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Seal-the-border hysteria is everywhere. Instead of blaming immigrants for America's problems, let's look at executives on both sides of the border.

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Immigrants Come Here Because Globalization Took Their Jobs Back There

By Jim Hightower, Hightower Lowdown. Posted February 7, 2008.


Seal-the-border hysteria is everywhere. Instead of blaming immigrants for America's problems, let's look at executives on both sides of the border.

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The wailing in our country about the "invasion of immigrants" has been long and loud. As one complainant put it, "Few of their children in the country learn English ...The signs in our streets have inscriptions in both languages ... Unless the stream of the importation could be turned they will soon so outnumber us that all the advantages we have will not be able to preserve our language, and even our government will become precarious."

That's not some diatribe from one of today's Republican presidential candidates. It's the anxious cry of none other than Ben Franklin, deploring the wave of Germans pouring into the colony of Pennsylvania in the 1750s. Thus, anti-immigrant eruptions are older than the United States itself, and they've flared up periodically throughout our history, targeting the Irish, French, Italians, Chinese, and others. Even George W's current project to wall off our border is not a new bit of nuttiness -- around the time of the nation's founding, John Jay, who later became the first chief justice of the Supreme Court, proposed "a wall of brass around the country for the exclusion of Catholics."

Luckily for the development and enrichment of our country, these past public frenzies ultimately failed to exclude the teeming masses, and those uproars now appear through the telescope of time to have been some combination of ridiculous panic, political demagoguery and xenophobic ugliness. Still, this does not mean that the public's anxiety and simmering anger about today's massive influx of Mexicans coming illegally across our 2,000-mile shared border is illegitimate. However, most of what the politicians and pundits are saying about it is illegitimate.

Wedge issue

There is way too much xenophobia, racism and demagoguery at play around illegal immigration, but such crude sentiments are not what is bringing this problem to a national political boil. Polls show -- as do conversations at any Chat & Chew Cafe in the country -- that there is a deep and genuine alarm about the issue among the nonxenophobic, nonracist American majority. In particular, workaday families are fearful about what an endless flow of low-wage workers portends for their economic future, and they're not getting good answers from Republicans, Democrats, corporate leaders or the media.

For the GOP candidates in this year's presidential run, the contest is coming down to who can be the most nativist knucklehead. They accuse each other of not wanting to punish immigrant children enough, of not being absolutists on "English-only" proposals, of having coddled illegal entrants in the past with amnesty proposals and sanctuaries, and of not being hawkish enough on sealing off and militarizing the border.

The leader of the anti-immigrant Republican pack is Tom Tancredo, a Colorado congress-critter who based his ill-fated presidential campaign on immigrant bashing. This goober is so nasty he'd scare small children. His website screeched that immigrants are "pushing drugs, raping kids, destroying lives," and his campaign slogan is a sledgehammer demand: "Deport those who don't belong. Make sure they never come back." As for illegal immigrants, Tom thinks that the term "illegal" is too soft, preferring to demonize immigrants as "aliens." Tancredo doesn't merely rant, he foams at the mouth, maniacally warning about waves of Mexican terrorists who are "coming to kill me and you and your children." Accused of trying to turn America into a gated community, he exulted, "You bet!"

At least he's taken a position, even if it's un-American and loopy. Democratic leaders, on the other hand, have mostly tried to do a squishy shuffle, wanting to beef up law enforcement against illegal immigrants while also mouthing soothing words about the good work ethic of our friends south of the border and offering a bureaucratic rigmarole to allow some of the younger ones to gain permanent residency in our country. Worse, such corporate Democrats as Rep. Rahm Emanuel urge the party's candidates either to adopt the Republican's punitive message or simply to try ducking the issue.

Which brings us to the wall, both figuratively and literally. The fact that we are resorting to the construction of an enormous fence between two friendly nations admits to an abject failure by policy makers, who are so bereft of ideas, honesty, courage and morality that all they can do is to try walling off the problem.

We've had experience here in Texas with the futility of tall border fences. Molly Ivins reported a beer-induced incident that took place in 1983. Walling off Mexico had been proposed back then by the Reaganauts, and a test fence had been built way down in the Big Bend outpost of Terlingua. This little town also happened to be the site of a renowned chili cookoff that Molly helped judge, and it attracted a big crowd of impish, beer-drinking chiliheads.

There stood the barrier, 17 feet tall and topped with barbwire. It didn't take many beers before the first-ever "Terlingua Memorial Over, Under, or Through the Mexican Fence Climbing Contest" was cooked up. Winning time: 30 seconds.

Yet here come the border sealers again. Bush & Co. (including Democrats who have allowed the funding) is putting up an initial $1.2 billion to start building this version of the wall, which is projected to cost up to $60 billion over the next 25 years to build and maintain. It's a monster wall -- two or three 40-foot-high rows of reinforced fencing that take a swath of land 150 feet wide and stretch for 700 miles.


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See more stories tagged with: workers, globalization, corporate accountability, immigration

From "The Hightower Lowdown," edited by Jim Hightower and Phillip Frazer, January 2008. Jim Hightower is a national radio commentator, writer, public speaker and author of the new book Swim Against the Current: Even a Dead Fish Can Go With the Flow. (Wiley, March 2008)

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Americans turn...
Posted by: chomsky on Feb 7, 2008 12:37 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And, now that the US economy is going down very fast, the number of available jobs will go down too. So, unless the growing number of unemployed americans are ready to accept the difficult and low wage jobs immigrants accept to do, it's their turn to find a job abroad. Hurry, those available jobs abroad will also soon get outsourced to cheap/slave-labor countries.

Hum... I can hear the politicians and their corporate friends praising globalisation but I can't exactly understand what is so great about it... Let's see: prices keep going up, wages keep going down (unless you're a CEO) if you are one of the lucky ones who still have a job... Nope, I still don't see how it makes life better.

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Duh
Posted by: kepstein7777 on Feb 7, 2008 2:40 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's not like we have to build a wall to keep Canadians out, although they might have to build one soon to keep us out.

This is a good article. But it's too bad we need articles like this to explain the obvious.

With the rank and file anti-immigrant American, you have two barriers between him and reality: ignorance and denial. Ignorance is self-explanatory. Denial is more difficult to break through, because it's cognitively and politically easier to beat up on some poor dirty immigrant than to confront the root problems outlined in this article. Good luck with that.

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» RE: Duh Posted by: ellie
Reframe the dialogue
Posted by: Democritus on Feb 7, 2008 4:09 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The corporatocracy has done a good job in framing the problem as one involving "illegal immigrants." Anything illegal is bound to get our dander up. In reality, as Hightower points out, the problem lies with the large companies that crush labor, both here and in Mexico, and set our workers at odds with Mexican workers.

My suggestion is that we reframe the dialogue to speak about the problem of corporate greed. If we repeal NAFTA, and instead pass laws that squelch corporate greed, then the only illegal activity to worry about will be that of corporate criminality.

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» RE: eframe the dialogue Posted by: using
» RE: Reframe the dialogue Posted by: TheLimit
» RE: eframe the dialogue Posted by: nochicagoboys
» RE:frame the dialogue Posted by: Ian MacLeod
» RE: frame the dialogue Posted by: JPerry
» RE: frame the dialogue Posted by: Ian MacLeod
» RE: frame the dialogue Posted by: Ian MacLeod
» RE: frame the dialogue Posted by: Ian MacLeod
» RE: frame the dialogue Posted by: rickiey
It not the race, it is the willingness to commit crimes.
Posted by: rickiey on Feb 7, 2008 4:40 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are two types of immigrants.

There are hardworking people who do things the right way, and come to America because they know that in America lies the freedom to earn a better life. The US was founded on this type if immigrant, they are welcome here and we need more of them. Over half a million of these welcome additions to our country came here last year alone. They are the legal immigrants, who respect law, and do things the right way.

The other type is the lazy type who believes the world owes them. They think that their situation makes them exempt from laws. They come to the US illegally, because they don't have a problem basing their entire lifestyle around committing a crime. If they did, they would have entered the country legally, now wouldn't they?

It is time to treat Americans, whether born here or legal immigrants, like Americans.

It is also time to treat people who commit crimes, like people who commit crimes.

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» Freedom. Posted by: colinmeister
» RE: Freedom. Posted by: drmflorida
» RE: Freedom. Posted by: JSquercia
» To rickiey... Posted by: Quannah
» RE: To rickiey... Posted by: rickiey
» That's very funny. Posted by: Artkansas
HOGWASH
Posted by: HBoyer on Feb 7, 2008 5:40 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article is nice and has compassion but no common sense.

Illegal Aliens are just one more step in the implementation of the North American Union.

Open Borders between Mexico, USA, Canada.

Corporate America, the Republican Party, the Democratic Party, the Federal Reserve, the Greedy rich in America want the NORTH AMERICAN UNION.
It will guarantee peasant wages for 80% of Americans.

The Patriot Act (Gestapo Manifesto) and Home Land Security (Gestapo Headquarters) have taken away portions of the Bill of Rights and the Constitution in order to stop any protests when congress and the white house to implement the North American Union.

No matter which party comes into power the North American Union will be implemented by 2015.

So if we allow 20 million plus illegal aliens to receive citizenship and not send them back to their country of origin to reapply for visas to enter this country we will be supporting the implementation of the NORTH AMERICAN UNION.

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» RE: HOGWASH Posted by: grkjr
» RE: HOGWASH Posted by: doubter
» RE: HOGWASH Posted by: TheLimit
» RE: HOGWASH Posted by: doubter
Wow - just when you think you've heard it all!
Posted by: war_on_tara on Feb 7, 2008 5:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For example, just last month, Speaker Nancy Pelosi engineered a vote to extend NAFTA to Peru, a corporate favor that could be called the Tom-Rahm Bipartisan Axis of Immigration Stupidity, for it drew enthusiastic support from both Tom Tancredo and Rahm Emanuel.

Ay yai yai!

The news here in New England is how Brazil's economy has improved so greatly in recent years - no thanks to the US! - under that wild-eyed radical Lula (too smart to join NAFTA), that the Brazilians here are now going home in droves.

In fact I thought from the headline of this article it would go into that sort of thing. With the US economy tanking like it is, that's one way to get many of the illegal immigrants to go home, isn't it? It may take awhile to start making Mexico look good, but we may get there sooner than you think!

Obama seems at least to have a little sense about all this. Won't talk about repealing NAFTA of course but he talks about "working with Mexico to improve job growth there" and similar stuff. You know the Clintons of WalMart aren't going to do anything about that in their third term.

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Like all other issues, Corporate America and social conservatives
Posted by: maxpayne on Feb 7, 2008 5:52 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
make it too easy to shift the blame and burden on the little guy/gal, American or otherwise. See, it's too easy for our fucked up wackos be it talkshow hosts like Sean Hannity or pols such as James SenseLESSbrenner or even media "analysts" such as Pat Buchanan to blame the immigrants alone while conveniently ignoring the real perpetrators that brought us privatization, "deregulation", "free" trade, outsourcing, offshoring, tax cuts for the wealthy/corporate elite, etc ... As pointed out by Hightower and other posters, ignorance is killing us all.

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Two separate issues + the usual critizism
Posted by: JPHickey on Feb 7, 2008 6:02 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First of all, it just depends on which end of the stick you're on.

This writer, regardless of his merits is safely enconsed in the "annointed", well-positioned meritocratic class.

Certainly some good things can come from the high view of the advantaged-class catbird seat, since he believes he will never have his nose stuck in the underclass mire where our very own citizens of greatest need find ourselves grovelling with illegal aliens for a crust of bread, a few alms for a roof over our head, or even a little compassion.

Meanwhile the boarderline psychopath neocons continue to cut us down to size as though they would love to just see us crawl under a viaduct and disappear. You know who I'm talking about, the old, the veterans, the ill, the young, and so on.

Our lives cannot wait until the ill-conceived correct the disasterous politicies that have dragged down the Mexican economy and our own, as well!

We don't want illegal aliens lowering our wages or standing in line in front of us at the food bank or emergency room, and who knows what else.

Any article written by the overlord class that refers to illegal aliens as "immigants" is using propaganda methodology to confuse the issue and ultimately blame the victims.

So many of these high-and-mighty types prance around calling themselves Christians, yet they are unable to feel anything in their heats for our own needy and deserving citizens.

Instead, we're exected to bear the brunt of this uninvited and illegal migration, all the while the "superior financial autocrats" of Mexico, aka Duby's buddies, have wealth that equals or exceeds the billionaires in the United States.

What I want is for us to give a helping hand and/or a leg up to our own citizens, and take care of the other miserable issues in D.C. or other obscure place.

Consider the alternatives. Elitists would never tolerate arrangements that the rest of us are expected to embrace, like abandoning our national boarders and allowing the informal integration of all the peoples of the world if they were forced to beg for handouts at the end of the line.

I doubt that, as the depression deepens, our citizens at the bottom of the heap will suddenly see the light, and open their pocketbooks and hearts to all the needy peoples of the world, especially as homelessness grows. Wake up and smell the coffee! And stop blaming the victims!

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duckcreek99
Posted by: duckcreek99 on Feb 7, 2008 6:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Most of us know NAFTA got completely out of hand. It has taken away good American jobs. The question is to all of you intelligent bloggers, HOW do we, as ordinary Americans stop this insanity. I write and write our Senators and Congressmen. Who really is running this country? It ain't us!

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» RE: duckcreek99 Posted by: AmeriPole
» RE: duckcreek99 Posted by: TheLimit
Immigration Facts & Solutions
Posted by: Brez on Feb 7, 2008 6:26 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In considering illegal immigration, it would be an excellent first step if all the pundits and corporate shills would stop trotting out the well-worn and overused Race Card every time someone disagrees with their idea that we can and should allow everyone who wants to live in America to do so.

Let’s just look at some facts instead:

 We already have the most liberal immigration policy of most, if not all, developed nations.
 Everyone else in the world cannot live here. We’re pretty full just in terms of infrastructure and services alone.
 A de facto corporate agenda to undermine the living wage of American citizens is driving our current non-existent enforcement of immigration law in order to further marginalize the working poor and the middle class. Jobs, not race, is the counterpoint to this.
 Unsecure borders invite terrorist infiltration, which will only worsen as we withdraw from the ill-conceived and ill-executed Iraq fiasco.
 Illegal immigrants cost millions in education, health care, crime, lost wages (for legal labor), and welfare. They drive Americans and legal immigrants onto welfare or into McJobs.
 Those most in need of the jobs taken by illegals are the poor and our legal immigrants; they are the ones who suffer the most.
 There are NO jobs Americans won’t do. All we ask is a proper wage, at least a minimum wage. Don’t take my word for it – ask your sanitation worker.
 For all you race-mongers out there, please don’t consider this as applying to Hispanics. It applies to Asians, Indians, Russians, Canadians, and anyone and everyone not an American citizen or legal immigrant regardless of race or national origin.

Now please consider the following solutions:

 REPEAL NAFTA!
 Make it a felony to employ illegal immigrants. Illegal aliens themselves should be considered as misdemeanants only, with the punishment for a first offence limited to deportation.
 Provide NO services whatsoever to anyone who is not an American citizen or legal resident.
 Give anyone who wants one a bus or plane ticket home so they can fix their own country.
 Stop chain family immigration. Allow only the minor children of legal immigrants to immigrate. Illegals who had children here can take them home with them or not as they choose.
 Do not consider any qualifications for immigration other than the above, such as programming skills or degrees – instead, educate and train Americans to do that work. I am certain that there are plenty of trained and capable Americans, but the mantra of corporate greed would rather pay immigrants a pittance, thus further increasing the two-class society that was established a mere six years ago.
 What we need to do is to discourage everyone else from wanting to come here, and to discourage those here illegally from wanting to stay. To do otherwise is to betray every American worker who does not have a job, or who cannot advance because someone else is willing to work for a bit more than they can earn in their own country.

Most importantly, do whatever it takes to secure our borders, North and South, and all our ports. The neglect by this administration of true homeland security for a roll of duct tape and perpetual “Condition Yellow” is criminal, even treasonous.

Please be aware that there are a great number of American citizens of all classes and occupations who feel the same, but the incessant use of the false pejorative of racism by corporate shills and one-worlders who either want cheap labor or want to perpetuate their own illegal residency mutes the voice of reason and rationality.

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» RE: Immigration Facts & Solutions Posted by: undrgrndgirl
so--how many IS enough?
Posted by: zooeyhall on Feb 7, 2008 6:34 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So, all you academics and Lexus liberals out there, I ask you: How many illegal aliens coming in IS enough? 100,000 a year? a million? Do you realize that there are, given the chance, literally BILLIONS who would come to the U.S.?

When our country starts to look like the world depicted in the movie Soylent Green, will you be satisfied? Are you prepared to let them move into your house? How about your son giving up that summer job so that an illegal can take it? Are you prepared to take that step yourselves to ease your conscience? Or do you only want to tell others that THEY have to do it?

And spare me that old saw "they do the jobs that we don't want to do". Let me tell you about the packing plants in my area. In the 70's they paid the equivalent of $20/hour. They had NO trouble getting local farmers and rural people to work in them. They had a strong union and it was considered a good middle-class job.

Another tactic of the pro-illegal crowd is to dig up old quotes (like the one in this article about Franklin) to show how the anti-immigrant types were proved wrong. Yes, Franklin may have been wrong 250 years ago, but that doesn't mean that anti-illegals are wrong TODAY. The country is far different then it was in Franklin's time. We are filling up fast, and our infrastructure and resources are already strained. To say that we can bring in more people "because that's what we always did in the past" is no longer valid today.

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» RE: so--how many IS enough? Posted by: YogiBear
Illegal Immigrants
Posted by: zak822 on Feb 7, 2008 6:36 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"The wailing in our country about the "invasion of immigrants", gives a false impression of what the wailing is about.

It's not about "immigrants". It's about illegal immigrants. Conflating the two distorts the discussion.

Franklin railing against German immigrants who were coming here legally is worlds apart from out current flood of illegal immigrants coming in from Central and South America.

Yes, corporate execs on our side of the border should be held accountable for their role in facilitating the flow of illegal immigrants. The nations below below the border do things very differently and they are not amenable to changing their business practices or dismantling the oligarchies that keep them rich and powerful.

Hightower's argument that this is about whether to "be for workers or for more trade imperialism" is a case building a straw man to knock over.

He simply refuses to recognize that America cannot absorb everyone who wants to better their life by coming here. It's impossible.
zak822

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» RE: Illegal Immigrants Posted by: Afban
» RE: Illegal Immigrants Posted by: AmeriPole
evolution instead of revolution
Posted by: using on Feb 7, 2008 6:37 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
this is a good article! Thank you. While alot of the information is known already it clearly listed and adds pertenient information that I had not known.

However, looking up -- is not helping -- since it does not enable us to change their behavior. It is being empowered that will make those in power notice us. HOw can we do that -- short of revolution. Well we can pick a presidential candidate that is willing to enforce our laws and make strong changes. Oh, the media did not give them much play, those that write these wonderful articles did not come out an endorse them, and on their own most people did not recognize what is in their own best interests, and who knows what "behind the scenes" influence the power structure had, so, those like Edwards, are no longer running. Perhaps we can start an undercountry. There is alot of unemployed talent in the class that is beginning to hurt and many who would join us if we began to grow a strong union. We can build an under-economy -- boycotting the "Bad samaritians" that are laid our country to waste, and supporting industries that will cooperate with us. That will send the illegal people home to fix things in their own country or stay here and work with us -- and most important, that will create a more comfortable less comsumerish lifestyle for us.
"lets organize and cut the string tieing us to the "bad samaritans".
If you have a better suggestion let me know. But regardless, the only thing that will help is if there are many of us working together.

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» RE: Ignorance is bliss Posted by: MeridaLady
» compassion needs to keep on going. Posted by: veggiegrrrl
» Mexico is also at fault Posted by: veggiegrrrl
» RE: Ignorance is bliss Posted by: rickiey
» RE: evolution instead of revolution Posted by: constantreader
» RE: evolution instead of revolution Posted by: constantreader
It's Pro-Choice Karma
Posted by: Iconoclast421 on Feb 7, 2008 7:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's a really simple equation. You abort 50 million babies. Most of those would have grown up in or near poverty. They would have worked low wage jobs. The jobs the illegals have now. Karma. It's enough to make even an atheist look upward every now and then!

But yeah, it doesnt help that we use both overt and covert methods to blow out latin american economies and then loot them. And then set up grossly unfair heavyhanded trade deals. The thing that really sucks about our idiotic free trade agreements is not only are they unfair, but theyre also not very smart. They dont make optimal use of the land. For example of something that makes sense, we grow corn and brazil grows sugar. This makes sense because brazil has the kind of heavy sunlight and rainfall required to grow a high energy yielding plant like sugar cane. Sadly the vast majority of these trade deals do not promote efficiency, they simply promote profits for shortsighted investors. Tearing down rainforests for grazing land is another example. The rainforest has such diversity of life. We dont know even a fraction of whats in the rainforests that we are destroying. Its so foolish. Huge loss of potential future income... For what? So we can have more beef patties?

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» RE: Birth Control Posted by: MeridaLady
This just in the sky is BLUE!!!!!
Posted by: Phenix on Feb 7, 2008 8:00 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wow what is next?

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Fear of Political Correctness
Posted by: grn1 on Feb 7, 2008 9:06 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
has gotten us nowhere. Hightower is correct, if there wasn't economic collusion, so many would not be here. It is not just corporations as many illegals are employed by Latinos, who bring over their cousins in droves. There is a big difference in American culture and Latino, the most obvious being ruled by oligarchic governments. Thus making it easy for them to buy into the criminal behavior, as example to survival set as a way of life in their countries. It happened with every wave of immigration, only this wave has gotten out of control. I say that because I saw an article on Huffpo where some Latin writer was celebrating the fact that Latinos would decide this election. Fuck him! And more appropriately fuck all his family members left in Mexico, because that is what he is really endorsing. My best friend is an immigrant, so is my son-in-law, I have also sponsored an immigrant, just a little history to let you know that what I'm about to say may seem offensive but is racist, from the Latin perspective. We all agree that the strong Latino backing for Clinton is due to Latinos racist attitude towards black Americans. Political analyst Bebitch shows this in percentages 59% Clinton, 19% Obama. This should be very disturbing to every American, as the last thing we need to do is to immigrate racism.

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The other side of the coin: cash transfers
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Feb 7, 2008 9:13 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That's really what the free trade deals are all about. No borders for cash, but borders for people.

This benefits billionaires, but no one else. Funds can move in and out of countries without tariffs - slosh, slosh, slosh.

None of the candidates will lift a finger to stop that, and none will discuss it either.

This has been known for decades. Mexico: NAFTA corn liberalization fails farmers, environment, 2000

"And, due to market imperfections and segmentation, the expected benefits in terms of lower consumer prices for maize products have failed to materialize, and the prices of ‘tortilla’ (thin flat unleavened bread made of corn and eaten hot) has actually risen."

That's 2000 - NAFTA led to market manipulation by U.S. agribusiness. It wasn't the use of corn for ethanol in the U.S. that destroyed small-scale Mexican agriculture - it was monopolistic practices by U.S. agribusiness corporations, which were backed by the U.S. government's trade agreements.

That created massive unemployment in Mexico, leading to more migration to the U.S. - where those once-independent Mexican farmers now labor for the U.S. agribusiness and construction industries at sub-par wages.

Duh. Why are racists so stupid?

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Illegal Immigrants Returning To Mexico For American Jobs
Posted by: wagadog on Feb 7, 2008 9:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When I showed this story from The Onion to my mom, she thought it was for real at first.



As with any spoof, it's the opposite of the real story, but -- man, globalization is even worse than we thought it could be.

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Take care of our own first
Posted by: Old Skeptic on Feb 7, 2008 9:41 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It may be true that illegal aliens are being pushed here by the ill effects of NAFTA, but the fact is that this country cannot continue to allow this invasion to go on. Illegal aliens may not be the direct cause of the weakening of the American middle class, but their ready availability as a pool of cheap, docile labor is certaining aiding and abetting the corporate crooks who are to blame! Without illegals, employers would have to offer better salaries and benefits to get American workers.

The millions of uneducated, unskilled, poor peasants who are being shoved across our border by Mexico and other Latin countries are draining more tax money from our economy than they will ever pay enough in taxes to equal. Their children's education, medical care, even the cost of birth, is paid for by the American taxpayer. In return, many of these people work for cash and pay only taxes they can't escape, like sales taxes. They don't pay their way. They send money back to Mexico, instead of spending it here to bolster our economy. IMO, they are in too many cases leeches, who are draining our economy to benefit Mexico in one way or another.

Mexico gets rid of its surplus people, who might organize and overthrow the status quo if they stayed home. We get to pay for them. What a deal...for Mexico!

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» Worth repeating. Posted by: YogiBear
Slavery Of Citizenship
Posted by: NoPCZone on Feb 7, 2008 10:08 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Since when did people become the chattel slaves of a particular nation? It is the most un-American thing I have ever heard of in my life. How is it that a government has a right to restrict your movement, deny you the right to transfer funds or relocate based upon the geography of where your mother was when you were born? Sounds like BS to me.

I welcome all who wish to come and participate in the experiment that is America with one set of qualifications:
1- Love America first-not the old country.
2- Learn the common language - don't expect us to learn yours.
3- Respect the diversity that is this country.

If those are met, I have no problem.

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» RE: Slavery Of Citizenship Posted by: AmeriPole
Critical Juncture
Posted by: penobscotdziekuje@yahoo.com on Feb 7, 2008 10:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First things first: Who's to blame for the critical problems of immigration and globalization of the world's economies, a solution NAFTA was supposed to prevent? The answer could be found in Washington and Mexico City.
NAFTA was touted as an elixir to stimulate North America's economy to promote or accelerate the flow of commerce betw