Mexico's Lawlessness And Machismo—Coming Here, Courtesy Of The Bush Betrayal
05/12/2006
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I have two sisters and several nieces and nephews who live in Guatemala.

Nothing gives them a bigger laugh than reading that Mexico is calling the shots on U.S. immigration policy and basing its demands on "humane treatment of migrants."

Throughout Guatemala, it's universally understood that when someone sets out for America, he'd better hope and pray he makes it all the way. If such "migrants" are apprehended in Mexico, the lucky ones are jailed. The unlucky ones will be mugged, beaten and sexually assaulted before they are eventually thrown unceremoniously back into Guatemala.

Captured migrants in Mexico are not, as is the practice in the U.S., released pending a hearing. They will not be allowed to enroll their children in school, will not be eligible for medical services and will most certainly not be participating in massive street demonstrations for their perceived rights.

Sonia Nazario, the Los Angeles Times Pulitzer Prize winning author of the soon-to-be released HBO movie Enrique's Story, said that while she was doing research in Mexico, she was "afraid…afraid of the gangsters, the bandits, the Mexican police, of being beaten, robbed, raped…"

(Read my VDARE.COM analysis of "Enrique's Story" here and here.)

Nazario's simple sentence tells quite a tale about Mexico's lawlessness and machismo.

Lawlessness: As must be obvious to everyone after the May 1st illegal alien demonstrations, to Mexicans illegally in America, immigration violations are trivial, a non-starter in the crime chase.

When you come from Mexico, "crime" is drug running and murder. Crossing the border, buying fake documents, falsifying job applications and submitting fictitious social service forms is chicken feed.

VDARE.COM has posted numerous columns and blogs that prove that major cities have been overwhelmed by the gangster mentality that dominates in Mexico.

Recently, James Fulford tallied up the numbers of Hispanics (mostly Mexican) on the Los Angeles Police Department's most wanted list. According to Fulford's informal count, 85% of the suspects were Hispanic.

And in columns that I have written about San Diego and Salinas, the most wanted lists in those cities are respectively 90% and 100% Hispanic.

(Thinking that perhaps George W. Bush, Western Civilization's number one booster of all things Mexican, is geographically too far removed from California to pay attention to our criminal profiles, I looked up the most wanted in the District of Columbia, home of the White House.  Although Washington, D.C is synonymous with black crime, eight of the nine most wanted for murder are Hispanic.)

Recently, in Lodi, California, my hometown, a small Mexican restaurant/night club was closed. By day, Antonio's was a harmless Mexican buffet. But by night, enter at your own risk. According to police logs, 98 calls for help were made over an eighteen-month period.

The club closed partially because new owners worried that the numerous police calls would prevent the club for having its liquor license transferred. [ Violence outside Lodi club raises concerns for soon-to-be owners, by Jake Armstrong, Lodi News-Sentinel, June 26, 2006

Machismo: in a classroom incident several years ago, a student who I knew well and liked told me that he would be missing class for the next week or so because he had to return to Mexico to "take care of family business."

I naturally thought this meant an ill relative or maybe a funeral. But another student explained later that the trip home was to avenge his brother's murder. None of his friends thought a revenge killing was out of the ordinary.

Of course, Mexico has peace loving and devout, God-fearing people. But the presence in the U.S. of its criminal element has overwhelmed American society. Because Mexico's political culture is so lawless, and because criminals are rarely prosecuted, often the first course of action is macho physical violence rather than rational debate.

But where would Mexican citizens learn about rational debate?

Certainly, Mexico' politicians set a poor example. With Mexico's presidential election less than two months away, the three main candidates are running on the genitalia platform.

Read these recent statements:

  • A television spot for PRI candidate Roberto Madrazo: "We know why we're with Roberto. It's because he has big ones."


  • A radio ad for PAN candidate Felipe Calderon: "He's got balls."

Mexican political analyst Marcela Bobadilla says: "This thing about size comes from a yearning among Mexicans for a strong president or even a strong party." [Size Matters in Mexico's Macho Elections, Reuters, April 26, 2006]

Given the crime rate, the sophomoric mentality and the rabid nationalism Mexico brings to the U.S., I can't fathom the White House's fascination…even though I understand but naturally disagree with the cheap labor angle.

We want more of Mexico? We want ourselves condemned to the locker room crowd?

For the average American what it comes down to is this: massive immigration from Mexico has been a raw deal on a personal level.

When I first moved to Lodi about 18 years ago, I told my old New York friends that I would walk from one side of town to the other at any time of the day or night without fear.

That's no longer true.  As I file this column on May 11, 2006, the Lodi News-Sentinel has three stories on pages two and three of today's edition.



Right-minded Americans want the same thing I do.

And it isn't more of the killing culture from macho Mexico—coming here because George W. Bush has betrayed his constitutional obligation to defend our borders.

I want my town back.

I want my country back.

Joe Guzzardi [email him], an instructor in English at the Lodi Adult School, has been writing a weekly newspaper column since 1988. This column is exclusive to VDARE.COM.

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