Is Mexico Thwarting US Immigration Enforcement?

FrodoB

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Apr 5, 2001
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"Most people know that Usama bin Laden's terror group, Al Qaeda (Arabic for ?the base?), derives its name from the Mujahideen database that bin Laden developed through the 1980s and 1990s. Using ?the base,? bin Laden could call on a corps of operatives to carry out missions.


There is growing evidence that the Mexican government, in similar fashion, is working with a group called the Instituto de los Mexicanos en el Exterior (search) (?Institute of Mexicans Abroad?) to use its matricula consular database (search) to deploy illegals to state legislatures and city councils across America. There, the illegal aliens ? Mexican nationals who have been provided a matricula consular card ? pack the gallery and seek to apply pressure against legislators who sponsor or intend to vote for bills that enhance immigration law enforcement.

Not since America?s mid-century experience with communism has there been such an organized effort at subverting our country?s political institutions. As reported in the Washington Times, local and statewide illegal immigrant advocacy groups and Hispanic groups, whose memberships include illegal immigrants as well as Mexicans who have become legal immigrants or citizens, coordinate with the Instituto de los Mexicanos en el Exterior to agitate for access to public services for illegal aliens in the United States.

Where does the Instituto de los Mexicanos en el Exterior get its instructions? From Vicente Fox. The Instituto was created by presidential decree and reports to a group of Mexican government officials who are posted to Mexico?s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which is Mexico?s equivalent of our own State Department.

If the number of boisterous illegal aliens packing legislative sessions is any indication, the two main goals of the Instituto?s efforts are to defeat efforts to stop adoption of the matricula consular and driver?s licenses for illegal aliens.

California Assemblyman Dennis Mountjoy (search) recalls the floor debate on a California measure, SB 60, which would have allowed illegal aliens in California to qualify for a state driver?s license. Referring to the former name of the territory ceded to the United States by Mexico as part of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo of 1848 (search), Mountjoy took the floor and said, ?This bill paves the road to Aztlan."

"Then everyone in the gallery stood up and applauded,? Mountjoy said.

Last summer, a Mexican consulate in Michigan detected that the small city of Holland might adopt the matricula consular as a valid form of identification. Consul General Miguel Antonio Meza Estrada traveled to Holland?s city counsel meetings five times, many times with what can only be described as a mob in tow, all of whom Estrada held out to be beneficiaries of the matricula consular. Holland finally postponed a decision on the issue because the meetings had become so contentious.

Mountjoy recently sponsored the Secure and Verifiable ID bill (search) (Calif. AB 2576). The bill follows Colorado?s secure identification law, and mandates that when a California state agency issues a license, permit, or other document to a person, it first obtain from that person a previously issued secure and verifiable identification document. The bill defines a secure and verifiable identification document as one issued by a state of federal agency, a foreign passport with a valid United States entry stamp, or any other form of identification whose veracity can be verified by law enforcement.

To most, this would seem a modest and common sense legislative proposal aimed at better security, particularly after the events of September 2001. But to Mexican consulates in America, it is an attack on the rights of Mexican nationals illegally in the United States, and grounds for a pitched battle. ?It?s a bill to make America safer. If we are issuing identification or a benefit to someone, we want to know who they are,? says Mountjoy.

But the bill?s simplicity couldn?t prevent one Mexican consul from running to the newspapers, apparently without any understanding of the measure. "We have to realize that under international law, Mexican consulates have the right to issue Mexican IDs to their Mexican citizens," said Consul Giralt Cabrales to a Knight-Ridder reporter. Mountjoy responds, ?This bill does not prohibit Mexican consulates from issuing whatever ID they choose.?

When Mountjoy?s secure identification bill comes up for a vote, expect the matricula consular rolls to be pulled out, and the balcony of the California legislature to be filled. As bin Laden has shown, organization makes all the difference.

Matt Hayes began practicing immigration law shortly after graduating from Pace University School of Law in 1994, representing new immigrants in civil and criminal matters. He is the author of The New Immigration Law and Practice, to be published in October.

Respond to the Writer "
 

dmcowen674

No Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
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www.alienbabeltech.com
Here is something appropriate for this thread,

Somebody forgot to tell this Journalist:

New Title - Lake 102.3 boosts signal to cover Unestades de Mexico population in Norte Georgia:

Lake 102.3 boosts signal to cover Gwinnett and beyond

Mike Andrews

Fox 97 dumped oldies for three decades of R&B and hip hop. Now oldies is undergoing an Atlanta renaissance. Buford?s Oldies Lake 102.3 finds itself as the senior member of the oldies club.
That position is just fine with Lake 102.3 General Sales Manager Al Garner, whose station is one of the only locally owned stations in metro Atlanta and the only FM that focuses on Gwinnett County.

But Lake?s real advantage is not so much its playlist as its position as a local station in a market filled with corporate stations intent on covering the entire metro.
?We are like the Daily Post in that we have a great niche,? Garner said of his station?s concentration on Gwinnett County.

The Joseph family has owned the Lake 102.3 signal for nearly 40 years and has stuck with oldies through the last quarter century, meaning that the songs that were popular at Lake?s inception are now themselves oldies.

The station hopes within two weeks to improve its coverage through a repositioning and upgrade of its antenna. Ultimately, the move will get Lake?s signal into Gainesville-Hall County, as well as parts of North Fulton and Cobb. And Garner says more and more advertisers are interested in paying for this targeted portion of the metro.

?This market has grown to such a size, you don?t need to be everywhere,? Garner said. ?Ingles can more effectively buy us and cover 24 of their stores, instead of buying a lot of wastage. ? Gwinnett, Hall and Forsyth are more than enough for us to say grace over.?

The local control has survived the corporate buying frenzy that dominated the ?80s and ?90s and saw virtually all major Atlanta FMs owned by five national megaliths.

?I?ve had some people call me saying, ?I hear you guys are for sale,?? Garner recounts. ?I found out there?s a spot on the Internet that says Lake102 is for sale, but that is just an Ohio station of the same name.?

Oldies Lake 102, says Garner, is most assuredly not for sale. That is good news for Gwinnettians who think a county of half a million deserves its own station.

Mike Andrews? column appears in the Friday Weekend section. E-mail him at gwinnettradio@yahoo.com.
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Cliff Notes:

Fox 97 went Hip Hop

Only Non-Corporate Station FM Station in Atlanta went Hispanic a few days ago.

There are now 3 Major Market FM stations broadcasting in Atlanta.
 

dmcowen674

No Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
54,889
47
91
www.alienbabeltech.com
Here's more:

Broadcasting from Gwinnett

Teresa Prieto, the owner of RadioMex WPLO 610AM in Lawrenceville, has created a success story all her own. Prieto, who recorded her first radio commercial in Mexico at the age of 18, founded the station along with her husband, Filiberto, in 1996, converting an existing station from its country music format to Spanish programming with Mexican regional music.

?It?s a very strong signal, very powerful. We cover all of North Georgia, from Riverdale to Atlanta, Conyers to Acworth. It's the number one radio station in the area?s Latino community,? she said.

Prieto and her husband, who manages radio station 1080 AM in Acworth, met at a Chicago radio station, where they were deejays. They also own several Spanish restaurants in the area. ?We found there were all kinds of opportunities in Georgia,? she said.

For Prieto, starting WPLO has been an opportunity to serve Gwinnett County's exploding Hispanic population. ? Gwinnett County is number one in Latino population in Georgia, and 80 percent of them are Mexican,? she said.
 

maluckey

Platinum Member
Jan 31, 2003
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It's all fine and dandy that the Matricula Consular may be accepted by a City Council as identification. There is a big fly in the ointment.

Federal Law prohibits aliens without proper documentation from living in the United States. This even includes the INTENT to live in the United States. This seems innocent enough, but it's ramifications are larger than you would imagine. If a person applies for a drivers license in a State, they almost always must be a resident of the state in which they apply for that driving license, and have to sign at the bottom of the page, affirming that the address that they list is their residence, or something of the sort. How is a person without rights to even intend to live here, going to get a license without violating the law? They can't. Back in my days working the border, we regularly arrested persons listing a United States address on a drivers license. They were charged with being and Intended Immigrant Without Documentation. They were processed and shipped off to Mexico, and banned for five years from even attempting to enter the country.

Some Immigration Lawyers slept through law school. We regularly sent them packing.
 

Ozoned

Diamond Member
Mar 22, 2004
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The mexican ideology



"The establishment of a Homeland Security Department does not mean that the U.S. is serious about protecting our national security.
Americans should wonder why Mexico is actively pushing for the acceptance of Mexican ID cards in many states, and amnesty and benefits for millions of illegal Mexican immigrants, and more guest worker programs.
This past June, a Zogby poll showed that 58 percent of Mexicans believe the U.S. Southwest rightfully belongs to them and 57 percent of Mexicans do not believe that they need U.S. permission to enter this country.
Not surprisingly, in 1997, Ernesto Zedillo, then president of Mexico, said in Chicago that the "Mexican nation extends beyond its territories enclosed by its borders and that Mexican migrants are an important, a very important, part of it."
In 1995, former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Henry Cisneros said: "As goes the Latino population will go the state of California, and as goes the state of California will go the United States of America. ... The stakes are big. This is a fight worth making."
In the last decade, the Hispanic population in North Carolina increased by more than 600 percent.
Is Mexico using immigration to control American policies and, eventually, control the entire U.S.? We should remember that children born in the U.S. even of illegal immigrants and guest workers are U.S. citizens and can vote when they turn 18."