"Send troops to protect our borders!"
"We have to allow illegals. Citizens don't want to work!"
But where are those arguments coming from? Not just America, apparently:
Stepping Over the Line
Don't try sneaking north across Mexico's other border.
By Joseph Contreras
Newsweek
June 5, 2006 issue - Ever since he crossed into Mexico, José Moisés has had nothing but trouble. Now the 30-year-old Honduran mechanic is hunkered down with other young illegal migrants in a rail yard just north of Mexico City, waiting for nightfall to hop a northbound freight. He displays a pale line encircling his finger. He used to have a ring there, he says—until Mexican cops slammed him against a squad car in the southern border state of Chiapas and grabbed it. "They took everything," says Moisés. "Here the Central American has no value."
As tough as the United States can be for workers who slip in from south of the border, Mexico is in a poor position to criticize. The problem goes far beyond the predatory gantlet of thugs and crooked cops facing defenseless transients like Moisés. There's ample precedent in Mexico for just about everything the United States is—or isn't—doing. Calling out the military? Mexicans may hate the new U.S. plan to deploy 6,000 National Guard troops on the border, but five years ago they cheered President Vicente Fox for sending thousands of Mexican soldiers to crack down on their southern frontier. Tougher laws? Hispanic-rights groups are enraged over U.S. efforts to criminalize undocumented aliens—yet since 1974, sneaking into Mexico has been punishable by up to two years in prison. Foot-dragging on amnesty? Fox has spent the past five years urging the United States to upgrade the status of millions of illegals from Mexico. Meanwhile, his own government has given legal status to only 15,000 foreigners without papers.
Some of the worst abuses take place on the coffee plantations of Chiapas state, where some 40,000 Guatemalan field hands endure backbreaking jobs and squalid living conditions to earn roughly $3.50 a day. Some growers even deduct the cost of room and board from that amount. "If you ask them, 'Why are you bringing in Guatemalans to work?' they say, 'You can't depend on Mexicans. They don't work hard; they're irresponsible'," says George Grayson, a political scientist specializing in Mexico at the College of William & Mary. "The truth is, you can pay [the guest workers] a pittance. And if they cause the slightest disturbance, you can send them back to Guatemala."
At least a few Mexicans are balking at the hypocrisy. Late last year their National Human Rights Commission issued a report criticizing Mexico's widespread mistreatment of aliens; the report described sub- human facilities where captured illegals are kept until they can be deported. Several international news agencies ran stories on the publication. But most of Mexico's leading papers ignored it.
Work hard for a pittance or we send you somewhere you really don't want to be.
2 comments:
are you white or are you mexican becuase if you where you would now what we go threw!!!!!!!!
How does my race affect a shameful practice?
Does my race affect the ethics of coercing people to work for a pittance?
I guess my point is this:
- All people, white, Mexican, etc. are the same because when placed in similar circumstances we all react the same way. When Americans feel threatened by illegal labor, they react in the same way that Mexicans react when they feel threatened by illegal labor. Likewise, American businesses use the same excuses to cover their measly pay for hard work as the Mexicans use to cover the practice when they do it.
- America (and Mexico, apparently) has a bi-polar immigration policy. It's "illegal" to jump the border, but it's not enforced unless an illegal is unwilling to work for a pittance. Work for a pittance and you'll "allowed" to stay. Ask for safety equipment, decent wages, etc. and you're threatened with being shipped away.
It smells. I think America's national slogan should be better than, "Well, it sure beats being screwed somewhere else."
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