Author: Staff

Espionaje de última generación

La pregunta que flota en el ambiente es: ¿por qué espía Estados Unidos a su vecino del sur? ¿Qué busca? ¿Recursos, terroristas, posibles inmigrantes? Descarto el tema de los recursos a la luz de la que se sabe es ya una práctica autosuficiencia estadounidense en materia energética. Elimino la cuestión de los emigrantes en virtud del acuerdo senatorial de invertir más de 38 mil millones de dólares en el reforzamiento de la seguridad fronteriza, lo que implica su sellamiento. Me queda únicamente el argumento del terrorismo, que es, a todas luces, la gran obsesión estadounidense desde los lamentables acontecimientos...

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Do U.S. Economic Policies Fuel Latin-American Immigration? | Daily News | NCRegister.com

While Congress hotly debates the fate of millions of immigrants living and working illegally in the United States, few have paid attention to the factors that push migrants to take the dangerous journey from their home countries to find work in the U.S. — or how U.S. economic policies toward Latin America may shoulder part of the blame.Nearly 11.1 million immigrants live and work without legal papers in the U.S. Archbishop Jose Gomez of Los Angeles, who leads the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ advocacy of comprehensive immigration reform, has urged Congress to enact legislation this year.The Democrat-controlled Senate...

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Mexico and the U.S.: Who Needs Who? | AS/COA

Immigration reform discussions are often based on the premise that immigrants desperately want to come to the U.S. and will do whatever it takes to migrate. But this is, increasingly, an incomplete and even dated picture.When it comes to Mexico, a place we know well as U.S. Ambassadors to Mexico for 11 of the last 20 years—one of us in a Republican administration and the other in a Democrat one—the incentives for its population to move north are fading. Mexico is on the rise, and only sensible immigration reform will allow the U.S. to continue to attract and retain...

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Highway will leapfrog Mexico’s drug lands

Lavender-blue peaks of the western Sierra Madre jut as far as the eye can see, the only hints of civilization: a tendril of smoke from burning corn residue, a squiggle of dirt road.Then out of nowhere, a flat ribbon of concrete runs like a roller-coaster over giant pylons, burrowing in and out of the mountainside until it seems to leap mid-air over a 400-metre river gorge via the world’s highest cable-stayed bridge, called the Baluarte.The Durango-Mazatlan Highway is one of Mexico’s greatest engineering feats, 115 bridges and 61 tunnels designed to bring people, cargo and legitimate commerce safely through...

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For those living on border, security is complicated subject – CNN.com

oe Metz, a straight-talking Texas rancher on the U.S.-Mexico border, awoke recently to find 50 cows roaming freely in his front yard. Undocumented immigrants, he says, left a gate open as they crossed his land, which abuts the Rio Grande.For years, he’s witnessed migrants and drug smugglers touch American soil for the first time on his property.“We deal with this every day,” he said.But as a rancher in Hidalgo County, he also knows firsthand the need for labor to keep producers in the Rio Grande Valley operating. The traffic through his land frustrates him — particularly the potentially dangerous...

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