Boycotting Mexico? Mexico Suing Over Arizona’s SB 1070 Immigration Laws; regardless to their OWN Toughest, Anti-Immigrant & Discriminatory Immigrations Laws Around:
By Marc Chamot
“Gringos shouldn’t stick their nose where it doesn’t belong,” were Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silvas’s exact words, in regards to American and European environmentalists, protesting plans on hydroelectric dam being built in the Amazon. The proposed dam would flood about 190 square miles of the rain forest.
That's how they feel about us when we meddle into their affairs, but then
there's this from Snopes;1. If you migrate to this county, you must speak the native language
2. You have to be a professional or an investor. No unskilled workers
allowed.
3. There will be no special bilingual programs in the schools, no
special ballots for elections; all government business will be
conducted in our language.
4. Foreigners will NOT have the right to vote no matter how long they
are here.
5 Foreigners will NEVER be able to hold political office.
6. Foreigners will not be a burden to the taxpayers. No welfare, no
food stamps, no health care, or other government assistance programs.
7. Foreigners can invest in this country, but it must be an amount
equal to 40,000 times the daily minimum wage.
8. If foreigners do come and want to buy land that will be okay, BUT
options will be restricted. You are not allowed waterfront property.
That is reserved for citizens naturally born into this country.
9. Foreigners may not protest; no demonstrations, no waving a foreign
flag, no political organizing, no badmouthing our president or his
policies, if you do you will be sent home.
10. If you do come to this country illegally, you will be hunted down
and sent straight to jail.
Harsh, you say? The above laws belong to the immigration laws of
MEXICO!
Mexico has waded into a legal challenge to a new immigration law in the US state of Arizona.
"In papers submitted to a US federal court, the Mexican government argues that the law is unconstitutional and would damage bilateral relations.
It says it is concerned that it could lead to unlawful discrimination against Mexican citizens.
The law - which comes into force on 29 July - makes it a state crime to be in Arizona without immigration papers.
It also requires police to question people about their immigration status, if officers suspect the person is in the US illegally, and if they have stopped them for a legitimate reason.
The Mexican government submitted arguments as a "friend of the court", or amicus curiae, meaning it is not a party to the case, but is offering a legal opinion which it believes has bearing on it.
It is in support of a case brought by a group of civil rights organizations, including the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund, the National Immigration Law Center, and the American Civil Liberties Union.
'Discriminatory acts'
It urges the federal court in Arizona to declare the law unconstitutional and stop it coming into effect.
"Mexico has a duty to protect its citizens and ensure that their ethnic origin is not used as a basis for committing discriminatory acts," the Mexican foreign ministry said in a statement.
It said it would respond forcefully to any violation of the fundamental human rights of all Mexicans in Arizona, independent of their immigration status.
The action is one of five separate challenges to the Arizona immigration law.
The measure has widespread support in Arizona, where there is growing concern at the flow of illegal migrants across the border from Mexico.
Arizona governor Jan Brewer has said she was forced to act because the federal government had failed to tackle illegal immigration.
Other states are considering similar moves. President Barack Obama has called the law misguided.
He has made immigration reform a priority, amid pressure from US border states for action to help curb illegal immigration and drug violence.
Last month, he said he would seek more funding and deploy up to 1,200 extra troops to help secure the US-Mexico border."
The most discriminative and anti-migratory law nation in Central America, Mexico, wants to dictate us in how to run our OWN immigration policies.
This is all borderline insane, since when have we ever had a foreign country sue any of our sovereign states, over immigration? Here is another example, of the Mexican government avoiding their responsibilities, to caring for their own citizens.
They want the United States to care for them, regardless to the plight and miseries they bring into our own communities.
This fight shouldn’t be about those boycotting Arizona, it should be more about boycotting Mexico. Any American who spends money and travel to Mexico, is borderline traitorous.
1 comments:
The more I think about this whole conflict between America and Mexico it looks more and more like that of Rome and Carthage, especially in the way Mexico seems to be antagonistic to us. The way Mexico is acting right now reminds me of the way the second Punic war started, minus Hannibal and the elephants. The Mexican government has acted more like an enemy then a friend for most of last hundred fifty plus years. Mexico also has the habit of encouraging it’s poor to come to America the same way the dictators in the Middle East encourage the hating of America,
to keep the peoples anger off their backs.
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