December 04, 2007
Memo From Mexico,
By
Allan Wall
Vicente Fox Won’t Stop Telling Americans What to Do
Now that Vicente Fox is no longer
president of Mexico, he’s more mobile, because
constitutionally the
President of Mexico can't leave the country without
Congress's permission.
He’s definitely a man on the move. It's hard to keep up
with him as he jets from speech to speech.
On November 17th, in
“sanctuary city”
Durham, NC, Fox received a standing ovation for
a speech in which he called on us
to build
"bridges not walls."
After that he flew across the pond and met with the
Club de Madrid, in Spain on November 19th and
the 20th and then flew back across the Atlantic and wound
up in California,
where he bashed the border wall, endorsed Hillary
(not for the first time) and expressed his disapproval
of the U.S. immigration debate.
On Nov. 26th he was in Washington, D.C. to sign an
agreement with the Woodrow Wilson Center. And on Nov.
29th he was in Virginia to meet with the U.S. branch of
the
Fox Center Consultative Council. (Fox has opened
Mexico's first Presidential Library.)
In the old days, Mexican presidents tended to keep a low
profile,
often electing to enjoy their loot
outside of Mexico. Fox, however, is changing the
role of a former Mexican president by aspiring to
become a jet-setting world statesman, along the lines of
Jimmy Carter, Mikhail
Gorbachev or U2’s
Bono. The kind of guy
who never shuts up, in other words.
Turns out there’s a
lot to be said for a former head of state retiring,
playing golf and tending to his presidential library.
As president of Mexico, Fox did preside over a stable
economy. But in the area of substantive reforms, he
didn’t accomplish a whole lot. His administration failed
to
dynamize the Mexican economy to provide more, and
better paying, jobs for Mexicans in Mexico. He
frittered away time and political capital in
encouraging illegal aliens in the U.S., bashing U.S.
immigration policy, and
promoting globalism.
Fox recently came out with a book called Revolution of Hope: The Life, Faith and Dreams of a Mexican President
.
Fox’s collaborator on this literary masterpiece is
none other than Bush advisor
Rob Allyn. It’s a small world after all!
And get this—Revolution of Hope was not written
for Mexican readers—it was designed for the
American market, is only for sale in the U.S., and
only exists in English!
Why?
Larry King asked Fox about this in an interview:
KING: Is this book written for a
Mexican audience? Because it seems like it's for an
American audience.
FOX: It is. It is for an American
audience because I think that the migration issue is a
key issue. It has been
for 100 years and it will be the issue of this 21st
century.
KING: But this...
FOX: So I'm trying to have a dialogue
with U.S. public opinion to convey my thinking and my
beliefs on this issue.
Larry King interview
Oct. 8th, 2007
Yes indeed, Fox is "trying to have a dialogue with
U.S. public opinion" on immigration. Except it’s not
really a "dialogue", it’s a Vicente Fox
monologue.
Fox is bringing his propaganda monologue on a grand tour
of the U.S.A. Fox is plugging his book and promoting
his brand of mass immigration/globalist mumbo-jumbo,
meddling in U.S. internal affairs,
slandering Americans who don’t agree with him, and
repeatedly
endorsing Hillary for president.
Most everything is going according to script for
Vicente, although some protestors have shown up to
protest his presence—some Americans who want the
law enforced, and some Mexican critics of Fox.
On October 17th, Fox threw a tantrum on a Los Angeles
Spanish-language program when the host wanted to talk
about a corruption accusation in Mexico rather than plug
the book. So Fox got
angry and walked out of the studio. [Watch
it on Youtube.]
Yet with all Fox’s energetic promotion of his agenda, I
sense a certain frustration. He’s been
trying for years to get the gringos to have a
more open immigration policy. But he sees things as
moving in the opposite direction.
In fact, the more Vicente Fox shoots his mouth off, the
more he helps immigration restrictionists. Fox’s
arrogance is so over the top that it is waking up more
Americans as to what is going on.
Outside his circle of
business tycoons and
globalist jet-setters, Fox has never displayed any
real interest in understanding ordinary Americans who
are negatively affected by illegal immigration.
Thus in an interview with the
Associated Press in New York on October 8th, Fox
blasted "racism" and "xenophobia" as the
reason Americans don’t cotton to the Fox agenda:
"The xenophobics, the racists, those who feel they
are a superior race ... they are deciding the future of
this nation." [Ex
Mexico Prez: Racists Stop Immigration, AP, Diego
A. Santos, October 8th, 2007]
Sounds like
Mike Huckabee!
Fox is a man with a mission. But I sense he is getting
impatient, and frustrated, as the slowly waking American
public becomes aware of what is really happening.
As Fox tirelessly visited assorted corners of U.S.
territory, he continued to lecture his hosts:
CALIFORNIA
On October 25th, Fox assured the audience at the
San Jose Silicon Valley Chamber of Commerce’s Legends
and Leaders dinner that
"Walls don't work. The Chinese wall
didn't work. The
Berlin wall didn't work against freedom. This one
won't work either."
Ah, but Mr. Fox, are you afraid it won’t work—or are you
afraid it will work? [Former
Mexican President Decries U.S. Immigration Policies,
by Timothy Roberts, East Bay Business Times, Oct.
26th, 2007,]
STORM LAKE, IOWA
In Storm Lake, Iowa, on October 27th, Fox came out in
favor of a woman president for each country. (Hmm, how
would Fox like it if VDARE.COM’s
Brenda Walker were U.S. president?)
Fox repeated his skepticism and concern about the United
States' plan to build
a wall along its southern border:
"That was not the spirit of those who
came to found this nation."
Actually, one of the first things the
Jamestown settlers did 400 years ago was
build a fort to protect themselves.
And Fox told Iowans that
"God did not create borders. He did
not create divisions."
In fact if you read the story of the Tower of Babel in
the Bible, [Genesis
11, 1-9] it was God Himself who divided
mankind.
[Former President Fox: Nations Would Benefit from
Female Leader, By Henry C. Jackson, Associated
Press, October 26, 2007]
Also in Storm Lake, Fox tossed out this rather bold
statement:
"The American dream is not exclusive
to the citizens of this great nation."
Uh, actually Vicente, the American dream, by definition,
belongs to the American people. Mexicans should have
their own dream, the
Mexican Dream. The problem is, you don’t understand
that distinction. [Illegal
Immigrants with Jobs are critical to U.S., Fox says,
By Lisa Rossi, Des Moines Register, October 27,
2007]
SOUTH DAKOTA
On November 1st, speaking at a college in South Dakota,
Fox tried to tell us that nothing could get done in the
U.S. without Mexicans:
"Who is going to build the hospitals,
the hotels, the highways? They are being built by
immigrants. At many of the packing plants in this state,
in
Iowa, in other states? ... Who is going to harvest
the vegetables in California? Who sets your table in
many restaurants? The service economy is highly
supported by these people."
It’s funny you should mention packing plants, Vicente.
Thanks to illegal Mexican labor, wages there have been
cut in half in the past few decades. [Ex-Mexico
leader praises immigrants, By Melanie Brandert,
Sioux Falls Argus Leader, November 2, 2007]
WILKES-BARRE, PA
On November 5th, in a speech in Wilkes-Barre,
Pennsylvania Fox called for an open work force in the
entire western hemisphere. He said the U.S. was an
"aging nation" in need of workers. Fox decried local
officials (like the
mayor of nearby
Hazleton) enacting anti-illegal immigration
legislation:
"It’s a
federal issue and should be addressed by Congress,"
he said. "When you do not act and you do not meet
problems, you leave empty spaces."
But when the U.S. Congress
fails to enact an amnesty, he doesn’t like that
either.
Fox took another swipe at the wall, which launched the
former Mexican president into an incoherent mumbo-jumbo
riff:
"I cannot understand why a wall is
being built. What is the fear in this nation? Who is
this nation trying to isolate from? Why the
inconsistency? When President Reagan comes in Berlin and
shouts ‘Mr. Gorbachev tear down this wall ...’ The
threat to this nation is not immigrants. The threat to
this nation is isolation. Instead of building walls, we
should be building bridges. Bridges of understanding.
Bridges of trade. Bridges of love." [Fox
calls for open work force in the Americas, By
Coulter Jones, Wilkes-Barre Citizen's Voice,
November 6, 2007]
CINCINNATI
On November 7th, Fox was in Cincinnati, speaking to an
Hispanic chamber of commerce. There Vicente utilized the
"nation of immigrants" motif:
"Immigrants built this great nation,"
"When we look back far enough, we are all
immigrants."
If you define "immigrant" as anybody whose
ancestors came from elsewhere, then everybody in the
world is an immigrant, making the term completely
useless.
Fox’s own paternal grandfather (the surname was
Fuchs then) emigrated from Cincinnati to Mexico. [Former
Mexican president a 'local guy, Business
Courier of Cincinnati, October 17, 2007]In Mexico,
Fox almost never mentioned his American heritage, but
lately he’s been babbling on and on about it, as a way
to shame Americans into supporting mass immigration.
Fox says of his grandfather that
"He brought down to Mexico the core value of the
founding fathers," he said, calling for a return to
those values." Huh?
It’s not that he’s for open borders, says Fox, but
rather a "reasonable, sound,
common-sense solution" to immigration.
Fox also talked about the development of the
European Union, as a model for North America—a
"successful
continental trade agreement." [Mexican
Leader speaks to Chamber
, By Stepfanie Romine,
Cincinnati Enquirer, November 8, 2007]
Allow me to point out that back in 2002 I wrote
an article for VDARE.COM about Vicente Fox’s Madrid
speech, where he
openly called for a
union with the U.S. and Canada modeled after the
European Union.
ATLANTA
On Nov. 12th in Atlanta, Fox said there were two kinds
of local governments in the U.S.A.—governments that are
"humane"
(i.e.
don’t enforce immigration law) and those governments
that are "really going too far, and violating human
rights in certain situations" (i.e.
enforce the law against illegal Mexicans).
Fox was speaking at the
Jimmy Carter Presidential Library, but across the
street a score of Minutemen were protesting. Fox called
these Minutemen "xenophobes" and complained that
the whole matter of immigration is "being managed by
fear". Fox also slammed TV hosts Lou Dobbs and Bill
O’Reilly for "violent aggression" and said "I
think they should be more tolerant and bring in more
facts".
When Fox was asked how Mexico can create jobs so
Mexicans don’t feel like they need to emigrate, he let
the cat out of the bag:
"It's not that they don't have jobs
in Mexico, but that they make more money here."
Bingo! As I’ve pointed out before, many Mexican
immigrants
had jobs before leaving Mexico and some are even
middle-class Mexicans. [Former
Mexico president: Cobb immigration policy ‘going too
far’, By Mary Lou Pickel, Atlanta
Journal-Constitution, November 13, 2007]
ANSWER TO A GOOD
QUESTION
In Fox’s aforementioned Larry King interview, he hit on
many of the same topics, such as the infamous wall. Of
course, he came out in favor of licenses for illegal
aliens, had the temerity to deny that Mexican illegals
get
free medical care, endorsed Hillary, and said of
Bill Richardson that "he’s
so Mexican in his interior."
And when he was bashing the wall, Fox asked a question
himself, which really sums up this whole issue:
"Who is going to stay inside that
wall and who is going to stay outside?"
Congratulations Vicente, you’ve summarized the whole
issue!
Americans will stay
inside the wall and
foreigners—unless they have permission to enter—stay
outside.
That’s how it’s supposed to work.
P.S. Who is paying for all this propaganda?
American citizen Allan Wall (
email
him) resides in Mexico, with a
legal permit issued him by the Mexican government. Allan
recently returned from a tour of duty in Iraq with the
Texas Army National Guard. His VDARE.COM articles are
archived
here; his FRONTPAGEMAG.COM
articles are archived
here his "Dispatches from
Iraq" are archived
here his website is
here.