Showing posts with label tom tancredo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tom tancredo. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Diary of a Mad Brown Woman

Congressman Tancredo (R-Colorado) joined Congressman Ortiz in Brownsville on Tuesday for a joint committee meeting regarding the proposed fence building to attempt to curb illegal immigration (amongst other things) in the area.

Not surprisingly, Tancredo was met with a rather cold reception with his known favoritism towards building the fence. “It really isn’t a border to most of us who live down here” said Betty Perez local activist. No need to guess which side she’s advocating.

Now, on the not so stereo-typical side, you’ve got me to give you some insight into uber minority: the endangered Republican Female Mexican American immigrant --- who came to this country legally. Thank you very much. Hold all applause please.

I was born in Juarez Mexico in the state of Chihuahua. I was adopted by my Mexican American parents and brought to this country. They put me on a path to citizenship from the moment I got here; it took fifteen years before I would become an American citizen. I value my citizenship and the rights that go along with that and hold them in the highest regard. It pains me to see people like Ms. Perez who I lived virtually next to for years display their ignorance.

I grew up in McAllen located in the Rio Grande Valley (RGV). I lived with the border situation all my life. I’ve had family in law enforcement that have had to deal with hundreds of cases of drug smuggling and encounters with the Mexican Mafia and other crime organizations that stem out of Mexico. Additionally, I’ve had family in the Border Patrol who dealt with the immigrant situation for years.

I do not have an issue with “keeping the Mesicans out”, but there is a legal way to come into this country and if you can’t honor or respect the basic laws to enter into this country what grounds do we have to believe that you’ll respect the rule of law that governs us while you’re here? I know all about the standard of living in Mexico---my birth mother was a bar-maid with 8-10 kids all from different fathers. My birth-father was a dope fiend. So I get the desire to attain a better quality of life.

I moved to San Antonio about 5 years ago. I haven’t been back to McAllen in about 4 years because I couldn’t stand to see how bad things got down there. Now, as much as I love the taquerias on every corner, what I don’t like is being required to speak Spanish at every major store I went to in order to get what I needed from that establishment. I grew up speaking Spanish. In fact, I am tri-lingual, but that’s entirely beside the point. I stopped refer to McAllen as McAllen, and called it what it was: Northern Mexico.

No a fence isn’t the end all be all of illegal immigration, but it will help to curb the smuggling of immigrants into the nation as well as illegal narcotics. The fence will not “alienate people and businesses who live and work between the wall and the border” as Rev. Raymundo Pena suggests. The same people and business will continue to exist and the cultural diversity will continue to be ever-present and to argue against that fact is ludicrous. The people who live there typically are rather conservative given the religious beliefs. However, they have been indoctrinated by party that wants to keep them where they are and shelter them from progressing in order to keep their votes. That’s the ol’ “Democrats are for the poor” mentality.

The fence isn’t being constructed to keep all Mexicans out forever. It’s being constructed to help stop the amount of illegal narcotics coming into our country that will eventually find its way into the hands of our children and later go on to fund terrorism. Narco-terrorism is now one of the most effective tactics being used today. The fence is there to see that the people who do come to our country do it safely and legally.

Congratulations to Tancredo for managing to go into the lions den and coming out alive. .

Thursday, December 20, 2007

My Personal Rankings of the Candidates

Okay, I did these ratings before Tom Tancredo dropped out of the race, but I was so proud of my post about him, I decided to keep him in my personal rankings of the political candidates.


Personal Rankings

1. John McCain- He has by far the most experience with the security of our nation, is a good fiscal conservative regarding spending, and he does not play politics with his decisions. Now with his surge in both Iowa and New Hampshire polls, it looks like my favorite candidate has a good chance.

2. Mike Huckabee- It’s not just the likeability factor, but he is very good at getting into the intricacies of complex issues ranging from health care to social security. He is both genuine and smart, which is a dangerous combination.

3. Mitt Romney- He has a very good record in one term as governor, but his past positions along with lack of governmental experience worry me a little bit. I will not be disappointed one bit if he is the Republican nominee.

4. Fred Thompson- Almost every time I hear him speak, he sounds Presidential. He also is very knowledgeable about how to fix entitlement programs such as Medicare and Social Security.

5. Rudy Giuliani- I have some problems with his positions on gun control and abortion, but like Romney, he has been a good executive.

6. Duncan Hunter- He seems to be fairly knowledgeable about foreign affairs, but we have not had a President as anti-free trade as Hunter since Jimmy Carter. The GOP will not nominate a candidate that is for major trade restrictions.

7. Ron Paul- Says he’s for free trade, yet he is against NAFTA and CAFTA. Says he wants to be open to other countries and talk with them, yet says we cannot have influence over other countries. If there was such thing as a protectionist libertarian, it would be Ron Paul.

8. Tom Tancredo- I can understand somebody being so vehemently anti-illegal immigration, but with a last name like Tancredo, he should not be anti-legal immigration. The only thing that Tancredo was able to do during the debates was give college political junkies a reason to take a shot every time he said the word immigration. I'm sure it's the only way he was even remotely watchable.