Lou Dobbs - Blame it all on Mexico - Why Not!

Black Jack Lou Dobbs on his trusty steed Buttercup off to wage war with Mexico

Black Jack Lou Dobbs on his trusty steed Buttercup off to wage war with Mexico

For the past few years, Lou Dobbs has led anti-immigrant forces against amnesty, against illegal Mexicans, against Mexico, against his own government, and against the truth.

His rants have been less than truthful; once almost causing a panic in the United States when he brought forth on his show the issue of illegal Mexicans coming over the border infected with Leprosy, or Hansen’s disease, a chronic infectious disease which causes horrific disfiguration upon those who are infected.

Lou Dobbs lied to stir the American people to rise up against the Mexican people and he is doing it once again with the tomato issue.

The salmonella outbreak that has sickened more than 200 people recently is being centered on Florida or Mexico as the likely sources of the contaminated vegetable. But if left up to Lou Dobbs to decide where those tainted tomatoes came from, the Crusader appears to be comfortable with blaming Mexico.

“Last year, Mexico dominated the U.S. tomato import market, shipping in more than two billion pounds of tomatoes, both field and hothouse, far outpacing Canada’s quarter of a billion pounds” said CNN correspondent, Louise Schiavone.

Schiavone went on to say “…just a little bit more than a dozen states that we know there’s a possibility that the source could be — that the tomatoes could be from and we don’t know about Mexico, whether or not Mexico is a source. Florida and Mexico the two big suppliers of tomatoes, for April to May, in this country, and we don’t know whether or not those tomatoes came from Mexico or Florida.”

Yet, when you listen to Dobbs, one gets the impression he’s already made up his mind where the tainted tomatoes came from, and clearly for Dobbs, they came from Mexico.

Dobbs is on this rampage against the Mexican immigrant and government.

Let me just make a suggestion. Why doesn’t President George Bush bring back the 10th Cavalry and name Dobbs as the commander so that we can watch him illegally trespass over the Mexican border in search of bad Mexicans like General Black Jack Pershing did.

Read the rest of this excellent article by Robert Miranda at LA Progressive Online

Robert Miranda, a frequent contributing columnist to HispanicVista.com is a national award winning columnist, Latino community activist and Publisher of the Milwaukee Spanish Journal. Email at: rmiranda@wi.rr.com

[cref lou-dobbs],

Share/Save/Bookmark

This post was read 77 times until now

These might be of interest

About the Author

PMC

Mexico Trucker was established to present the truth about the Mexican Trucker and the Mexican transportation industry and to dispel the accusations and myths being thrown about by the media and others in the United States. Having spent the past 35 years in the trucking industry, as a company driver, and owner operator and in management of several large companies, I am qualified to offer the opinions stated on Mexico Trucker. Also, having lived in various cities in Mexico over the past 10 years and traveling throughout this wonderful country both by motor coach and in my private vehicle, I am more than qualified to rebut the outrageous claims being made concerning Mexican Truckers and the other people of this wonderful country As the Mexican truck issue becomes a non issue, this site will continue to push for common sense immigration reform while protecting the rights of those unable to do so

3 Responses to “ Lou Dobbs - Blame it all on Mexico - Why Not! ”

  1. Totally right on !!

  2. I am an American truck driver. That may conjur all sorts of images in your mind but I wonder how many would be accurate. I do listen to Lou Dobbs and agree with some of the things he says and always wish that he were a more effective communicator so that he would not leave himself open to some of the more legitimate criticisms against him.

    Am I frustrated by the sudden massive increase in Hispanic drivers I encounter across the nation? Of course I am. Is that because I am prejudiced against brown skinned people? No more than I was against the black skinned people I served 3 years with as a Peace Corp Volunteer in Africa. Is it because I don’t want to see working class living standards raised up in Mexico and, for that matter, every other economically depressed nation in the world? No.

    My frustration is that I have witnessed first hand, especially over the past 15 - 20 years, as the American nation has kicked the working class to the curb. After the Great Depression of the 1930’s and World War II the American working class was not treated as a commodity over which the laws of supply and demand should dictate working conditions and living standards. It was the thing I was most proud of about this nation. It was also the thing which I think many people around the world admired; a thriving middle class that wasn’t rich but could affort a decent lifestyle and maybe get their children through college, even if only a state university.

    Now my nation has returned to the mentality of the Gilded Age, where the owners lorded over the workers and exploited them at every turn. If business owners can increase profits by exporting jobs to underpaid (exploited) workers in other economically depressed nations, then by all means do it. If business owners can increase profits by hiring (exloiting) desparate illegal immigrants, then, by all means, do it. If wages, benefits, and living standards for American workers are decimated as a result, well, the free market system is always right and its not their problem. Right?

    No, I don’t have a problem with Hispanic drivers in this country, I have a problem with already rich people making themselves even richer by taking jobs from Americans and giving them to people who will work for a fraction of what the American worker should be expected to live on.

    The problem I do have with many Hispanics is that they fail to acknowledge or respect this part of the issue and instead want to call anyone a rascist or bigot who is against depressed wages due to illegal immigration or the hiring of citizens from other nations to work in this nation at reduced wages.

  3. LB, thank you for the intelligent comment. They are a rarity around here.

    You know, I agree with 99.999% of what you have written here.

    I too am an American trucker for the past 34 years who made the choice to live in Mexico. For various reasons, but the mian one is the society, the people is as it was when I was growing up People respect one another here and respect their neighbors space. But that is another story.

    I would imagine you to be like the majority of truck drivers in the US and for that matter, Canada and MExico. Intelligent, respectful and hard working. It is the other 1% on both sides of both borders that give the rest of us aq bad name.

    They manifest themselves on sows such as Trucking Bozo and Bubba Bo. You know the types.

    The death or decline of the middle class. What annoys me is that a minority of people who like to shout like a majority, want to blame that decline on NAFTA, and on MExico. When in reality, technology and computerization have taken many of the good jobs.

    Yeah, we’ve lost jobs to MExico, some to Canada, but statistics show a net gain in the US. People were accustomed to coming out of high school in our generation and working basically cradle to grave for the same company. Usuall unionized. And then they started demanding more which the companies were unwilling to provide or could not provide.

    Sure there is an increase in Hispanic drivers in the US. The majority native born or second generation. The Hispanic population, both legal and illegal is increasinging generationally. And trucking is still a good job.

    What chaps my ass is some people try to blame all the woes on Mexico and the MExicans, or their Government. Certain talk show hosts go out of their way to convince their small base of regulars, sucessfully, that the US is being invaded by unlicensed, unquaified foreign drivers. And where MExico is concerned, this is not true.

    Living in Mexico, working for a Mexican owned company out of Laredo, if there was any doubt in my mind that Mexico, NAFTA or MExican drivers were a threat to my livlihood, my job or my existance, I would be raising seven kinds of hell about it. And indeed, when I started this site, I went forward to learn who was telling the truth and who was blowing smoke up our ass.

    This site and it’s content is a result of hat learning experience.

    And I also agree with your last paragraph, which can applu to drivers of any nationality. Fortunately, it is a small percentage who shout loud enough to be heard, and there are poeple on both sides of the borders too damn lazy or stupid to think for themselves, and believe the BS.

    You saee, Our thinkiing is pretty much in line.

Leave a Reply

By submitting a comment here you grant this site a perpetual license to reproduce your words and name/web site in attribution. In addition, under the conditions of the FAIR USE NOTICE, The material used on Mexico Trucker may be copyrighted material, and the use of it on Mexicotrucker.com may not have been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Such material is made available on a non-profit basis for educational and discussion purposes only. We believe this constitutes a ‘FAIR USE’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for in 17 USC § 107. For more information go to: <url>http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml</url> If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond ‘FAIR USE’, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner. Additionally, we reserve to moderate, edit or delete any comments which are designed to be slanderous, libelous or a deliberate attack against the character of the sites owners. Debate is good. Personal attacks will not be tolerated.

You can use these XHTML tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <strong>