Tuesday, June 8, 2010

CALDERON CONDEMNS BORDER KILLING - And On The 12 Americans Murdered By Illegals Daily???????

Calderon condemns border killing (only killings by illegals acceptable)

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Date: 2010-06-08, 2:52PM PDT
Reply to: see below

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~FUNNY CALDERON DOESN'T SEEM TO HAVE A PROBLEM WITH THE FACT THAT TWELVE AMRERICANS PER DAY ARE MURDERED BY ILLEGALS. HE'S ALSO MUTE ON THE SUBJECT OF THE THREE YEAR OLD CHILD WHO WAS RAPED AND MURDERED IN HER BED BY AN ILLEGAL MEXICAN.~~
Mexican President Felipe Calderon is condemning the killing of an illegal immigrant by U.S. Border Patrol agents as a "truly unacceptable violation" that involved "torture." He's also tying it to Arizona's immigration law, even though the incident took place on the border with California.

"A death with that degree of violence is a truly unacceptable violation," Calderon said, according to the Associated Press. "We need to raise all our voices, not only for Mexico but for human rights, because the cause of migrants is a cause that affects us all." He added that the Arizona immigration law "opens a Pandora's box of the worst abuses in the history of humanity."

A San Diego police captain told the Associated Press that Anastacio Hernandez — who was in the country illegally and was being deported to Mexico — wrestled two Border Patrol agents to the ground when his handcuffs were removed at the border crossing between San Diego and Tijuana. An agent shocked him with a stun gun and he died hours later.

Calderon, who criticized U.S. immigration policy during his visit to the White House last month, says Mexico is engaging in an "energetic protest of the torture and death of Anastacio Hernandez, a Mexican who died at the hands of North American migration authorities."

This rhetoric can't help his relationship with the U.S., which he depends on for cash and resources to fight the country's costly drug war. But Calderon is a deeply unpopular president, and turning the focus to foreign policy might be a way for him to distract from domestic failures. His war on the drug cartels, which the U.S. supports financially through the Merida Initiative, has unleashed a wave of violence in the country.

A recent poll sponsored by the Mexican newspaper El Universal shows that Calderon's approval rating remains at 41 percent. That's unchanged since February, despite his newly aggressive stance toward the U.S. Those polled listed the country's main problems as national security and jobs.

Correction: An earlier version of this post gave Calderon's approval rating as 32 percent. That is the approval rating of Calderon's Cabinet

ILLEGALS QUIT ARIZONA! Watch the Crime Wave Plummet

MEXICANOCCUPATION.blogspot.com

WHILE OBAMA HAS BENT OVER BACKWARDS TO ASSURE ILLEGALS NO LAW REALLY APPLIES TO THEM, THERE ARE NO BORDERS, NO E-VERIFY, NO JOB THEY CAN’T STEAL WITH A STOLEN SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER… THE ILLEGALS ARE STILL QUITTING ARIZONA!
WHERE DO YOU THINK THEY’RE HEADED?
IN LOS ANGELES COUNTY, WELFARE FOR ILLEGALS IS MORE THAN $600 MILLION PER YEAR!!!

REALITY IS, IT’S TAKEN 20 YEARS FOR MEXICO TO EXPORT 38 MILLION ILLEGALS. IT WILL TAKE A LONG TIME TO WIN OUR COUNTRY BACK AS WE’RE FIGHTING THE ILLEGALS, THEIR GOVERNMENT, OUR OWN GOVERNMENT, BIG BUSINESS THAT WANTS “CHEAP” MEX LABOR, LA RAZA FASCIST PARTY, AND EMPLOYERS OF ILLEGALS!
BUT FIGHT WE MUST OR SURRENDER TO MEXICO!


Hispanics flee Arizona ahead of immigration law
By Alan Gomez, USA TODAY
Arizona's tough new immigration enforcement law is fueling an exodus of Hispanics from the state seven weeks before it goes into effect, according to officials and residents in the state.
Though no one has precise estimates, reports from school officials, businesses and individuals indicate worried Hispanics — both legal and illegal — are leaving the state in anticipation of the law, which will go into effect July 29.
Schools in Hispanic areas report unusual drops in enrollment. The Balsz Elementary School District is 75% Hispanic, and within a month of the law's passage, the parents of 70 students pulled them out of school, said District Superintendent Jeffrey Smith. The district lost seven students over the same one-month period last year, and parents tell Smith the Arizona law is the reason for leaving.
"They're leaving to another state where they feel more welcome," he said.
The measure, signed into law April 23 by Republican Gov. Jan Brewer, requires a police officer to determine a person's immigration status if they are stopped, detained or arrested and there is "reasonable suspicion" they are in the country illegally.
About 100,000 illegal immigrants left Arizona after the state passed a law in 2007 that enhanced penalties on businesses that hired them, according to the Department of Homeland Security. Some early signs suggest another exodus.
Businesses serving the Hispanic community say business is down, signaling that illegal immigrants are holding on to cash in anticipation of a move from the state, said David Castillo, co-founder of the Latin Association of Arizona, a chamber of commerce for nearly 400 first-generation Hispanic business owners.
"(Brewer) signed the law, and everything fell apart," Castillo said. "It's devastating."
Jorge Vargas plans to move to New York City because his air-conditioning business relies mostly on Hispanics. "My business is completely dead," he said.
Juan Carlos Cruz, an illegal immigrant who has worked in plant nurseries for 20 years, huddled with dozens of relatives over the Memorial Day Weekend in the backyard of his brother's Phoenix-area home to plot out the family's next move to avoid what they say will be harassment by police. Virginia and California are the front-runners.
"If I were alone, I'd try to stay. But I have a family, and I have to find a place where we can live with more freedom," said Cruz, who hopes to move July 4 to blend in with holiday weekend traffic. "This is getting too hard."
Paul Senseman, a spokesman for Brewer, said it's difficult to gauge how many people are leaving because of the law, but he said he hears similar reports of people leaving the state.
"If that means that fewer people are breaking the law