uhm... yeah...erm, si.
vendedor de pendejada
[BLITZER] what’s wrong with the folks in Arizona wanting to protect their border?
[CALDERON]: That is not exactly the problem. I fully respect the right of any nation to establish the legislation that that nation wants—or their people—and, of course, the right of any nation to enforce the law and protect their own borders.
But the problem is first that we need to—to face this challenge in a comprehensive way as President Obama says. And that implies to recognize the rights and the contribution of the people to the growth of this great nation.
But, on the other hand, and in particular, in Arizona, there is some racial profiling criteria in order to enforce the law that it is against any sense of human rights and, of course, is provoking a very disappointing things—or a very disappointing opinion in Mexico and around the world, even here, in America.
I got Mexico’s—and the World’s— “disappointment” right here:
Tens of thousands of migrant men, women and children making their way from Central America to the United States to seek a better life are preyed on by criminal gangs in Mexico while authorities turn a blind eye—or even play an active part—in kidnappings, extortion, beatings, rapes of girls and women, and murders, Amnesty International said in a new report released today. Urging the Mexican government to protect the migrants’ rights and punish those who abuse them, Amnesty International called the migrants’ plight a “human rights crisis."
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