medical marijuana program

Why Does Mexico Really Oppose Arizona Law?

Question by Gray Wanderer: Why Does Mexico Really Oppose Arizona Law?
How many have heard about this?

“The State of Sonora is angry at the influx of Mexicans into Mexico ! !

Nine state legislators from the Mexican State of Sonora traveled to Tucson to complain about Arizona ‘s new employer crackdown on illegal s from Mexico . It seems that many Mexican illegal s are returning to their hometowns and the officials in the Sonora state government are ticked off. A delegation of nine state legislators from Sonora was in Tucson on Tuesday to state that Arizona ‘s new ‘Employer Sanctions Law’ will have a devastating effect on the Mexican state. At a news conference, the legislators said that Sonora, – Arizona’s southern neighbor – made up of mostly small towns – cannot handle the demand for housing, jobs and schools that it will face as Mexican workers return to their hometowns from the USA without jobs or money.

The Arizona law, which took effect Jan. 1, punishes Arizona employers who knowingly hire individuals without valid legal documents to work in the United States . Penalties include suspension of, or loss of, their business license. The Mexican legislators are angry because their own citizens are returning to their hometowns, placing a burden on THEIR state government instead of ours.

‘How can Arizona pass a law like this?’ asked Mexican Rep Leticia Amparano-Gamez, who represents Nogales . ‘There is not one person living in Sonora who does not have a friend or relative working in Arizona ,’ she said, speaking in Spanish. ‘Mexico is not prepared for this, for the tremendous problems it will face as more and more Mexicans working in Arizona and who were sending money to their families return to their hometowns in Sonora without jobs,’ she said ‘We are one family, socially and economically,’ she said of the people of Sonora and Arizona .”

Best answer:

Answer by lare
this may come as a shock to you, but public officials in Mexico speak Spanish when acting in their official capacity. has something to do with that being the official language of government there. i worked at a public station in southern California that regularly interviewed the Mexican consulate, and it was always in Spanish. The interviewer was a Spanish professor from the community college.

do laws in Arizona affect Mexico, as Sarah Palin would say, you betcha. the laws in Arizona that allow mexican drug trafficers to freely buy weapons affects law enforcement in Mexico where it is illegal. just as an example.

Mexico is sometimes demonized for a larger issue of immigration policy. I can remember not too long ago some police officers in southern California were found to be illegal immigrants from Ireland. Bottom line is America needs to get its house in order to deal with its needs for workers in a realistic manner and not just bash Mexico.

What do you think? Answer below!

 

E-cigarettes' growing popularity poses danger to kids

Filed under: Drug Use Arizona

azcentral.com – Arizona's Home Page. SUBSCRIBE NOW. for $ 2.77 per week. SUBSCRIBE …. Meanwhile, the 2012 National Youth Tobacco Survey shows that recent e-cigarette use nearly doubled in one year among U.S. high school students, rising from 1.5 …
Read more on azcentral

 

The Cost of Colorado Pot May Be Doubling, but It's Still Pretty Cheap

Filed under: Drug Use Arizona

The Cost of Colorado Pot May Be Doubling, but It's Still Pretty Cheap. Although the price of marijuana in Colorado is rising, the drug is a bargain there compared with the illegal market. … With stores beginning to legally sell marijuana for …
Read more on National Journal

 

Colorado pot law a guide for hopeful Arizonans

Filed under: Drug Use Arizona

The increasingly lax attitude toward state-regulated marijuana use has played a key role in the defense of Arizona's medical marijuana program, narrowly approved by voters in 2010. And proponents of marijuana use for non-medical reasons …. “We have …
Read more on Arizona Capitol Times

 

Tracing the human cost of immigration from Altar to Arizona

Filed under: Drug Use Arizona

"Now some of the coyotes in Altar use Central American migrants as drug mules." But over in Nogales, Mexico, about 60 miles south of Tucson, was a very different scene. There, Father Sean, a Jesuit priest, and his group called the Kino Border …
Read more on WHAS 11.com (subscription)