
The official and vigilante deportation of Mexicans from the U.S. began immediately after Mexico's loss of half its territory at the conclusion of that war of conquest, cheerfully called Manifest Destiny by the journalists of the day. Such deportations continue to this day. Learn about some of this history.
Part One:
The deportation of Mexicans is a perennial American event—predictable as hurricanes, floods, and locusts. The roundups of Mexicans, rondadas, began in 1848, at the end of the Mexican-American War, when the Texas Rangers offered Mexicanos the choice of leaving their haciendas (many built 300 years earlier) or being hung. Tens of thousands left, hundreds were hung; the city of San Antonio was abandoned. Meantime during the California gold rush, Mexicans, who perfected many gold mining techniques, were outlawed from registering mining claims, had to give up claims already registered, and could only work as miners for “real” Americans in the Sierra Nevada gold fields of California (sic).
In 1915, again the Texas Rangers (not to be confused by President Bush’s former baseball team), now joined by the U.S. Army, “cleaned out the infestation” of refugees of the Mexican Revolution, working on the farms and ranches of the Rio Grande Valley, creating an exodus so massive that all roads to the border were congested with fleeing Mexican families.
After the crash of the Stock Market in 1929, (note: caused by bankers in New York, not by Mexican tenant farmers or coal miners in the Southwest), and the consequent Great Depression, President Hoover initiated operation “Mexican Repatriation,” where one to two million residents of Mexican decent where rounded up to be repatriated to their “home country.” An estimated 60 percent, forced onto railroad boxcars to be taken to the border, were U.S. born.
The next roundup came in 1952, ordered by President Eisenhower who became alarmed by a New York Times report of “The rise of illegal border-crossing Mexican wetbacks.” His Operation Wetback brought one thousand border patrol agents with state and local police efforts designed to aggressively sweep entire cities and rural communities to deport more than one million Mexicans, again many U.S. born, and some taken 500 miles into Mexico, to “ensure they don’t come back, ever!”
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), continues to hunt for Mexicans, raiding worksites and day worker centers, neighborhoods, mercados, public schools, and human services agencies. The goal is to catch undocumented immigrants for deportation. The method is to raid locations frequented by Mexicans, round up every man, woman, senior and child who fits the stereotype; brown-skinned, low income, Spanish-speakers, frightened, those who run, and those who cry (often the women and children).
At the detention centers being built or expanded, all must prove their right to live in the U.S. The rule is: No papers? Deportation! But what about my U.S. born children? Take them or leave them! ICE does not care either way. What about my spouse in the hospital? What about the home I am buying? My job? The taxes I paid for 20 or 40 years? My clean record of not even a parking ticket? What about the thousands I paid an immigration lawyer to fix my papers?
These questions, protestations, and pleas from people without their residency visas, (the famously magical green card), are no doubt tiring to seasoned ICE-men and women who have heard it all, seen it all, and do their duty to officiously deport the “illegals, wetbacks, spicks, border raiders, and those who have no right to invade our country, take American jobs, live off welfare, and commit all manner of crimes!”
What do you think?

Comments
"Less we forget our beginning"
“Those who do not have a right to invade our country,” I agree entirely with border control, yet, let us not be so prideful to isolate a group of people looking for a better tomorrow; less we forget our beginning as America. If I remember distinctly our beginnings starts with an “invasion”.
Immigration
I really don’t blame the immigrants for trying to come to the U.S. If you live in a country that’s corrupted by the drug cartels and fighting is happening every day you really have no choice but to move. The main reason they choose to migrate is not to cause trouble but to live in an environment where safety is not an issue. Another reason is to find better jobs to help support their family and to basically have freedom and what better place to be free than American itself. The land of freedom and opportunity!
But on the other side I do not agree with many immigrants smuggling drugs into the U.S soil; or causing terrorist attacks.
Pages