On Apr 9, 5:49 pm, THE-MAG...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
> http://www.judicialwatch.org/blog/mexico-complains-too-many-repatriat...
>
> Mon, 04/07/2008 - 15:28 Judicial Watch
>
> The U.S. border state leading the battle against illegal immigration
> with unprecedented tough laws has received complaints from Mexico's
> government that too many Mexicans have been repatriated and the country
> is overwhelmed with demands for housing, jobs and schools.
>
> Fed up with the devastating effect of illegal immigration, Arizona has
> enacted the nation's toughest laws to curb the problem and evidently its
> working. State legislators have passed laws barring illegal immigrants
> from receiving government services, posting bail for serious crimes and
> winning punitive damages in lawsuits.
>
> This year a new law makes it illegal for businesses to hire undo***ented
> workers and those that do can be shut down.
> The state legislator who sponsored the work bill, Representative Russell
> Pearce, says the law's undeniably positive effects include smaller class
> sizes, shorter emergency room waits and an overall huge savings to
> taxpayers.
>
> The Republican congressman drafted the bill because studies revealed
> that illegal immigration cost Arizona taxpayers over $2 billion
> annually, not including the toll of crime and destruction.
>
> It turns out that enough illegal immigrants have either fled the U.S. or
> been de****ted that officials in the Mexican state of Sonora, which
> shares an extensive border with Arizona, have complained that too many
> of their fellow countrymen have returned. They miss the remittances sent
> from the U.S. as well as smaller class sizes in local schools.
TOUGH!
> Mexican government officials knew Arizona's tough employment
> verification law would become their worst nightmare, which explains why
> they tried blocking it. Earlier this year a delegation of nine
> legislators from Sonora toured Tucson and held a news conference to say
> that their beloved state cannot handle the demand for housing, jobs and
> schools resulting from illegal Mexican workers returning home.
Now you know how WE FEEL!
> One baffled Mexican legislator, Leticia Amparano Gamez, asked in Spanish
> "how can they pass a law like this?" She went on to explain that
> Mexico is not prepared for the "tremendous problems" it will face as
> more and more Mexicans working in Arizona and sending money to their
> families return to hometowns in Sonora without jobs. Another member of
> the Mexican delegation, Representative Florencio Diaz Armenta, asked
> "what do we do with the repatriated?"
Frankly Escarleta, I don't give a damn!
- Stewart (San Diego Minuteman)


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