Thursday, August 20, 2015

On the way to the US Presidency: Trump and his ignorance

As a true Mexican-American I'm a bit biased about anything Donald Trump declares about immigration, but what a heck this is an Op Ed and I'm really are so pissed off with all the lies he's been telling to the US audience using a very Joseph Goebbels' propaganda style (Goebbels was the Minister of Propaganda of Nazi Germany during Hitler leadership), which was tell the lie first and the people is going to see it as a true.

Both parties, the Republican and the Democratic, have good ideas and good people but the poisonous statements of Donald Trump since he enter to the run to the presidency until now have been sickening and influential to the minds of good republican people who think that he says the truth just because he's so blunt in front of the cameras or microphones of the mass media.

Mexico and the United States share one big border, as well Canada and US, but in Trump's first of the three core principles of the immigration plan said:
A nation without borders is not a nation. There must be a wall across the southern border.
The borders exist, but looks like Canada is another State of the Union and don't need to have a wall in the northern border. And he said that "Mexico must pay for the wall"; and added that "Mexico's leaders have been taking advantage of the United States by using illegal immigration to export the crime and poverty in their own country (as well as in other Latin American countries). I think he doesn't know the list of countries down to Central and South America because he's not talking about them (eg. Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua, etc., etc.).

He said that the US taxpayers are covering the costs of healthcare, housing, education, welfare, etc., of the illegal immigrants. More ignorance of the real state guy. The immigrants cannot use the healthcare system because you need some papers to get it, so they use small clinics were they can pay for the services of good will doctors that don't charge the regular fees and help poor people.

About the housing costs, they rent small houses or shacks that can afford. They never use the housing government system because they don' have papers. And the education for their children, if they go to the public school system, they pay their fair share through the rent they are paying to the house owner. And finally the welfare system not even with a fake social security number the welfare system is going to give the benefits they offer until they run a thorough investigation of the person. The only thing I would like to know is what he means of  "free tax credits".

The crime and drug traffic, well in the Mexican news you hear about the seize of tons of marihuana every week before crossing the border and on this side of the border you hear about kilos or pounds of drug confiscated. So the Mexican government is making a lot of efforts to seize and burn all the drugs by the Mexican Army, but the Customs, Border Patrol agents, DEA, and Sheriff departments of border towns in the American side are investigated, and some of them detained, by the FBI under conspiracy charges, drug traffic, racquet, etc.

Trump said that "Mexico continues to make billions on not only our bad trade deals but also relies heavily on the billions of dollars in remittances sent from illegal immigrants in the US". He hates Mexico and the Mexican government because he couldn't make a resort in the Mexican Caribbean due to environmental concerns (after he paid a lot of money to bribe local officials) and also another resort near Tijuana and for the same reasons.

So, Trump is a good salesman, and the average American is an easy target for that kind of people, sometimes because of ignorance or because is naïve both things bad if they're thinking to elect a person to be the leader of the "free world" the "example of a nation" not the guy who wants to be remembered as the one who build a beautiful wall, like the Great Wall of China, but this one would be the Wall of (Great) Trump.

Salutem,
Ray Pedraza

Thursday, August 13, 2015

En camino a la Presidencia de Estados Unidos: los republicanos y la precampaña

Debate; controversia: discusión de opiniones contrapuestas entre dos o más personas. Diccionario de la Lengua Española.
Los precandidatos a la presidencia de Estados Unidos por parte del Partido Republicano tuvieron su primer debate para buscar elegir al candidato de ese partido que contendrá por su lugar en la oficina del ala oeste de la Casa Blanca. Son 17 precandidatos contra dos por parte del Partido Demócrata, Bernie Sanders y Hilary Clinton.

De los 17, Donald Trump lleva la delantera en las encuestas de opinión por sus declaraciones sobre la inmigración ilegal, sus ataques a los otros precandidatos y contra el gobierno de Obama que se repiten hasta el cansancio. En el primer debate en que participaron los 10 con mayores puntos en las encuestas, y en el que la cadena Fox News quiso deshacerse de los menos favorecidos por el Partido Republicano, le salió el tiro por la culata ya que de acuerdo a una encuesta de opinión posterior al debate por parte de la cadena CBS los tres precandidatos que encabezan la lista fueron Trump, Ted Cruz, Senador por Texas con mucho apoyo por parte de la extrema derecha del Tea Party, y Ben Carson, Médico Cirujano Pediatra, con poca experiencia política.

Los que dieron la sorpresa fueron Marco Rubio, joven Senador por Florida y muy coherente en su participación en el debate, Carly Fiorina, ex-Directora Ejecutiva de Hewlett-Packard quien participó en el mini-debate previo al principal y subieron sus puntos de tal manera que, de ese desfavorecido grupo de precandidatos, y la única mujer en el paquete de 17, saltó a las grandes ligas en una tarde.

Otros dos que se mantuvieron y subieron un poco sus puntos fueron Jeb Bush, ex-Gobernador de Florida, que se vio un tanto fuera de lugar y sin muchas ganas de desgastarse en ataques, y Scott Walker, Gobernador de Wisconsin que no es muy bien visto por los sindicatos después de una guerra directa con sindicatos de empleados públicos de ese Estado.

Sin embargo, los que hicieron buen papel, uno para defenderse de los ataques poco organizados de Rand Paul, Chris Christie, Gobernador de Nueva Jersey y el Gobernador de Ohio John Kasich cuyos comentarios se salieron un poco de la política conservadora del Partido Republicano pero se vio muy coherente en lo que dijo.

De la lista, y quienes gustaron a los votantes republicanos, se encuentran Mike Huckabee, Donald Trump, Ted Cruz, Scott Walker, y Ben Carson. Lo único recomendable para el Partido Republicano es cerrar filas en dos precandidatos para la Presidencia y Vicepresidencia que bien podrían ser Kasich y Rubio o Walker y Rubio para calentar el brazo del joven cubano-americano para la siguiente contienda.

Ya veremos dijo Ray Charles.