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Mexico’s Undeclared War on America
by Alan Caruba
25 January 2005
Mexico,
in collusion with the Bush administration, is maneuvering to suck Social
Security funds across the border for millions of their citizens who are currently
here illegally.
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If a foreign country
was sending more than a million of its people to illegally enter the United
States every year surely that would be grounds for war. Mexico is doing that.
It is no stretch of imagination to say that Mexico in engaged in an undeclared
war on the United States of America.
US Border Patrol Agents, according to a January 10 article in the Washington Times,
“apprehended 1.15 million illegal aliens last year trying to sneak into the
United States between the nation’s land ports of entry, more than 3,100 a
day -- a 24 percent increase over the year before.” Among them, 23,000 people
with criminal records were identified and arrested. They included 84 murder
suspects, 37 suspected kidnappers, 151 who were wanted on charges of sexual
assault, 313 robbery suspects, and 2,630 others implicated in drug-related
charges.
“There were 8,577 drug seizures that confiscated 1.4 million pounds of illegal
narcotics with an estimated street value of $1.62 billion,” according to
the Times article by Jerry Seper. In all, the US Customs and Border
Protection agency’s inspectors and officers processed 428 million passengers
and pedestrians, including 262 million aliens, “denying entry to more than
643,000 aliens under US law.” They were in addition to those trying to steal
across the border illegally.
All this was happening as the Mexican Foreign Ministry was publishing “The
Guide for the Mexican Immigrant.” It is a guide on how to enter the US illegally.
It is an act of war. It is part of a long-term plan to flood the US, particularly
California and the Southwest, with illegal Mexicans in the belief that, once
again, the US will grant amnesty to them, thus putting into motion yet another
human wave to follow. There must be no amnesty.
President Bush doesn’t see it that way. He calls illegal Mexican aliens “undocumented
workers.” That is just pure sophistry. It’s spin. He calls the flood of illegal
Mexicans “a problem,” but it is much more than that. It is an undeclared
act of war.
We have fought wars with Mexico in the past. Indeed, Mexico had invited Americans
to settle Texas after it had won independence from Spain. In 1836, after
the Alamo was overrun, the Battle of San Jacinto resulted in Texas becoming
an independent republic. By 1845, the US had annexed Texas. This was followed
by the Mexican-American war in 1846-7. By September 14, 1847, our Marines
were in Mexico City and we are still singing about the “Halls of Montezuma.”
The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ended the war with the annexation of the
Oregon Territory and much of the Southwest, i.e., California, New Mexico,
Nevada, and Utah. The US paid Mexico $15 million for the land acquired. The
US paid additional millions for the Gadsden Purchase of land that now comprises
a part of Arizona.
Today, the oligarchy ruling Mexico has hit upon a plan to not only regain its former territory by a de facto
form of demographics, deliberately re-populating those States with Mexican
citizens and seeking a series of amnesties to confer citizenship that bypasses
the normal process, but it is also seeking to suck still more money out of
the US with an audacious plan to raid Social Security. It’s not enough that
the second largest amount of money Mexico “earns” comes from funds sent home
by illegal aliens estimated to number between eight and ten million.
Writing in a recent issue of The American Enterprise, Marti Dinerstein,
a fellow at the Center for Immigration Studies, noted that Social Security
arrangements between nations are intended to prevent dual taxation of employees
who work temporarily in another country and the employers who send them.
The second objective is to guarantee an old-age pension for workers who end
up paying into the Social Security systems of two countries, but earn insufficient
credits to qualify for retirement from either of them alone.
Twenty nations, Mexico included, have Social Security reciprocity agreements
with the US. Eight of them have so few of these legal, temporary workers
that the US Census Bureau doesn’t even keep track. “By 2000, there were an
estimated 9.2 million Mexicans living and working in the US.”
I have concluded that no branch of the US government has any realistic idea
of how many illegal Mexicans are in the country. One thing’s for sure, though,
the Social Security pact currently making its way through Congress, as Dinerstein
notes, provides no parity between the US and Mexico which accounts for an
estimated 69 percent of all illegal aliens in the nation! The pact would
be a windfall calculated in millions of dollars for Mexico.
Advocates of “open borders” want the US to sign this Social Security agreement
with Mexico and the Bush administration is claiming only 50,000 Mexicans
would qualify for it. That figure is bogus. Representative Dana Rohrbacher
says simply enough, “We are talking about huge sums of money -- not just
for retirement, but for disability payments, premature deaths, caring for
the families of illegal immigrants,” adding that “it is an outrageous violation
of our obligation to watch out for senior citizens of the United States.”
Wisely, he calls for “a law specifically banning work by illegal aliens from
qualifying for Social Security.” Indeed, he has a bill -- HR 1631 -- to prohibit
the work histories of non-citizens who are here illegally from being counted
toward Social Security earnings.” If HR 1631 doesn’t become law, millions
of illegal aliens, if yet another amnesty is granted, will become part of
the Social Security system because all the time they worked here illegally
will be credited to their accounts.
Mexico, in collusion with the Bush administration, is maneuvering to suck
Social Security funds across the border for millions of their citizens who
are currently here illegally. This is the same administration that is telling
us that we must “fix” the Social Security system to protect future generations
of Americans.
I can’t tell you exactly when the second Mexican-American War began, but I can tell you it is going on right now.
Alan Caruba is the author of Warning Signs, published by Merril Press. His weekly commentaries are posted on the Internet site of The National Anxiety Center.
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