Showing posts with label Mexico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mexico. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Candy Cigarettes: Most Politically Incorrect Candy

Pixelaneous #50:
Politically-Incorrect Candy




PC Storm Troopers Overlook Old-time Candy favorite

Back in the 1950s, 60s and 70s, back before Policial Correctness had gotten its grip on the American consciousness, at most convenience or general stores, a kid could purchase a confection that was sure to produce a monster sugar rush: candy cigarettes.




"Eventually You'll Get Pretend Cancer: The Bizarre World of Candy Cigarettes", succinctly sums up the candy cigarette:

For the past 100 years, a variety of chocolate, candy, and bubble-gum confections have been manufactured that simulate the appearance of actual cigarettes. For the first 65 or so years, the major cigarette corporations either looked the other way or took an active part in ensuring that the candy package reproductions were "faithful" to their less-appealing tobacco brothers. For some reason, a lot of people believe candy cigarettes were "totally outlawed" in the United States sometime in the past, when in actuality, the major players have remained one step ahead of governmental regulation via sluggish self-policing and a strong commitment to what ESPN would call "Extreme Hiding."







Less popular, though no less PC--or tasty--are bubble gum cigarettes, a sample which is pictured below.




The forces of PC are weaker in foreign countries and candy cigarettes are a popular item, both for manufacture and for consumption. The next three pix are candy cigarettes manufactured in Mexico.



In many places in the USA, you can still purchase candy cigarettes, though they are many times stored out of sight, behind the counter with the Playboy magazines and the condoms.




And that's our trip down Memory Lane to when you could munch on a candy cigarette without fear of offending anyone--but the dentist.

[NOTE: The last three pix come from Cardhouse.com. For a fascinating tour through the world of foreign, and especially Mexican, candy cigarettes, check out "The Cardhouse Non-American Candy Cigarette Exhibition".]


MORE PIXELANEOUS:

* 49 - Science Fair Projects: Unlikely Winners
* 48 - Summer Thunderstorm: Before and After Pictures
* 47 - The Crazy World of Egg Stacking
* 46 - Meaning of NASCAR Flags
* 45 - Big Muskie: The Biggest Machine to Ever Walk the Earth
* 44 - Hell's Belles: All-Female AC/DC Tribute Band
* 43 - Machine Gun Shoot at Cheyenne Wells, CO!
* Pixelaneous #41:
Ouch! Some Painful Moments



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by Mondoreb
images: DBKP;
* candy warehouse
* cardhouse

Friday, June 27, 2008

Video: Mexican Drug War Violence Spills into USA



This week's blogburst by Blogs4Borders contains:

* The Other War: As Mexico melts down are we next?

* 100% Preventable! Americans continue to pay the bloody price for open borders. When will the madness end?

* John Monti’s false accusers take a second bite at the apple. We report and tell you what you can do to help!



Readers will find a wealth of material on illegal immigration at Freedom Folks, as well as a daily recounting on the follies of unsecured borders.

The war being fought in Mexico between the government and the drug cartels is having its effects here.

It looks like it will have to get a lot worse before our ruling elites in Washington take action.

In the meantime, anyone who calls attention to the problems, is labeled "racist".

Or worse.

by Mondoreb
Sources:
* Just ‘Good Hearted Folks?’
* Blogs 4 Borders! 062308

Monday, April 7, 2008

Mexico's Roughest Neighborhood in Los Angeles



The weekly blogburst from Blogger4Borders. This week's subjects include:

* Where's the roughest neighborhood in Mexico?
Los Angeles!

* Reconquista the musical!

* Mexican rapper demands amnesty, makes threats!



by Mondoreb
image:
Sources:
* B4B Blogburst 040708
* Roughest Neighborhood in Mexico in Los Angeles

DBKP.com - Bigger, Better!.
Back to DBKP at Blogger Front Page

Sunday, December 9, 2007

Peyote: Psychedelic Dreams to End?


The magical peyote button has been undone by supply and demand. Foreign tourists, or peyoteros, seeking that special kind of "mystical" high have been blamed for outstripping the peyote's ability to survive but other factors have come in to play.
Once a year, the Huichol Indians make a 300-mile pilgrimage from their villages in the mountains of Nayarit, Durango and Jalisco states to the high desert of San Luis Potosi, where the tiny cactus grows in the shade of thorny shrubs.

As they walk through the desert toward their holy mountain, towering above the mining town of Real de Catorce, they run into foreign tourists with stupefied smiles, sucking hallucinogenic juice from the revered plant.

Consuming peyote is legal in San Luis Potosi, a curious loophole that for decades has drawn thousands of druggies to the desert. As long as no one tries to take the cactus home – that would be trafficking and could lead to 10 years or more in prison – they're free to make as many psychedelic trips as they want.[1]
Peyote has become yet another endangered species, the lowly little cactus button, sitting under the desert sun, 30 years until it's full grown. Perhaps those who can no longer seek out the peyote high can turn to the little Bufo alvarius, or Psychedelic Toad.


That's if one's dumb enough to lick a toad.

Homer Simpson dumb.

Nuff said.

by Little Baby Ginn
Image [japundit.com/wp-content/uploads/2006/10/homertoad.jpg]
Source - Signonsandiego.com - Mexico peyote site suffers onslaught of tourists, mining

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Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Caution! Drug Smugglers Working: 2400-Foot Tunnel Discovered


Drug tunnel discovered not quite this large


South of the border and the living is easy. And the drug tunnels keep getting larger.

A story highlighting that drug smugglers are, at heart, entrepreneurs.
The entrance to a drug tunnel discovered yesterday in Tecate is in an office building about a block south of the border.

Although Mexican authorities were not releasing any details Tuesday morning, they did allow reporters to go into the tunnel, which has its U.S. exit in a large storage container about a quarter mile northwest of the Tecate border crossing. The entire tunnel is not passable because water has collected in it.
Drug smugglers often have access to large amounts of money, but it sounds like they've got a few engineers and geologists on their payroll now.
The tunnel, which passes under homes and businesses in Mexico, is carved through earth and rock and has what looks like electrical and drainage systems.

“This tunnel has similarities with the one found in 2006, such as the size, the dimensions, the pumping and lighting systems, but we haven't estimated the length yet,” said Lauren Mack, a spokeswoman for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

The tunnel found last year measured about 2,400 feet, and authorities say it's the longest they have ever discovered. It was a sophisticated passage between Tijuana and Otay Mesa, and officials said drugs probably had been moved through it for several months.
2400 feet is almost a half-mile long--where was the dirt moved deposited? Drug smugglers apparently have an excavating capability now that's pretty impressive.
Blankets were scattered around the room where the Tecate tunnel entrance was found. Half-eaten food was in the room, along with a television and several pairs of boots. Several wheelbarrows were in the tunnel itself.
Sounds like a couple of lunchrooms we've been in.

Like all good tunnel builders, perhaps the smugglers collected tolls.

by Mondoreb
note: Little Baby Ginn

Source:
Inside the Drug-Smugglers' Tunnel

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Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Grupero Murders: Gang Execution or Part of a Border War?


Murdered singer shot, execution-style

Another grupero singer has been murdered in Mexico. Twenty eight-year-old Zayda Pena was shot dead in the back, gangland style in the emergency room of a Matamoros, Mexico, hospital. This after she had been treated for a gunshot wound to the back from an altercation the day before.

Pena was one of several grupero singers and band members who have been recently gunned down in gangland slayings in Mexico.
Peña — the front woman in a band named Zayda y los Culpables, or "Zayda and the Guilty Ones" — enjoyed a following on both sides of the border playing music known as grupero, which features basses, electric guitar, drums, accordions and synthesizers.

Grupero lyrics focus on love, unrequited or not, and on the exploits of narcotics gangsters and other borderlands themes. The genre's bands are popular draws in dance halls across provincial Mexico. Gangsters are said to be among the bands' many fans. [1]
A year earlier another singer, Valentin Elizaide, was shot after performing a concert in the border town of Reynosa, 60 miles north of Matamoras, the site of Pena's death.
In February, four members of another grupero band were shot to death after playing a hall in central Michoacan state, where much of this year's gangland violence has occurred.

Another popular grupero singer was gunned down in a Michoacan park last December.

Mexican newspapers last weekend reported that the lead singer of yet another band went missing Saturday, along with two businessmen, following a performance in Morelia, the Michoacan state capital. [1]
The rampant violence along the Texas-Mexico border is due to the presence of a drug cartel known as the Gulf Cartel. President Calderon ordered hundreds of troops over the weekend to Reynosa.

Pena was another of the nearly 2500 victims who have murdered in gangland violence this year.

by LBG
[image:islamusicals]
Source - Houston Chronicle - Singer Shot To Death after surgery in Matamoros


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Monday, November 26, 2007

Dog the Bounty Hunter:
Two Bounty Hunter Stories,
"What Would Dog Do?"



Two bounty-hunting stories for Dog fans.

One, about what Dog did; the other, about what Dog might do.

Back in June, the 20th to be exact, of 2003, the headline were about Duane "Dog" Chapman. But they were headlines of a different sort. The headlines of an American who had been jailed for doing a "good deed" in most people's eyes.

Dog became a household word in the Andrew Luster case. For those whose memories are fuzzy, here's what was written back then.

Anthony Harwood's Heir's Hunter Arrested in the Mirror.
HE is a father of 12, a devout Christian - and America's most famous bounty hunter.

But now Duane "Dog" Chapman and two of his sons are languishing in a Mexican jail while his long-suffering wife Beth tries to raise bail money.

The man who has caught 6,000 fugitives was arrested as he added convicted rapist Andrew Luster, heir to the Max Factor cosmetics fortune, to his list.

FBI agents are arranging extradition for Luster. But the Chapmans could face charges - Mexican law says bounty hunting is kidnapping.


At home in Honolulu, Beth told the Mirror: "I think it's disgraceful for what he did, the deed he did for the US government.

"The Feds are just going to let him rot. Duane talked to them every day during the hunt. Now they say they can't have anything to do with him."

Chapman, a bounty hunter since 1979, is so famous in America that he organises his own speaking tours.

He is known for "Dogisms" such as: "Born on a mountain, raised in a cave. Arresting fugitives is all I crave." Or: "Six men carry you or 12 men can judge you, you decide.

What would Dog do?

Fast forward to November of 2007. Dog the Bounty Hunter is laying low, his show canceled, his fans signing petitions, mailing pineapples to the A&E Network and rallying to get his "Bounty Hunter" TV show back into the line-up.

Just because Dog is temporarily down, doesn't mean that other bounty hunters are not working. And some of them are working for evil ends.

The following story caught our eye for several reasons. Since the "Enquirer tapes" story made headlines, we've heard a lot of comments about "Dog fans": who they are, what they do with their time when they're not watching "Bounty Hunter" or their level of education.

Those comments are generalizations and they are, in many cases, unsympathetic characterizations of Bounty Hunter fans.

This got us thinking: what would they think of the actions of the bounty hunters in this second story. This is about a group of bounty hunters who are not after criminals. Their prey is a young girl whose only crime is that she is running from being raped, beaten and/or other violence.

The story is about the girl running from those bounty hunters. It happened in England. It happens in the United States, but the stories usually get reported in the back of newspapers and don't receive much attention in the popular media.

The story begins: "She has been kidnapped, tortured, shot at, beaten and, at 16, forced into marriage with a stranger twice her age. And for the past five years Sara Ali has been tracked across Britain by an army of bounty hunters... bounty hunters paid for by her own family." --about Sara Ali in The Mirror's "Woman's 'honour crime' hell by Lucy Thornton.

Settle back--the story takes about 10 minutes to read--but is worth the time. Read the rest of this story and ask yourself: What would Dog do?

Now 22, divorced and living near Newcastle with the father of her two-year-old child, Sara is a victim of so-called "honour crime", a never-ending nightmare that began when she was just 11 years old.

"We lived in a really big nine-bedroom Victorian house and it was always mad busy. My dad had two wives, so there were 11 of us.

My mum had married him in Pakistan after he claimed his wife back in the UK was dying. England was this fantasy, a picture-perfect country with money, so her father agreed to the match.

I had a good childhood, I was popular at school and was pretty much allowed to do what I wanted. But it all started to change when I was 11 years old and taken to Pakistan where men kept asking my parents if they could marry me ... Mum and Dad were under a lot of cultural pressure.

I just thought it was all pretend and even when one of my sisters overheard my parents discussing my engagement I just thought this was the sort of thing that happened to big girls, not to me.

Then, when I turned 14 and was back in the UK, there was a phone call from Pakistan asking when I was going over there to be married.

All hell broke loose when I said I wouldn't go. And it was then that the mental and physical torture began.

My father would drop to the floor, clutching his chest saying I was giving him a heart attack. My brothers and sisters told me they would kill themselves because of the shame I was bringing to the family.

I got a really bad beating from my dad. I locked myself in my bedroom but he kicked the door off its hinges and screamed at me, 'I'm going to burn you alive.'

I remember being so scared I lay shivering from fear in my room. In the night I crept downstairs and ran to the local police station.

I was put into foster care but eventually my family got in touch and I ended going back to them because I was just so scared they would kill me if I disobeyed them.

But when I got home, things just got worse. They called me "dirt" and an "outcast". I had to cook my own food in different pots and pans from the rest of the family.

A little while later, when I was 15, they tricked me into travelling to Pakistan by getting my grandma to phone to tell me she was really ill and wanted to see everyone before she died. I was so naive.

We all flew over, but when we arrived they drove straight past my grandma's house. They told me I was being taken to a remote village to be married. I had no passport, no money - and no hope. I was just a child.

The wedding day was held on my 16th birthday to a man who was 40 and looked like my dad with big bushy hair, a big moustache and a pockmarked face.

I begged him to help me, saying I did not want to marry him but he told me: "Why would I say no to a walking visa?"

I knew it was hopeless, but I even told the priest during the ceremony I did not want to marry this old man, but he just carried on.

On the wedding night I had to go to my "husband's" house where he tried to rape me. I was 16, and had never even kissed a boy before. I'd only ever held hands.

He was an animal. He held my arms and pinned me down. He started licking me and bit me like a dog. I kicked and screamed the place down which probably saved me, but still I felt like I wanted to pour bleach all over my body I felt so dirty.

In the end he pulled my trousers down and screamed in my face: "I'm not going to keep you as a wife. I'm going to use you and abuse you because you're just a slag!"

He beat me violently and tried to rape me again but I made so much noise that his family stopped him in case someone outside the house heard. After that I kept a knife hidden under my pillow.

The next month I flew back to England with my family while he waited for his visa to join us. I went back to college for a bit, but I was messed up and started drinking. I tried to kill myself several times and even threw myself into the canal but I was always dragged back home, without any help or sympathy.

Six months after the marriage I was told my husband was coming to England to live with us and I realised I had to escape. That's when I ran away to Wales, and over time met and fell in love with a white boy.

I thought at last that I was safe and that they would never find me. But I was wrong ...

One day about 80 people turned up outside my flat - they were everywhere - blocking the road. Friends, relatives, friends of friends, neighbours of friends of friends.

When I opened the door I was slapped in the face and dragged back to a car by my hair and driven to my parents' house.

When they got me home, my parents told me I had to sleep with my vile husband but I refused. I begged my father to kill me rather than put me through this daily hell. In total I think I ran away about half a dozen times, but they always found me - even in women's refuges.

They paid these strangers to find me, bounty hunters, giving them my picture, my national insurance number and they showed it round, asking for me.
Eventually, I plotted with my boyfriend to run away, but it went wrong as we were spotted by a relative. We were followed by 15 cars and my brother pulled in front, forcing us to emergency stop. He got his arm through the window, flicked the lock and grabbed me by the hair, pulling me onto the road.

The police heard about it and told my family to take me to the police station. Dozens of my relatives waited outside, but the police helped me escape to a refuge.

But again they tracked me down and threatened to kill my sister if I didn't go with them.

They forced me to go Pakistan and kept me with my so-called husband's family in terror for nine months, telling me I was there to make babies.

I had two guards outside my door and was beaten regularly and one time I was kept in hospital with internal bleeding when his brother beat me with a chair.

They would say: "It's not England. If we bury you now, nobody will come looking. They have no authority over here."

I was even shot at because they said I had disrespected their brother, but it missed and went over my shoulder, I'm still deaf in one ear.

I eventually managed to slip out and phone a youth worker in the UK. It was an answer machine and I left a message: "Please get me out of here. They are going to kill me. If you don't hear from me in the next few weeks, assume that I'm dead!"

Afterwards my husband's family found out I had used a phone and threw me into a river, breaking my arm. But the youth worker contacted immigration who arranged for a judge to have me sent back to the UK.

I never went back to my parents and now I have a beautiful family of my own. I was in heaven until a few months ago when, out of the blue and after changing my name by deed poll I received a letter from that man, a petition for a divorce.

I was terrified, he'd simply found me by paying £14.99 to a tracker agency. But if I must, I will simply move again ... people who lose hope, lose everything.'

Think this is a rare case? Ask yourself that same question after reading the following statistics.
Around 5,000 women a year - 13 a day - die worldwide in "honour" crimes, according to the United Nations.

In Britain figures show 13 people die every year in honour killings, but police and support groups believe it is many more.

The Metropolitan Police are investigating 200 deaths they believe are linked to honour killings.

In a BBC poll of 500 young British Asians last year, a shocking 10 per cent believed honour killings were justified.

Around 250 forced marriages are reported to the Home Office Forced Marriage Unit every year, a third of which are children as young as 12 years old.

The suicide rate of Asian women aged 16 to 24 is three times the national average.

Two stories: one short, the other, longer. Would Duane "Dog" Chapman, for all of the things he's been called over the past 4 weeks, have taken the case to find this girl? Undoubtedly, he would have found her by now. He and his crew would have taken her back to the ones who are looking for her--her family.

What would Dog do?

by Mondoreb

MORE ON DOG the BOUNTY HUNTER:

Dog the Bounty Hunter Library: over 35 stories and videos on Dog the Bounty Hunter.
Also, on the left sidebar, see the latest on the Dog.

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Sunday, November 25, 2007

Mexico to Make Chinese Cars:
Ground Broke for New Auto Plant


Replacing 'Little Red Book'?


What would Mao do?

Ground-breaking ceremonies were held in Mexico a few days ago for North America's first Chinese car plant. In slightly over two years, GM will have another competitor to worry about.

From Signs on San Diego's Investors break ground on first Chinese car plant in Mexico :
Construction began Friday on an auto assembly plant in central Mexico that will create thousands of jobs and be the country's first to produce Chinese cars.

Mexican President Felipe Calderón led groundbreaking ceremonies for the factory, which will be financed by an arm of Mexican conglomerate Grupo Salinas and China's state-owned FAW Group Corp., one of the nation's largest automakers.
Mexican economic development authorities had to be overjoyed. Anything to employ Mexicans in Mexico is good news.

It was good news for those calling on Mexico to provide more domestic employment opportunities. Higher Mexican employment would slow the tide of immigrants from south of the border.

“Most of the world's investments used to go to China, and today China has come to invest in our country because it recognizes an enormous opportunity in Mexico thanks to its domestic market” and proximity to the U.S. and Latin America, Calderón said.

Due to open by 2010 in Michoacan state, the plant is expected to churn out 100,000 cars a year for sale in Mexico and Central America, according to a statement from Grupo Elektra, Grupo Salinas's electronic goods and consumer financing unit.

So China's expanding its car-making into Mexico. The consequences of what this means, if anything, will be debated.

Mao should be turning over in his communist grave.

by Mondoreb
[image:edmunds]

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Friday, November 23, 2007

Cartoon Network Bans Speedy Gonzalez



Speedy was always one of our favorites growing up, with the fastest kids always wanting to be Speedy whenever we were playing outside. He always put one over on the slower, but larger, cats.

And now, the Cartoon Network is banning the "fastest mouse in all of Mexico", for fear offending Hispanics. What? They ought to give Speedy a parade! Smart, fast and cool--that's Speedy.

So here's a Speedy picture for old time's sake.


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Wednesday, November 7, 2007

DOG THE BOUNTY HUNTER, canceled:
UPDATE-VIDEO of Hannity, Colmes Interview Part 2
Judge's Ruling the Only Good News




LATEST
Dog the Bounty Hunter UPDATE: 11-07-07

VIDEO: Dog Interview on Hannity & Colmes Part 2:
Click Here
Tucker's Girlfriend Rejects Apology:
Click here
JUDGE'S RULING ONLY GOOD NEWS LAST FEW DAYS
The only good news that's been reported in the last week for Duane "Dog" Champman has been the news that the last attempt to jail him for his Mexican adventure that brought him to fame is over,

This was reported yesterday, but a more in-depth report is now presented. More from aol:
Television bounty hunter Duane "Dog" Chapman, who had his reality show taken off the air after getting caught using a racial slur, will not be extradited to Mexico to face a pending appeal of kidnapping charges against him, a judge ruled Monday.

The U.S. government had been trying to send Chapman, his son Leland Chapman and a third man to the resort town of Puerto Vallarta, where they were charged with kidnapping Andrew Luster, a Max Factor heir who had jumped a $1 million bond on charges that he drugged and raped three women.

Luster's disappearance during his trial in California set off an international manhunt by police, FBI and bounty hunters trying to recoup some of the bond money. In June 2003, Chapman and the others apprehended Luster, and the fugitive was taken back to the United States to serve the 124-year sentence he was given while on the lam.

But because bounty hunting is illegal in Mexico, prosecutors in that country charged the three with kidnapping and asked U.S. authorities to arrest the trio and ship them to Puerto Vallarta.

A Mexican judge dismissed the kidnapping charges in July, ruling that Mexican prosecutors had taken too long in their attempts to bring the trio to trial. But Mexican prosecutors appealed the ruling, and the U.S. attorney's office in Honolulu, where the senior Chapman lives, declined to dismiss the extradition proceedings pending the outcome.

Still, U.S. Magistrate Judge Barry Kurren in Honolulu on Monday dismissed the extradition attempt because the judge said the three are no longer charged with any offenses, despite the appeal.

"I don't think they have any regrets whatsoever in facilitating the capture of Mr. Luster, who is a known and convicted rapist," his San Francisco lawyer, James Quadra, said Monday. "Though this has been a difficult process, they are proud of what they have done."

Co-counsel Brook Hart said in Honolulu that Chapman and his wife, "while very appreciative of the court's ruling, are not celebrating today" in light of the tempest created by his use of racial epithets.

Dog will be on Larry King Live tonight to discuss the affair with Mr. Softball himself. Known for presenting an unvarnished image to the public, he'll look for just a bit of varnish at CNN.

reports by Mondoreb

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Tuesday, October 9, 2007

STONE COLD FOX:

Vicente Fox to Bush:
"You Have Borders? You Racist"

"I want to say 'Hola Jorge' to the Racist-Gringo-in-Chief!"
[photo: vicentefox.org]


Calling Someone a Racist Means Never
Having to Say "Ergo Sum Cogito"


by Little Baby Ginn
--notes by mondoreb
Shout Out to: Dumb Ox Daily News

The story of Vincente Fox and George Bush. At one time they were singing songs from Grease, “we go together like ramma lamma lamma ka dinga da dinga dong” and skipping rocks together across the muddied waters of the Rio Grande. Evidently those days are over as Vincente has pulled out his Mexican Army Knife and stabbed George in the back.
NEW YORK (AP) - Former Mexican President Vicente Fox said Monday that the United States is letting racism dictate its policies, especially when it comes to immigration.
"The xenophobes, the racists, those who feel they are a superior race ... they are deciding the future of this nation," he said, without naming names, in an interview with The Associated Press.
Go figure. Bush lets an guesstimate of up to 14 million illegals flow unhindered into the United States from Mexico but apparently that’s not good enough for Fox. Now we’re “racists” and “xenophobes.” Most people in the United States have a skewed opinion of Mexico: that the majority of the people there are tired and oppressed; somehow America should welcome them with open arms.

In his recently-released autobiography, Fox whispered sweet nothings into the ears of the U.S. by also calling him a "windshield cowboy" and "the cockiest guy I ever met".

The fact remains that Mexico has a vibrant economy and a bustling, growing middle class. It also has an over-regulated and sometimes-corrupt economy, full of cronyism and hurdles for the ambitious and potential small businessman. Instead of fixing it's problems, the Mexican elites prefer to turn their heads and cough.

A convenient way to get rid of its discontented citizens is to hand them an official Mexican government map of all the really easy spots to slip across the Mexico-United States border. There… problemo solved. If the Norte Americanos squawk, well, just call them, you know, racist.

Repression? Weapons? Violence? Vincente Fox knows no shame. Where else in the world can millions cross the border to receive free medical care, free schooling, drive without a license, no auto insurance, and receive government subsidies for housing? What kind of “repression” is Fox referring to?

Violence? A not-so-small number of illegals who have committed very violent crimes sit in our jails, clog our judicial systems, turn communities into drive-by shooting zones and spawn burglar bars across American windows and doors.

Weapons? Illegal gangbangers sport a nice assortment of the latest.

So just what did Bush do to make his good buddy, Fox, turn on him?

One could put the question to Bush, but it's doubtful there'd be any answer. Bush has remained steadfastly mum on his reasons for flooding the United States with millions of undocumented aliens. We used to refer to them as “illegals”; but no more, this is considered “racist.’

What kind of racism is this: when the U.S. pays for illegals' medical care and yet many U.S. citizens cannot afford medical insurance of their own?

Vincente Fox is a hypocrite: a hack politician, with an apologist and essentially useless agenda, searching for his niche. Fox should focus on fixing the problems in his own country. Calling the United States “racist” and “xenophobic” is doing nothing.
UPDATE (hat tip: Flying Dutchman at LGF via Hot Air O'Reilly Leaves Vicente Fox Speechless"




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