Pubdate: Fri, 12 May 2006
Source: Miami Herald (FL)
Copyright: 2006 The Miami Herald
Contact:  http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262
Author: Leonard Pitts Jr.

A SMOKIN' VIEW OF LIFE IN MEXICO AS A DRUG MECCA

The following are translations of future letters to the editor of El 
Universal, a newspaper in Mexico City.  The date of publication: May 12, 2016.

Dear Editor:

Yesterday's massive immigration rights rally in the capital should be 
a wake-up call for all Mexicans.  I could not believe my eyes: one 
million American illegals marching in the streets to protest that 
bill in Congress to secure our northern border.  We are being overrun 
by these people and it's our own fault: We should never have 
legalized drug possession back in 2006.  -- IGNACIO RAMIREZ, Veracruz

Dear Editor:

Yesterday while taking my daughter to school, we had to step over 
three Americans nodding on the sidewalk.  I asked them in plain 
Spanish to move, but they just gave me glassy-eyed stares and sat 
there drooling on themselves.  If you want to solve our immigration 
problem, forget about amnesty, forget about hardening the 
border.  Just remove the incentive.  After all, they're only coming 
here for an opportunity they can't find in their own country: the 
opportunity to do legal drugs.  -- CARMEN RUELAS, Tijuana

Dear Editor:

Is it too much to ask that they learn to speak the language? -- MARIA 
RODRIGUEZ, Zacatecas

Dear Editor:

I have nothing against Americans.  Some of my best friends are 
American.  So this is not about racism or nationalism.  It's about 
the necessity for a sovereign nation to control its borders.  Last 
night on the news, I saw hidden camera footage of hundreds of 
Americans swimming across the Rio Grande, carrying bongs and rolling 
papers in watertight bags.  One border patrol agent told the reporter 
it's not worth it to catch them.  They just keep coming back.  -- 
JOSE QUESADA, Acapulco

Dear Editor:

Some people want to build a fence along the border.  I say, build an 
electric fence.  That would solve everything.  -- JORGE CRUZ, Leon

Dear Editor:

The current anti-immigration mood in our country is shortsighted and 
wrong.  It troubles me that we as Mexicans have such a negative 
attitude toward people who come here simply because they want to 
start new lives.  New lives doing drugs, but

still .  .  .

People keep saying undocumented Americans are taking jobs from 
hardworking Mexicans.  The truth is, the Americans take menial, 
demeaning work most Mexicans are unwilling to do.  Do you want to 
make your own vanilla soy latte? I know I don't.  -- ANA GOMEZ, Guadalajara

Dear Editor:

In 2006, I lived in a cardboard box in a mountainside.  I supported 
myself by collecting rags and bottles.  Ten years later, I own a 
palatial home, a getaway place on a beach in Acapulco and I'm closing 
this week on a spacious condo on the Upper East Side in Manhattan.  I 
feel we should make it as easy as possible for the Americans to stay 
in our country.  I believe in diversity.  Diversity has been very, 
very good to me.  -- ESTEBAN MORALES, President U-Pick Marijuana 
Farms, Chihuahua

Dear Editor:

I am an immigrant from the United States; I moved here legally in 
2006, right after the law was passed.  While I can understand the 
anger some native Mexicans feel at seeing so many Americans coming 
here, I hope that doesn't lead lawmakers to do anything that would 
destroy the one thing I've always cherished most about this country.

By which I mean your live and let live spirit, your willingness to 
leave a girl alone to enjoy her hobbies.  That means a lot to 
me.  Oh, and by the way, crack is wack.

-- WHITNEY HOUSTON, Ensenada