Monday, April 28, 2008
What Mexico can do
"Mexico benefits when America acts. By securing the border, both countries can focus on the serious problem of drug trafficking and its deepening cycle of violence and criminality. Border agents require infrastructure at the border to successfully carry out that mission—and the less time they spend looking for illegal immigrants, the more time they can fight violent crime.
Economic reform is key to resolving the immigration issue. By creating new, private-sector jobs in Mexico, the "supply push" that drives illegal immigration to the United States can be reduced. Mexican President Felipe Calderon must make the Mexican economy more competitive by challenging its private sector monopolies and duopolies."
From "The United States and Mexico: Helping One Another, Helping Ourselves" here.
Economic reform is key to resolving the immigration issue. By creating new, private-sector jobs in Mexico, the "supply push" that drives illegal immigration to the United States can be reduced. Mexican President Felipe Calderon must make the Mexican economy more competitive by challenging its private sector monopolies and duopolies."
From "The United States and Mexico: Helping One Another, Helping Ourselves" here.
Labels: border, economics, Mexico, reform
Tuesday, April 01, 2008
What FAIR says about Ohio's immigration
Legal and illegal immigration. The stats from FAIR, The Federation for American Immigration Reform, "a national, nonprofit, public-interest, membership organization of concerned citizens who share a common belief that our nation's immigration policies must be reformed to serve the national interest."