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To: rintense
Thank you, Rintense. Can't believe my fellow Texans aren't on this thread taking major offense. Mexico indeed! Over our dead bodies.
132 posted on 06/21/2002 8:36:38 PM PDT by McLynnan
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To: McLynnan
Well, I think this is all pretty laughable. Having seen some of the comments made lately by Fox, I have to wonder if there isn't a major rift going on between him and GWB.
138 posted on 06/21/2002 8:41:11 PM PDT by rintense
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To: McLynnan
Thank you, Rintense. Can't believe my fellow Texans aren't on this thread taking major offense. Mexico indeed! Over our dead bodies.

Here's a post from one of your Texas neighbors......

Why no! Nothing like that could happen to the great "Republic of Texas". We've got the Alamo. Why, our motto is "Don't Mess With Texas". We print it on T-shirts and refridgerator magnets and everything.

We are the biggest braggarts and chest beaters in the nation. You don't know what you are talking about. Illegal Mexicans aren't taken over Texas. Texas is conquering Mexico. yeah, that's it. That's the ticket. we will just keep telling ourselves that. That way we won't have our overblown pride hurt. Yeah! Thats it.

570 posted on 3/13/02 9:38 PM Pacific by southern rock [ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 564 | View Replies | Report Abuse ]

I reckon you folks in Texas got your work cut out for you. This titanic invasion of millions wont get better. America needs to seriously wake up soon.

182 posted on 06/21/2002 10:31:52 PM PDT by Joe Hadenuf
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To: McLynnan
Thank you, Rintense. Can't believe my fellow Texans aren't on this thread taking major offense. Mexico indeed! Over our dead bodies.

Uh, I think you ought to be taking offense at what's going on in your own state, that is being brought to you by your own government. Over your dead bodies? It may be later than you think.

Texas shantytown poorest in nation

AP | June 7, 2002 | Lynn Brezosky CAMERON PARK, Texas - In many ways, things are better than they were just a few years ago in Cameron Park, a cluster of shacks stretching for miles near the Mexican border. Gunfire no longer erupts at sunset. Families are more likely to stay put when fathers leave for months to pick crops in Michigan or North Dakota. The new pavement means children can walk to the bus on rainy days without having to wrap garbage bags around their shoes. Televisions are powered by electric lines rather than car batteries. There are stoves and refrigerators - some of them even indoors.

Yet national census figures show there is still a long way to go.

Among places with 1,000 households or more, Cameron Park is the poorest spot in America.

It ranks dead last in median per-capita income, at 4,103 dollars a year. About 6,000 people live in the unincorporated community near Brownsville. Many of them are migrant workers and factory hands, and many of them are from Mexico.

"Extreme Third World conditions," said Cameron County Judge Gilberto Hinojosa. "You can pave the streets and put lights and police patrols and parks, but you still have to deal with the fact that many remain poor, and because so many are undocumented, it's difficult to provide them with programs."

Their poverty has been worsened by economic trends that hit the least-skilled hard. The textile industry that employed many with working papers has disintegrated - the Levi's, Haggar and Horace Small factories have all announced closings. Drought has meant fewer agricultural jobs in the region.

In Cameron Park, only 19.3 percent of people age 25 or older have a high school diploma or better. The state average is 72.1 percent.

Some 1,800 colonias, or shantytowns that developed without services like water or sewers, have emerged along the Texas-Mexico border.

They started in the late 1960s and early 1970s with landowners offering mostly poor Mexican immigrants land on easy terms.

Cameron Park was one of the first. In 1968, a plot went for 300 dollars, paid at a rate of 7 dollars a month. By 1977, it was 1,200 dollars, at 20 dollars a month. The plots lacked water, sewers and drainage, but it was a chance to own land. Preliminary dwellings sprang up in a weekend.

In recent years, the plight of the colonias has drawn the attention of county, state and federal officials, who have made campaign stops and passed laws to fix substandard conditions. A constitutional amendment passed in November authorized up to 175 million dollars in state bonds to build or improve roads and drainage. And the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development has offered low-cost financing to build homes.

"I saw firsthand when there's three inches of rain and children don't go anywhere and the water stagnates, bringing mosquitoes and opportunities for disease," Gov. Rick Perry said in supporting the measure.

When social worker Alma Rendon first visited in the early 1990s, the colonia was full of outhouses, and pots and pans collecting rainwater for washing. Now most of the homes have indoor plumbing.

Also since the early 1990s, a program through Texas A&M University has enlisted people in the community to tell neighbors about such services as counseling or vision care. At a community center, families are matched with food stamps and other public assistance programs. There are English classes, and a new computer center is under construction.

It has been against the law since 1995 to sell unimproved land for housing. But the colonias keep on growing, and those who sell their land have profited, with plots now going for as much as 18,000 dollars.

Houses have developed over time into a hodgepodge of styles, some pastel Mexican stucco, others pale brick. Most are in some stage of construction, with half a roof, windows without panes, an uncompleted second floor.

Teresa Serna has been working for 19 years on her dream house - a five-bedroom rose stucco with balconies and elaborate door moldings. It is yards away from the wooden trailer where she lived 30 years ago as a 15-year-old newlywed from Brownsville's sister city of Matamoros, Mexico.

But for every home like Serna's are three or four rusted 20-by-6-foot campers with large families crowded inside.

Several times developers have come to the community, offering to buy the land, raze it all and build new homes. They got laughed away.

"It's part of the mindset they brought with them from Mexico," Rendon said. "A person doesn't have anything unless you have property and your own home."

America seems to be enjoying the ever warming water

190 posted on 06/21/2002 11:00:59 PM PDT by Joe Hadenuf
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