The argument that a bourgeois politician and the capitalist Mexican state can be pressured to implement genuinely progressive, let alone socialist, policies is absurd and dangerous.
"The American Southwest
seems to be slowly returning to the jurisdiction of Mexico without firing a
single shot." --- Excelsior, the national newspaper of Mexico
“The radicals seek nothing less than
secession from the United States whether to form their own sovereign state or
to reunify with Mexico. Those who desire reunification with Mexico are
irredentists who seek to reclaim Mexico's "lost" territories in the
American Southwest.” Maria Hsia Chang
Professor of Political Science, University of Nevada Reno
WHAT DOES MEXICO DO
WITH THEIR OWN ILLEGALS???
THEY DEPORT THEM ON
THE SPOT!!!
Mexico has a single, streamlined law that ensures that foreign
visitors and immigrants are:
1.) in the country legally;
2.) have the
means to sustain themselves economically;
3.) not
destined to be burdens on society;
4.) of
economic and social benefit to society;
5.) of good
character and have no criminal records; and
6.) contributors
to the general well-being of the nation.
The law
also ensures that:
7.) immigration
authorities have a record of each foreign visitor;
8.) foreign
visitors do not violate their visa status;
9.) foreign
visitors are banned from interfering in the country’s internal politics;
10.) foreign
visitors who enter under false pretenses are imprisoned or deported;
11.) foreign
visitors violating the terms of their entry are imprisoned or deported;
! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
!
GET THIS:
12.) those who aid in illegal immigration will be
sent to prison!!!!!!!!!
MEXICO VOWS A NEW INVASION HAS BEGUN, FINANCED BY U.S.
THE NEXT MEXICAN INVASION IS AT HAND:
"Mexican president candidate Andrés Manuel López Obrador called for
mass immigration to the United States, declaring it a "human right".
We will defend all the (Mexican) invaders in the American," Obrador said,
adding that immigrants "must leave their towns and find a life, job,
welfare, and free medical in the United States."
*
http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2018/07/mexican-president-andres-manuel-lopez.html
*
"Fox’s Tucker Carlson noted
Thursday that Obrador has previously proposed granting AMNESTY TO MEXICAN DRUG
CARTELS. “America is now Mexico’s social safety net, and that’s a very good
deal for the Mexican ruling class,” Carlson added."
"Many Americans forget is that our country is located
against a socialist failed state that is promising to descend even further into
chaos – not California, the other one. And the Mexicans, having reached the
bottom of the hole they have dug for themselves, just chose to keep digging by
electing a new leftist presidente who wants to surrender to the cartels and who
thinks that Mexicans have some sort of “human right” to sneak into the U.S. and
demographically reconquer it." KURT SCHLICHTER
Billionaire Mexicans tell their poor
to JUMP U.S. OPEN BORDERS and LOOT THE STUPID GRINGO… and loot they do!
Billionaire Mexicans tell their poor
to JUMP U.S. OPEN BORDERS and LOOT THE STUPID GRINGO… and loot they do!
Billions of dollars are sucked out of
America from Mexico’s looting!
1) Mexico
ended legal immigration 100 years ago, except for Spanish blood.
2) Mexico is the 17th richest nation
but pays the 220th lowest minimum wage to force their subjects to invade the
USA. The expands territory for Mexicans, spreads the Spanish language, and
culture and genotypes, while earning 17% of Mexico's gross GDP as Foreign
Remittance Income.
López Obrador’s rise in Mexico sets stage for explosive class struggles
4 December 2018
On Saturday, Andrés Manuel López Obrador—or “AMLO,” as he is known—was sworn in for a six-year term as president of Mexico, the world’s tenth largest country by population, home to 130 million people.
The coming to power of López Obrador sets the stage for an escalation of the class struggle across North America. No Mexican president since Francisco Madero was elected in 1911 has confronted as acute a contradiction between the progressive expectations of the masses of people and the reactionary aims of the ruling class. As in 1911, at the onset of the Mexican Revolution of 1910–1920, Mexico is a social powder keg waiting to explode.
López Obrador is a 65-year-old former mayor of Mexico City who has spent his entire political life as a bourgeois functionary and political climber. Hailing from the southern gulf state of Tabasco, he became active in the ruling Party of the Institutional Revolution (PRI) in his early 20s and won appointments to positions at various government agencies in the years that followed.
In 1988, AMLO joined the populist Democratic Currents opposition within the PRI, whose leader, Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas (son of Mexican President Lázaro Cárdenas), split with the PRI and ran unsuccessfully for president that year. AMLO rose as a leading figure in Democratic Current’s successor party, the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD), and served as head of the party from 1996 to 1999 before winning election for Mexico City mayor in 2000, a position he held until 2005.
He ran for president as a member of the PRD in 2006 and again in 2012. Though it is likely AMLO won the vote in both elections, he was prevented from taking office both times by electoral fraud perpetrated by the ruling class with the support of the military and the media.
In this year’s election, however, AMLO won 30 million votes, double the total in each of his prior two campaigns. His National Regeneration Movement (MORENA) party, which was founded only four years ago after he split from the PRD in 2012, won an absolute majority in both the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate and captured five of the nine governor’s seats up for election. The traditional parties of the Mexican ruling class were reduced to parliamentary rumps.
The results marked a massive repudiation of the Mexican political establishment. Seeing AMLO as a mechanism for diffusing growing social opposition, dominant sections of the ruling class have supported his transition to power.
But now, with the hated PRI administration of
Enrique Peña Nieto out of power, millions of
Mexican workers, peasants and young people
believe that AMLO and MORENA will have no
excuse if they fail to deliver on campaign
promises to reduce inequality and poverty,
rein in government corruption, defend
Mexican émigrés in the US and end the
disastrous “war on drugs.” According to a recent poll
from El Financiero, 83 percent of Mexicans believe AMLO will
generate economic growth and jobs and 74 percent think he will
reduce poverty and inequality.
AMLO’s proposed policies, packaged in pseudo-populist verbiage, make clear that these aspirations will soon be shattered.
While denouncing the “repressive strategies” of past administrations, AMLO has called for nearly doubling the size of the military and keeping it on the streets to conduct the hated “war on drugs,” which has resulted in over 260,000 deaths since 2006.
AMLO claims to oppose big business, but he
has pledged to veto anti-bank legislation and
called for passage of an austerity budget. He
has rejected calls to re-expropriate the oil
industry and proposes setting up a number of
“special economic zones” in both the
northern border region and the impoverished
south, where transnational corporations will
be allowed to hyper-exploit the land and the
impoverished residents.
He has promised to work on behalf of the US to block the flow of Central American immigrants across Mexico’s southern border with Guatemala. Some 10,000 asylum seekers remain encamped under horrible conditions in Tijuana, and AMLO is reportedly considering Trump’s proposal that Mexico hold them in internment camps instead of allowing them passage to the US as is required under international law.
As AMLO faithfully carries out the policies of the ruling class, he will set a fuse igniting the anger of millions of workers, youth and peasants. Under conditions where workers will be breaking from AMLO and entering into the class struggle, various self-proclaimed “socialist” groups in the US and Latin America are already fighting to keep them tied to AMLO and the state.
In a December 1 article, Jacobin magazine, which is politically linked to the Democratic Socialists of America, tells its readers that AMLO “will hit the ground running” with “a welcome set of proposals to be fought for and defended.” It urges Mexican workers to apply pressure on López Obrador to distance himself from his right-wing cabinet.
After the elections in July, the International Socialist Organization (ISO) wrote that “AMLO and his government will come under a lot of pressure to deliver to all sides,” including both the working class and the ruling elite. “The ruling class and the US establishment are by far the most organized of these sources of pressure. The radical left will have to organize to make sure the urgent call for change that the elections represented isn’t silenced.”
The argument that a bourgeois politician and the capitalist Mexican state can be pressured to implement genuinely progressive, let alone socialist, policies is absurd and dangerous.
It is a formula for politically subordinating the working class to the ruling elite by promoting illusions in left-talking defenders of capitalism. It opposes an independent and revolutionary policy for the working class and thereby paves the way for the violent suppression of the class struggle. It is a repetition, at an even lower level, of the “popular front” politics that have proven so disastrous in Latin America, most tragically in Chile, where the refusal of the popular front government of Salvador Allende to oppose the counterrevolutionary, CIA-backed conspiracies of the Chilean corporate elite and military paved the way for the bloody dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet.
The policies of the Mexican government are not determined by the degree of pressure AMLO receives from his “left,” but by the class character of the state and Mexico’s position in the global capitalist market. Above all, this means the domination of the country by American banks and corporations and the hyper-exploitation of the Mexican working class.
From 1993, the last year before the implementation of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), to 2016, the value of regional trade between Canada, the US and Mexico increased from $290 billion to $1.1 trillion. Over that same period, US foreign direct investment in Mexico grew from $15 billion to over $100 billion.
On the one hand, this economic domination means political subservience. When Trump rounds up Mexican immigrants, throws Mexican children in jail without their parents, calls Mexican nationals rapists and deploys the military to the border, the Mexican government pledges its readiness to work with his administration and honors his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, with the highest state honor, the Order of the Aztec Eagle!
The domination of Yankee imperialism does not lessen the intensity of the conflict between the Mexican bourgeoisie and working class, it heightens it. The ruling elite and all of its political representatives, AMLO no less than the openly right-wing leaders of the PRI and the National Action Party (PAN), fear the revolutionary threat to their property and power from the workers infinitely more than the depredations of Washington and Wall Street.
At the same time, the increasing economic interconnectivity between Mexico and the US has created a powerful working class. Mexico has become a formidable industrial country, with the 11th highest manufacturing output in the world. There are 9.1 million manufacturing workers in Mexico—three times the total in the UK.
In economic terms, the Mexican, Canadian and American working classes are not three separate entities, but a single social force, exploited by the same companies at different stages in the same process of production. Under capitalism, however, workers are held down by the nation-state system and pitted against each other by the corporations. While Mexico’s natural resources can flow freely across the border to American corporations, the children of Mexican workers cannot cross to join their parents.
The task for workers across North America is to unite in a common revolutionary movement, tear down this irrational system and reorganize the hemisphere on a planned, socialist basis through the establishment of the United Socialist States of the Americas.
It needs U.S. support for its war on cartels. Instead of
insulting American citizens, Mexico should confront directly the reasons why
its people are so desperate to leave, and do all in its power to destroy the
cartels that are slowly killing the nation. That includes defunding the
murderous gangs by halting illegal immigration.
Mexico: Where Is Your Shame?
At a demonstration Wednesday in Mexico City against
Arizona's law.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Immigration: Mexico's government gloated triumphantly
after a federal judge's injunction blocked Arizona's immigration law. But it's
no victory for Mexico. In fact, Mexico's leaders ought to be mortified.
As radical immigration activists crowed with glee and the
Obama administration claimed victory, Mexico's government joined the applause.
Calling Judge Susan Bolton's injunction Wednesday "a
step in the right direction," Mexican Foreign Minister Patricia Espinosa
declared: "The government of Mexico would like to express its recognition
for the determination demonstrated by the federal government of the United
States and the actions of the civil organizations that organized lawsuits against
the SB 1070 law."
In reality, it ought to be ashamed. Supposedly framed as
an issue of federal power pre-empting state power, it's hardly Mexico's
business. But Mexico made a big show of saying its interest was in protecting
its nationals from the dreadful racism of Arizona that its own citizens,
curiously enough, keep fleeing to.
Espinosa said her government was busy collecting data on
civil rights violations and her department had issued an all-out travel warning
to Mexican nationals about Arizona.
That's where Mexico's hypocrisy is just too much.
First, Mexico encourages illegal immigration to the U.S.
Oh, it says it doesn't, but it prints comic book guides for would-be illegal
immigrants and provides ID cards for illegals once they get here. In Arizona
alone, Mexico keeps five consulates busy.
That's not out of
love for its own citizens, but because Mexicans send cash back to Mexico that
helps finance the government.
Instead of selling its wasteful state-owned oil company or
getting rid of red tape to create jobs in Mexico, Mexico spends the hard
currency from remittances. It fails to look at why its citizens leave.
According to the Heritage Foundation-Wall Street Journal
2010 Index of Economic Freedom, Mexico's big problem is — no shock — government
corruption, where it ranks below the world average.
That's where
Mexico's cartels come in.
Mexico's encouragement of illegal immigration undercuts
its valiant war against its smuggling cartels. The cartels' prowess and
firepower have made them the only ones who can smuggle effectively across the
border. U.S. law enforcers say they now control human-smuggling on our southern
border.
Feed them immigrants and they grow more cash-rich — and
right now, immigrant smuggling is about a third of the cartels' income.
Mass graves and car bombings are signs of criminal
organizations getting bigger, and more powerful. Juarez, which has lost 5,000
people this year, bleeds because cartels fight over not just who gets the drug
routes, but who gets the illegal-immigrant smuggling routes, too.
Aside from the cartel mayhem in Mexico, the bodies are
piling up in the Arizona desert and U.S. Border Patrol rescues of abandoned
illegals left to die have risen.
It's not the
desert's fault, and it's certainly not Uncle Sam's fault, as activists claim.
No, it's the fact that Mexicans are encouraged to emigrate. Criminal cartels
don't fear abandoning their human cargo in the desert, as long as Mexico does
nothing and blames Uncle Sam.
Hearing Mexico's government now cheer the Arizona ruling,
which will only encourage more illegal immigration, gives the country's regime
a pretty inhuman face.
If Mexico had any decency, it would do all it could to
discourage illegal immigration and keep a respectful silence about Arizona.
It needs U.S. support for its war on cartels. Instead of
insulting American citizens, Mexico should confront directly the reasons why
its people are so desperate to leave, and do all in its power to destroy the
cartels that are slowly killing the nation. That includes defunding the
murderous gangs by halting illegal immigration.
Mexican
Presidents Deny
They Took Bribes from El
Chapo
They Took Bribes from El
Chapo
14 Nov 201898
3:02
Two former Mexican presidents publicly denied taking bribes from the
Sinaloa Cartel. The statements came after the legal defense for Joaquín “El
Chapo” Guzmán Loera made contrary claims this week.
The
drug lord is facing several money laundering and drug trafficking charges at a
federal trial in New York. In his opening statement, defense attorney Jeffrey
Lichtman spoke of bribes “including the very top, the current president of
Mexico and the former.”
Soon
after the statements became public, Mexico’s government issued a statement
denying the allegations. Eduardo Sanchez, the spokesman for current Mexican
President Enrique Pena Nieto said the statements were false and “defamatory.”
El gobierno de @EPN persiguió, capturó y extraditó al criminal Joaquín
Guzmán Loera. Las afirmaciones atribuidas a su abogado son completamente falsas
y difamatorias
Former
Mexican President Felipe Calderon took to social media to personally deny the
allegations, claiming that neither El Chapo or the Sinaloa Cartel paid him
bribes.
Son absolutamente falsas y temerarias las
afirmaciones que se dice realizó el abogado de Joaquín “el Chapo” Guzmán. Ni
él, ni el cártel de Sinaloa ni ningún otro realizó pagos a mi persona.
Under
Guzman’s leadership, the Sinaloa Cartel became the largest drug trafficking
organization in the world with influence in every major U.S. city.
The
allegations against Pena Nieto are not new. In 2016, Breitbart News reported on an investigation by
Mexican journalists which revealed how Juarez Cartel operators funneled money
into the 2012 presidential campaign. The investigation was carried out by
Mexican award-winning journalist Carmen Aristegui and her
team. The subsequent scandal became known as “Monexgate” for the cash cards
that were given out during Peña Nieto’s campaign. The allegations against Pena
Nieto went largely unreported by U.S. news outlets.
Ildefonso Ortiz is an award-winning journalist with Breitbart
Texas. He co-founded the Cartel Chronicles project with Brandon Darby and
Stephen K. Bannon. You can follow him on Twitter and on Facebook. He can be contacted at Iortiz@breitbart.com.
Brandon Darby is the managing director and editor-in-chief of
Breitbart Texas. He co-founded the Cartel Chronicles project with Ildefonso
Ortiz and Stephen K. Bannon. Follow him on Twitter and Facebook. He can be contacted at bdarby@breitbart.com.
Mexican Judge Denies Bond for Cartel Boss Wanted in Texas
18 Nov 201822
2:45
MONTERREY, Nuevo Leon – A Mexican federal judge has ruled against the
release of a recently captured cartel boss. The man is wanted by U.S.
authorities in connection to a high-profile cartel-execution near Dallas.
In
a court hearing, a federal judge in Monterrey ruled against releasing Luis
Lauro “La Mora or La China” Ramirez Bautista. He ordered that he be held
without bond until further hearings. Officials removed the wanted drug boss to
the Cadereyta state prison. As Breitbart News first reported in an exclusive
article, detectives with the Nuevo Leon’s State Investigations Agency
arrested Ramirez Bautista at a checkpoint after
the wanted drug lord left a bar near the Barrio Antiguo neighborhood in
Monterrey.
Prior to his arrest, Ramirez
Bautista allegedly attempted to run over a law enforcement official at the
checkpoint and then resisted the arrest. During the arrest, authorities seized
a.38o caliber handgun carried by the wanted drug lord.
The
man known as La Mora is a key boss with a criminal organization that once
belonged to the Beltran Leyva Cartel but has since branched off and become
independent and highly dangerous. Under orders from his boss Rodolfo “El Gato”
Villarreal, Ramirez Bautista is believed to have played a role in helping
mastermind the 2013 murder of Gulf Cartel attorney Juan Jesus Guerrero Chapa.
As Breitbart News reported, Guerrero Chapa was gunned
down in the ritzy Dallas suburb of Southlake after a long-term surveillance
operation. The murder was personal in nature since Ramirez Bautista’s boss El
Gato blamed Guerrero Chapa for the murder of his father.
Ramirez Bautista is wanted by U.S.
authorities in the ongoing case against Villarreal and federal authorities had
added him to a most wanted list of fugitive cartel bosses in the Texas border
region.
The ruling by the judge denying bond for Ramirez Bautista comes as a surprise since in recent months, as Breitbart News has reported, federal judges in Mexico have been releasing an alarming number of cartel bosses by ruling their arrests as illegal or alleging some other bureaucratic error. The man known as La Mora had been arrested in 2017. However, a Mexican federal judge ruled at the time that the raid that led to his capture was illegal and ordered his release.
Soon
after the most recent arrest, gunmen from El Gato’s criminal organization
murdered 34-year-old Santiago Aaron Urbina Arellano. This man managed Bar
Ambria, where Ramirez Bautista visited prior to his arrest. It is believed that
the gunmen targeted the bar manager suspecting that he may have tipped off law
enforcement.
Editor’s Note: Breitbart Texas
traveled to the Mexican States of Tamaulipas, Coahuila, and Nuevo León to
recruit citizen journalists willing to risk their lives and expose the cartels
silencing their communities. The writers would face certain death at the
hands of the various cartels that operate in those areas including the Gulf
Cartel and Los Zetas if a pseudonym were not used. Breitbart Texas’ Cartel Chronicles are published in both
English and in their original Spanish. This article was written by
Tony Aranda from Nuevo Leon.
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