AnotW came across the truck pictured above and below, therefore asked what the personalized plates mean - "Castro W". The driver spoke with laughter in his voice that he is pro Fidel Castro. When he was asked about if he would be interested in working with U.S.A. citizens, veterans first, he only laughed and did not express interest. All of the workers who were with the driver did not express that they knew English, yet one of them was all too quick with stating; "Me US citizen". He said this with such a grin! Well, I guess a person has to believe that this non-native English speaker, who had trouble even with those few words, was not with deceit. Right?
What is happening to the U.S.A.?
WHAT?
The next Obama & destroyer of the U.S.A.?
Julian Castro: A Radical Revealed
by Charles C. Johnson 4 Sep 2012Mayor Julian Castro of San Antonio, who will be giving the keynote address tonight, is, according to some, the next Obama. But while Obama’s radicalism may have escaped the notice of the DNC in 2004, Castro’s views are bit more transparent. (more)
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From
09/05/2012
Cuban-American Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida introduced Mitt Romney at the GOP’s convention last week in Tampa, Fla. San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro, a Mexican-American, delivered the Democrats’ keynote speech in Charlotte, N.C.
They are often lumped together as Hispanics. But Rubio and Castro are emblematic of acute political distinctions between Cuban-Americans and Mexican-Americans.
Mexican-Americans are the largest Latino group in the U.S. They have different histories in the U.S., have different political priorities and are subjected to distinctions in immigration policy that go easier on Cubans.
Political conventions highlight Hispanic split
By Associated Press |
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Hispanics with the highest profiles in this year's political conventions, Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida and Mayor Julian Castro of San Antonio, stand as opposites in a cultural and political split that has divided millions of U.S. Latinos for decades.
Republicans
chose Rubio, who is Cuban-American, to introduce Mitt Romney at the
party's convention last week. Democrats, meeting this week in Charlotte,
N.C., picked Castro, who is Mexican-American, as keynote speaker, the
role that launched a young Barack Obama to national political
prominence.
Although they often are lumped together as Hispanics, Rubio and Castro are emblematic of acute political distinctions between Mexican-Americans, who are the largest Latino group in the U.S., and Cuban-Americans,
who are the most politically active. Despite their shared language,
these two constituencies have different histories in the United States
and are subjected to distinctions in immigration policy that go easier
on Cuban immigrants.
"Historically,
many Cuban-Americans for the last few decades have tended to be a
little more conservative. So it's not surprising that you would see Sen.
Rubio and the Republican nominee for Senate in Texas, Ted Cruz, running
as Republicans," Castro told The Associated Press. "And I don't
begrudge them for that. I think the policies they espouse are wrong, are
not the best ones. But, you know, they're doing what they believe. And I
applaud them for that."
Rubio, 41, was born in Miami. His parents left their native Cuba for the U.S. 2½ years before Fidel Castro overthrew the Cuban government. Fifty-nine percent of Cubans in the U.S. in 2010 were foreign-born, according to the Pew Hispanic Center, and three-quarters were American citizens.
Julian
Castro, 37, was born in the U.S., as were his parents. Almost 64
percent of people of Mexican descent in the country are U.S.-born,
according to the Pew Hispanic Center.
Moises Venegas, a retired
Mexican-American educator and Latino community activist in Albuquerque,
N.M., said the two groups have little in common besides an historical
connection to Spain, and Spanish surnames.
"The Cubans have never
been one of us," Venegas said. "They didn't come from Chihuahua or
Sonora in Mexico and from poor backgrounds. They came from affluent
backgrounds and have a different perspective. The Republican Party also
has opened doors just for them."
Pedro Roig, a Cuban-American
attorney and senior researcher at the Institute for Cuban and
Cuban-American Studies in Miami, disputed the notion that there is
significant rivalry between the groups. He attributes divisions between
Cuban- and Mexican-Americans in part to geography and noted that many in
the Cuban community admire Castro's selection as the Democrats' keynote
speaker.
"Sometimes Cuban-Americans, we have created an enclave
in the area of South Florida, which is much more limited than the
Mexican settlement in the United States," Roig said.
Of the 52 million Latinos in the U.S., 33 million are of Mexican descent,
followed by 4.7 million who are Puerto Rican and 1.9 million of Cuban
descent, Pew Hispanic Center numbers show. The remaining 10 largest
Latino groups are Salvadorans, 1.8 million; Dominicans, 1.5 million;
Guatemalans, 1.1 million; Colombians, 972,000; Hondurans, 731,000;
Ecuadorians, 665,000; and Peruvians, 609,000, the center reported.
In
2008, 9.7 million Latino voters cast ballots in the presidential
election, and 5.2 million were Mexican-Americans, about 45 percent of
eligible Mexican-American voters, according to Pew Hispanic Center data.
When it comes to showing up at the polls, however, Cuban-Americans
outpace Mexican-Americans — some 713,000 Cuban-Americans showed up to
vote in 2008, 69 percent of eligible Cuban-American voters, the center
found.
Obama won 47 percent of the Cuban vote in Florida that year, according to data from The Associated Press.
In
Texas, some Republican candidates garner roughly 30 percent of the
Hispanic vote, which is overwhelmingly Mexican-American, said Antonio
Gonzalez, president of the San Antonio-based Southwest Voter Education
Project.
Immigration is the greatest source of division between
the groups, with Cubans having an easier and faster route to legal
residency and citizenship. Early migrations of Cubans included upper-
and middle-class families, but people who came to the U.S. during the
1980s Mariel boatlift were not as well-off.
Cuban-Americans began
embracing the GOP in the early 1960s after the Bay of Pigs invasion,
which failed to topple Fidel Castro. The loyalty deepened after
President Ronald Reagan courted Cubans with his anti-Castro policies.
The
U.S. amended the Cuban Adjustment Act of 1966, which had provided
Cubans in the country with temporary visas and a path to legal
citizenship, with what is known as the "wet foot, dry foot policy." The
1995 measure allows Cubans who reach American shores, "dry foot," to
apply for legal residency and eventually citizenship. Cubans who are
intercepted at sea, "wet foot," are returned to Cuba or sent to another
country that will accept them.
By
comparison, Congress has for years refused to rewrite immigration laws
to provide U.S. residency for immigrants in the country without legal
permission, many of whom are from Mexico. It also voted down a bill that
would have given residency to immigrants brought to the country by
their parents who entered or stayed illegally.
While
some Cuban-Americans have hoped for decades for a return to a free
Cuba, many Mexican-Americans recognize parts of the U.S. as historically
Mexican. "We didn't cross the border, the border crossed us," is a
favorite refrain. Mexican immigration has fed much of the U.S.
population growth in recent decades.
DeeDee
Blase, founder of the Arizona-based Tequila Party, an independent
political group made up largely of Mexican-Americans, said
Cuban-Americans have failed to support policies important to
Mexican-Americans, like immigration reform and health care, while
wanting Latinos to rally around the trade embargo on Cuba. Blase is
Mexican-American.
Guarione
Diaz, outgoing president of Miami-based Cuban-American National Council,
said resentments are disappearing as more Mexican-Americans have moved
to Miami and more non-Cuban politicians are elected to offices with
heavy Cuban support. Intermarriage between the groups has bridged the
divides along with growing Latino unity around equal access issues,
Gonzalez said.
___
Contreras reported from Albuquerque, N.M. Associated Press writer Paul Weber in San Antonio contributed to this report.
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Julian Castro: Mitt Romney "has no idea how good he’s had it"
By Holly Bailey, Yahoo! News | The Ticket
CHARLOTTE, N.C.—In a speech that
instantly invoked comparisons to Barack Obama's star-making turn at the
2004 Democratic National Convention, San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro
invoked his personal story as the descendent of Mexican immigrants to
press the case that Mitt Romney "just doesn't get it" when it comes to
the struggles of average Americans.
Castro, the first Latino to
deliver the DNC keynote, spoke of the "unlikely journey" that led him
from a poor upbringing in Texas to a rising star of the Democratic
party. He talked about his grandmother, an orphan, who immigrated to the
United States and dropped out of school in the fourth grade to work and
support her family. (more)