Well, they could make the argument that their own countries just aren’t safe. With the Obama regime shipping guns to Mexican drug cartels, at least that country could make the argument that their illegal aliens should not be subject to the law. Of course, they can’t make a case for the oceans of illegal aliens that poured into the United States before Fast and Furious became official Obama policy. All facetiousness aside though, no country has the right-or should have the right to stick their nose into the sovereign affairs of the United States. But some countries feel the need to dispose of their citizens somewhere, and the United States has been as welcoming as any suicidal society can be.
In anticipation of a judge’s ruling coming Monday, and fresh off the racist rant of scumbag Carlos Santana,11 countries have filed briefs challenging HB 87, the Georgia law that is thier version of Arizona’s SB 1070. The law would allow law enforcement to verify the immigration status of anybody not able to provide valid I.D. If the suspects turn out to be illegal aliens, they will be turned over to ICE. Eventually, that would lead to deportations, and these countries do not want their citizens back.
Mexico, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Peru all filed briefs with the court citing reasons that have nothing to do with law as to why the law should continue to be broken.
Here was what Mexico had to say.
The measure, Mexico said, would strain diplomatic relations between the U.S. and Mexico, “interfering with the strategic diplomatic interests of the two countries and encouraging an imminent threat of state-sanctioned bias or discrimination.”
Fast and Furious isn’t straining relations? You mean you’re okay with that? Sending your cartels, identity thieves, anchor parents and drunks isn’t straining relations? Funding reconquista political candidates in the Southwest isn’t straining relations? Overburdening our emergency rooms, our schools, our social safety nets, our roads, our neighborhoods, and now even our court system isn’t straining relations? The gall of countries like Mexico. You need us, we don’t need you, so don’t lecture the United States about diplomatic interests. Mexico should feel lucky that the goons trolling Washington aren’t interested in securing the border. It could be done tomorrow.
In the end, as it always is with these countries, it’s all about la raza. Not about illegal aliens in general, but about their own. If the law said only Chinese illegal aliens are subject to the Georgia law, you wouldn’t hear a peep from Mexico, or any of the other countries that had the nerve to file briefs. Unfortunately for the United States, the law no longer matters. All it takes is an activist judge, or one on the Obama payroll and this law is blocked. We saw that in Arizona, and Georgia may likely suffer the same fate. We could get lucky though, and the law will stand. If it does, other states can mirror the validated law, and that will go a long way in combating the illegal alien problem. Better than nothing, anyway. That’s what Mexico and it’s ten amigos want to prevent.






Well said. Then again, people here illegally sending money back to Mexico is one of their top sources of income. They don’t want to interrupt the gravy train.
The gravy train. Not the way to run a country, and we see the end result.
Well done. Then again, they are of the opinion that much of the Southwest is rightfully theirs which gives them “standing” in the Courts. I am waiting for Mexico to start to reclaim what they perceive is theirs, and I am sure Obama will help them out.
If memory serves me, Pew Hispanic Center polled Mexicans and indeed over 80 percent believed the Southwest belongs to them. Lax border security makes that number all the more stunning.