Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Mexican cultural imperialists and their leftist allies have long dreamed of a Reconquista – retaking America's Southwest on behalf of Mexico.  They have sought for decades to use illegal immigration and birthright citizenship to r...

Mexican cultural imperialists and their leftist allies have long dreamed of a Reconquista – retaking America's Southwest on behalf of Mexico.  They have sought for decades to use illegal immigration and birthright citizenship to r...


THE LA RAZA SUPREMACY PARTY OBAMA FUNDS:



We’ve got an even more ominous enemy within our borders that promotes “Reconquista of Aztlan” or the reconquest of California, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas into the country of Mexico.

Mexico objects to border security portion of US immigration bill, says fences not solution

more at this link – post on your Facebook and email broadcast

http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2013/06/la-raza-mexican-foreign-relations.html


MEXICO’S INVASION, OCCUPATION and LOOTING
Isn’t it by invitation of the Democrat Party?

August 25, 2015
Mexico fights for rights of 'anchor babies'
Mexican cultural imperialists and their leftist allies have long dreamed of a Reconquista – retaking America's Southwest on behalf of Mexico.  They have sought for decades to use illegal immigration and birthright citizenship to remake a vast corner of America – Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and California – in the image of Mexico.
Now, a court battle is heating up in Texas that revolves around a Texas agency's refusal to grant birth certificates to illegal immigrants with children born in Texas.  As the Austin-American Statesman reports:
In a rare move, the Mexican Ministry of Foreign Affairs filed an amicus curiae brief late Monday in a lawsuit filed by four women whose children have been denied birth certificates by the Texas Department of State Health Services because of the mothers’ legal status in the country.
In the last year, officials in the Vital Statistics Unit of the department have denied parents who are in the country without authorization birth certificates for their children and have told these parents that they will not accept their “matriculas consulares” — photo identification cards issued by Mexican Consulates in the United States to Mexicans living in the country — or foreign passports without a current visa.
The lawsuit, filed in May, includes Mexican, Honduran and Guatemalan plaintiffs suing the department for what they allege is constitutional discrimination and interference in the federal government’s authority over immigration.
“This policy puts the newly born children of undocumented people in a state of drastic vulnerability,” the Mexican Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a news release issued Monday. “It violates the right to an identity guaranteed by international human rights protocols and blocks their access to basic services like health and education.”
As this case moves through the courts, it will no doubt overshadow an election campaign that – thanks to Donald Trump – has put illegal immigration and birthright citizenship at the forefront of a testy public debate.
"You either have a country or you don't," Trump said recently.  That observation – a reference to America's sovereignty – is especially timely, given that Mexico's legal arguments are, in part, based on "international human rights protocols."  The irony here is that these high-minded protocols in fact serve the cynical purposes of Mexico's politicians and economic elites.  Specifically, they give them cover to realize their dream of a Reconquista that expands their influence in America at the expense of its sovereignty – and its culture.
Interestingly, Mexico's legal action also challenges Texas officials who, it seems, believe that Mexican counselor officials have played them for fools by readily issuing identity documents to Mexicans residing illegally in Texas.  Specifically, Texas's Department of State Health Services says it has refused to recognize those identity papers “because the documents used to obtain the ‘matricula’ are not verified by the issuing party,” according to the Statesman.
Mexico's ministry, for its part, was quoted as saying, “We want to assure the recognition of (Mexican) passports and consular identifications as legitimate documents that should be enough to attest to the nationality and identity of their carriers.”
Mexico has for decades encouraged citizens of its lowest social classes – including millions of poor and uneducated members of its peasant class – to head to the U.S. illegally.  By doing this, Mexico achieves two goals: it rids itself of a vexing social problem, and it generates a staggering transfer of wealth from the U.S. back to Mexico – some $20 billion annually – as illegal immigrants send money back to relatives.  It's a win-win for Mexico.
Mexico's cynicism is boundless.  It has protested to international courts when its citizens were convicted in high-profile death penalty cases.  Yet it can be counted on to avoid financial or moral responsibility for its citizens who fuel America's crime wave and who are draining social service programs – from bankrupting hospital emergency rooms to utilizing benefits for anchor babies.
Ordinary Americans have grown increasingly outraged over what's happening in their communities.  The latest small town to head toward a Latino majority is the tiny city of Jerome, Idaho – where Hispanics now outnumber whites in the school system, according to a recent item in a newspaper in Twin Falls.
None of this is about human rights.  Rather, it's about the cynical way that Mexico and its leftist allies have played American politicians for chumps as they endeavor to enhance their own power and ideological agenda.
No wonder Donald Trump is soaring in the polls as he declares that Mexico – not the U.S. – will pay for a wall on Mexico's northern border.
Trump may be undiplomatic.  But he's no chump.
Mexican cultural imperialists and their leftist allies have long dreamed of a Reconquista – retaking America's Southwest on behalf of Mexico.  They have sought for decades to use illegal immigration and birthright citizenship to remake a vast corner of America – Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and California – in the image of Mexico.
Now, a court battle is heating up in Texas that revolves around a Texas agency's refusal to grant birth certificates to illegal immigrants with children born in Texas.  As the Austin-American Statesman reports:
In a rare move, the Mexican Ministry of Foreign Affairs filed an amicus curiae brief late Monday in a lawsuit filed by four women whose children have been denied birth certificates by the Texas Department of State Health Services because of the mothers’ legal status in the country.
In the last year, officials in the Vital Statistics Unit of the department have denied parents who are in the country without authorization birth certificates for their children and have told these parents that they will not accept their “matriculas consulares” — photo identification cards issued by Mexican Consulates in the United States to Mexicans living in the country — or foreign passports without a current visa.
The lawsuit, filed in May, includes Mexican, Honduran and Guatemalan plaintiffs suing the department for what they allege is constitutional discrimination and interference in the federal government’s authority over immigration.
“This policy puts the newly born children of undocumented people in a state of drastic vulnerability,” the Mexican Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a news release issued Monday. “It violates the right to an identity guaranteed by international human rights protocols and blocks their access to basic services like health and education.”
As this case moves through the courts, it will no doubt overshadow an election campaign that – thanks to Donald Trump – has put illegal immigration and birthright citizenship at the forefront of a testy public debate.
"You either have a country or you don't," Trump said recently.  That observation – a reference to America's sovereignty – is especially timely, given that Mexico's legal arguments are, in part, based on "international human rights protocols."  The irony here is that these high-minded protocols in fact serve the cynical purposes of Mexico's politicians and economic elites.  Specifically, they give them cover to realize their dream of a Reconquista that expands their influence in America at the expense of its sovereignty – and its culture.
Interestingly, Mexico's legal action also challenges Texas officials who, it seems, believe that Mexican counselor officials have played them for fools by readily issuing identity documents to Mexicans residing illegally in Texas.  Specifically, Texas's Department of State Health Services says it has refused to recognize those identity papers “because the documents used to obtain the ‘matricula’ are not verified by the issuing party,” according to the Statesman.
Mexico's ministry, for its part, was quoted as saying, “We want to assure the recognition of (Mexican) passports and consular identifications as legitimate documents that should be enough to attest to the nationality and identity of their carriers.”
Mexico has for decades encouraged citizens of its lowest social classes – including millions of poor and uneducated members of its peasant class – to head to the U.S. illegally.  By doing this, Mexico achieves two goals: it rids itself of a vexing social problem, and it generates a staggering transfer of wealth from the U.S. back to Mexico – some $20 billion annually – as illegal immigrants send money back to relatives.  It's a win-win for Mexico.
Mexico's cynicism is boundless.  It has protested to international courts when its citizens were convicted in high-profile death penalty cases.  Yet it can be counted on to avoid financial or moral responsibility for its citizens who fuel America's crime wave and who are draining social service programs – from bankrupting hospital emergency rooms to utilizing benefits for anchor babies.
Ordinary Americans have grown increasingly outraged over what's happening in their communities.  The latest small town to head toward a Latino majority is the tiny city of Jerome, Idaho – where Hispanics now outnumber whites in the school system, according to a recent item in a newspaper in Twin Falls.
None of this is about human rights.  Rather, it's about the cynical way that Mexico and its leftist allies have played American politicians for chumps as they endeavor to enhance their own power and ideological agenda.
No wonder Donald Trump is soaring in the polls as he declares that Mexico – not the U.S. – will pay for a wall on Mexico's northern border.
Trump may be undiplomatic.  But he's no chump.

What will America stand for in 2050?
The US should think long and hard about the high number of Latino immigrants.

The principal beneficiaries of our current immigration policy are affluent Americans who hire immigrants at substandard wages for low-end work. Harvard economist George Borjas estimates that American workers LOOSE $190 billion annually in depressed wages caused by the constant flooding of the labor market at the low-wage end. 

PATRICK BUCHANAN: OBAMA’S ASSAULT  ON AMERICA BEGINS AT OUR BORDERS
“Yet nothing that happens on these borders imperils America so much as what is happening on our own bleeding border with Mexico.” Patrick Buchanan

JUDICIAL WATCH SOUNDS THE ALARM!
THE ILLEGALS’ CRIME TIDAL WAVE in our OPEN and UNDEFENDED BORDERS!
AMERICA’S THIRD-WORLD INVASION… isn’t it really ONLY about keeping wages depressed???

AN AMERICAN SEES and SPEAKS…
REALITY OF THE LA RAZA SUPREMACIST OCCUPATION:
I'm half Mexican, I live on the U.S. / Mexico international border - exactly 1.6 miles from the International bridge.
Listen, the VAST majority of these ILLEGAL SQUATERS do NOT - I repeat - DO NOT want to become U.S. citizens.
They see the U.S. as a MEAL TICKET, they DON'T want to pay taxes, wave an American flag, learn our language or follow our laws.
Mexico - far, far away from the fancy seaside resorts some of you all may have visited is a HELL HOLE.
These ILLEGAL ALIENS see the U.S. as an extension of "their area" with NO CONCERN or aspirations to be "Americans."

REALITY CHECK:
"The American Southwest seems to be slowly returning to the jurisdiction of Mexico without firing a single shot."  --- Excelsior, the national newspaper of Mexico
SOME HISTORY OF THE MEXICAN FASCIST PARTY of LA RAZA:
ON THE GROWIN POWER OF “LA RAZA” FASCISM FOR MEX SUPREMACY

http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2011/04/history-of-mexican-fascist-party-of-la.html

American Taxpayers Being Forced To Support Latino Nazi Party

By Dave Gibson (09/17/06)
In 2005, the Latino group known as La Raza (The Race) was given $15.2 million in U.S. federal grants. La Raza also received an additional $4 million in so-called 'earmarks' tucked into the 2005 Housing Bill, which our Congress passed and President Bush signed. Considering the racist agenda of La Raza, giving federal funds to this group is tantamount to the U.S. funding the Nazis in the 1930's.
The comparison to the Nazi Party is well deserved. La Raza openly supports pushing all but Latino Americans out of a portion of the United States (ethnic cleansing), they call for 'Reconquista' or the re-conquest of the American Southwest by Mexico (the re-occupation of the Sudetanland), and the establishment of 'Atzlan' which is the utopian all-Latino version of the American Southwestern states (Adolf Hitler planned to called his utopia Germania).


AS MEXICO HURLS  THEIR POOR, CRIMINALS AND ANCHOR BABY BREEDERS FOR WELFARE OVER OUR BORDERS……..

Mexico Deports More Immigrants Back to Central America than the U.S. Does
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico now deports more Central American migrants than the United States, a dramatic shift since the U.S. asked Mexico for help a year ago with a spike in illegal migration, especially among unaccompanied minors
Between October and April, Mexico apprehended 92,889 Central Americans. In the same time period, the United States detained 70,226 “other than Mexican” migrants, the vast majority from Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador.
That was a huge reversal from the same period a year earlier, when the wave of migrants and unaccompanied minors from Central America was building. From October 2013 to April 2014, the United States apprehended 159,103 “other than Mexicans,” three times the 49,893 Central Americans detained by Mexico.
The difference is Mexico’s new Southern Border Program, an initiative that included sending 5,000 federal police to the border with Guatemala and more border and highway checkpoints. Raids on migrants increased and authorities focused on keeping migrants off the northbound freight train known as “the Beast,” on which many have suffered mutilation injuries.
Neither U.S. nor Mexican immigration officials responded to requests for comment on the change this week, though officials in the past have said it is aimed at reducing dangers facing migrants.
“Mexico is doing the dirty work, the very dirty work, for the United States,” said Tomas Gonzalez, a Franciscan friar who runs the “72” shelter for migrants in Tenosique, a town in the southern Mexico state of Tabasco.
In the past, Mexican migration officials looked the other way as thousands rafted across the river at the border and then boarded freight trains north. In 2014, more than 46,000 unaccompanied minors from Central America crossed into the United States, leading the U.S. government to turn to the governments in Mexico and Central America to try to stanch the flow.
Mexico has proved the more efficient in deportations, which is already causing concerns among human rights groups about the new tactics.
In most cases, Mexico holds migrants only long enough to verify their nationalities, and quickly bundles them aboard buses to take them back to their home countries.
“The time that foreigners are in immigration (detention) centers depends only on the speed with which the authorities of their (home) countries confirm their nationality,” Mexico’s National Immigration Institute said in an email response to questions from The Associated Press.
Maureen Meyer of the Washington Office on Latin America think tank, which noted the dramatic change in a report this week, questions the speed Mexico is using.
“What we have heard continuously in the past year is that migrants are being so rapidly deported that even some that might have wanted to request some type of protection, or who would have been eligible for some type of humanitarian visa because they had been victims of crime in Mexico, haven’t had that opportunity,” Meyer said.
By comparison, when immigrants are caught crossing the U.S. border illegally, the process of being sent home can take anywhere from hours to years. Mexican nationals are often repatriated quickly – sometimes the same day they are caught – while migrants from other countries often spend at least a few days in U.S. custody before being flown back to their country of origin.
The deportation process can take much longer if an immigrant seeks asylum or if the person is a child traveling alone. For those immigrants who fight to stay in the United States, the wait for a court date and a final decision on their case can take several years because of backlog of more than 449,000 cases already pending in immigration courts.
According to the U.S. Department of Justice, there were about 41,920 requests for asylum in 2014, not all from Central Americans. About 49 percent of requests processed that year were granted.
Mexico grants only a tiny number of asylum requests. The latest figures, covering a nine-month period from January to September 2014, show only 1,525 people, the majority of them Central Americans, requested asylum or refugee status, and only one-sixth – 247 – were granted.
U.S. officials did not respond to questions regarding the amount of U.S. funding Mexico receives for its crackdown on the Guatemalan border, but it is making things tougher for migrants..
“It has raised the costs of the trip, it has raised costs for paying coyotes (smugglers) and the (Mexican) authorities that let them through,” said Gonzalez, the migrant activist. “It has spurred increases in everything bad – corruption and impunity – everything but human rights.”
PATRICK BUCHANAN: OBAMA’S ASSAULT  ON AMERICA BEGINS AT OUR BORDERS
“Yet nothing that happens on these borders imperils America so much as what is happening on our own bleeding border with Mexico.” Patrick Buchanan




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