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Phyllis Schlafly
[Ed Note: One silver lining of the September 11, incident
was a much welcomed slow down of negotiations with Mexico. There
are promises floating around that the borders are going to be
tightened now. Hopefully it will have a deterring effect on the
NAFTA agreement.]
- Eagle Forum - August 15, 2001 When demonstrators
displayed anti-American signs against our President while traveling
to Europe last month, we could brush it off as a bunch of street
radicals getting their kicks. But it is an insult when a foreign
head of state comes to the heart of the United States and attacks
our laws while his audience waves foreign flags.
Mexican President Vicente Fox spoke in Milwaukee on July 17 to
2,300 people at a meeting sponsored by the National Council of
La Raza, a Hispanic-U.S. group. He should be reminded to mind
his manners and show a decent respect for our laws when he visits
the United States. Attacking "current immigration policies,"
Fox demanded "an integrated Mexican-U.S. labor market."
He demanded that U.S. laws be rewritten to bring about open borders
between the U.S. and Mexico, that we give illegal aliens U.S.
driver's licenses (even though they can't read the road signs
and don't have insurance), and that we give Mexican illegals
university education and other taxpayer-paid benefits.
Specifically, Fox said, "Our goal is to legalize migrant
flows between our two countries." Saying that "migration
should be an option," he demanded that we exempt Mexico
from limits on immigration. Fox called for full legalization
of illegal aliens, exempting Mexico from U.S. limits on immigration
and work visas, giving Mexicans a guest worker program that uses
temporary work visas, and allowing illegal Mexican aliens to
get U.S. driver's licenses and in-state college tuition rates.
Fox also demanded that the United States increase foreign aid
to Mexico. He didn't offer to give us anything in return except
poor, uneducated, unemployed Mexicans who can't find jobs in
Mexico's corrupt socialist economy. If Fox wants to show friendship
for the United States, he could offer to distance Mexico from
the criminal price-fixing cartel called OPEC, which props up
oil prices so much higher than they would be in a competitive
market. Mexico isn't a member of OPEC but acts as though it is
by promising Saudi Arabia that it will refuse to sell the United
States more oil when OPEC punishes us by production cutbacks.
Fox is asking for more U.S. financial handouts to bolster his
pathetic economy. But Mexico won't allow U.S. investment in the
Mexican oil industry. In Milwaukee and at other rallies in this
country, Fox tried to show Americans that Mexicans are a potent
political pressure group. He is also trying to build a partnership
between legal Mexican immigrants and the illegals.
Fox had a tantrum after both Houses of Congress last week passed
legislation to require Mexican trucks entering the U.S. to be
inspected and meet the same safety and insurance regulations
required of U.S. and Canadian trucks. Fox said on August 2 that,
if these regulations go into effect, he will close the border
to U.S. truckers!
If Bush gives in to Fox's tantrum, Bush may get caught in an
embarrassment similar to the Illinois truck scandal. Nine people
have been killed and 50 injured in truck accidents after licenses
were corruptly sold to drivers who couldn't pass the test in
English. Fox promotes the concept of "dual citizenship."
Every immigrant who becomes a naturalized American, takes an
oath to "absolutely and entirely renounce all allegiance"
to any foreign state. Mexico is openly fighting this fundamental
principle by passing a law recognizing "dual citizenship."
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- For example, on July 9 a former illegal
alien now naturalized American, Andres Bermudez, was elected
mayor of Jerez, a city in Mexico, declaring himself a "candidate
of two nations." If the Bush Administration believes in
the rule of law, Bermudez's U.S. citizenship should be revoked
immediately. Dual citizenship is an insurmountable barrier to
assimilating naturalized citizens into the American culture and
turning immigrants from all over the world into "e pluribus
unum." The Bush and Fox administrations are now negotiating
a broad agreement on immigration policy changes that the two
presidents are expected to sign in Washington in September. Fox
went public with his accelerated demands in order to force Bush
to acquiesce. Fox's foreign minister said that Mexico will not
sign any border agreement that fails to include amnesty for 3
to 4 million Mexicans illegally living in the United States.
"It's the whole enchilada or nothing," Jorge Castaneda
told journalists in Phoenix.
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Vicente Fox's speeches are not the words of a friendly neighbor.
They are words that resonate with the radicals whose goal is
Mexico's conquest of southwest United States by overwhelming
us with the sheer numbers of undocumented Mexicans coming north.
Foxy enough to avoid the A-word Amnesty, Fox is nevertheless
trying to play U.S. politics to achieve that goal. He apparently
thinks he can get George W. Bush to adopt the ridiculous assumption
that circumventing our immigration laws will persuade Mexican-Americans
to vote Republican.
In 1986 we amnestied 3 million of 5 million illegal aliens from
several countries, promising that it would be a one-time-only
amnesty. The result was the number of illegals increased to 8
million, and Americans don't want a repeat of that mistake. [Source:
http://www.eagleforum.org/column/2001/aug01/01-08-15.shtml]
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