Originally posted by Agent_USA_Supporter
reply to post by centurion1211
Mexico's unemployment rate is now 4.9 percent,
Really a 4.9? why if thats true why are there so many poor and homeless in Mexico? you see thats why i dont believe in those crab unemployment
rate numbers.
It depends a lot on how one defines "unemployed" and
who is expected to be employed. "Partially employed" really is not like being "a
little bit pregnant", especially not in the US.
Poor and homeless in Mexico?? Definition, please. I don't really believe Mexico has a "homeless" problem. Their family system is very
generationally inclusive and a family takes care of its own, almost everyone has a "home" they can go to. Almost any family group can obtain a home,
either to rent, buy, or build one. A home is very accesible to almost anyone.
What is poor? Starving? Obesity and diabetes are health problems in Mexico, most people are eating. There is poverty everywhere and the US is not
exempt from it either, on their reservations or up in the backwoods there are people living outside the formal economic standard, off the grid, out of
the matrix so to speak. Living that way is much more discouraged in the US than many places. "For the children" the government meddles to make sure
the children are educated, vaccinated, and that no person is emancipated from the system. Mexico is less stringent in that regard so has a number of
people living in little ranchos and pueblos, far from the system that makes them other than "poor".
Poor is...? Lacking "necessities"? How many of ATS survivalists here are going to say to just give them a hunting knife, a Bic lighter, and a ball
of twine and by the end of the week they'll have camp set-up to rival Club Med? Many would be happy to live like that if there was a place they could
do so, especially with nice weather. Welcome to Mexico. The survivalists here have developed it into an art, called living. There is property here,
much of it, that is accesible to natural-born Mexicans for an affordable price almost any of them can buy.
Running water? The water system is very different here. I receive fresh water pumped to my house by the city water system about 2 or 3 times a week
for several hours. It tops-off my
aljibe (underground storage tank, cistern, which holds more than a month's supply of water for me) which has
a float valve that cuts-off the water when full. I have a
tinaco (tank) on my roof with a pump to fill it (electric float sensor to trigger the
pump). This provides me water pressure for my shower, kitchen, and bathroom needs - works just like your home and most city dwellers have a similar
system. Others prefer having a
pila (above-ground large pool of fresh water)
and use
cubetas (buckets) to fill their sinks, flush the toilet, etc. They have like a shower stall (the pila generally has coves that service
the kitchen and bath) and use their cubetas to rinse, scrub down, and rinse-off - ice-cold water! One friend of mine always removes the shower-head in
a place without pilas so he can fill his cubeta easier. There are well-developed practices around the pila to not contaminate the water, plus the pila
is emptied, scrubbed-down, and refilled periodically. No running water. It is not poverty, however.
When the Mexican government offers something free it is up to the people to go, stand in line, and take advantage of the offering. Getting those thing
are considered the right thing to do and you are foolish or lazy to not go take advantage of what is being given out. That same cultural value is
carried over when they enter American society, they wouldn't get it if they were not qualified to receive it. If that statement is not true then it
is not their fault for receiving the goods. Complain to your congressman or city hall.
Mexican workers are needed in the US. At least seasonally they are a necessity to harvest or do seasonal work. There just are not American workers
that are willing or able to do those things. Just try to do without them if you don't believe this. There used to be programs for importing seasonal
workers. After a number of seasons these workers earned their Social Security benefits (money was taken from them to make them eligible) and many
retired in Mexico while others that could stay employed year-around made the US their home. Some time along the way it was thought better, with a lot
of citizen rabble-rousing, to leave these people out of the system and permit them to work "illegally" and welcomed to accept that standard. Read
earlier post in this thread -
www.abovetopsecret.com...
Anyway, you guys don't like them illegal immigrants and there is becoming less and less reason for them to go there. You're getting your wish,
patience. Quit promising government handouts and more money then many had ever seen in their lives. But word is out on the streets that the US is not
really an easy life, all milk and honey days. Most do not want to go there but the mystique exists for the young growing up on the ranchos that never
had a taste of living big. I'm trying to help the cause though, I'm telling them the truth about life in the USofA.