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1 posted on 05/17/2006 5:33:55 PM PDT by dennisw
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To: dennisw

uh... no


2 posted on 05/17/2006 5:36:07 PM PDT by kinoxi
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To: dennisw

Reposted due to current illegal immigration amnesties, bills and debates. This article explains why the American people be damned! They are in the way of the elite's scheme to unite USA Mexico and Canada


3 posted on 05/17/2006 5:36:21 PM PDT by dennisw
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To: dennisw

This is a tin-foil hatty and simplistic analysis. Mrs. Schlafly's mind must be beginning to fade.


4 posted on 05/17/2006 5:36:45 PM PDT by GovernmentShrinker
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To: dennisw

I (vaguely) remember reading about this.

Is there an actual copy of this document available to the public? Or is it rumors?


5 posted on 05/17/2006 5:37:31 PM PDT by SE Mom (God Bless those who serve..)
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To: hedgetrimmer

Isn't this what you and B4Ranch were saying a year ago?


10 posted on 05/17/2006 5:42:41 PM PDT by Grinder
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To: dennisw
 

FROM THIS CFR DOCUMENT (LIFTED FROM THE PDF FILE)

 

Increase Labor Mobility within North America


People are North America’s greatest asset. Goods and services cross
borders easily; ensuring the legal transit of North American workers
has been more difficult. Experience with the NAFTA visa system
suggests that its procedures need to be simplified ,and such visas should
be made available to a wider range of occupations and to additional
categories of individuals such as students, professors, bonafide frequent
visitors, and retirees.
To make the most of the impressive pool of skill and talent within
North America, the three countries should look beyond the NAFTA
visa system. The large volume of undocumented migrants from Mexico
within the United States is an urgent matter for those two countries
to address. A long-term goal should be to create a ‘‘North American
preference’’—new rules that would make it much easier for employees
to move and for employers to recruit across national boundaries within
the continent. This would enhance North American competitiveness, increase productivity, contribute to Mexico’s development, and address
one of the main outstanding issues on the Mexican-U.S. bilateral agenda.
Canada and the United States should consider eliminating restrictions
on labor mobility altogether and work toward solutions that, in the
long run, could enable the extension of full labor mobility to Mexico
as well.

WHAT WE SHOULD DO NOW
• Expand temporary migrant worker programs. Canada and the
United States should expand programs for temporary labor migration
from Mexico. For instance, Canada’s successful model for managing
seasonal migration in the agricultural sector should be expanded to
other sectors where Canadian producers face a shortage of workers
and Mexico may have a surplus of workers with appropriate skills.
Canadian and U.S. retirees living in Mexico should be granted
working permits in certain fields, for instance as English teachers.
• Implement the Social Security Totalization Agreement
negotiated between the United States and Mexico. This agreement would recognize payroll contributions to each other’s systems, 
thus preventing double taxation.


WHAT WE SHOULD DO BY 2010
• Create a ‘‘North American preference.’’ Canada, the United
States, and Mexico should agree on streamlined immigration and
labor mobility rules that enable citizens of all three countries to
work elsewhere in North America with far fewer restrictions than
immigrants from other countries. This new system should be both
broader and simpler than the current system of NAFTA visas. Special
immigration status should be given to teachers, faculty, and students
in the region.
• Move o full labor mobility between Canada and the United
States. To make companies based  in North America as competitive
as possible in the global economy, Canada and the United States
should consider eliminating all remaining barriers to the ability of
their citizens to live and work in the other country. This free flow

13 posted on 05/17/2006 5:56:10 PM PDT by dennisw
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To: All
I read the plan. At least the authors acknowledged the problems in Mexico. If this or any plan happens -- or better IMO, it happens when it's time -- Mexico has to rid itself of corruption and crime, said the plan.

But then the plan goes on as though it's not really necessary for Mexico to reform -- Mexico can be an observer in areas where it cannot be trusted, was how I read the plan.

If one member of the "community" cannot be trusted because the member is a disgusting corrupt, untrustworthy criminal then what's the point of the plan?

15 posted on 05/17/2006 6:21:38 PM PDT by WilliamofCarmichael (If modern America's Man on Horseback is out there, Get on the damn horse already!)
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To: dennisw
"No longer will illegal aliens have to be smuggled across the border; employers can openly recruit foreigners willing to work for a fraction of U.S. wages."

Borders are being thrown down so outsourcing can be replaced by 'insourcing'; and Bush, the RINOs and liberals must be panicking at the fact that Americans are fighting back against the 'insourcing' of hispanic criminals, drifters and migrants. But I think America will lose in the end, and the globalists will win out. This can already be seen by the fact that Bush's response to the national outcry for illegal immigration reform is a sham and a joke.

Amnesty is Bush's obsession, and amnesty it will be. The (alleged) 6,000 National Guardsmen will only be coverng a fraction of the border with Mexico, and they will not be given any authority to arrest or detain illegals. This response by the Administration is an insult and a slap in the face to the majority of Americans, who are demanding REAL reform.

All that debt American college students are piling up in the hopes of acquiring a high paying job when they graduate will overwhelm many of them, because American citizens are losing ground in the U.S. jobs market on all fronts: manufacturing (to China), technical (to India), construction (to illegals undercutting American citizen-owned contractor services), and now even corporate law and legal services are being outsourced to India. Better train your kids to be public school teachers where they can teach the virtues of multi-culturalism, that's about all there'll be left out there for jobs.

16 posted on 05/17/2006 6:28:14 PM PDT by TheCrusader
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