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kah
09-12-2007, 07:49 AM
September 5, 2007

Mexican president's blatant hypocrisy

By Lou Dobbs
CNN

Lou Dobbs' commentary appears weekly on CNN.com.

NEW YORK (CNN) -- Mexican President Felipe Calderon Sunday demanded the United States surrender its sovereignty, abandon the rule of law and accede to Mexico's inherent supremacy.


Lou Dobbs says Mexican President Felipe Calderon is showing "blatant hypocrisy" on immigration.

In his state of the union address to the Mexican nation, Calderon established his imperialistic imperatives: "I have said that Mexico does not stop at its border, that wherever there is a Mexican, there is Mexico. And, for this reason, the government action on behalf of our countrymen is guided by principles, for the defense and protection of their rights."

Calderon protested the U.S. government's increased raids on illegal employers of illegal alien employees and work site enforcement. In what is little more than a faint nod to the Bush administration's responsibility to enforce U.S. immigration law, the Department of Homeland Security had planned to send out notices to employers from the Social Security Administration informing them of non-matching records between an employee's name and Social Security number. These employers would then be forced to resolve any discrepancy within 90 days or be required to dismiss the employee or face up to $10,000 in fines for knowingly hiring illegal immigrants.

But then, ethnocentric advocacy groups and some labor unions, trying to bolster their membership, sued to stop the crackdown on hiring illegal alien workers. A federal judge in California last week issued a temporary restraining order blocking the plan, giving a victory to the AFL-CIO, the American Civil Liberties Union and the National Immigration Law Center, all of which brought the suit alleging DHS exceeded its authority in making the rule.

That U.S. District Court judge ruled as if she were an employee of the Mexican government, rather than the U.S. government. Homeland Security was simply enforcing existing immigration laws. Are we not a nation that follows the rule of law? If not, we're no country at all.

Calderon must have been delighted by the judge's decision. Calderon, like his predecessors, Carlos Salinas and Vicente Fox, has failed miserably to establish policies that would create jobs for the Mexican people and to eliminate shameful, unchecked corruption and incompetence in the Mexican government.

Even by Mexico's standards, Calderon's blatant hypocrisy is breathtaking. Calderon told the Washington Post more than a year ago that he believes laws are not a relative concept, nor subject to a personal concept of justice. Calderon declared a big difference between himself and his rival for the Mexican presidency, Manuel Lopez Obrador, was this: "I believe in the rule of law." Obviously he does not believe in the rule of U.S. law on U.S. soil.

Calderon can't have it both ways. He cannot fail his citizens at home and then act as the Great Imperialist Protector of his citizens who are driven by poverty and corruption to enter the United States illegally. The United States provides Mexico with an annual surplus of $65 billion in trade, an estimated $25 billion in remittances from Mexican citizens living and working here illegally, and at least another $25 billion generated by the illegal drug trade across our southern border.

But it is President Bush and this Congress who should be most embarrassed, because they are failing to assert rights for Americans in their own country, rights far short of those demanded by Calderon for his citizens living illegally in our nation.

Nostromo
09-12-2007, 01:51 PM
Lou Dobbs ghost writes a column in Fangoria. At least that's what his housekeeper Consuelo says. N

Bill_the_Pony
09-12-2007, 02:52 PM
Strange times are in store for North America aka "The North American Union". (http://www.canadafreepress.com/2006/cover121406.htm) :mad:

whitetemplar78
09-12-2007, 03:32 PM
over my cold dead body this will happen.....:mad:

sickness
09-12-2007, 03:57 PM
Then you may be cold and dead long before you ever expected.

We'd be fools not to try to join forces and compete with other economic powerhouses in the world. China is an economic union unto itself. The EU is already proving a formidable economic adversary for us. I wouldn't be surprised to see Japan, Australia and India unite in some economic capacity with most of the Polynesian / South East Asian region along for the ride. With a population/economic explosion developing in Africa, it's only a matter of time before the AU becomes more than a political/peacekeeping bloc.

Absolute fools. That's what we'd be not to form the North American equivalent of the EU some time in the next 20 years (and that's exactly what NAFTA and CAFTA were all about). Any hesitation will see America and Canada relegated to second-tier economic and political powerhouses.

Lavoruis
09-12-2007, 06:46 PM
If we invade Mexico than you can have your wish
sickness. until then NO!
Mexico has nothing offer but different set of values
that americans don't prescribe to.
Canada has more to offer than mexico
but most Canadians are some what bitter toward America.
You will have mini war on your hands if someday this comes
to pass . the will be fought in Mexico

spammityspam
09-12-2007, 06:50 PM
Mexico has nothing to offer? Dude, a huge portion of our labor force is Mexican, and Mexico itself is extremely rich in natural resources. Where do you think we get our precious metals, a lot of our oil, our timber? Joining forces and forming a North American EU is the best trade idea we've had in years. It's already been seen to work in other places and maintaining our isolationist ideals will only hurt us in the long run. It already is -- many countries are dumping products on our shores to drive American companies out of business and they're able to do that because we're already not trading on the same level as everyone else. With lowered tariffs and better continental trade, we'll be able to reenter the world market on a level playing field. Global trade naturally results in more for everyone and higher quality of life across the board. I really don't see how this is a bad idea.

omicron
09-12-2007, 07:25 PM
For Fuck's sake people, check snopes (http://www.snopes.com/politics/business/amero.asp)before you freak out.

Space Tycoon
09-12-2007, 07:36 PM
Joining forces and forming a North American EU is the best trade idea we've had in years. It's already been seen to work in other places and maintaining our isolationist ideals will only hurt us in the long run.

Why is it always a choice between isolationism and heedless "free" trade? A lot of American working class communities have been devastated by globalization. I would think long and hard before signing on to some continental trading bloc.

Especially given Mexico's current expansionist mood.

Open trade between nations with similar values--such as Canada, the US, Europe-- is one thing. But it is a totally different story when one is considering extending that to nations that are still emerging from third world status.




.

Lavoruis
09-12-2007, 07:54 PM
Ahhhh but without oil what does mexico have offer
someday it will dry up?
as far as percious metals nah,
america can find there own we do alot recyciling, we still have mills.
all this manufacturing can be done here.
most companies want cheap labor research spammy..........
It really started in the 60's in gone down hill since.
we could been self sufficent but no.
If most jobs were kept since the 60's
We would be like germany.
Its all going blow up in americas having mostly everything
manufactured else where.
I can give a list of jobs that were shipped overseas & to mexico
since the 60's
We wouldn't have homeless or poor problem eitheir.
If america stuck to its guns

sickness
09-13-2007, 10:22 AM
If we invade Mexico than you can have your wish
sickness. until then NO!
Mexico has nothing offer but different set of values
that americans don't prescribe to.
Canada has more to offer than mexico
but most Canadians are some what bitter toward America.
You will have mini war on your hands if someday this comes
to pass . the will be fought in Mexico
Who said anything about a political union? It's all about economies. In fact, I think the political aspect of the EU has made Europe more of a bitter mess than before in the political sense. I think we'd be bigger fools not to learn that you can't force political transition like that.

Besides, it's not even what I was suggesting. If you really believe that we really have so much to lose from an economic union with Mexico because their values generally differ, I think you haven't looked at the explosion in telecom in Mexico nor are you aware that the top two countries we get our oil from are Canada and Mexico, not Saudi Arabia and Iraq.

Bill_the_Pony
09-13-2007, 10:35 AM
http://www.agoracosmopolitan.com/home/Frontpage/2007/08/16/images/bush_amero.jpg


:eek:



:rolleyes:

Nostromo
09-13-2007, 11:35 AM
http://www.agoracosmopolitan.com/home/Frontpage/2007/08/16/images/bush_amero.jpg


:eek:



:rolleyes:



In Juan we trust. :wink: N

Bill_the_Pony
09-13-2007, 12:02 PM
'Scyooooss Meeee, but I Don Juan nuttin' too doo witit. :Tongue: