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Abolishing Our Borders.


Amnesty for illegal Mexican immigrants is only part of larger drive to erase the U.S.-Mexican border and to create a regional power bloc in this hemisphere la the European Union European Union (EU), name given since the ratification (Nov., 1993) of the Treaty of European Union, or Maastricht Treaty, to the

European Community
.

Mexican President Vicente Fox's September state visit to the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  was an event unprecedented in the annals of U.S. diplomacy: It was the first time that a foreign head of state behaved like the ruler of a separate nation within our nation.

Acting as the supposed representative of the "Mexican nation beyond its borders," Fox seized the initiative and set the agenda for "normalizing" -- that is, granting a blanket amnesty to -- unspecified millions of illegal Mexican immigrants in our nation. Speaking in front of the White House's Truman Balcony with President George W. Bush at his elbow, Fox declared: "We must and we can reach an agreement on migration before the end of this very year which will allow us, before the end of our respective terms, to make sure that there are no Mexicans who have not entered this country legally ... and that those Mexicans who have come into the country do so with the proper documents."

Fox likes to refer to himself as the president of "all Mexicans," including those who have violated our nation's immigration laws immigration laws nplleyes fpl de inmigración

immigration laws npllois fpl sur l'immigration

immigration laws npl
. It was in the name of this criminal sub-population that Fox made the audacious demand that we change our laws and further undermine the security of our borders. Even more remarkable than Fox's audacity in making such a demand was Bush's docility in letting it pass without criticism. An AP account of the incident recorded that "Bush, asked whether he thought Fox's timetable [for an illegal immigrant illegal immigrant n. an alien (non-citizen) who has entered the United States without government permission or stayed beyond the termination date of a visa. (See: alien)  amnesty] was too ambitious, pretended not to understand the question and joked in Spanish, 'I can't hear....'"

Some "conservative" members of Congress were even more servile ser·vile  
adj.
1. Abjectly submissive; slavish.

2.
a. Of or suitable to a slave or servant.

b. Of or relating to servitude or forced labor.
 in their reaction to Fox's demands. During an address to a joint session of Congress (which was delivered in alternating English and Spanish), Fox tried a Clintonian formulation of his demand to "regularize reg·u·lar·ize  
tr.v. reg·u·lar·ized, reg·u·lar·iz·ing, reg·u·lar·iz·es
To make regular; cause to conform.



reg
" (that is, legalize le·gal·ize  
tr.v. le·gal·ized, le·gal·iz·ing, le·gal·iz·es
To make legal or lawful; authorize or sanction by law.



le
) illegal Mexican immigrants. "Let me be clear about this," Fox stated. "Regularization reg·u·lar·ize  
tr.v. reg·u·lar·ized, reg·u·lar·iz·ing, reg·u·lar·iz·es
To make regular; cause to conform.



reg
 does not mean rewarding those who break the law; regularization means that we will provide them with the legal means to allow them to continue contributing to this great nation." Senate Minority Leader Trent Lott (R-Miss.) all but swooned over Fox's performance. "I think President Fox did a magnificent job," he gushed. "A boffo bof·fo   Slang
adj.
Extremely successful; great.

n. pl. bof·fos
See boff1.



[Alteration of boff1.]

Adj. 1.
 performance. Viva Fox." Senator Jesse Helms (R-N R-N Raion (Russian, district; used in postal addresses) .C.), who is consistently identified in press accounts as a hard-line critic of Mexico, also genuflected before the Mexican ruler: "I think he's a great leader."

Electoral Calculus

While Fox's credentials as a leader have yet to be established, his canniness as a politician is plainly evident. Nicholas M. Horrock, a White House correspondent for UPI UPI
abbr.
United Press International
, notes that while "Mexico's indigenous population is 100 million," Fox's description of the "Mexican nation" is much larger, either 117 million or 123 million; the larger figures would include "U.S. citizens of Mexican heritage" and the millions of Mexicans here illegally. During his successful campaign for the presidency in 2000, Fox "campaigned in Southern California to get votes," observed Horrock. "He clearly recognizes that if he wins a good immigration immigration, entrance of a person (an alien) into a new country for the purpose of establishing permanent residence. Motives for immigration, like those for migration generally, are often economic, although religious or political factors may be very important.  deal from Bush, it would legalize 4.5 million potential voters, and as legal residents they could travel back to vote" in Mexico.

A similar desire to win the allegiance of the growing Mexican population explains, in part, the Bush administration's courtship of the Fox regime. Neo-conservative commentator Paul Gigot of the Wall Street Journal places the Fox-Bush "amnesty" proposal squarely in the context of the GOP's electoral agenda. Gigot blames California's 1994 Proposition 187 ballot measure, which would have cut off some public services to illegal immigrants, for "turning millions of Hispanics into Democrats and the [California] GOP into a minority party." This assumes that the real problem in California is the erosion of the GOP's voter share, rather than the fact that the state has lost control of its borders and is now playing host to a large constituency that places ethnic solidarity above the principle of equal justice under the law.

Gigot insists that developments in California foreshadow fore·shad·ow  
tr.v. fore·shad·owed, fore·shad·ow·ing, fore·shad·ows
To present an indication or a suggestion of beforehand; presage.



fore·shad
 the future for the rest of the nation. While this is a sound assessment, Gigot, in a fashion typical of defenders of amnesty for illegal immigrants, insists that "conservatives" have no choice but to placate the growing Mexican voting bloc. "Hispanics are gaining in overall voter share, from 5% in 1996 to 7% last year and an expected 9% in 2004," he writes. "Matthew Dowd, Mr. Bush's pollster poll·ster  
n.
One that takes public-opinion surveys. Also called polltaker.

Word History: The suffix -ster is nowadays most familiar in words like pollster, jokester, huckster,
, says that this trend is already turning safe GOP states into tossups, notably Nevada and Florida. And Hispanic voter growth will continue whether or not there is more immigration."

While former California Governor Pete Wilson "defined Republicans down for Hispanics" by supporting Proposition 187, "Mr. Bush has a chance to redefine his party's image back up," insists Gigot. Thus President Bush and his party have a political interest in devising some formula for amnesty. Once again, there is a dubious assumption at work here, specifically that this gesture would induce "legalized" Mexican immigrants to vote Republican -- an assumption that seems to be refuted by the GOP's own polling data showing how Hispanic voter growth has undermined states that previously were Republican strongholds.

The notion that "regularizing" illegal Mexican immigrants would create a new pool of Republican voters is even more doubtful in light of the 1998 Mexican law permitting Mexicans living in the U.S. to obtain dual citizenship. In effect, the law promotes "Balkanization" by undermining the Americanization of Mexican American immigrants. It was because of this law, which permits such dual citizens to vote in Mexico if they travel there to cast their ballots, that Fox became the first candidate for the Mexican presidency to campaign among Mexican populations north of the border. Furthermore, notes UPI, "Fox has said that he wants the legislature to adopt absentee ballots, and thus Mexicans would be able to cast their ballots in the United States either at embassies or consulates or by mail."

The 1998 Mexican "dual citizenship" law is an invitation to naturalized nat·u·ral·ize  
v. nat·u·ral·ized, nat·u·ral·iz·ing, nat·u·ral·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To grant full citizenship to (one of foreign birth).

2. To adopt (something foreign) into general use.
 Mexicans in the United States to defy their Oath of Citizenship An Oath of Citizenship is an oath taken by immigrants that officially naturalizes immigrants into citizens. It is often the final step in this process, and is usually done in a ceremonial capacity. , which states, in relevant part: "I hereby declare, on oath, that I absolutely and entirely renounce and abjure all allegiance and fidelity to any foreign prince, potentate POTENTATE. One who has a great power over, an extended country; a sovereign.
     2. By the naturalization laws, an alien is required, before he can be naturalized, to renounce all allegiance and fidelity to any foreign prince, potentate, state, or sovereign whatever.
, state, or sovereignty of whom or which I have heretofore been a subject or citizen...." (Emphasis added.) Fox's electoral strategy thus depends upon his ability to promote an adulterated a·dul·ter·ate  
tr.v. a·dul·ter·at·ed, a·dul·ter·at·ing, a·dul·ter·ates
To make impure by adding extraneous, improper, or inferior ingredients.

adj.
1. Spurious; adulterated.

2. Adulterous.
 view of American citizenship, in a very literal sense: The allegiances of Mexican "dual citizens" are as divided as those of a bigamist big·a·my  
n.
The criminal offense of marrying one person while still legally married to another.



[Middle English bigamie, from Old French, from Medieval Latin bigamia, from Late Latin
.

Juan Hernandez, the American-born head of Mexico's office for the protection of immigrants, is of the opinion that Mexico will be the singular beneficiary of the loyalty of "dual citizens." Hernandez, who has referred to illegal Mexican immigrants to the U.S. as "the new pioneers," told the June 7th edition of ABC's Nightline program: "We are betting that the Mexican American population in the United States will think Mexico first."

The Mexican first lady, Marta Sahagun de Fox, drew a similar portrait of an indivisible INDIVISIBLE. That which cannot be separated.
     2. It is important to ascertain when a consideration or a contract, is or is not indivisible. When a consideration is entire and indivisible, and it is against law, the contract is void in toto. 11 Verm. 592; 2 W.
 Mexican "nation" in remarks presented on September 6th at the Terra Museum in Chicago. "Those of us lucky enough not to have to leave our homeland must welcome our countrymen and countrywomen with open arms, letting them know that they have never been forgotten by their own nation, and that their birthplace, their families, and their countrymen will be waiting for them," stated Mrs. Fox, who has been called the "Hillary Clinton of Mexico" by people who consider that description a compliment. "The governments of Mexico and the United States Relations between the United States and Mexico are among the most important and complex that each nation maintains. They are shaped by a mixture of mutual interests, shared problems, and growing interdependence.  are working together to support our migrants, your immigrants."

This peculiar vision of the U.S. and Mexico collaborating on behalf of the indivisible Mexican "nation" was given substance by a bizarre September 6th dual campaign stop in Toledo, Ohio, by Presidents Bush and Fox. Toledo is a community with a large and growing Mexican immigrant population, and the joint visit was an attempt by both presidents to ingratiate in·gra·ti·ate  
tr.v. in·gra·ti·at·ed, in·gra·ti·at·ing, in·gra·ti·ates
To bring (oneself, for example) into the favor or good graces of another, especially by deliberate effort:
 themselves with the "dual citizen" community. A New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times account of that visit described how both Presidents Fox and Bush "praised the contributions of Mexican immigrants and pledged to improve their lives." Immigrant worker Noelia Reynoso summarized the impact of the visit by what could be called the "co-presidents" of the United States' unassimilated Mexican population: "I liked what both of them said, knowing that as Mexicans we count."

Just hours before the arrival of the "Two Amigos AMIGOS Advanced Mobile Integration in General Operating Systems ," as the Bush/Fox duo was referred to in the press, union workers in the city held a protest rally to dramatize dram·a·tize  
v. dram·a·tized, dram·a·tiz·ing, dram·a·tiz·es

v.tr.
1. To adapt (a literary work) for dramatic presentation, as in a theater or on television or radio.

2.
 the impact of the so-called North American Free Trade Agreement North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), accord establishing a free-trade zone in North America; it was signed in 1992 by Canada, Mexico, and the United States and took effect on Jan. 1, 1994.  (NAFTA NAFTA
 in full North American Free Trade Agreement

Trade pact signed by Canada, the U.S., and Mexico in 1992, which took effect in 1994. Inspired by the success of the European Community in reducing trade barriers among its members, NAFTA created the world's
) on American jobs. "We've had enough of it," complained Toledo city councilman Pete Gerken, who asserted that the NAFTA agreement had resulted in plant closings in the U.S. as production has been shifted to Mexico. USA Today pointed out that "workers at Toledo's Jeep assembly plant were angered this spring when Daimler Chrysler announced it would increase production of the hot-selling PT Cruiser at a plant in Mexico instead of in Toledo." "Why are they taking it from us and giving it to a new country?" protested Rosa Ealy, who had worked for Jeep prior to its NAFTAinspired decision to send the work south of the border.

The situation in Toledo is a very useful snapshot of what the NAFTA supporters call "harmonization." In this instance, the term refers to the process whereby the United States imports Mexico's surplus poverty, while Mexico -- because of its lower wage costs -- imports America's industrial jobs.

While speaking before a carefully selected crowd of 8,000 in Toledo, President Bush declared: "We want Mexico to grow a middle class so that the citizens of Mexico can find work and feed their families, just like the citizens of American can find work and feed their families." For some reason, the president wasn't eager to test this applause line on Toledo-area workers who are being "harmonized" out of their jobs.

La Reconquista

During his address in Toledo, President Fox maintained that he and President Bush would work on behalf of "the cause of all of the citizens of the United States and Mexico." As noted above, Fox's public insistence that "regularizing" illegal immigrants would be a "win-win" proposition is a rhetorical facade for a calculated effort to increase Mexico's influence within the United States. Indeed, this effort is central to the Fox administration's plans for Mexico's national development.

The Fox administration's Plan Nacional de Desarrollo 2001-2006, or five-year development plan, refers to that government's determination to "strengthen our ability to protect and defend the rights of all Mexicans abroad." The document (as translated by Howard Sutherland, a commentator for the immigration reform website VDARE.com) frankly admits that this will require that the United States change its laws to accommodate unrestricted immigration from Mexico: "[T]he issue of migration, especially in the United States, needs a new focus over the long term to permit the movement and residence of Mexican nationals to be safe, comfortable, legal and orderly, and the attitude of police persecution of this phenomenon must be abandoned...."

In the section dealing with "Defense of National Independence, Sovereignty and Territorial Integrity," the Fox regime's five-year plan promises that it will "demand decent treatment for our countrymen who travel or reside abroad." It also refers to Mexico's determination to work "with other nations and international organizations [to defend] the rights of Mexicans abroad...." This is apparently an oblique reference to recent efforts by Mexico to enlist the aid of the United Nations in combating efforts by American citizens to protect our nation's borders (see sidebar).

At the same time that the Fox regime is denouncing enforcement of U.S. immigration laws as a form of "police persecution," it is energetically cracking down on illegal immigration to Mexico from Central America. The August 13th Washington Times reported that Mexican authorities, in an initiative called "Plan Sur," are "clamping down on the hundreds of thousands of Central Americans crossing Mexico's southern border." Mexican immigration officials deported 150,000 illegal immigrants in 2000, and another 100,000 in the first six months of 2001.

Felipe de Jesus Preciado, the head of Mexico's immigration service, insists that "the flow of Central American migrants north is a national security problem for Mexico. It wouldn't be such a big problem if they were getting through to the U.S., but they get stuck and hang around in the frontier cities making trouble, sleeping in the streets with no money." That similar dangers to U.S. national security result from the inundation INUNDATION. The overflow of waters by coming out of their bed.
     2. Inundations may arise from three causes; from public necessity, as in defence of a place it may be necessary to dam the current of a stream, which will cause an inundation to the upper lands;
 of U.S. cities along the Mexican border troubles our "good friends" to the South not at all. From the Fox regime's perspective, the United States has a duty not only to absorb whatever portion of the Mexican population it chooses to send our way, but also to relieve Mexico's own problem with illegal immigration by keeping the borders open to Central American immigrants as well.

But the Mexican government is not merely using the United States as an immigration "pressure valve." It is quite literally conducting an invasion of our country in what has been described as a campaign of "demographic warfare."

In a 1982 article published in Excelsior, the Mexican analogue to the New York Times, columnist Carlos Loret de Mola Carlos Loret de Mola (b. October 17, 1976 in Mérida, Yucatán) is a Mexican journalist. He is one of the most popular news anchors in Mexico. He graduated with a degree in Economics from the Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM) and studied law at the Universidad Nacional  described the outpouring of Mexican immigrants into the United States as "The Great Invasion":

A peaceful mass of people ... carries out slowly and patiently an unstoppable invasion, the most important in human history. You cannot give me a similar example of such a large migratory wave by an ant-like multitude, stubborn, unarmed, and carried on in the face of the most powerful and best-armed nation on earth.... [Neither] barbed-wire fences, nor aggressive border guards, nor campaigns, nor laws, nor police raids against the undocumented, have stopped this movement of the masses that is unprecedented in any part of the world.

Loret pointed out that the migrant invasion "seems to be slowly returning [the southwestern United States] to the jurisdiction of Mexico without the firing of a single shot, nor requiring the least diplomatic action, by means of a steady, spontaneous, and uninterrupted occupation." This is an allusion to the concept that California, Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, and Texas, the states created in the territory obtained from Mexico through the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo is the peace treaty, largely dictated by the United States[1][2] to the interim government of a militarily occupied Mexico, that ended the Mexican-American War (1846–1848).  in 1848, compose "Aztlan," the mythical homeland of the Aztec Indian. For decades, Chicano militants have demanded that the territory of "Aztlan" be taken back from the United States.

Loret is hardly the only member of Mexico's media elite who has described the immigration onslaught as an invasion inspired by dreams of "Aztlan." According to a July 4th story carried by Mexico's EWE Ewe (ā`vā,–wā), African people, numbering over 3 million, who live in SE Ghana, S Togo, and S Benin. When German Togoland was partitioned after World War I, the Ewe in that colony were divided between France and Britain.  news service, the celebrated Mexican novelist Elena Poniatowska "asserted today that Mexico is at this moment recovering territories it lost in the past to the United States thanks to emigration emigration: see immigration; migration. ." "The common people -- the poor, the dirty, the lice ridden, the cockroaches cockroaches

insects which may carry Salmonella spp. in their gut and play a part in the spread of the disease.
 are advancing on the United States, a country that needs to speak Spanish because it has 33.5 million Hispanics who are imposing their culture," declared Poniatowska in a press conference unveiling her new novel La Piel del Cielo (The Skin of Heaven). "Mexico is recovering the territories yielded to the United States by means of migratory tactics."

Seen in this light, the Fox administration's demand for "regularization" of illegal Mexican immigrants amounts to a demand that the United States consolidate Mexico's gains in its demographic war upon our nation.

The Grand Design

It's by no means surprising that Mexico would seek to erase our southern border, thereby reversing its defeat in the Mexican-American War. Many Americans might be surprised to learn that our nation's political Establishment shares the same objective: It seeks to eradicate the borders that separate Canada, Mexico, and the United States as part of a larger design to create a regional political and economic bloc duplicating the European Union. And the administration of George W. Bush is vigorously promoting this design.

"Whatever else George W. Bush does, or doesn't do, he has earned a place in history as the first American president to place Hispanic voters at the center of politics, and the first to view the land between Canada and Guatemala as one," writes Newsweek political analyst Howard Fineman. "It makes sense, if you think about it: Texas, long ago and far away, was part of Mexico. Now a Texan is trying to reassemble re·as·sem·ble  
v. re·as·sem·bled, re·as·sem·bling, re·as·sem·bles

v.tr.
1. To bring or gather together again: reassembled the band for a reunion tour.

2.
 the Old Country, and then some."

Actually, what the Bush administration is doing is not rebuilding the Mexican Empire, but amalgamating the United States and Mexico. During the Vicente Fox visit, Bush convened a meeting of the U.S.-Mexico Binational bi·na·tion·al  
adj.
Of, relating to, or involving two nations.
 Commission, a cabinet-level body in which officials from both national governments develop joint policies on such issues as immigration, counter-narcotics efforts, trade, energy, and foreign policy. In 1993, under the NAFTA framework, the U.S. and Mexico established the Border Environment Cooperation Commission and the North American Development Bank The North American Development Bank (NADB) is a binational financial institution capitalized and governed equally by the United States of America and Mexico for the purpose of financing environmental projects certified by the Border Environment Cooperation Commission (BECC).  (NADBank).

Although the NADBank was originally designed to finance environmental initiatives at the border, the Fox administration seeks to use the bank to subsidize projects "in non-environmental sectors and in a wider geographic zone," to use the delicate language of a White House press release. In an interview published in the September 4th Washington Post, Fox claimed that using the NADBank to subsidize economic development in Mexico is justified by the "broad spirit of cooperation, as well as justice and equity."

Once such rhetorical flourishes are peeled away it becomes obvious that Fox and Company want to use the NADBank as a U.S. taxpayer-subsidized cookie jar.

The September 7th Atlanta Journal-Constitution, noted that Fox "envisions a North American North American

named after North America.


North American blastomycosis
see North American blastomycosis.

North American cattle tick
see boophilusannulatus.
 economic alliance that will make the border between the United States and Mexico as unrestricted as the one between Tennessee and Georgia." Of course, Tennessee and Georgia are not separate, independent countries, but states in the same constitutional union. This implies that the United States and Mexico, as well as Canada, would cede their sovereignty to a new, supra-national political union, and the Journal- Constitution warmly embraces that vision.

"The ultimate goal of any White House policy ought to be a North American economic and political alliance similar in scope and ambition to the European Union," opined a Journal-Constitution house editorial for September 7th. "Unlike the varied landscapes and cultures of European Union members, the United States, Canada and Mexico already share a great deal in common, and language is not as great a barrier. President Bush, for example, is quite comfortable with the blended Mexican-Anglo culture forged in the border states of Texas, California and Arizona."

Bush is also quite comfortable speaking the language of "inevitability" to justify the erosion of our national sovereignty. "There are people in Mexico who've got children, who worry about where they're going to get their next meal from," asserted the president during an August 25th speech. "And they're going to come to the United States.... That's a simple fact. And we've got to respect that....

Speaking in the same vein, Jagdish Sheth of Emory University told the Journal-Constitution that any attempt to crack down on illegal immigration from Mexico would precipitate an economic crisis in this country. "Fundamentally, economic integration with Mexico is inevitable," insists Sheth. Speaking of U.S.-Mexico convergence, Georgia State University History
Georgia State University was founded in 1913 as the Georgia School of Technology's "School of Commerce." The school focused on what was called "the new science of business.
 economist David Sjoquist declares: "Our choice is to fight it and lose, or embrace it and come out better for it."

But, as is usually the case, the developments described by the Establishment media as inevitable" are the product of carefully planned, long-term initiatives by an international Power Elite. As William F. Jasper documents in his new expose, The United Nations Exposed, the ongoing effort to "harmonize" the United States with Mexico and Canada is one facet of a long-term design to create a Free Trade Area of the Americas The Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) (Spanish: Área de Libre Comercio de las Américas (ALCA), French: Zone de libre-échange des Amériques (ZLÉA), Portuguese: Área de Livre Comércio das Américas  (FTAA FTAA Free Trade Area of the Americas
FTAA Free Trade Agreement of the Americas
FTAA Florida Turkish American Association
FTAA Federated Tanners Association of Australia
FTAA Fixed Threshold Adaptation Algorithm
), which would be a "building bloc" of a UN-dominated world order.

Amazingly, Fox said nearly as much in his September 7th address to the Organization of American States Organization of American States (OAS), international organization, created Apr. 30, 1948, at Bogotá, Colombia, by agreement of Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti,  (OAS OAS

See: Option adjusted spread
), which is a regional affiliate of the United Nations. Fox volunteered the services of Mexico to host a "Special Security Conference" of the OAS for the purpose of revising the 1945 defense treaty that created the alliance. The updated treaty would "create a new regional security structure" and outline "a new regional agenda" for "all nations of the hemisphere."

While collaborating with the Fox regime to "harmonize" the U.S. and Mexico, the Bush administration is pursuing similar collaboration with Canada. The June 30th issue of Canada's National Post quoted U.S. Ambassador to Canada Paul Cellucci as insisting that "Canada, the United States and Mexico should forge closer links as part of a 'NAFTA-plus' relationship based on harmonization of border controls, law enforcement, energy, environmental, and immigration policies...." The government of Canadian Prime Minister Jean Cretien has called for a "public debate on economic and social union" among the three NAFTA nations. David Zussman, an advisor to Cretien, will travel to Europe in November, "bringing 15 to 20 senior federal and provincial civil servants to investigate how the nations in the European Union have coped with the end of borders for the European market, and the implications for policing, immigration and social policies."

"I think the debate certainly should take place on North American integration and it should be a no-holds-barred debate where nothing is taboo," states Canadian Member of Parliament Maurizio Bevilacqua, who supports the concept.

Unfortunately, the subversion of our national sovereignty that such "integration" entails is being imposed upon the United States without the "no-holds-barred debate" described by Bevilacqua. To those who are aware of the semi-covert drive to "integrate" the Western Hemisphere, the surrealistic sur·re·al·is·tic  
adj.
1. Of or relating to surrealism.

2. Having an oddly dreamlike or unreal quality.



sur·re
 state visit of Vicente Fox in his role as "co-president" of America's undigested Mexican population offers an unsettling un·set·tle  
v. un·set·tled, un·set·tling, un·set·tles

v.tr.
1. To displace from a settled condition; disrupt.

2. To make uneasy; disturb.

v.intr.
 foretaste fore·taste  
n.
1. An advance token or warning.

2. A slight taste or sample in anticipation of something to come.

tr.v.
 of the future that the hemisphere's would-be masters have in store for us.

Mexico's Cross-Border Meddling med·dle  
intr.v. med·dled, med·dling, med·dles
1. To intrude into other people's affairs or business; interfere. See Synonyms at interfere.

2. To handle something idly or ignorantly; tamper.
 

William Norman Grigg William Norman Grigg is a writer of Mexican and Irish descent.[1] He was the senior editor and a prolific contributor to The New American, the official magazine of the John Birch Society.  

Last year, Mexico's National Commission for Human Rights (NCHR NCHR National Coalition for Haitian Rights
NCHR Nordic Committee for Human Rights (Olofstorp, Sweden) 
) demanded that the United Nations Human Rights Committee investigate supposed "human rights" abuses against illegal immigrants to the United States. The Mexican government's complaint focused upon Douglas, Arizona, a small border town that has literally been under siege by illegal immigrants.

A Border Patrol clamp-down on several popular border crossings had the effect of funneling illegal immigrants through Douglas County "at a rate of hundreds of thousands a year," reported the February 17th New York Times. Rancher Ira Ackerman complained that the border resembled "Grand Central Station. You don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 when you're going to come across a group of 50 or 60 people out in the desert." "When my brother bought his ranch five years ago, it was pristine," recalled Douglas resident Don Barnett. "You could ride a horse along a mountain crest, or pick up arrowheads. Now it's a garbage pit. There's plastic, tin cans, and [bodily waste] everywhere you look. Old blankets, cut hoses, cut fences. You name it, illegals'll do it." With the Border Patrol already stretched to the limit, some local ranchers formed posses in order to protect their property.

The Mexican government, which has never been accused of delicacy in its treatment of illegal immigrants on its own southern border, cobbled cob·ble 1  
n.
1. A cobblestone.

2. Geology A rock fragment between 64 and 256 millimeters in diameter, especially one that has been naturally rounded.

3. cobbles See cob coal.

tr.
 together a media campaign accusing residents of Douglas County of "hunting Mexicans like they were animals. They shot at the feet of some, the heads of others, and some have been killed. Those that they didn't shoot at, they were siccing packs of dogs on."

But the Mexican media campaign had the desired effect: It demonized American citizens whose sole "offense" was to defend their homes and provide desperately needed help to those officials charged with enforcing our nation's immigration laws. "We feel that people who are being forced to sleep with one ear to the door and one eye open, in order to protect their property and their families from harm, are being labeled as some kind of radical group," protested Pima County Sheriff Clarence Dupnik.

The Mexican regime was not satisfied to denigrate den·i·grate  
tr.v. den·i·grat·ed, den·i·grat·ing, den·i·grates
1. To attack the character or reputation of; speak ill of; defame.

2.
 Douglas residents as racists. In May 2000, the NCHR requested that UN Human Rights Commissioner Mary Robinson intervene. "We must prevent an atmosphere of growing intolerance and exclusion motivated by incidents in Arizona spreading to other places, with serious risk of there being a climate of lynching and death," wrote NCHR official Soberanes Fernandez. Mexico also urged that the UN, along with the governors of Arizona The following is a list of Governors of the State of Arizona and Arizona Territory.

The governor's powers are established by Article 5 of the Arizona Constitution. They are elected for four year terms, but may not serve more than two consecutive terms (part of a term counts
, California, New Mexico, and Texas, "collaborate with us immediately so as to intervene in preventing the proliferation of such feelings and behavior as those which took place in the state of Arizona."

In June 2000, Mexican Foreign Minister Rosario Green announced. that the Mexican government had hired a U.S. law firm to prepare a lawsuit against any ranchers who had detained illegal Mexican immigrants. (On several occasions, posse members had executed citizen's arrests and detained the law-breakers pending the arrival of Border Patrol agents). "We, as the government of Mexico, can bring suit, with proof, against those who have violated the rights and dignity of Mexico," thundered Green. "We will take this as far as we have to." Within a few years this could mean seeking an indictment of American ranchers before the UN's planned International Criminal Court.

Such behavior is to be expected from the Mexican "government," which is actually just the congealed con·geal  
v. con·gealed, con·geal·ing, con·geals

v.intr.
1. To solidify by or as if by freezing: "My aim . . . was to take the Hill by storm before . . .
 crust of corruption atop that nation's system of organized crime. The official federal reaction to the situation in Douglas is more remarkable. When supporters of immigration reform gathered in Douglas in October 2000 to help the victimized ranchers restore their damaged homes and lands, the Immigration and Naturalization Service Noun 1. Immigration and Naturalization Service - an agency in the Department of Justice that enforces laws and regulations for the admission of foreign-born persons to the United States
INS
 (INS INS
abbr.
1. Immigration and Naturalization Service

2. International News Service

Noun 1. INS
) issued an "Officer. Safety Bulletin" warning that these Good Samaritans constituted "an anti-immigration hate group."

The five-page bulletin listed immigration reform groups such as Concerned Citizens of Cochise County (CCCC CCCC Cerro Coso Community College (California)
CCCC Conference on College Composition and Communication (NCTE)
CCCC Central Carolina Community College
CCCC Canadian Council of Christian Charities
), the Federation for Immigration Reform (FAIR), and the California Coalition for Immigration Reform California Coalition for Immigration Reform (CCIR) is a Huntington Beach, California-based political advocacy group devoted to immigration reduction. It was founded in 1994 by Barbara Coe, a former police clerk who has served as chairwoman of the organization ever since.  (CCIR See ITU. ) alongside indisputable hate groups such as the Ku Klux Klan Ku Klux Klan (k' klŭks klăn), designation mainly given to two distinct secret societies that played a part in American history, although other less important groups have also used  and former Klan leader David Duke's National Organization for European American Rights (NOFEAR NOFEAR National Organization for European American Rights ).

"You can see this document was not done by anyone working here on the border," commented Chief Patrol Agent David Aguilar of the Border Patrol's Tucson Sector, to whom the memo was addressed. "Someone in Washington, with limited knowledge of our situation here, wrote this thing. And they got it all wrong. I know these groups [such as CCCC, FAIR, and CCIR]. Some of my friends are in these groups. These people are not anti-immigrant, and are not hate groups."

Among the supposed "terrorists" was CCCC member David Stoddard, a retired Border Patrol supervisor. "I deeply resent the inference that we are a hate group," protested Stoddard. "I think it's a sad day when our government attacks its citizens for exercising their constitutional right to criticize their government."
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Title Annotation:President Vicente Fox of Mexico pushes for US amnesty to all illegal Mexican immigrants
Author:Grigg, William Norman
Publication:The New American
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Oct 8, 2001
Words:4526
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