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  1. #1
    Senior Member crazybird's Avatar
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    Mexican Farmers protest US Trade pact

    Mexican Farmers Protest US Trade Pact

    Farmers ride on a tractor as they approach Mexico City's main Zocalo plaza during a mass p...
    By MARK STEVENSON, AP
    Thu Jan 31, 10:33 PM EST
    Led by a column of tractors, tens of thousands of demonstrators marched through downtown Mexico City on Thursday to protest recent trade openings that removed the last tariff protections for ancestral Mexican crops like corn and beans.

    Chanting "Without corn, the country doesn't exist!" farmers and farm activists from across the nation demanded the Mexican government renegotiate the 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement, or NAFTA, to reinstate protection for basic crops.

    Farmers here say the can't compete with bigger U.S. farms which receive more government support. Under the terms of NAFTA, Mexico got a 15-year protection period to improve its farms, but that phase-in period ended Jan. 1, and Mexican farms — mostly tiny plots of 12 acres or less — still lag behind.

    "The truth is, we can't compete, that is why we're demonstrating ... because we're really getting hit hard," said Telespor Andrade, 44, a weather-beaten farmer from central Mexico who grows corn and beans on about 7 acres of land.

    Protesters pastured their cows outside the Mexican Stock Exchange on the city's main boulevard, and burned a tractor at a nearby monument to the 1910 Mexican Revolution.

    Mexican officials say farmers are getting help, and that Mexico's corn production is rising.But activists say farm policies have benefited mainly big producers, not small producers who make up the vast majority of farmers here. U.S. farmers, they say, have much better transport and distribution systems, lower costs and bigger subsidies.

    "We're up against all the might of the developed countries," said Martin Perez Santiago, 60, a farmer from the Gulf coast state of Veracruz. "We can't compete because of a lack of support, a lack of subsides, technology, better seed varieties."

    U.S. Ambassador Tony Garza released a statement on Thursday defending the trade pact, saying NAFTA's success has inspired other free trade agreements throughout the Western Hemisphere.

    "NAFTA is the best example of the positive effects of free trade," Garza wrote. "For example, according to the U.N., chicken consumption in Mexico more than doubled in the last decade."

    However, activists note that much of that chicken — and much of Mexico's livestock — is fed with imported U.S. corn.

    Jose Ambris Juarez, a farm activist from Baja California, said the country's farm problems were likely to fuel continued immigration to the United States.

    "If the government doesn't help us find a way to make a living, what are we going to do? Just keep trying to cross the (border) line," he said.

    Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    http://www6.comcast.net/news/articles/w ... est/print/
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  2. #2

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    Well I am glad to finally hear about Mexicans protesting in Mexico rather than here in the US.

    And for once I agree with some of what they say....that NAFTA has harmed the small farmer. What I don't agree with is their solution which is to keep coming here illegally.

    This also makes me think that big business is our true enemy. I know it's unrealistic, but if Americans and Mexicans could join together to fight big business we might actually get somewhere. What's happening now is that big business is raking it in more than ever, Mexicans are fleeing their own country to come here, and middle class American foots the bill for medical costs, educational costs, etc. for this massive influx of illegal aliens. The Presidential candidates are to a large extent "bought" through donations made by..guess who...big business. I think that is one reason we are seeing so little difference between the two parties. They are both largely run by big business.

    Sorry for the rant. I will go have more coffee now.
    "Calling an illegal alien an undocumented immigrant is like calling a burglar an uninvited house guest."

  3. #3
    Senior Member crazybird's Avatar
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    I know it's unrealistic, but if Americans and Mexicans could join together to fight big business we might actually get somewhere
    Exactly.....I thought the same thing. The hatred seems so deep I wonder if they'd ever get beyong it to join forces. They seem to still have the mentality it's us vs them, when the reality is we're all fighting to survive against the greed and power hungry of every color and country.
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