WrongPlanet.net
WP Members: > 70,000

Aspie Affection

New Today: 28
New Yesterday: 34

Mexican town gets a taste of its own medicine! >:D
Post new topic   Reply to topic    Wrong Planet Autism Forum Index -> News and Current Events     
John_Browning
ON A LIST SOMEWHERE
Phoenix


Joined: Mar 23, 2009
Posts: 4456
Location: The shooting range

PostPosted: Tue May 08, 2012 3:25 am    Post subject: Mexican town gets a taste of its own medicine! >:D Reply with quote

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-mexico-migrants-shelter-20120506,0,2365077.story

TULTITLAN, Mexico — The travelers, with bloodshot eyes and sleep-wrinkled clothes, press around a man with a map of Mexico taped to the wall. He speaks, and his finger traces various routes north to the border. All roads lead to trouble.

Up here, kidnappers and drug killers. Over there, Mexican army checkpoints. Farther along, a giant desert, with poisonous snakes and deadly heat.

Listeners rise on tiptoes to see better. A woman asks for a piece of paper; she wants to remember the name of the Mexican state bordering Arizona. Sonora. Others swap hesitant looks but stay silent, like soldiers being briefed on a terrible foe.

They are migrants, almost all from Central America, and they have endured much to reach this place, a church-run shelter about an hour's drive north of Mexico City. And they will endure more. The man with the map is a volunteer whose job is to make sure they know how much more.

The San Juan Diego Migrant House is hundreds of miles from any frontier, but in many ways it crystallizes the wider border-crossing drama: the hope and desperation of those caught up in the inexorable human flow, the irritation of residents on the receiving end of so much humanity.

This day, the church shelter is jammed with more than 100 migrants, who sprawl across floors and sagging bunks or squat on a sun-scorched concrete patio outside. Nearly all have ridden atop freight trains to reach Tultitlan, a rail crossroads in central Mexico that serves as a launch point for any number of paths to the northern border.

Gerson Varela, 26, from Honduras, had arrived three days before with a horror story from the road. Two of his cousins were wounded by gunfire, he said, when bandits boarded their train in southern Mexico. One cousin lost an eye in the attack, the other cousin was still missing.

The trio had been aiming for Atlanta, but Varela was thinking of turning back. He felt trapped between two bad options: forward or back.

"They say it's dangerous," he said of the road north. "But there's no work in our country.... You have to go somewhere else if there's nothing in your country."

The steady flow of people to the church shelter has rankled residents of the working-class neighborhood, called Lecheria. Some homes sport banners asking that the shelter be shut down.

Neighbors who once gave the foreigners food and a place to sleep say they now feel dismay as trash piles up in the street and migrants get high in plain view. Some locals are intimidated by knots of tattooed young men. There have been robberies. Fathers keep daughters in at night.

"We neighbors are not against them," said Luis Rodriguez, a 44-year-old mechanical engineer whose grandfather settled in Lecheria in the 1940s. "But things have changed."

Rosalva Martinez, 56, who lives on the dead-end street where the shelter is, sounded a lot like frustrated border dwellers in the United States when they talk about an influx of undocumented Mexican migrants.

"We're citizens, and we pay taxes," said Martinez, who works in an auto-parts store. "A country has to take care of its own first."

Residents have appealed to city officials, who say migration isn't under their control.

Christian Rojas, a baby-faced Roman Catholic priest in charge of the shelter, said the church wants a better location. Meantime, he said, offering bread and a roof to strangers is simple Christian mercy.

"They're people who didn't come for pleasure. They came for pure need," Rojas said. "This is a social problem, not a church problem."

Similar migrant shelters are said to be full all over Mexico, a sign that Central American job-seekers keep coming, despite poor odds. Economic doldrums in the United States mean jobs are hard to find, and tougher enforcement makes it more difficult to slip across the U.S. border.

On top of that, the migrant trail through Mexico has become a deadly gantlet, as drug gangs such as the Zetas increasingly prey on migrants to extort money.

Two years ago, 72 migrants from Central and South America were massacred on a ranch in the northeastern state of Tamaulipas, about 90 miles short of Texas.

Migrants pouring off trains near the Tultitlan shelter say they know about the massacre. But, clutching tattered rucksacks, they say they hope for the best.

"It's always been dangerous," said Santos Ulloa, a 33-year-old Honduran wearing a Colorado Rockies cap. He last crossed five years ago, before Mexico exploded in violence.

Worsened risks are forcing cruel calculations. The shortest and cheapest route to the border from here is through Tamaulipas. But, as home to a bloody turf war involving the Zetas, it is also the most treacherous.

Gustavo Martinez Castro, a 20-year-old Salvadoran with close-shaved hair and Vans sneakers, said he would go that way to reach New York. Martinez walked to the wall map of Mexico and fingered an imaginary trip from the center to the Texas border and beyond.

He caressed the blank expanse to the north.

"Ah," he said, "the United States."
Twisted Evil Mr. Green Twisted Evil Mr. Green Twisted Evil Mr. Green
_________________
"Gun control is like trying to reduce drunk driving by making it tougher for sober people to own cars."
- Unknown

"A fear of weapons is a sign of retarded sexual and emotional maturity."
-Sigmund Freud
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
persian85033
Phoenix
Phoenix


Joined: Jul 02, 2009
Age: 26
Posts: 1695
Location: Phoenix

PostPosted: Tue May 08, 2012 9:46 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

The laws in Mexico against illegal immigration are extremely harsh, and Mexican citizenship is one of the most difficult to obtain, which is why I'm glad I was born there. If it's the police that catch you illegally, you get thrown in jail, and the jails there are not comfortable like the ones here. If it's not the police, you could end up being caught by drug dealers and stuff, which is even worse sometimes, although our authorities are still pretty harsh. That's why I don't think that the illegals here have any right to complain. How badly are people from Central America treated in our own country?
_________________
"Of all God's creatures, there is only one that cannot be made slave of the leash. That one is the cat. If man could be crossed with the cat it would improve the man, but it would deteriorate the cat." - Mark Twain
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail
snapcap
Phoenix
Phoenix


Joined: Oct 13, 2011
Age: 31
Posts: 2328

PostPosted: Tue May 08, 2012 11:16 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

If Mexico doesn't take in the immigrants, that means they are racist and have racist policies! Rolling Eyes
_________________
*some atheist walks outside and picks up stick*

some atheist to stick: "You're like me!"
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
Tequila
Trust the people!
Phoenix


Joined: Feb 26, 2006
Posts: 26047
Location: Lancashire, UK

PostPosted: Tue May 08, 2012 11:21 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

snapcap wrote:
If Mexico doesn't take in the immigrants, that means they are racist and have racist policies! Rolling Eyes


Indeed. Even the slightest anti-mass immigration sentiment is irrefutable proof of the holders of that view being jackbooted, strutting, shaven-headed neo-Nazi types. Yes, especially the pensioners supping their Earl Grey on a Sunday evening watching Antiques Roadshow.
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
Post new topic   Reply to topic    Wrong Planet Autism Forum Index -> News and Current Events   

 
Read more Articles on Wrong Planet



Wrong Planet is a Registered Trademark.
Copyright 2004-2013, Wrong Planet, LLC and Alex Plank. Alex does public speaking for Autism.

Advertise on Wrong Planet

Alex Hotchalk / Glam 

Alex Plank  Aspie Affection 

Terms of Service - You must read this as a user of Wrong Planet | Privacy Policy

Subscribe: RSS Feed  Wrong Planet News  Wrong Planet Forums




fine art