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To: Between the Lines
I don't doubt that there are elements within the U.S. Government who believe it is in our best interests to become one with Mexico - the part I'm having trouble understanding is, how is absorbing a poor, third world backwater nation like Mexico, whose culture and language are far different than ours and whose poverty and corruption is legendary, in the best interests of an advanced, industrialized society like the United States?
27 posted on 02/01/2007 7:39:16 AM PST by reagan_fanatic (Every time a jihadist dies, an angel gets its wings.)
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To: reagan_fanatic
Easy: Cheap labor (because Lincoln declared slavery illegal).

Those globalists are more interested in CODA (cost of doing business) than in people. Importing millions of cheap laborers may be detrimental to a sovereign nation, but it is a boon for businesses that use cheap laborers to produce goods and services. How else do large corporation CEO retire with multi-million dollar nest eggs?

==

A few months after Clinton was out of office, he made a speech (at Georgetown U, IIRC). Around the same time Madeline Albright made a similar speech somewhere overseas. Both made reference to the coming time when the US is comparable with 3rd world nations. Clinton's theme was that we needed to be nice to 3rd world nations because the US would be one soon.

I was astonished that the media didn't rake Clinton or Albright for those comments. After 5 years of Bush and open borders and the flood of millions of illegals, I see that we are heading in that direction, unabated. And both political parties are in on it. They are more on-the-same-page than they want the masses to know.
36 posted on 02/01/2007 7:50:39 AM PST by TomGuy
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