Posted on 04/09/2005 10:09:01 PM PDT by Wiz
AGUA PRIETA, Mexico Ask Carlos A. Zozaya Moreno if the "migrantes" crossing the Sonoran desert are dangerous and he'll laugh and shake his head.
Moreno, an agent with Grupo Beta, Mexico's government agency charged with protecting the human rights of migrants, listens to country music as he drives his orange pickup truck through the wilderness just south of Arizona.
He's looking for signs of migrants and keeping an eye on members of the Minuteman Project, a monthlong U.S. civilian effort to watch the border and report crossers to Border Patrol.
Another Grupo Beta agent, Julio Cesar Cancino, says his job is simple to provide migrants with food, water and, if needed, a ride back to the city for medical attention.
"The migrants only want to work," he said. Unlike many of the minutemen, yards away on the other side of a barbed wire fence marking the border, the Grupo Beta agents aren't armed.
When asked what the chances are of finding any migrants today, the agents reply, very slim.
Agent Hector Salazar said the minutemen sitting just across the border have deterred some migrants and diverted routes of "coyotes," or immigrant smugglers, but there are still people trying to cross the border here.
"They don't read newspapers or watch TV," he said. "They don't know about the minutemen."
The U.S. Border Patrol attributes the decreased attempts at border crossing to increased activity in the area by Mexican authorities.
On this day, the Grupo Beta agents start hiking at a spot with a water container marked with a blue flag, proceed past the remnants of a camp, and continue as the path narrows. They're following a trail of footprints, abandoned water bottles and tuna cans.
(Excerpt) Read more at deseretnews.com ...
Just another illegal immigrant day on our border. If they only want to work, why doesn't the crooked drug, graft and corruption ridden Mexican Mafiaso government provide the conditions for businesses and workers to prosper in Mexico?
What would the Mexican reaction be if unarmed Americans started making lightning cross border entry/egress (just step over the fence & back) crossings into Mexico?
Oh, but not to worry federales, the US authorities would arrest the Americans in a NY minute, this while allowing Mexican illegals in their millions to walk right past them.
Hey, is America not a great country for illegal non-citizens or what?
Illegals have no rights once they set foot on our soil, which is about the same as they get from their own corrupt government.
If we provide food and shelter, $5 is a darn good living wage. Besides, they complain about that already with the migrant workers, as they proclaim to everyone that they are doing jobs that Americans won't do
Carlos Zozaya Moreno, an attorney for Grupo Beta and agency commander.
"Illegal immigration is growing and growing," he said. "It's like a giant snowball now and you can't stop it."
Critics of Grupo Beta say they are helping people illegally enter the United States. Alex Segura, a minuteman and board member of Utahns for Immigration Reform and Enforcement, said booklets that Grupo Beta agents give to those attempting to cross the border suggest they're doing more than providing humanitarian aid.
"The whole bottom line of the whole survival guide is to help them survive their way into this country," he said. "We know their government is actually encouraging" illegal immigration.
The booklets warn about the dangers of crossing the border and provide information about safe passage and their rights if detained in the United States. Another booklet, designed for those from countries other than Mexico, provides information about Mexican laws.
A wall would be a federal public works project thus subject to the Davis-Bacon prevailing wage law. We would have to pay the illegals $30 to 40$ an hour, plus training, plus medical, plus retirement, for them to work on the federal wall project. /s
I personally think room and board in a tent is a good idea. I wonder how long it would take to build the wall. Perhaps the Minutemen can be paid as job recruiters and construction supervisors.
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