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View Full Version : [2/24/2009] "Deported Mexicans face shattered lives" ~ MSNBC.COM


IndyPUMA
02-26-2009, 04:20 PM
Over the past five years, deportations from U.S. to Mexico jump 60 percent

"...U.S. deportations have jumped by more than 60 percent over the past five years. Mexicans accounted for nearly two-thirds of those deportees, helping to roll back one of the biggest migrations of recent history. All along the border, shelters once full of people trying to cross into the United States are now home to thousands of deportees who sleep on mattresses strewn inches apart on cement floors.

In a week spent at the Tijuana gate, The Associated Press watched busload after busload of deportees arrive, some in a daze, still stunned over their sudden expulsion. Many stumbled over the Mexican official's question, "Where are you from?" after spending decades in the United States.

The faces of those who stream through reflect how tough and far-reaching the U.S. crackdown on illegal immigration has become.

Among them are young people. There were more than 18,000 repatriations of children under 18 to Mexico this year, and in more than 10,000 cases they were alone, according to the Mexican government.

There are also criminals. The U.S. does not break down figures by country, but it has deported about 55,000 prisoners so far this year. One man walked through the gate in slippers with 80 cents in his pocket, after being picked up by police during a violent fight with his wife in their backyard.

And there are women, with more than 40,000 repatriations since January — about 13 percent of all cases, according to the Mexican government. Sometimes the women are dropped off alone, at night. The U.S. Border Patrol in Washington says the safe repatriation of women is a major concern, but acknowledges there is no overall policy along the 2,000-mile border.

Mexico must now deal with a population that it has long ignored. And those returning must deal with Mexico, a land that for many now seems foreign. The challenge starts the day they walk through the gate the U.S. Border Patrol calls Whiskey II, military code for west of the port of entry...."

Read full article here (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26379348/).

Palinfan
02-26-2009, 06:30 PM
my ancestors made the boat trip and stood in line at Ellis Island.
They obeyed the laws and when they began to work, they paid taxes and contributed to our institutions.

I have a relative who migrated here in the 90's, and had his papers in order, as well as signed promises he would not become a ward of the state. Others in the family had to promise they would support him if he needed help.
Now he belongs in the top tax bracket and contributes more to our government than 85% of most Americans.

If these Mexicans want to be here, they need to follow the law and they need to contribute just like everyone else.

There is no money left.

America can no longer pick up their hospital bills and give them free education.

Mallory
02-26-2009, 07:24 PM
And for every human and heartbreaking story of someone deported, there is a story of an American family dealing with their own heartbreak as the result of another person who circumvented the laws and came here illegally, who destroyed the lives of an American family.

I am not unsympathetic to the people who come here out of desperation, but that doesn't make it right. What about the poor guy who's lost his job, has a sick child and medical bills mounting by the minute who holds up a bank or robs someone. Do we look the other way because he was desperate and needed the money? Is his crime just forgiven because he had a need?

Here are the stories of many Americans who lost their lives or loved ones because of illegal immigration.:(

www.immigrationshumancost.org/text/crimevictims.html