The Latest News from Mexico

Started by docbyers, 05-02-2006 -- 10:18:54

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dallanta

Gives a whole new meaning to the term "treason" doesn't it?
The Center Will Not Hold

flew-da-coup

We better be careful how we treat the Mexicans. I heard they are going to raise the prices for tacos and burritos. Salsa has already hit a market high and at these prices who can afford it. This will have a major impact on our economy. Taco Bell is already a place rich people can afford. You can't even afford a nice sombrero these days.  :-o
You shall do no injustice in judgment, in measurement of length, weight, or volume.Leviticus 19:35

cs137

What! salsa up to $78.00 a barrel?

docbyers

I thought Taco Bell was the Mexican telephone company...!
If it works, it's a Fluke.

flew-da-coup

You shall do no injustice in judgment, in measurement of length, weight, or volume.Leviticus 19:35

flew-da-coup

Flynn as El Presidente! Alright. I'll come to the waste land then.
You shall do no injustice in judgment, in measurement of length, weight, or volume.Leviticus 19:35

PMEL_DEVIL-DOG

You guys seen the vids on the internet called the amazing racist? He's this jewish comedian who will deffiantly get a capped popped in his ass sooner or later...

One skit he goes to pick up some mexicans to help him with his deck at home. He ends up taking them to immigration, blowing an airhorn, car horn, and screaming in a bull horn. Boy, those mexicans scatter like roachs. It was hilarious!

He goes in a mosque and try to sell them very offensive t-shirts

He wears a KKK robe and hood in the ghetto! That was the funniest sh&t of all! Esp. when he trys to have his robe cleaned!

Do a google search for the amazing racist, you wonn't be ket down, Trust me (keep in mind that this guy is a jew)
"Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island, South Carolina: Where young men who can't hack it, drop out, and become outstanding Air Force Officers..."

flew-da-coup

I've seen it and it is funny.
You shall do no injustice in judgment, in measurement of length, weight, or volume.Leviticus 19:35

docbyers

I work in a pharmaceutical plant, but not even our products can help me see things the way you do...  (we must be making the OTC strengths this week :-D)
If it works, it's a Fluke.

step30044

 :? :? :? :?

ran across this article on the web CAN YOU BELeIVE THIS CRAP


MEXICO CITY - If     Arnold Schwarzenegger had migrated to Mexico instead of the United States, he couldn't be a governor. If Argentina native Sergio Villanueva, firefighter hero of the Sept. 11 attacks, had moved to Tecate instead of New York, he wouldn't have been allowed on the force.


Even as Mexico presses the United States to grant unrestricted citizenship to millions of undocumented Mexican migrants, its officials at times calling U.S. policies "xenophobic," Mexico places daunting limitations on anyone born outside its territory.

In the United States, only two posts — the presidency and vice presidency — are reserved for the native born.

In Mexico, non-natives are banned from those and thousands of other jobs, even if they are legal, naturalized citizens.

Foreign-born Mexicans can't hold seats in either house of the congress. They're also banned from state legislatures, the Supreme Court and all governorships. Many states ban foreign-born Mexicans from spots on town councils. And Mexico's Constitution reserves almost all federal posts, and any position in the military and merchant marine, for "native-born Mexicans."

Recently the Mexican government has gone even further. Since at least 2003, it has encouraged cities to ban non-natives from such local jobs as firefighters, police and judges.

Mexico's Interior Department — which recommended the bans as part of "model" city statutes it distributed to local officials — could cite no basis for extending the bans to local posts.

After being contacted by The Associated Press about the issue, officials changed the wording in two statutes to delete the "native-born" requirements, although they said the modifications had nothing to do with AP's inquiries.

"These statutes have been under review for some time, and they have, or are about to be, changed," said an Interior Department official, who was not authorized to be quoted by name.

But because the "model" statues are fill-in-the-blanks guides for framing local legislation, many cities across Mexico have already enacted such bans. They have done so even though foreigners constitute a tiny percentage of the population and pose little threat to Mexico's job market.

The foreign-born make up just 0.5 percent of Mexico's 105 million people, compared with about 13 percent in the United States, which has a total population of 299 million. Mexico grants citizenship to about 3,000 people a year, compared to the U.S. average of almost a half million.

"There is a need for a little more openness, both at the policy level and in business affairs," said David Kim, president of the Mexico-Korea Association, which represents the estimated 20,000 South Koreans in Mexico, many of them naturalized citizens.

"The immigration laws are very difficult ... and they put obstacles in the way that make it more difficult to compete," Kim said, although most foreigners don't come to Mexico seeking government posts.

THIS LINE IS AMAZING?

Michael Waller, of the Center for Security Policy in Washington, was more blunt. "If American policy-makers are looking for legal models on which to base new laws restricting immigration and expelling foreign lawbreakers, they have a handy guide: the Mexican constitution," he said in a recent article on immigration.

Some Mexicans agree their country needs to change.

"This country needs to be more open," said Francisco Hidalgo, a 50-year-old video producer. "In part to modernize itself, and in part because of the contribution these (foreign-born) people could make."

Others express a more common view, a distrust of foreigners that academics say is rooted in Mexico's history of foreign invasions and the loss of territory in the 1847-48 Mexican-American War.

Speaking of the hundreds of thousands of Central Americans who enter Mexico each year, chauffeur Arnulfo Hernandez, 57, said: "The ones who want to reach the United States, we should send them up there. But the ones who want to stay here, it's usually for bad reasons, because they want to steal or do drugs."

Some say progress is being made. Mexico's president no longer is required to be at least a second-generation native-born. That law was changed in 1999 to clear the way for candidates who have one foreign-born parent, like President     Vicente Fox, whose mother is from Spain.

But the pace of change is slow. The state of Baja California still requires candidates for the state legislature to prove both their parents were native born.


flew-da-coup

The world is jealous of the USA. This is typical response from people with greed. They call us greedy and they just prove that they are too.
You shall do no injustice in judgment, in measurement of length, weight, or volume.Leviticus 19:35