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The Mexican military, under orders of their President,are transporting illegal aliens

Thread ID: 17731 | Posts: 13 | Started: 2005-04-12

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Okiereddust [OP]

2005-04-12 00:50 | User Profile

[URL=http://www.teamamericapac.org/ta-ttpr-050408-mmproject-exposeplot.shtml]Team America [/URL]

"The Mexican military, under orders of their President, are transporting illegal aliens to areas outside the Minuteman's scope"

From the Office of Congressman Tom Tancredo FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

WASHINGTON, D.C. - Congressman Tom Tancredo (CO-06) was shocked to learn from Border Patrol sources on the scene that the Mexican Military is transporting would be illegal aliens to safer crossing points in order to avoid the Minuteman.

"President Bush should publicly denounce Mexico's latest act to curb U.S. law," said Tancredo, Chairman of the Congressional Immigration Reform Caucus.

"The President of Mexico is threatening to sue any member of the minuteman who have contact with a Mexican national, threatening to take the U.S. into the International Court of Justice at the Hague over the passage of Prop 200 in Arizona, and is providing transportation to Mexican nationals trying to sneak into the US," added Tancredo. "One could say he is acting in the best interest of his nation. Isn't it unfortunate we cannot say the same thing about President Bush?"

Congressman Tom Tancredo 1130 Longworth House Office Building, Washington, DC 20515 (202) 225-7882 Tom Tancredo's Congressional Website


Howard Campbell, Jr.

2005-04-13 06:08 | User Profile

[QUOTE=Okiereddust][URL=http://www.teamamericapac.org/ta-ttpr-050408-mmproject-exposeplot.shtml]Team America [/URL]

"The Mexican military, under orders of their President, are transporting illegal aliens to areas outside the Minuteman's scope"

From the Office of Congressman Tom Tancredo FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

WASHINGTON, D.C. - Congressman Tom Tancredo (CO-06) was shocked to learn from Border Patrol sources on the scene that the Mexican Military is transporting would be illegal aliens to safer crossing points in order to avoid the Minuteman.

"President Bush should publicly denounce Mexico's latest act to curb U.S. law," said Tancredo, Chairman of the Congressional Immigration Reform Caucus.

"The President of Mexico is threatening to sue any member of the minuteman who have contact with a Mexican national, threatening to take the U.S. into the International Court of Justice at the Hague over the passage of Prop 200 in Arizona, and is providing transportation to Mexican nationals trying to sneak into the US," added Tancredo. "One could say he is acting in the best interest of his nation. Isn't it unfortunate we cannot say the same thing about President Bush?"

Congressman Tom Tancredo 1130 Longworth House Office Building, Washington, DC 20515 (202) 225-7882 Tom Tancredo's Congressional Website[/QUOTE]

From this:

[img]http://www.dmwv.org/mexwar/images/prints/taylor-in-camp.jpg[/img]

To this:

[img]http://vn.kominet.ru:8101/Pic/bush-chimp.jpg[/img]

Doesn't say much for Darwin's Theory... :D


Angler

2005-04-13 06:47 | User Profile

LMAO!!! That's hilarious, Howard. :lol:

What I don't understand is why the Mexican government would want their citizens to sneak into America. How does that benefit Mexico? Anyone have any ideas?


Okiereddust

2005-04-13 07:37 | User Profile

[QUOTE=Angler]LMAO!!! That's hilarious, Howard. :lol:

What I don't understand is why the Mexican government would want their citizens to sneak into America. How does that benefit Mexico? Anyone have any ideas?[/QUOTE]Are you serious?

OK - Nationalism Facts 101:

For starters it benefits them the same way I guess it managed to benefit America when our citizens managed to move in Tejas, now known as Texas

Besides that there's the remittances to Mexico from citizens working in the US, giving Mexico a safety valve for its unemployed ... shute all therights you get from controlling another nations territory, the reasons invasions have occurred from the dawn of history.


SteamshipTime

2005-04-13 10:56 | User Profile

[QUOTE=Angler]LMAO!!! That's hilarious, Howard. :lol:

What I don't understand is why the Mexican government would want their citizens to sneak into America. How does that benefit Mexico? Anyone have any ideas?[/QUOTE] The Spanish elite that rules Mexico is offloading its large, restive underclass of mestizos and Aztecs on the US, similar to what we would do with negros if we could.


Walter Yannis

2005-04-13 12:34 | User Profile

[QUOTE=Angler]LMAO!!! That's hilarious, Howard. :lol:

What I don't understand is why the Mexican government would want their citizens to sneak into America. How does that benefit Mexico? Anyone have any ideas?[/QUOTE]

The white Mexican elites are worried about another revolution. They have armed unrest in places like Chiapas among the Indians.

But they've been unable to rise above the morrass of corruption that is their cultural heritage, and so instead of making things okay for the mixed race majority they encourage them to seek work in the States. Millions of them do, and they send lots of dollars back to Mexico that helps keep the Mexican economy afloat.

Our white (and Jewish) elites get cheap, union-busting Mexican labor.

Basically, this is the white Mexican elite and American elite engaged in mutual back scratching.


Stuka

2005-04-13 12:48 | User Profile

[QUOTE=Angler]What I don't understand is why the Mexican government would want their citizens to sneak into America. How does that benefit Mexico? Anyone have any ideas?[/QUOTE] Mexican immigrants (legal and illegal) are the advance guard, so to speak, for the coming Reconquest of the American Southwest.

Wherever Mexicans are, there is Mexico.


MadScienceType

2005-04-13 14:37 | User Profile

Just to add to the above good replies, Mexico is way overdue for a revolution. If you look at their history, there's a big one every 80 years or so (the last one being in 1910) so they're dumping the pressure in their pressure cooker on their gringo neighbors to the north, since we're stupid enough to give them free food, housing, jobs, etc, all of which are lacking in the corrupt cesspool of Mexico. This way, people like Fox don't swing from lamposts and get to strip-mine the economy of Mexico, such as it is, for a little longer while, as noted, the Mexicans in America send back billions to the homeland every year, which is I believe second only to oil exports as a source of revenue for the nation of Mexcrement. This is the reason Fox is so hysterically opposed to the Minutemen and the sentiment that goes with it. If Americans ever do get serious about controlling the border and repatriating the illegal wetbacks here (got my digits crossed on that one!) then the party's over for Fox and he and everyone else knows it.


Walter Yannis

2005-04-13 15:31 | User Profile

[QUOTE=MadScienceType]If Americans ever do get serious about controlling the border and repatriating the illegal wetbacks here (got my digits crossed on that one!) then the party's over for Fox and he and everyone else knows it.[/QUOTE]

Which raises the general question of what we do about Mexico with its population of 100 million people even if we did manage to wake up and reassert control over our borders.

How would a revolution in Mexico affect us?

That's a big question, and I think that being worried about and trying to defuse that isn't completely unreasonable. The price we're paying for this is way too high, though. I mean, the big fear of a Mexican revolution is that we'd get a huge influx of poor Mexicans and some troubles on the border with neo-Zapatista criminal gangs, but what do we have now?

Another really stupid move was setting up the Maqiladora plants on the border. The border area was unpopulated until we did that. Why couldn't we have set them up far away and ship the stuff in by sea? The explosive growth of border cities was a really, really bad development for American security.


MadScienceType

2005-04-13 16:40 | User Profile

[QUOTE=Walter Yannis]Which raises the general question of what we do about Mexico with its population of 100 million people even if we did manage to wake up and reassert control over our borders.

Why do we even have to do anything? Provided the border's secure, then internal Mexican politics are none of our concern.

How would a revolution in Mexico affect us?

I really don't think it would affect us, in the long run, simply because the only thing Mexican revolutions typically accomplish is replacing one set of thieves with another while eliminating the surplus population that precipitated the revolution in the first place. Ever hear of a "fruit tree" in the Mexican revolutionary context?

That's a big question, and I think that being worried about and trying to defuse that isn't completely unreasonable. The price we're paying for this is way too high, though. I mean, the big fear of a Mexican revolution is that we'd get a huge influx of poor Mexicans and some troubles on the border with neo-Zapatista criminal gangs, but what do we have now?

Exactly. If the "worst" happened, and we got a Marxist-style Zapatista regime in control of Mexico, I don't think the damage would be any worse. At least they would be recognized as an open enemy and greeted with bullets, not bottles of Gatorade, when they invaded the country. I mean, with a "friend" like Mexico now, who needs enemies?

Another really stupid move was setting up the Maqiladora plants on the border. The border area was unpopulated until we did that. Why couldn't we have set them up far away and ship the stuff in by sea? The explosive growth of border cities was a really, really bad development for American security.[/QUOTE] Yep. They're really just way stations for illegals on the way to El Norte. On a side note, I saw a funny blurb on CNN that had "Chinese migrants" (read: illegals) complaining about all the textile factories and jobs being sent to China!!! Boo hoo says I. I guess if they'd been patient, they wouldn't have had to make the trek across the ocean. As it is, the freighters go both directions last time I checked.


Angler

2005-04-14 20:09 | User Profile

[QUOTE=Okiereddust]Are you serious? Sure. Why, was my question stupid? :confused:

OK - Nationalism Facts 101:

For starters it benefits them the same way I guess it managed to benefit America when our citizens managed to move in Tejas, now known as Texas

Besides that there's the remittances to Mexico from citizens working in the US, giving Mexico a safety valve for its unemployed ... shute all therights you get from controlling another nations territory, the reasons invasions have occurred from the dawn of history.[/QUOTE] The answer that makes the most sense to me is in bold above. If the illegals are leaving family members behind to come over here and then sending money back to those people in Mexico, then that certainly does take strain off of the Mexican government and economy.


mwdallas

2005-04-15 16:08 | User Profile

[QUOTE]What I don't understand is why the Mexican government would want their citizens to sneak into America. How does that benefit Mexico?[/QUOTE]

The same as any other invasion -- it results in the invader controlling additional territory.


Ponce

2005-04-15 17:49 | User Profile

[QUOTE=Angler]LMAO!!! That's hilarious, Howard. :lol:

What I don't understand is why the Mexican government would want their citizens to sneak into America. How does that benefit Mexico? Anyone have any ideas?[/QUOTE]

Angler? The same way that the Jews need a lot of their people in Palestine in order to take over the whole of the land the Mexican government needs a lot of their their people in the US in order for their Aztlan dream to come true.

As far as I am concern California is now CaliMex, haven't been to Texas in many years so I don't know about there.

I don't expect to many illegals in this one mule town where I live because there is no jobs, welfare is about 76% one way or another and the state is no longer giving out welfare money.