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Death's terrain: Migrants' dreams of a better life die hard, fast in the American desert



One gram of bone is all Dr. Lori Baker needs to find the truth.

The bone chips arrive in FedEx packages at her Baylor University lab from a morgue in Tuscon, Arizona. They’re samples from the unidentified remains of illegal immigrants who died in desert crossings.

Jerry Larson photo/Waco Tribune-Herald

She crushes the bone and from the mitochondria of a single cell strips out a double-stranded molecule of DNA. She unravels the strands: The length of a snowflake but too thin to see, a twisted ladder of chemical code.

A forensic anthropologist, Baker homes in on a minute section of that tiny molecule for the answer: in the end a simple yes or no to an anxious family waiting to hear whether the victim’s DNA resembles theirs.

Behind every bone is a story. Dr. Baker would rather not know. She’s a scientist, after all. She’s also a young mother, and the weight of all these tragedies keeps her up at night thinking about her own family.

Still, if you could strip out and unravel one of these stories from the bone, it would stretch back thousands of miles, to the desert, then perhaps to the heartland of Mexico. You might find a family devastated by the loss of a son or daughter, a husband or brother. A promise lost, a dream wasted.

M ARANA, Ariz. — Faustino Francisco Galvan squinted up at the face of his son, now a dark blur against bright desert sky.

“I want to stay with you,” he heard the boy say, as in a dream.

Struggling to focus his eyes and thoughts, the man could sense the boy’s hesitation. Thirteen years old, a babyfaced kid, Eloy was weighing life and death.

BROKEN PROMISE LAND
Part 1 of 4
About this series

This project examining the perilous crossings of illegal immigrants along the U.S.-Mexico border was made possible by a World Affairs Journalism Fellowship from the International Center for Journalists in Washington, D.C.

For three weeks last summer, Cox News Service writer J.B. Smith traveled to three towns in Mexico to interview families of dead illegal immigrants identified in Waco by Baylor University forensic DNA scientist Lori Baker.

He also spent five days in September visiting southern Arizona, where all of those immigrants died. He traveled into the desert with Border Patrol agents and volunteers from a locally based humanitarian group and visited the Pima County Medical Examiner’s Office.

Smith continued his research well into December, conducting interviews with anti-illegal immigration activists and policy-makers, including the head of the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps and the Center for Immigration Studies.

This series explores the causes and effects of illegal immigration through the stories of real people on both sides of the border.

Faustino Francisco, 37, was diabetic, and his body was shutting down. He had hiked four days through the Sonoran Desert of southern Arizona with a group of about 15 Mexicans and Guatemalans. They hadn’t slept more than an hour since leaving. Their water bottles had run dry 30 hours ago. The piece of barrel cactus pulp he had chewed on for moisture yesterday only made him vomit.

Now on this late morning of May 19, 2006, the blazing sun promised another 100-degree day. Faustino could go no farther. His blood sugar was soaring. He was losing his sight. He was losing his mind. For his own life, he was fast losing hope.

But the boys could not die.

In this undated photograph, Faustino Francisco (center) holds his son, Eloy. As the boy grew older, he traded his dream of engineering school for the quicker payoff of manual labor in North Carolina.

Not Eloy, his oldest son, the soccer player, the ambitious one who had traded his dream of engineering school for the quicker payoff of manual labor in North Carolina.

Not Rosario, his 16-year-old nephew, the factory worker who had persuaded Eloy to come along on this misbegotten trip to the United States.

Only a couple of hours more, said the coyote, the smuggler of illegal immigrants. Just behind those hills lies Tucson, he said. A man will be there with water and roasted chicken and beer.

Ahorito regeso. We’ll be right back to rescue you.

Faustino had heard enough of the coyote’s lies the last few days. The group was lost. And to remain here was certain death.

But for Eloy and Rosario, perhaps there was hope.

“Go on,” Faustino said to the shadow that was his son. “Go save your life.”

Faustino’s sister, Clara, also hunkered down on the ground, unable to go farther because of her heart condition. Her friend Elisa, exhausted, also stayed behind. The trio watched as the boys and the rest of the group staggered off into a purgatory of brush, rocks and thorns.

Faustino Francisco sprawled on his back in the shade of a giant saguaro cactus, praying and waiting to die.

* * *

Odds are that a man in Faustino’s condition would become another grim statistic in the unfolding tragedy of the U.S.-Mexico border.

The Francisco family at home in Tehuacán. Right to left: Faustino; his wife, Constanza; a young relative; Faustino's 12-year-old son, Efraim.

A decade ago, few immigrants dared to cross this harsh stretch of desert south of Tucson and Phoenix.

Today, because of increased enforcement elsewhere along the U.S.-Mexico border, it’s the busiest corridor for illegal immigration. It’s also the deadliest.

The Pima County Medical Examiner’s Office in Tucson last year received 205 bodies of unidentified migrants. The number is at an all-time high, 10 times the annual rate back in the 1990s.

“Something has funneled people into the Sonoran Desert,” says Dr. Bruce Anderson, the office’s forensic anthropologist, who oversees the autopsies.

“They used to cross in Texas or California or New Mexico, in safer places. The Sonoran Desert is not a safe place to cross any time of year. In the summertime, it’s lethal.”

In this desert vastness, the end can begin with a sprained ankle, a missed turn or an empty water bottle.

An abandoned body might be found months later, skeletonized or partly mummified with blackened skin and a ghastly grin, or torn apart by wild animals.

Anderson’s staff of about 10 investigates each case, usually performing an autopsy, and works with the Mexican Consulate to find relatives back in Mexico.

The hardest cases go to Dr. Lori Baker in Waco for mitochondrial DNA testing. With funding from the Mexican government, she analyzes bone samples from 200 border-crossers a year and blood samples from 50 families in Mexico. The Mexican government uses a database to match the families with the bodies. Since 2005, more than 50 of Baker’s samples have been matched.

* * *

Faustino Francisco knew the long trip could end badly. That’s why he came along.

Eloy had come to him with the idea back home in Tehuacán, a city in the south-central Mexican state of Puebla.

Rosario, Eloy’s cousin, was planning to go to North Carolina to join his father working at a plant nursery.

Rosario had talked his dad, Maximino, into arranging the trip through the same coyote who had guided Maximino earlier that year.

Like his older cousin, Eloy had big dreams: to work at the landscaping company a couple of years, save his money and come back to Tehuacán with a car. A teenager with his own car: That would turn some heads in a neighborhood of unpaved streets and loose chickens.

No, Faustino told the boy.

“It’s too much risk for you,” he said.

Faustino had risked his own life before in crossing the border. In 1999, he crossed illegally near Tijuana en route to Oregon, where he worked harvesting cherries, strawberries and cucumbers.

The group had run out of water on that trip and suffered from dehydration, and that route wasn’t even desert like southern Arizona.

But Eloy wasn’t afraid.

“Look at my physical conditioning,” the boy told him. “I play soccer, I can run and jump. Nothing’s going to happen to me.”

The boy, normally polite and obedient, made his position clear: He was going, with or without his father’s permission. Faustino finally gave in.

“OK, I’m going to accompany you and see what kind of person is taking you,” Faustino said. He made the call to Maximino, his brother-in-law. Through Maximino’s boss, they arranged to pay the coyote $1,700 apiece for smuggling them into the United States.

They gathered at the bus station in downtown Tehuacán on May 13: Faustino, Eloy, Rosario, Faustino’s sister and his sister’s friend and two other Tehuacán men making the journey.

Rosario was so keyed up for the trip that he hardly touched the hearty breakfast his mother, Cecilia, prepared for him.

At the bus station, she pleaded with him once more. He was young, without responsibilities, and the family could make it without him sending money home from El Norte, she said.

“I said, ‘Don’t go, my son. Don’t go,’ ” she recalls. “He said, ‘Don’t cry, Mama. I’m happy. I’m going to work and earn money.’ ”

Scott Fagner graphic/Waco Tribune-Herald
On May 13, 2006, Faustino Francisco Galvan left his home in Tehuacán, Mexico, to accompany his son Eloy, nephew Rosario and sister Claraon a 1,260-mile journey to the United States, where the boys planned to get jobs. For Faustino, it ended a week later in the Sonoran Desert, southwest of Tucson, Ariz. (Note: Family's route from Mexico City to Altar is based on speculation).

Rosario hugged her and his sister and said goodbye.

He called her from the city of Puebla, then from Mexico City. A couple of days later, he called from Altar, Sonora, a northern Mexican town known as a staging area for border crossings.

Then the calls stopped. A week passed.

* * *

In Altar, the travelers were picked up by some men they assumed had arranged their trip. It turned out the men meant to take them hostage and rob them of their money. The travelers stalled, claiming they were still waiting on a check to arrive, and they managed to escape.

They then found Nicolas, the coyote they had hired to take them into the desert. They spent the night at a cheap hotel on the outskirts of town.

The coyote was a 35-year-old Mexican who talked of his home and a girlfriend in Merida, Yucatán. Faustino noticed he had a nervous manner and seemed to jump at every noise.

On May 16, the group traveled to the border town of Sasabe. That evening, they crossed into the Altar Valley of Arizona. They took the roughest terrain to avoid Border Patrol agents.

Night gave them cover. The Altar Valley is one of the darkest places in North America — Kitt Peak National Observatory is perched on an adjacent mountain range for that reason — and on this night, the moon didn’t rise until after midnight.

With only starlight to guide them, they moved carefully over broken rocks, avoiding the cholla cactus plants whose ferocious barbs lodge in socks and skin.

Each man and woman carried 2.6 gallons of water, a small container of rehydrating serum, a Coca-Cola, cans of food and a change of clothes.

Faustino had no idea how long the trip would take, and the coyote wouldn’t give a straight answer. Each day, he would tell them that they were only a few hours from their destination, the small town of Marana. A map would have shown them Marana was 70 miles north of the Mexican border as the crow flies — perhaps half again that far for a group traveling clandestinely over land, sometimes by moonlight, sometimes off-course.

Daybreak revealed the lay of the land: ravines cutting through long stretches of blond grassland, with the purple Baboquivari Mountains just to the west.

A severe landscape, but also beautiful, Faustino thought. It reminded him of his hometown of Nopala, in the arid hills west of Tehuacán.

The grass and brush hid surprises: Bobwhite quail taking wing, jackrabbits bounding on their spindly legs. He saw cows here and there, and mottes of ironwood and mesquite trees that made him daydream of being a lumberjack.

Several days into the journey north through the Arizona desert, the thirsty group stumbled through rocky, thorny terrain. At left is a cholla, whose thorns lodge in skin and socks.

The first two days, Eloy, Rosario and a young Guatemalan chatted and joked as they walked. They sang a song from a soft drink commercial:

“Da, da, da, quiero Pepsi, mama/Da, da, da, dame Pepsi, mama.”

“You can’t have a Pepsi out here,” one boy chided the others.

By the third day, thirst was nothing to laugh at.

Their water containers had run dry. The coyote led them to a cattle pond where he knew they could refill their bottles. But as they dipped their bottles in the pond, they saw trucks.

“La Migra!”

The group scattered, eluding the Border Patrol agents but leaving some water containers behind. Soon afterward, they saw an unmarked van, which Faustino suspected was full of narcotraffickers. Later, he learned it might have been a humanitarian group that was trying to save their lives.

Exhausted, Faustino took out his frustrations on the coyote, telling him he had failed the group. The coyote cursed him and threatened to leave him behind.

Over the protests of the coyote, who wanted to move on, some of the travelers stopped to open a barrel cactus. The cactus was covered with inch-long thorns, and it took great effort to break it open with sticks and cow bones. Faustino and others chewed on the bitter pulp, seeking its moisture. But he vomited. Later he would develop diarrhea — a dangerous loss of water for a dehydrated man.

A Border Patrol agent walks the hills north of the site where Faustino collapsed because of severe dehydration after four days in the southern Arizona desert.

* * *

By the fourth day, Faustino’s condition was in free-fall.

In the dry desert heat, a hiker can lose half a cup to a pint of fluids every hour. To avoid dehydration, you would need to pack five or six gallons of water — at least 50 pounds — for a three-day trip. The most anyone can practically carry is four gallons, immigrant advocates in Tucson say.

As dehydration becomes severe, the body goes into hypovolemic shock in which multiple organs fail, shutting down in stages like someone turning off the lights in a house.

The blood thickens. Water stored between tissues in the arms and legs is robbed for use in the vital organs. The eyes lose water and go blurry.

Then the gastrointestinal system shuts down, making it difficult to eat or drink.

“You can’t hold down water, and you just start puking anything you drink,” says Gerry Carrasco, a paramedic with the Border Patrol’s Border Search Trauma and Rescue team — BORSTAR for short — in southern Arizona.

The heart may begin to lose its rhythm as the body loses electrolytes such as sodium and potassium.

As the fluids become depleted, sweating stops and the body loses its ability to cool itself. Heatstroke sets in when the body temperature reaches 104 or 105 degrees. At 108 degrees, severe damage begins.

“At that point, the victim is unconscious, and it’s basically cooking brain cells,” Carrasco says.

For a diabetic like Faustino, the cascade of failure is accelerated. The stress of dehydration can hasten a diabetic episode, in which blood sugar can soar to dangerous levels. The body begins urinating and sweating to get rid of the sugar.

As the body shuts down, the mind may also begin to go.

“People go into seizures and start hallucinating,” Carrasco says. “I’ve found guys hugging saguaros. I’ve found people completely naked. I’ve had females try to fight me.”

* * *

Faustino awoke. The shadow of the saguaro had shifted and he was broiling in the sun. In his delirium, he envisioned himself back in Tehuacán. He heard the voices of his mother, his children and his wife, Constanza. He felt overwhelming grief and dread, and he pleaded for forgiveness for taking the boys on a journey into hell.

“Forgive me, my wife,” he said to Constanza’s ghost. “I have failed you.”

Faustino Francisco Galvan, shown at home in Tehuacán, Mexico, with his granddaughter, recounts a disastrous desert crossing into the U.S. with his son and nephew.

* * *

Faustino struggles as he tells this story more than a year later. A quiet, thin man, he sits on a bed under a bare light bulb, in a tiny house he shares in Tehuacán with his wife, his children and his toddler granddaughter. While the little girl plays and giggles, he continues, with a painful smile. He has never told this story in its entirety.

“The truth is that there were very difficult moments,” he says in Spanish. “It’s not something I want to remember. . . . It was something frightening and macabre. If that is what death feels like, that’s why people don’t want to die. What I have learned is that God helped me greatly. I owe my existence to God.”

* * *

Rest revived Faustino’s sister, Clara, on that torrid May day in 2006. She broke another barrel cactus and pulled out the bitter pulp to give to her brother and her friend. Around sundown, she gathered twigs and dead cactus and piled them high, intent on building a signal fire.

Faustino summoned his last bit of strength and dragged himself over the rocks to the brush pile, giving his sister his lighter. The twigs crackled and flames leapt into the night sky.

Three BORSTAR agents were flying the desert that night in a helicopter, looking for stranded border-crossers to rescue. At 9:40 p.m., passing over the edge of the Tohono O’Odham Indian Reservation a few miles north of the tiny village of San Pedro, they saw a flicker of orange on the desert floor.

Down on the ground, watching the lights of the helicopter, Clara’s friend, Elisa, cheered.

“Look, mamita,” she said. “We’re saved.”

Faustino wasn’t so sure. He had heard stories about La Migra, that they were killers, that they shot immigrants. Still, he sat up and threw more twigs on the fire. The three began waving their gallon water jugs to attract attention.

The helicopter wheeled and began to descend. With the blades above him whirring, an agent stepped out onto a hanging ladder and called: “Dónde están?” Where are you?

“Aqui,” they shouted. Here.

Rescue beacons like this one in the Altar Valley allow stranded migrants to call the Border Patrol. But they are scarce, and migrants often fear "La Migra."

The Border Patrol rescue team quickly saw the three were in a state of severe dehydration and that Faustino and Elisa needed medical attention. They administered IV fluids and called a helicopter ambulance. The ambulance couldn’t land because of the terrain of rocks, saguaro and greasewood, so the agents arranged ground transportation to take Faustino and Elisa to St. Mary’s Hospital in Tucson and Clara to Border Patrol headquarters to document her and send her home.

At the hospital, doctors found that Faustino’s blood sugar was 600, far exceeding the normal level of about 120. He lay in his hospital bed that weekend, recuperating and thinking about what had happened.

The Mexican Consulate in Tucson sent someone to the hospital to ask Faustino what happened.

Was there anyone else in your party who needed to be rescued?

No, he said.

He wouldn’t tell authorities that he had a son and a nephew who went on, would not ask about whether they made it to safety. It was the rule of the border: Don’t tattle. Don’t jeopardize the journey of others. Tell them you were crossing the desert alone.

On Monday, he called William, his brother-in-law’s boss in North Carolina. He told him of his ordeal in the desert and asked about the boys. No word yet, William said.

That same day, the Border Patrol loaded Faustino on a bus with other captured illegal immigrants and sent him to Nogales, just across the border. He would head to Altar, then back to Tehuacán, dejected and exhausted. He had failed, but the boys had gone on. They were still strong when he last saw them.

A few days and he would hear their excited voices, telling him of their new home in the United States.

Comments

By eric teitel

January 14, 2008 2:16 PM | Link to this

We can only hope that a regulated immgration policy will be instituted, whereby laws are ahered to. Without this we have chaos…Americans are tired of the chaos. Thousand of legal applicants are being turned away so that lawbreaking can be accomodated. Let’s play by the rules and put a stop to the inherited crime and draining of social services by allowing illegals to sneak in.

By ann

January 14, 2008 9:56 PM | Link to this

http://www.voiac.org/

By Mary

January 14, 2008 10:36 PM | Link to this

It is truly sad to see how these immigrants suffer. Anyone who does not somewhat understand both sides of the story is truly inhumane. Yes we need a better immigration policy and a system that truly works, because it is not only Americans that loose money and the such (immigrants do not qualify for social services, its our own people here in America responsible for that, but thats another topic) but these people loose their dreams, hope, loved ones, and most importantly their lives. All so that they can seek a better future and pursue the American dream. Both parties would benefit from a better policy.

By Ruben

January 14, 2008 10:46 PM | Link to this

All you liberal Money Hungry leaches Need to get a life !!We Do Need laws !! We do Not Need to pity your Cheap labor source

FYI We Did not Tell Anyone to Come Here illegal it was there Fault They Came here on there own !! They did not want there Country to succeed They are to Blame for Mexico’s poverty if they can come here and stat there own business why cant they help there own country ?

By Mary

January 14, 2008 11:15 PM | Link to this

You are correct: it is their fault for crossing into a country thats not theirs and the such. Their government is so corrupted that it would be useless to even try to build a successful business, but to each’s own. Everyone is entitled to their own opinions. But…shouldn’t you know how to spell the correct English language is you claim you are a true American? Be respectful of others, cause up to an extent I do share SOME of your views. And last, if people want to get rid of immigrants and their “cheap labor” stop complaining about the prices when you go out and buy your groceries or out to dinner, cause prices will only get higher once a employers stop hiring immigrants.

By Tom

January 15, 2008 12:44 AM | Link to this

Remember, these are human beings we’re talking about! Most of them trying to earn money to keep their families alive. It’s not their fault that their government is corrupt, and there is little they can do about it. Those workers do NOT have a legal way to come across and work! That’s our fault, not theirs! We need them, but we haven’t bothered to set up a workable system for them to register and come in to work. We used to have the “Bracero Program” for bringing in unskilled workers. Let’s pressure our law makers to get busy and solve this problem in a fair and reasonable way, and quickly! We’re just throwing money at the problem. Fences and walls are not the answer. And there’s a lot of false information coming from hate groups. All human beings are our brothers and sisters and they are dying out there in the desert because we can’t seem to figure out how to deal with this problem. Americans used to be known as the most generous and caring people in the world. Our ancestors came here to find a better life. How can we now be so cruel to those in need?

By Gary

January 15, 2008 8:49 AM | Link to this

Right now the (what once was) USA is going bankrupt. Each DAY our dollar falls a little more in value in the world market, so rather than continuing the impossible quest of trying to save all of the people on Earth, we had better start using our every resource to save our OWN country and it’s NATURAL BORN citizens!

It’s not that I don’t care. It’s that common sense dictates, when this country goes under, and it IS going under right now, we will be in the same situation as those who are coming here!

Keep in mind, those people who are coming here illegally are NOT coming here to contribute. They’re coming here to TAKE, and the fact is, unless SOMETHING changes our current path, in the near future there won’t be anything left TO take!

WAKE UP PEOPLE! The “United States of America” is NOT a wealthy country anymore. On the contrary, this United States of America is currently TRILLIONS of dollars in DEBT, and mounting!

No matter how you FEEL about it, illegal entry into this country is an INVASION, and it’s one part of what will eventually bring a total disaster! If you’re willing to give up YOUR LIFESTYLE along with everything you’ve been blessed with, then follow your ‘feel sorry for them’ all the way into destruction!

THAT is the TRUTH, no matter what your view might be! Take it or leave it!

By FEDUP

January 15, 2008 8:57 AM | Link to this

SICK-N-TIRED of the sob stories. They KNOW they are breaking OUR laws when they cross the border! Period. It is a FEDERAL CRIME to cross OUR borders anywhere other than legal points of entry. AND it is NOT the responsibility of the U.S. Taxpayer to foot the bill because things are ‘bad’ in their country. FIXIT.

I’m SICK of the biased media and all the ILLEGAL enablers/supporters. Mexico’s government has had about the same amount of time to create a better place to live for their citizens and CHOSE NOT to. While in a little over 200 years - the U.S. has gone from raw land to putting a man on the moon!!!!

Their country CHOSE to have “class division” (haves & have nots) now they have to live with the consequences.

By Irritated

January 15, 2008 9:41 AM | Link to this

Why is this even a debate? The law is the law. Im tired of hearing all these sob stories of people dying in the desert while sneaking into our country to further drain it of its resources. How is this different than feeling sorry for the person that got shot while robbing someone’s house? This isnt about feelings. This is about our country going down the tubes. You want good paying jobs? lower taxes? less crime? of course. So why let in all these poverty level people that will do nothing but bankrupt our society and suck the government dry until nothing remains for the Americans that need its services such as veterans and our elders. We spend enough money already on foreign aid trying to be humanitarian and nice. Bottom line is it needs to be shut down now to stop the bleeding. America first…everyone else a distant second.

By Irritated

January 15, 2008 9:43 AM | Link to this

What is this new crusade to feel sorry for criminals? The law is the law. Im tired of hearing all these sob stories of people dying in the desert while sneaking into our country to further drain it of its resources. How is this different than feeling sorry for the person that got shot while robbing someone’s house? This isnt about feelings. This is about our country going down the tubes. You want good paying jobs? lower taxes? less crime? of course. So why let in all these poverty level people that will do nothing but bankrupt our society and suck the government dry until nothing remains for the Americans that need its services such as veterans and our elders. We spend enough money already on foreign aid trying to be humanitarian and nice. Bottom line is it needs to be shut down now to stop the bleeding. America first…everyone else a distant second.

By FEDUP

January 15, 2008 9:50 AM | Link to this

I want all the ‘bleeding hearts’ out there (politicians/media/enablers/supporters) to HAVE TO FACE the families of “REAL VICTIMS” at the hands of ILLEGAL aliens.

Illegal aliens murder 12 Americans daily http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=53103

Illegal aliens & traffic accidents http://www.darksideofillegalimmigration.com/page9.html

Twelve serial sex offenders cross the U.S. border illegally daily http://www.abc15.com/news/local/story.aspx?content_id=5f26227e-9f17-4444-b1d1-d8d27c4e72f6

The Danger of Immigration from Violent Cultures Author: Deborah Schurman-Kauflin, Ph.D., heads the Violent Crimes Institute in Atlanta, GA. http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/index.php?id=1011612

The Dark Side of Illegal Immigration: Sex Crimes http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/homeland.php?id=1386104 Quote: Nearly One Million Sex Crimes Committed by Illegal Immigrants in the United States

By J. Cline

January 15, 2008 10:08 AM | Link to this

Poor, pitiful people… not. Every choice in life is a calculated risk. Normally, we don’t reward people for taking stupid gambles with their lives, even if it IS the equivalent of the Mexican Lotto.

I’d like to say that I really give a damn, but these people are not victims. They are deliberate in their actions and they know perfectly well what they are doing. I’d rather feel sorry for real victims — like the American worker whose labor is being underbid by illegals, for the honest employer who can’t compete with the guy who loads cheap laborers into his panel van at the local Manpower office every morning. Heck, let’s feel sorry for the folks like you and I, the middle class who always, ALWAYS foot the bill for some do-gooder’s idea of “social justice”.

I don’t care how many illegal immigrants die trying to get into this country. It’s only 1% of those who try, and clearly, that isn’t deterrent enough. We should be making it harder, not easier, unless we want to encourage the behavior.

Let the recession come, and let it be long and hard. That will sweep out the economic opportunists — of every stripe and class, elite and illegal — better than any law or fence ever could.

By Fuffy1

January 15, 2008 10:28 AM | Link to this

I can not belive that you people are that selffish and thoughtless. We are talking about someone loosing there loved one and you people are worried about money. These people that do come over her to work illegal are only trying to provide for there families and do s** jobs for little of no pay cause just put food on the table. The people who do live in this country that are allowed to live in the United States don’t want to do the s** jobs cause they think they are to good to do the job. If if was not for these people working concrete jobs, roofing jobs and other hard labor jobs the majority of these things would not be complete cause our Americans that are legal here don’t want to do the job. Why is it that we will not allow these people in the United States but we allow the Pakastains and the Chinese and Japanese in with no problem and take over our gas stations and our businesses and take our money away from us here in American. Why don’t they go back to there country and make there living and stop taken out money from us. But no, we want to give the Mexican’s a hard time to be part of this Country that are human just like us. It doesn’t make any sense. If you were in there shoes you would do anything to have better for your kids..

By Phillip

January 15, 2008 10:52 AM | Link to this

As a supposed “Christian Nation”, America would do well to actually read the words of Christian Scripture, actually consider the words and very life of their supposed savior, Jesus Christ, and realize that the single largest subject, outside of “God”, addressed by the totality of Chritian Scriture is “the poor”. How we treat the poor, the stranger, the widow and orphan, these will determine our true faith and the depth of our humanity. Many say “the law is the law” but fail to see how the benifited from, even endorsed, “immigrant labor” and thus violated the law they so sanctimoniously scream. The sins of our fore-fathers, the very sins of this country, are that this country was founded on genicide and slavery and no matter how many years have lapsed, our hands remain bloody and our faith flawed. As a country, we enticed immigrant labor for most of the 20th Century because we wanted cheap labor and goods. We effectively gave them no rights and created another generation of “slavery” for our own benefit. Now, with the political winds changing, we wave the hypocritical flag of “the law” and feel justified in criminalizing those seeking LIFE through work. We are not far from the Nazi Germany mind-set of re-catigorizing a group people to justify our inhumane attitudes and acts against them. The bankruptcy this country is facing is far deeper and far older than the current panic over the impact of immigrants. Whether the American Indian or as recent as the poor of New Orleans, the poor and powerless suffer under the greed and indiffernce of the powerful in this “Christian Nation”. And make no mistake, I am not talking about the 1% of hyper-rich or government officials when I say “the powerful”. WE have the power to choose to live in the love of God, in the image of Christ Jesus, or to live in the fear and hate that grows out of worshipping a flag, a boundry, the Dollar - worshipping self. God have mercy.

By Carl

January 15, 2008 11:22 AM | Link to this

I have the solution, it will save the lives of many illegal aliens as well as all the US citizens they rape and kill (and that’s a huge number) when they get here. Mine fields along the border, sure a few will have to die until they catch on but then it will be smooth sailing. In all seriousness people breaking the law and/or doing something stupid die everyday, those are the risks, that’s life, how about a little personal responsibility.

By Katy

January 15, 2008 11:24 AM | Link to this

Phillip is right on target. I find it admirable that immigrants are willing to work less than desirable jobs because they want to provide better for their families. However, pretending that we are doing any illegals any favors by hiring them for less than minimum wage under the guise of “them doing jobs Americans don’t want” is nothing but foolish and selfish. This is why we need a guest worker program: it would ensure that people get paid fairly for their work, it would prevent an imported slave class, and it would provide a legal way for immigrants to enter this country and benefit from its economy. AND a guest worker program would even the playing field and bring immigrants into the tax system just like the rest of us.

By FEDUP

January 15, 2008 11:46 AM | Link to this

Like I said:

I want all the ‘bleeding hearts’ out there (politicians/media/enablers/supporters) to HAVE TO FACE the families of “REAL VICTIMS” at the hands of ILLEGAL aliens.

Illegal aliens murder 12 Americans daily http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=53103

Illegal aliens & traffic accidents http://www.darksideofillegalimmigration.com/page9.html

Twelve serial sex offenders cross the U.S. border illegally daily http://www.abc15.com/news/local/story.aspx?content_id=5f26227e-9f17-4444-b1d1-d8d27c4e72f6

The Danger of Immigration from Violent Cultures Author: Deborah Schurman-Kauflin, Ph.D., heads the Violent Crimes Institute in Atlanta, GA. http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/index.php?id=1011612

The Dark Side of Illegal Immigration: Sex Crimes http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/homeland.php?id=1386104 Quote: Nearly One Million Sex Crimes Committed by Illegal Immigrants in the United States

By rogerg

January 15, 2008 11:50 AM | Link to this

Reality is; H1 visas for temp. work are now unlimited. If an employer requires workers to do a job in the U.S. he needs but to follow the guidelines and can get as many as needed for the alloted time required. Reality is; those little comic books filled with “how to cross the border” information are given to prisoners getting out of jail in Mexico. Reality is; There is no excuse for illegals to be helped in any way and is against federal law.

By john

January 15, 2008 12:15 PM | Link to this

great series, great writing. Mexico is a developing country and has made huge strides in economic development. Anyone who thinks Mexico is, by world standards, a poor country has never been to the Third World of Africa and Asia. Mexico still has too many people for the number of jobs in the modernized sector and these are the people who look to the north for relief thru hard work at hard jobs. The price, of course, is the risk of death in the Sonoran desert.

From our side, there are 300+million of us, few of us being interested in the jobs an illegal takes in a flash. Even fewer of us want our children to grow up to carrying bricks at a construction site or manicuring the lawns on an estate. Demonizing those who want such work is uncharitable. Blaming these folks for our crime problems is beside the point. Cheap political rhetoric that leads to no solutions.

Thanks for the great journalism.

By JEN

January 15, 2008 12:39 PM | Link to this

I THANK THAT IF I WERE NOT FOR ILLEGALS THAT USA WOULD NOT BE WHAT IS IS TODAY SO MANY PEOPLE ALWYAS PUT DOWN MEXICAN PEOPLE BUT THEY ARE NOT THE ONLY ILLEGAL PEOPLE IS USA NEXT TIME YOU GO OUT TO EAT AND YOU SAY OH THIS IS SO GOOD GO BEHIND IN THE KITCHEN AND SEE WHO IS COOKING FOR YOU ,LOOK AROUND YOU WHEN YOU ARE OUT AND ABOUGHT LOOK WHO PICKS UP THE SLACK WHEN THERE ARE JOBS OUT THERE THAT CITIZENS DO NOT WANT TO TAKE BECAUSE THEY DONT WANT TO GET DIRTY.THERE ALL KINDS IN THIS WORLD THERE ARE HARD WORKING PEOPLE OF ALL RACES AND THER ARE ALSO PEOPLE OF ALL RACES THAT DONT WANT TO WORK. BUT DONT TAKE IT OUT ON THE MEXICAN PEOPLE THEY COME HERE TO MAKE A BETTER LIFE FOR THERE FAMILYS THAT IS WHAT WE ALL TRY TO DO SOME OF THESE PEOLPE DO TRY TO GET PERMITTS BUT FOR ONE REASON OR THE OTHER THEY ARE ALWAS DENIED JUST LOOK AT IT THIS WAS YES SO GET MEDICAL CARE AND YES THER KIDS ARE IN SCHOOL BUT THESE ARE HARD WORKING PEOPLE DOING JOBS AMERICAN DO NOT WANT TO DO IN ALL RACES THERE ARE CHILD MOLESTER AND THER ARE PEOPLE THAT KILL,STILL, BUT THAT IS IN ALL RACES NOT JUST MEXICNANS

By LISA

January 15, 2008 1:01 PM | Link to this

MR SMITH AND LORI BAKER THANKS FOR THE ARTICAL ON IMMIGRATION I KNOW IT IS HARD WORK THAT YOU DO I KNOW THE FAMILYS ON THE PEOPLE THAT CROSS YOUR PATH ARE GRATEFULL FOR ALL YOUR HARD WORK BUT THERE ARE SO MANY CLOSED MINDED IGNERANT PEOPLE OUT THERE THAT DONT LIKE YOUR WORK BUT TUFF.GOD GAVE YOU’L A GIFT KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK AND I HOPE THAT MORE FAMILYS ARE BLESSED AND THAT YOU’L ARE ABLE TO HELP MORE FAMILYS FIND THERE LOVED ONES BECAUSE NOT KNOWING WHAT HAPPENED TO YOUR LOVED ONES IS THE BAD THING THANKS AGIAN FOR YOUR HARD WORK AND KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK NO MATTER WHAT.GOD BLESS YOU AND YOUR FAMILYS

By Debbie Smith

January 15, 2008 1:53 PM | Link to this

Most of our ancestors had problems getting into this country, but they did it legally. I have no problem with people coming into America, but why can’t they do it legally. Why can’t they become citizens who pay taxes like everyone else? They want what America has, but they don’t want to be Americans.

By JUAN

January 15, 2008 2:14 PM | Link to this

People are always complaining about the criminals that cross over, but fail to see the 90% good that comes from immigration. So many people are always telling the nation to buy American products, well the only reason anything American is affordable is because of the hard working immigrants who dont want outrageous fees to do manual labor. The U.S mus first look to its welfare system and quit letting Americans abuse it. If you cut off most of the welfare system and assisted living (or at least make people try to get a job), you will creat less demand for foreign work. THERE IS NO SUPPLY IN A NATION WITH NO DEMAND. I dont support an all out amnesty, but do strongly support legalizing immigrant families that have lived here for years and have obeyed laws and paid taxes! And to Mary who strongly wants people to correctly write and speak the English language, maybe she should take spelling and grammer lessons, before talking about Mexicans. Also to FEDUP and other radicals that dedicate your life to hating illegal aliens, with all due respect get a life.

By Amy

January 15, 2008 3:45 PM | Link to this

This is in response specifically to rogerg’s comments. I do not know where your information is coming from but it is incorrect. The reality today is that visas are strictly limited and neither H1B visas for temporary skilled workers (bachelor’s degree or higher) nor H2B visas for seasonal or temporary laborers (landscaping, restaurant work, etc.) are unlimited. There are 65,000 H1B visas available each year. Last year on the first day of filing, the immigration service received approximately 120,000 applications. Therefore more than half of the employers who applied were left out. H2B visas, which many companies rely on to operate, are also limited to 66,000 per year. 33,000 are available on October 1 and an additional 33,000 are available on April 1. We ran out of the April 1 visas in December. Thus, many employers will be unable to secure LEGAL temporary help this year. Every day employers are saying that they will be unable to operate their businesses without the labor that the seasonal and/or temporary workers provide. You don’t have to agree with people calling for positive immigration reform, but you should at least develop your opinions based on accurate facts and with a firm grounding in reality. Our immigration system is broken - we need workers and people from Latin America need jobs. Our focus needs to be on finding ways to accomplish both goals and the system we have now isn’t it. Until we come up with something better, this will keep happening and if we are the country of human and civil rights we hold ourselves out to be, we cannot continue to allow people to die who are coming to this country to perform labor we badly need.

By FEDUP

January 15, 2008 4:56 PM | Link to this

Juan, et al

Take off the rose colored glasses. I was pointing out that many only see the ‘feel good’ stories the media and others portray.

The truth is - that more Americans have been killed at the hands of ILLEGAL aliens since 9/11 than have been killed in the war in Iraq.

  • ILLEGAL aliens murder 12 people EVERY DAY or 4,380 every year. 21,900 since 9/11..

  • ILLEGAL aliens who are driving under the influence kill 13 people EVERY DAY or 4,745 per year. 23,725 since 9/11.

  • ILLEGAL aliens molest 8 children EVERY DAY. That’s 2,920 every year.

http://www.victimsofillegalaliens.org/

http://www.immigrationshumancost.org/text/crimevictims.html

All of these crimes should have NEVER happened. They were preventable. ILLEGAL immigration is NOT a victimless crime.

As I said - I want each supporter/enabler to HAVE TO FACE the families of these victims and tell them….but they only want a better life.

By David L. Porowski

January 15, 2008 7:25 PM | Link to this

I don’t mean to sound like particularly cold-blooded, but I could really give a rat’s backside how many thousands of illegal aliens are put in mortal risk in their failed attempt to invade the sovereign territory of the USA. They should be considered as much a plague as the Biblical plague of locusts that struck ancient Egypt.

This country is/used to be a country of laws, of legal juriprudence. Foreigners seeking to emigrate to the USA passed through Ellis Island. They were screened for contagious diseases. They provided evidence that some individual, family, social organization, or employer backed them financially, in order to assure that they would not be a burden to society.

Long before Ellis Island, this country had specific quotas by nationality, if only to balance the needs between potential employers (like the railroads) and their larger impact upon society. The Mid-West and the West were both mostly empty back then, and there was a notion called “Manifest Destiny” to fulfill.

Today we have major employers, financial institutions, politicians, and organizations of illegal aliens themselves ( La Raz, Mexicans Without Borders, etcetera ) which our Federal government has deemed eligible for tax-exempt status ( Why? ) which all demand equal rights with citizens, and without the social and financial guarantees that were required during the Ellis Island era.

Illegal aliens are not (and never have been) revenue-neutral. They are a burden to public health, to social services, to health care, to unfunded primary education — but not a burden to the employers who illegal hire them. The social safety net that these illegal aliens use is essentially a free-bee that the employers benefit from, not unlike some new bit of corporate welfare. The over-taxed Middle Class and Poor in this country are effectively financing the destruction of their own economic well-being. Any politician, political pundit, or religious icon that publically equates the civil rights movement of the 1950’s and 1960’s to the current struggle of the “oppressed undocumented immigrant” has (I guarantee it) some other vested interest hidden in their “agenda”.

This country needs to preserve it’s sovereign boundaries, even if it means building a wall all along both southern and northern borders. There needs to be a concerted effort by both state and federal governments to enforce current laws against illegal aliens, the employers that hire them, and those others who aid and abet these crimes. Document fraud is a felony, identity theft is a felony, smuggling (aliens/drugs/weapons) is a felony, driving without a valid license is a crime, as is driving without insurance. Any illegal alien who has been deported and re-enters the USA has committed a felony worth 10 years. Persons who engage in the manufacture of illicit documents, as well those who use them can both be charged under RICO statutes. Employers who hire illegal aliens are also subject to RICO prosecution. The RICO statutes call not only for prison time for “maintaining a continuing criminal enterprise”, but also subject the convicted “up to the total value of assets attained in said crime”.

It looks to me like just enforcing our current laws to the fullest extent would not only cause so level of mass exodous if illegal aliens, but would also provide the funds (siezed under RICO) and the prison labor needed to construct those border walls relatively cheaply. What is really needed is the public outcry against our current crop of politicians that want amnesty and citizenship for all including the (estimated 885,000 violent street gang members) MS-13. Amnesty is insane. Two other amnesties have been tried, in the 1970’s and the 1980’s — without the enforcement part of those financed and implimented, it has been little but a “green light” for an even greater invasion of illegal aliens.

By David L. Porowski

January 15, 2008 7:27 PM | Link to this

I don’t mean to sound like particularly cold-blooded, but I could really give a rat’s backside how many thousands of illegal aliens are put in mortal risk in their failed attempt to invade the sovereign territory of the USA. They should be considered as much a plague as the Biblical plague of locusts that struck ancient Egypt.

This country is/used to be a country of laws, of legal juriprudence. Foreigners seeking to emigrate to the USA passed through Ellis Island. They were screened for contagious diseases. They provided evidence that some individual, family, social organization, or employer backed them financially, in order to assure that they would not be a burden to society.

Long before Ellis Island, this country had specific quotas by nationality, if only to balance the needs between potential employers (like the railroads) and their larger impact upon society. The Mid-West and the West were both mostly empty back then, and there was a notion called “Manifest Destiny” to fulfill.

Today we have major employers, financial institutions, politicians, and organizations of illegal aliens themselves ( La Raz, Mexicans Without Borders, etcetera ) which our Federal government has deemed eligible for tax-exempt status ( Why? ) which all demand equal rights with citizens, and without the social and financial guarantees that were required during the Ellis Island era.

Illegal aliens are not (and never have been) revenue-neutral. They are a burden to public health, to social services, to health care, to unfunded primary education — but not a burden to the employers who illegal hire them. The social safety net that these illegal aliens use is essentially a free-bee that the employers benefit from, not unlike some new bit of corporate welfare. The over-taxed Middle Class and Poor in this country are effectively financing the destruction of their own economic well-being. Any politician, political pundit, or religious icon that publically equates the civil rights movement of the 1950’s and 1960’s to the current struggle of the “oppressed undocumented immigrant” has (I guarantee it) some other vested interest hidden in their “agenda”.

This country needs to preserve it’s sovereign boundaries, even if it means building a wall all along both southern and northern borders. There needs to be a concerted effort by both state and federal governments to enforce current laws against illegal aliens, the employers that hire them, and those others who aid and abet these crimes. Document fraud is a felony, identity theft is a felony, smuggling (aliens/drugs/weapons) is a felony, driving without a valid license is a crime, as is driving without insurance. Any illegal alien who has been deported and re-enters the USA has committed a felony worth 10 years. Persons who engage in the manufacture of illicit documents, as well those who use them can both be charged under RICO statutes. Employers who hire illegal aliens are also subject to RICO prosecution. The RICO statutes call not only for prison time for “maintaining a continuing criminal enterprise”, but also subject the convicted “up to the total value of assets attained in said crime”.

It looks to me like just enforcing our current laws to the fullest extent would not only cause some level of mass exodous if illegal aliens, but would also provide the funds (siezed under RICO) and the prison labor needed to construct those border walls relatively cheaply. What is really needed is the public outcry against our current crop of politicians that want amnesty and citizenship for all including the (estimated 885,000 violent street gang members) MS-13. Amnesty is insane. Two other amnesties have been tried, in the 1970’s and the 1980’s — without the enforcement part of those financed and implimented, it has been little but a “green light” for an even greater invasion of illegal aliens.

By Carlos Martinez

January 15, 2008 7:56 PM | Link to this

There are serious problems that must be handled. The changes will not be made by running from them. The indocumentados are ++NEEDED++ in Mexico to make the change not by selfishly running away. Historically Mexico has a revolution every 100 years with the next one in 2010. Might not happen because the very people needed are in the US. It is more important to make the changes in our own country than to wash the gringos dishes.

By DON JUAN

January 15, 2008 8:29 PM | Link to this

TO THAT SORRY ** FEDUP, YOU THINK THAT ITS JUST ILLEGALS THAT DO ALL THOSE CRIMES HUH??? BOY I DONT KNOW WHAT YOU BEEN SMOKING MAN. I CAN REALLY TELL THAT YOU ARE SMART MAN.

By RoGeR (NoRtH WaCo)

January 15, 2008 10:25 PM | Link to this

First off, I would like to thank the ones who set this series up and for all the hard work ya’ll put forth towards it. I have really enjoyed reading it, as well my family and friends. I have seen lots of bogus comments that really make no sense.. people are so closed minded and confused about the whole immigration issue. Like a few have said, the Mexicanos are not the only illegals here in the country.. there are several types of people from hundreds of countries but we are stereo-typing the Mexican people that come over here just to look for a better life. They are only trying to escape poverty… Put yourself in that position, being born in a country of poverty, it is only natural to want the best for your family, your children, and your parents. And I’ve seen a few say “If people want what the Americans have, they should become legal”.. well if they COULD become legal, then they probably would. At this moment, there are so many people from SEVERAL countries that are applying for citizenship but it is not being granted. That is the main reason that people are coming over illegally.. we cannot put that blame on a certain race/ethnicity/origin and so on! Americans need to get over their full blown pride and wake up and realize we are all very grateful for what we have, and we take everything we have here for granted. We are so closed minded, and there is so much prejudice, racial issues, and stereo-typing. Being that we are a country founded on the belief of God, I don’t think it is right what we Americans are doing. We should stand up for what is right, but also we need to think before we speak. We should all be treated fairly and like human beings, NOT animals!! We are all created equal and we all want the best for ourselves! Let’s not act foolish on this wacotrib website.. let’s act like adults and speak wisely, not crazy. God bless!

By Vicki

January 16, 2008 8:55 AM | Link to this

America was founded on the idea of immigration, yes, the only true “Americans” are the native americans. Most of Americans now can trace their family origins from overseas, so you see I am not against immigration. However I believe that one must enter this country legally. Apply for visas, green cards, etc then enter when granted, that way people wont have to end up like these poor unfornutate souls. God give them rest!

By ELIZABETH

January 16, 2008 10:22 AM | Link to this

FIRST OF ALL, I AM AN AMRERICAN CITZ. IF YOU HAVE NOT GONE THROUGH, WHAT THESE FAMILIES HAVE GONE THROUGH-COMING THROUG WATERS THAT ON THE WAY THER’S JUST PRAYER THAT ITS NOT A DEEP SPOT WHERE LIFE WILL BE LOST, OR WALKING FOR DAYS AND NIGHTS HOPING YOUR BODY WILL MAKE IT, OR SIMPLY THAT YOUR SHOES WILL SUPPORT THE LONG WALK AND PREASURE PUT ON THEM, AND GUES WHAT THE WHOLE TIME YOUR WALKING ALL YOU HAVE IN YOUR MIND IS THAT DREAM, THAT AMERICAN DREAM OF KNOWING YOU WILL @ LEAST HAVE A MEAL FOR YOUR CHILDREN. SO ITS EASY FOR YOU TO SAY “WHY DONT THEY JUST BECOME LEGAL”,BUT YOU DONT KNOW WHAT ITS LIKE TO TRY AND BECOME LEGAL- BELIVE IT OR NOT YOU CASE CAN BE OPEN FOR UP TO 15 YEARS BEFORE YOU GET THAT FIRST APPT WITH INS OFFICE.SO DONT SAY “WHY CANT THEY JUST BECOME LEGAL IF YOU DONT KNOW HOW THE SYSTEM WORKS…..THANK YOU MR SMITH AND LORI BAKER FOR WHAT YOURE DOING, I MEAN IT WITH ALL MY HEART.BECAUSE OF PEOPLE LIKE YALL ONE DAY IMMIGRANTS WILL BE TREATED LIKE HUMAN BEINGS THAT THEY ARE.”EDUP” BEFORE YOU THROW ALL THESE STATISTICS OUT LEARN THEM FIRST DONT JUST MAKE UP #S……THANKS……..

By ELIZABETH

January 16, 2008 10:30 AM | Link to this

“FED UP”, BEFORE YOU JUST THROW #S OUT, GO GET THE REAL STATISTICS, BECAUSE THOSE ARE INCORRECT!

By Don

January 16, 2008 11:41 AM | Link to this

What part of ILLEGAL don’t you people understand! These people are invaders. They abuse our health care system, our schools, deflate our wages, etc. ALL of them need to be shipped back now!! They take jobs away from Americans and claim it is jobs no one wants to do, B.S.!!! I have no sympathy for ANYONE who sneaks in. All of them need to be shot as tresspassers and invaders.

By frankie

January 16, 2008 11:52 AM | Link to this

I understand what they go through… over there in Mexico there are no jobs and no life over there! There are no oppurtunities, I bet anyone born and raised here couldn’t last with a job over there for at least two weeks!!! No one knows how hard it is over there, only people with families that are over there do. So before anyone puts people down get facts straight and learn hw difficult it is down there!!!!!!!

By Luis

January 16, 2008 12:05 PM | Link to this

This message goes to everyone who thinks illegal immigrants are taking your jobs. If you really want to kick us out start to work hard. You people think the jobs with offices are the best ones and you can’t live with out one, but guess what we don’t care what kind of jobs they offer us if we get paid we do the job. You people think it will kill you to wofk outside in the sun. If ya’ll won’t do them jobs, then WHY ARE YA’LL COMPLAINING. This really makes me mad. No Offense to anybody, White people, first they treat the Black people wrong, now they try to kick the Mexicans out of the United states. Aint this the home of the FREE and the home of the brave. well not to me it aint. keep this world alive, and don’t try to cause no more wars with no one. LET US BE. PLAESE!!!!

By Klau

January 16, 2008 12:43 PM | Link to this

For those of you that think that “illegal” immigrants are just coming to the US to make trouble, to invade…think again. I’m a Mexican-American, proudly born in Mexico, but a U.S. citizen by naturalization. My parents brought me illegaly to this country at the age of five. My mother managed to cross the river carrying me. Now, almost twenty years later, I have a college degree from Baylor, and I’m about to start law school. Before you people start talking crap about Mexicans and how they should all be thrown back, why don’t you try to survive on $5 per day or less? That’s barely enough to buy a coffee at starbucks! It’s not about laws to them, it’s all about survival. Do y’all honestly think people want to leave their loved ones, their home, their country? Come on! They do it because they have to. All immigrants, regardless of country of origin, come to this country to work hard and make a better living for themselves and those around them. I have been blessed to have fulfilled the American dream, but it’s just so sad to see that there are so many ignorant people out there. Remember this… there will never be a river too deep, a desert too hot or a wall too high…illegal immigration will always exist, so you might as well get used to it. Oh, and if you’re scared of the “invasion” maybe it’s because you know someone better than you will be taking over…or has taken over (in my case)!

By rhonda

January 16, 2008 2:04 PM | Link to this

well i would just like to say that this country was taken from the indian so the fore fathers of the so called “americans” dont belong here either this land was stolen right from under neath them.Secound, these people dont want to be here they rather be with there famlies in mexico but in order to survive and feed there families they have to put there lives in danger for 6 or 7 dollar job,that an american wont do. Third they didnt take american jobs, if you are an american you had a longer oppertunity to find a job then them,but sociaity rather stay at home and collect walfare.who cleans your homes, cooks food in restruants,fixes your roof,cleans yards,builds new homes, construction work,and works in the filds,think about that!!

By Al

January 16, 2008 4:21 PM | Link to this

I don’t think that coming to this country illegally is that big of a crime. At most it should be a misdemeanor. These people are coming to this country like many others to improve their lives by earning money. If we don’t want them coming here to the United States then we should eliminate the ability to obtain the jobs that bring them here. How is it that I can fear a person that does not speak read or write English? If he can take my job away from me then it is my fault that I do not have enough education to compete with this type of individual. I believe that it is the persons that have not taken advantage of the educational system that are doing the most complaining. If you are not happy with the education that you have received in this country then you should hold the education system in your district accountable for the product it produced and not take it out on someone that should not be able to compete for your job.

By Jenny

January 16, 2008 5:16 PM | Link to this

Amazing that so much is made of how helpful this technology can be and at the same time we’re treated to the hearts and violins about what anyone knows will happen when you attempt to cross the desert to enter the US illegally. I wish that the media would spend some time writing so passionately on the tragedies that impact American citizens lives each and every day. A friend of mine lost her husband because they couldn’t afford health insurance and being citizens there was no lobby demanding that the state provide medicaid to them. He was ill, and cancer didn’t get diagnosed until it was too late. He died three weeks after being diagnosed. He left a widow and three small children. They aren’t alone either. American citizens who are black, brown and white are suffering because they have been discriminated against in the workplace, because they are American citizens and legally entitled to wage standards They face homelessness and hunger, but the media ignores that. Just as the media has ignored what has happened to the poor who were tossed aside after Katrina, they too were replaced by illegals so wages could be gutted.

I do not care about illegal aliens any longer. They have brought this on themselves. Our ancestors fought to get higher wages and more opportunities, those in other countries have the same ability to protest and demand better wages. Others in their country have said as much. Instead illegals want to come here to take jobs away from American citizens. It is to me no surprise tha the countries south of the border are corrupt cesspools, because those people do not care about working for something bigger than themselves, they are selfish and hate filled human beings.

By Jenny

January 16, 2008 5:37 PM | Link to this

To Rhonda,

Your ancestors, the Spanish were the ones who sailed to the lands that are now called Mexico, Central and South America and committed genocide against the Aztec, Incan and Mayan peoples, and those few that remained were enslaved, and their resources stolen. If you want to talk about going back to where ancestors come from, you are free to purchase a plane ticket and head back home to Spain. Your ancestors attempted to commit genocide here with the native peoples when you first started your cross border treks. I am a Native American and my people do NOT appreciate your exploitation of our history. You can attempt revisionism all you like, it doesn’t wash.

You are right that we don’t want you here, nor do American citizens of African, Hispanic and many other heritage. Have you ever heard of You Don’t Speak For Me? It’s an organization comprised of American citizens of Hispanic origin who are as fed up and angry about illegal aliens destroying our economy, undercutting their and their children’s jobs, education health care systems. I live in an urban area, filled with working poor and struggling middle class American citizens of all races and ethnic origins and they are all angry and swearing to vote out any and all politicians who support amnesty or open borders. You have no idea how angry the majority of the American people are and how united we all are against illegals and their lobbies. You can sneer all you like, but we are the ones who will have the last laugh. We all report businesses who we see having illegal employees. We take down info and share the information and mass call ICE and other governmental agencies. I have a friend who works in a hospital who takes down information on illegals who are illegally benefiting from medicaid and she reports them. We are always networking and encouraging others to get involved and we shall overcome.

By GREG

January 16, 2008 5:37 PM | Link to this

This has nothing to do the desire of illegals. It does, however have to do with what the majority of people in OUR country want…and end to illegals dictating what we can and cannot do in again, OUR country, not Mexico’s…and please for God’s sakes, wake up and quit saying the the only “true” Americans are “native Americans”…True Americans are those people who are here LEGALLY…and there have been many generations of Americans who built this country…but the main theme was they were Legal! The Americans who built this country…and they include damn near all races are the ones entitled to decide who does what in American…not the Democrats, La Racist (Raza..please the “white” version is called the KKK, (who only want illegals for more voters), not the Republicans (who only want cheap labor at the expense of Americans). No, Americans will decide, not Mexico (why don’t they use their immense wealth to take care of their own people…oh, that’s right, they have a cast system that completley disregards you if you don’t have a family name)…no, I want them out, and I’m not a racist…we all know the race card comes out when there is no true, good argument left to argue…that said, once you get out of college and grow up a bit, you will understand that the world in not an “ideal” place, but rather more practical.

By Jenny

January 16, 2008 5:49 PM | Link to this

Luis,

As a Native American who knows history, I’ll educate you on a fact your revisionist history lessons might not have informed you of. Spain, the country of your ancestors created the big slave trade. They picked it up from the Arabs, and decided to make a big business of it. Spain created the trans-Atlantic slave trade, and centuries before the English came to these shores, your ancestors had committed genocide against the native peoples of what is now called Latin America, and had started bringing over African slaves to do the work. To this day, your people are racist against blacks, and are racist against the few remaining indigenous peoples. It’s well documented, look at the racist stereotypes that are still shown in Mexico. President Fox disrespected Americans of African heritage and then made a bunch of excuses (not one of them were believed) because he realized he had shown his racism.

Your people could get higher wages in your own country if you were too lazy to work for them. Also, while wages are lower south of the border, so are prices. There are no starving illegals from south of the border, you see no pictures of malnourished Hispanics crossing over. This is about stealing jobs with lower wages and then demanding welfare to make up the difference so you can buy cars and houses and other luxuries.

We will pass laws, one state, one city at a time, we will punish, fine and imprison employers of illegals. We will cut off tax dollars going to sanctuary cities and states (do you hear me, California?) we will cut off access to everything, and we will deport all those who do not leave voluntarily, confiscating any property to pay for the deportations and other costs.

Have a laugh, go ahead, I don’t mind. :)

By Just Me

January 16, 2008 7:34 PM | Link to this

I see comments such as those by Luis and Klau, and it seems that you do not understand the big problem here. These illegals are just that, illegal, criminals when they break the law, and if one will do that to make his life better, then what is the differnce between him and the person who robs a convenience store to provide for his family? None, in my books. There are legal ways to come here, as proven by thousands of immigrants over the years. They had to go through the same process, same hardships, so what would make you better than those peoples? Why would we want to grant amnesty to the illegals that are here now, and not grant that amnesty and offer the jobs to the American citizens that are incarcerated United States prisons and jails some for committing crimes to try to provide for their families? And for Greg, it was the majority of Democrats voting for amnesty so that they could keep the cheap labor.

By clint b

January 16, 2008 9:53 PM | Link to this

Immigration has been a problem of the US for far too long with little or no progress being made to rectify it. Our social security benefits are at risk, for one thing. People who are LEAGAL citizens that work their whole life, paying into this fund may not receive these benefits when they become of age, I say again may not even receive them. And why???? because our government lets it happen. I say enough is enough, cut off any and all assistance to a plague on our nation. No more jobs, no more money, and for cryin out loud, no more freakin watering stations in the desert to help them. What is wrong with people. Yes, our nation was founded on immigration, but there is such a thing as over population. It is a drain on our economy as a whole, and I dare anyone to prove me wrong!

By Really FED UP

January 16, 2008 10:20 PM | Link to this

I’m really fed up with “FEDUP”!. He needs to get his facts right. I’m not saying that Illegals don’t committ horrible crimes, but so do NATURAL BORN CITIZENS or their crimes don’t count?. Was Timothy Mcveigh an Illegal?. Can you research that for me FEDUP?. What about the guys that dragged an African-American man to his death,a few years ago (for no reason) in a small TEXAS town?. I’m wondering if those guys were Illegals too. Oh and the Mother in Houston who killed her five childrena by drowning them, she MUST of being a darn illegal too huh?. A NATURAL BORN CITIZEN WOULD OF NEVER DONE it huh?. Darn illegals shame on you for being hardworking, and trying to provide a better life for your family!. A crime is a crime regarless of status. Everyone should be treated the same when it comes to crimes. Fedup look around and see who lives in HOUSING, NOT ILLEGALS. Want me to draw a picture or do you get my point?. Oh and in case you are wondering, I’m not ILLEGAL, I’m just like you only with a human heart. “KLAU” I’m proud of you for proving narrow minded people like FEDUP that not all illegals are criminals.

By david

January 17, 2008 12:18 AM | Link to this

for the people that think there social security is at risk, think about this. all the illegals pay in to social security under false numbers, so the ssa has no way to apply payments to there accounts. this means that 15.3% of there gross wages are surplus funds. they also can’t file tax returns so any money they pay in is not claimed as tax overpayment. so the overall picture is they are paying there own way. and they are willing to do the jobs that our spoiled youth won’t. do you want to mow the side of the roads?

By ovi

January 17, 2008 2:22 AM | Link to this

Hearing from people how they don’t care, makes me angry and I wanted to start throwing arguments at those idiiots, but instead I will try to calm down and say it in a different way:

I wish all you racist a***** would trade life with one of the “illegal” alien’s life. I wish you would be so desperate that you would have to walk thousands of miles without water. I wish you suffered as much as these people do. What I don’t wish is that you die. Death is probably only a releaf for these people and sadly to say, they DO NOT deserve it.

But guess who deserves it? Yes, you! You racist little bastard, born in wealth and boohooing about your job and life, when you should be gracefull of what you have.

There is no place for justice anymore, and too bad you can’t choke on your own words.. I’d wish for it!

By ovi

January 17, 2008 2:23 AM | Link to this

Hearing from people how they don’t care, makes me angry and I wanted to start throwing arguments at those idiiots, but instead I will try to calm down and say it in a different way:

I wish all you racist a***** would trade life with one of the “illegal” alien’s life. I wish you would be so desperate that you would have to walk thousands of miles without water. I wish you suffered as much as these people do. What I don’t wish is that you die. Death is probably only a releaf for these people and sadly to say, they DO NOT deserve it.

But guess who deserves it? Yes, you! You racist little bastard, born in wealth and boohooing about your job and life, when you should be gracefull of what you have.

There is no place for justice anymore, and too bad you can’t choke on your own words.. I’d wish for it!

By ovi

January 17, 2008 2:24 AM | Link to this

Hearing from people how they don’t care, makes me angry and I wanted to start throwing arguments at those idiiots, but instead I will try to calm down and say it in a different way:

I wish all you racist a***** would trade life with one of the “illegal” alien’s life. I wish you would be so desperate that you would have to walk thousands of miles without water. I wish you suffered as much as these people do. What I don’t wish is that you die. Death is probably only a releaf for these people and sadly to say, they DO NOT deserve it.

But guess who deserves it? Yes, you! You racist little bastard, born in wealth and boohooing about your job and life, when you should be gracefull of what you have.

There is no place for justice anymore, and too bad you can’t choke on your own words.. I’d wish for it!

By Cornelio III

January 17, 2008 12:25 PM | Link to this

To Jenny, first of all you need to know that Not everyone from Mexico is PURE SPANISH OR FROM SPAIN, plain and simple. And you also need to know that there is no Dwindling indigenous population in Mexico. They are denied their identity most of the times.
Also the black slaves were brought over by the Spanish because they did not care about the native population and the many many deaths that were happening to them in the mines. They brought over the black slaves and treated them better and were valued more. They did not care if the Native slaves died, but they did care if the black slaves died. Just a little history lesson.

Also you say you are American Indian, well then if you are then we are brothers and sisters, but you do not see it that way. You must be far detached from your traditions and elders. You seem to forget about those Nations that are on the border itself, on both sides. What they should just ** off and die? You do know that there are more Nations in Mexico besides The Aztec and Maya, right? ANd you want to talk about the Spanish genocide, well you do know it was a common practice with ALL EUROPEAN COUNTRIES AND THEIR DESCENDANTS. The U.S itself has done many many acts of genocide, hell even up to at the very least 1960’s. SO maybe you really need to look at the US’s history more.

David is right on, on what he says about the UNDOCUMENTED giving money into the economy and sending what they take home in hand back home to Mexico to their families. WHat do you care what they do with it? DO people complain when someone just waste money on needless things as in cars, tv’s, radios, electronics, clothes, ect? Probably f*** not because those people earned their money, just like the Undocumented.

And to the person who wanted to bring up Undocumented taking jobs from the Katrina tragedy, you are really ignorant. You think the jobs were offered to the Undocumented first? Come on, those people were to lazy to actually go back and build. Guess what will happen to the undocumented when all the cleaning and fixing up is done? The undocumented will m move on or get kicked out.

This was a great piece b y J.B, i commend him for actually thinking about the people. I commend him for looking further into the stories, to the problems.

Alot of yall just sound and seem **en heartless.

By ANNIE

January 18, 2008 4:18 AM | Link to this

THIS IS TO J.B. SMITH, I THINK YOUR SERIES WAS GREAT, WELL WORTH READING, REALLY MAKES ONE SEE OTHER SIDES TO THE STORY…I APPLAUD YOU!!

By ANNIE

January 18, 2008 4:18 AM | Link to this

THIS IS TO J.B. SMITH, I THINK YOUR SERIES WAS GREAT, WELL WORTH READING, REALLY MAKES ONE SEE OTHER SIDES TO THE STORY…I APPLAUD YOU!!

By Why?

January 18, 2008 12:28 PM | Link to