WASHINGTON & SANTA FE, NM
(By
Jon Garrido, The Jon Garrido Network)
October 26, 2011 ― Marco
Rubio is
a liar
and
hypocrite.
He
claims
his
parents
sacrificed
coming
to the
United
States to
provide a better
life for their
children.
The
sacrifice
may be
honorable
but is
no
different
or
higher than the
sacrifice
of 12
million
undocumented
Mexicans.
Rubio's
canticle
below
reads
like a
Broadway
play.
Theatrical,
staged
with a
hollow
ring.
It is
like
striking
a cymbal
expecting
a bang
but no
sound is
emitted.
Nothing
but
silence.
There is
no
substance
to be
found:
"...the
central and defining
event of my parents’
young lives – the
fact a brutal
communist dictator
took control of
their homeland and
they were never able
to return – is
something I will not
tolerate."
"My
parents talked about
their desire to find
a better life, and
the pain of being
separated from the
nation of their
birth. What they
described was the
struggle they faced
growing up, and
their obsession with
giving their
children the chance
to do the things
they never could."
"Regarding
the
Washington
Post
article the Post story
misses the point
completely."
"The real essence of
my family’s story is
not about the date
my parents first
entered the United
States. Or whether
they traveled back
and forth between
the two nations. Or
even the date they
left Fidel Castro’s
Cuba forever and
permanently settled
here."
"The essence of my
family story is why
they came to America
in the first place;
and why they had to
stay."
"Not, as some have
said before, as part
of some special
privilege reserved
only for Cubans.
They came because
they wanted to
achieve things they
could not achieve in
their native land."
"They wanted to go
back — and in fact,
they did. Like many
Cubans, they
initially held out
hope. After
1959, they traveled
back several times —
to assess the
prospect of
returning home."
"Soon after, Castro
officially declared
Cuba a Marxist
state. My family has
never been able to
return."
"I am the son of
immigrants and
exiles, raised by
people who know all
too well that you
can lose your
country. By people
who know first hand
that America is a
very special place."
"My father spent the
last 50 years of his
life separated from
the nation of his
birth. Separated
from his two
brothers, who died
in Cuba in the
1980s. Unable to
show us where he
played baseball as a
boy. Where he met my
mother. Unable to
visit his parents’
grave."
"My mother has spent
the last 50 years
separated from her
native land as well.
Unable to take us to
her family’s farm,
to her schools or to
the notary office
where she married my
father."
"The Post story
misses the entire
point about my
family and why their
story is relevant."
"People
voted for me
because, as the son
of immigrants, I
know how special
America really is.
As the son of
exiles, I know how
much it hurts to
lose your country."
The egocentrism of
Marco Rubio
Rubio has a personality trait which is the characteristic of regarding oneself and one's own opinions or interests as most important or valid. It also generates the inability to fully understand or to cope with other people's opinions and the fact that reality can be different from what they are ready to accept despite any change in their personal belief.
To simplify,
Rubio must be living
in a cave if he
thinks his parents
are unique. He is
the incomplete
differentiation of
the self and the
United States. He is
extremely selfish
not acknowledging there are
millions of
Hispanics/Latinos
living in the United
States who have the
same story.
There are 12 million
undocumented
Mexicans and other
Hispanics/Latinos
from Central America
and South America
who can match Rubio
word for word why
they have come to
the United States.
Rubio
is
simply naive and
extremely self
centered to use one
set of
standards
to
justify
why his
parents
came to
the
United
States
and in
the same
breath,
condemn
Mexicans
for
using
the same
justification
his
parents
used for
coming
to the
United
States
to find
a better
life for
them and
their
children.
Cuba has Fidel
Castro
who declared Cuba a
Marxist state
preventing Rubio's
family from
permanently
returning to Cuba
but Mexicans flee Mexico for the
United States to
escape
more than 40,000
people killed by drug cartels since
President Felipe
Calderon took office
in 2006. Brutal
killings have become
commonplace
throughout Mexico
preventing Mexicans
from returning back
to Mexico for fear
of their lives.
The Mexicans, as are
Cubans, are exiles who know all
too well you
can lose your
country.
Rubio adds, "By people
who know first hand
that America is a
very special place."
"My father spent the
last 50 years of his
life separated from
the nation of his
birth. Separated
from his two
brothers, who died
in Cuba in the
1980s. Unable to
show us where he
played baseball as a
boy. Where he met my
mother. Unable to
visit his parents’
grave."
"My mother has spent
the last 50 years
separated from her
native land as well.
Unable to take us to
her family’s farm,
to her schools or to
the notary office
where she married my
father."
It is puzzling why
Rubio's parents who came
from Cuba are
lauded but
Rubio condemns
Mexicans.
Holding
all
other factors
constant
―
passage
between
countries
is
controlled
by
immigration
visas
enabling
Rubio's
parents
to
freely enter
the
United
States
and
to travel
back and
forth to
Cuba
with
ease but
Mexicans,
out of
necessity,
are
forced
to enter
the USA
in the
dark of
night.
The real
question
The real
question
in this
entire
paradox
is why
Cubans
have
access
to
immigration
visas
and
Mexicans
do not?
The
answer
below is
as clear
as the
nose on
your
face why
Cubans
have
ease of
entry
and the
impossibility
of entry
for
Mexicans.
In the
article
Immigrants
Find
Legal
Paths to
U.S.
take
20-30
Years,
the
process
for
entering
the
United
States
from
Mexico,
Central
America
or South
American
is a
20-30
year
process
for
skilled
worker
classifications
or
family
ties the
immigration
system
typically
favors.
Pablo
Pilco's
saga
underlines
a major
reason
many
newcomers
to the
United
States
find it
difficult
to go
through
the
legal
process
of
immigration.
Few visa
categories,
high
expenses
and
processing
times
can
stretch
decades
put
several
obstacles
along
the
legal
road to
immigration.
Immigrants
traditionally
take two
paths to
reaching
this
country:
Family
ties or
employment
opportunities.
The
federal
government
caps
family-based
immigration
visas at
226,000
a year,
and
work-based
immigration
visas at
140,000.
By
comparison,
the Pew
Hispanic
Center
estimated
Alabama
had
120,000
unauthorized
immigrants
in 2010.
Temporary
nonimmigrant
visas
are
available
but
often
require
applicants
to
possess
particular
skills
or
resources
to
qualify.
Those
considered
unskilled
have a
more
difficult
time.
"It
definitely
favors
people
who have
the
financial
means,
skills
and
education,"
said
Jeremy
Love,
legal
services
director
for the
Hispanic
Interest
Coalition
of
Alabama.
"It's
not
people
who have
the
strong
desire
and
need."
Immediate
relatives
of U.S.
citizens
have
relatively
short
wait
times on
immigration
visas,
as do
those
planning
to marry
citizens
after
immigrating.
Those
holding
advanced
degrees
or
considered
to have
"extraordinary
ability"
in arts,
athletics
or
business
also see
low wait
times.
For
others,
the
process
can take
years
Take a
man from
the
Philippines
with
brother
who
holds
U.S.
citizenship.
If he
wants to
immigrate
but has
no
advanced
degrees
or
special
skills,
the man
could
have his
brother
file a
petition
for an
F4 visa,
capped
at
65,000 a
year.
The
family
will
have to
wait for
a number
to be
assigned
to the
case
before
the visa
application
can be
processed.
That
wait is
currently
23
years.
According
to the
monthly
Visa
Bulletin
published
by the
U.S.
State
Department,
F4 visa
applications
filed in
the
Philippines
before
Aug. 22,
1988,
are now
being
processed.
If the
family
is from
Mexico,
the wait
time is
15
years;
wait
times in
China
and
India
are now
at 11
years.
"You can
wait six
years,
15 years
or 20
years to
come on
a family
visa,"
said
President
Tamar
Jacoby
of
ImmigrationWorks
USA, a
coalition
of
pro-immigration
business
groups.
"For a
young,
able-bodied
man to
look for
work,
he'd
apply
when
he's 18
and come
when
he's
40."
Processing
of
work-based
immigration
visas is
slightly
better.
Immigrants
with
advanced
degrees
generally
have
their
applications
processed
faster,
but
those
listed
as
"other
workers"
might
wait six
to eight
years
before
receiving
a
decision.
Hispanic
Americans
are not
a
monolithic
group
How we
arrived
in the
United
States
has a
significant
influence
on how
we think
as
American
Hispanics.
Puerto
Ricans,
Cubans
and
Mexicans
are all
treated
differently
by the
United
States
government.
(In this
article
all
other
Latin
American
groups
where
there
are
subtle
cultural
differences
are
grouped
together
as one
group
for
immigration
purposes
and this
is the
"Mexican"
group).
Cubans
need
only to
put one
toe on
U.S.
soil and
they
were
granted
automatic
provisions
on
becoming
a U.S.
citizen.
Mexicans
even
thought
there is
a treaty
between
the
United
States
and
Mexico
granting
some
special
considerations
to
Mexicans
and
their
descendents,
all
Mexicans
must
adhere
to all
immigration
law as
all
other
persons
from all
other
countries.
Separated
by only
a line
in the
sand or
river,
Mexicans
have no
consideration
for
entry by
visa
other
than as
required
by all
other
persons
in the
world,
except
Puerto
Ricans
and
Cubans.
Puerto
Ricans
and
Cubans
do not
have to
comply
with
stringent
archaic
immigration
laws of
the
United
States.
Consequently,
all
persons
entering
the
United
States
utilize
a
different
point of
reference
than all
others
except
Puerto
Ricans
and
Cubans
who are
given
special
preferences
resulting
in
Mexicans
and all
other
Latin
Americans
treated
as
outcasts.
This is
a
profound
significant
reason
why
Puerto
Ricans
and
Cubans
do not
view the
need for
Immigration
Reform
as do
Mexicans.
Cubans
Political
upheaval
in Cuba
created
new
waves of
Cuban
immigrants
to the
U.S.
between
1960–1980.
In 1959,
after
the
Cuban
revolution
led by
Fidel
Castro,
a large
Cuban
exodus
began as
the new
government
allied
itself
with the
Soviet
Union
and
began to
introduce
communism.
From
1960 to
1979,
hundreds
of
thousands
of
Cubans
left
Cuba and
began a
new life
in the
United
States. Most
Cuban
Americans
that
arrived
in the
United
States
initially
came
from
Cuba's
educated
upper
and
middle
classes.
Between
December
1960 and
October
1962
more
than
14,000
Cuban
children
arrived
alone in
the U.S.
Their
parents
were
afraid
their
children
were
going to
be sent
to some
Soviet
bloc
countries
to be
educated
and they
decided
to send
them to
the
States
as soon
as
possible.
This
program
was
called
Operation
Pedro
Pan
(Operation
Peter
Pan).
When the
children
arrived
in Miami
they
were met
by
representatives
of
Catholic
Charities
and they
were
sent to
live
with
relatives
if they
had any
or were
sent to
foster
homes,
orphanages
or
boarding
schools
until
their
parents
could
leave
Cuba. In
order to
provide
aid to
recently
arrived
Cuban
immigrants,
the
United
States
Congress
passed
the
Cuban
Adjustment
Act in
1966.
The
Cuban
Refugee
Program
provided
more
than
$1.3
billion
of
direct
financial
assistance.
They
also
were
eligible
for
public
assistance,
Medicare,
free
English
courses,
scholarships,
and
low-interest
college
loans.
Some
banks
even
pioneered
loans
for
exiles
who did
not have
collateral
or
credit
but
received
help in
getting
a
business
loan.
These
loans
enabled
many
Cuban
Americans
to
secure
funds
and
start up
their
own
businesses.
With
their
Cuban-owned
businesses
and low
cost of
living,
Miami,
Florida
and
Union
City,
New
Jersey
(dubbed
"Little
Havana-on-the
Hudson")
were the
preferred
destinations
for many
immigrants
and soon
became
the main
centers
for
Cuban
American
culture.
It was
not
until
the mass
exodus
of the
Cuban
exiles
in 1959
that
Miami
started
to
become a
preferred
destination.
Westchester,
Florida
within
Miami-Dade
County,
stands
as the
area
most
populated
by
Cubans
and
Cuban
Americans
in the
United
States,
followed
by
Hialeah,
Florida
in
second.
Another
large
wave of
an
estimated
125,000
people
of Cuban
immigration
occurred
in the
early
1980s
with the
Mariel
boatlifts.
Most of
the "Marielitos"
were
people
wanting
to
escape
from
communist
tyranny,
and have
succeeded
in
establishing
their
roots in
the US.
The wet
foot,
dry foot
policy
is the
name
given to
a
consequence
of the
1995
revision
of the
Cuban
Adjustment
Act of
1966
that
says,
essentially,
anyone
who fled
Cuba and
got into
the
United
States
would be
allowed
to
pursue
residency
a year
later.
After
talks
with the
Cuban
government,
the
Clinton
administration
came to
an
agreement
with
Cuba it
would
stop
admitting
people
found at
sea.
Since
then, in
what has
become
known as
the "wet
foot,
dry
foot"
policy,
a Cuban
caught
on the
waters
between
the two
nations
(i.e.,
with
"wet
feet")
would
summarily
be sent
home or
to a
third
country.
One who
makes it
to shore
("dry
feet")
gets a
chance
to
remain
in the
United
States,
and
later
would
qualify
for
expedited
"legal
permanent
resident"
status
and U.S.
citizenship.
Since
the
mid-1990s,
after
the
implementation
of the
"Wet
Foot,
Dry
Foot"
policy
immigration
patterns
changed.
Many
Cuban
immigrants
departed
from the
southern
and
western
coasts
of Cuba
and
arrived
at the
Yucatán
Peninsula
in
Mexico;
many
landed
on Isla
Mujeres.
From
there
Cuban
immigrants
traveled
to the
Texas-Mexico
border
and
found
asylum.
Many of
the
Cubans
who did
not have
family
in Miami
settled
in
Houston;
this has
caused
Houston's
Cuban
American
community
to
increase
in size.
The term
"dusty
foot"
refers
to
Cubans
immigrating
to the
U.S.
through
Mexico.
In 2005
the
Department
of
Homeland
Security
had
abandoned
the
approach
of
detaining
every
dry foot
Cuban
who
crosses
through
Texas
and
began a
policy
allowing
most
Cubans
to
obtain
immediate
parole.
Why
Cuban
Americans
vote
republican
Cuban
Americans
vote
Republican
because
Cubans
do not
like the
communist
regime
in Cuba
and
identify
with the
Republican
party's
strong
anti-communist,
pro-capitalist
point of
view,
To
understand
Miami
Cuban
politics,
one must
go back
to the
Bay of
Pigs
invasion,
which
some
Miami
Cubans
will
tell you
President
John F.
Kennedy
blundered.
The
invasion
took
place
two
years
after
Fidel
Castro
seized
power
from
Fulgencio
Batista,
a
U.S.-backed
dictator
who
would
order
public
executions
of
children.
On April
17,
1961, a
brigade
of
CIA-trained
Cuban
exiles
invaded
a beach
in
southern
Cuba
with the
expectation
the
United
States
Air
Force
would
provide
them air
support.
The air
support
never
came.
Kennedy
called
it off
when it
became
apparent
the
American
involvement
in the
invasion
was no
secret
and had
the
potential
to lead
to a
full-scale
war
against
the
Soviet
Union.
More
than
1,200
exiles
were
captured
and 118
killed
in the
failed
invasion.
Although
Kennedy
negotiated
a deal
with
Castro
to
exchange
$53
million
in food
and
medicine
for the
release
of the
prisoners
20
months
later,
his
credibility
within
the
exile
community
was
destroyed
and the
majority
of Cuban
exiles
became
diehard
Republicans.
“Our
perception
is JFK
fell
asleep
at the
switch,”
said
Henry
Gomez, a
Cuban
American
born in
Miami
who is a
main
contributor
on the
right-wing
blog
Babalu,
which
bills
itself
as an
“island
on the
net
without
a
bearded
dictator.”
Democratic
presidents
since
then
have
been
perceived
as
dupes by
the
Cubans.
Rubio
wants to
deport
12
million
undocumented
Mexicans
Marco Rubio signed on as a co-sponsor to a bill that would reauthorize the E-Verify employment check system and make it mandatory for all employers.
“I know first hand the great things that immigration has meant for America," Rubio said in a statement posted on his website. "Immigration is woven into the fabric of our nation and is a critical part of our future. But we can’t be the only nation in the world that does not enforce its immigration laws. Consistently, I have stated that a modernization of the legal immigration system is impossible unless we must first secure the border and implement an E-Verify system that will help prevent the hiring and exploitation of undocumented workers. That’s why I support Senator Charles Grassley’s bill to make E-Verify permanent.”
Marco
was to
have
been the
Great
White
Hope
winning
the
Hispanic/Latino
vote for
Republicans
in 2012
but this
reveals
a lens
focused
on a
racist
society.
Marco
Rubio does not
support
Immigration
Reform.
Marco
Rubio believes
in
double
standards
of Cuban
Americans
supreme
over
Mexican
Americans.
Marco
Rubio supports
deportation
of all
undocumented
immigrants.
Marco
Rubio
has cut
off his
nose to
spite
his face
and if
the
Republicans
use
Marco
Rubio on
the 2012
presidential
ticket,
it will
be a
kiss of
death
for only
some
Cuban
Americans
will vote
for
Rubio
with 98%
of all
Hispanics/Latinos
in the
USA
remembering
Rubio's
double
standards,
will
not
vote for
the
Republican
ticket.