sure I have said this on here before but the Mexicans who stayed in Mexico do not like the ones who left.
    They come back with a different attitude and simply don't fit in.
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