Nope, we should make Mexico the 51st state. Then all the illegals
will go back home, because they'll STILL be in the United States.
;-0
2007-03-01 06:00:42
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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How will military intervention solve the economic problems of the country? Unless we are establishing a military dictatorship and a command economy, this will not solve anything. Command economies have been shown to fail in most places they have been instituted. Since Mexico has a market economy, we should let them be. Sending them help in the form of more modern industrial equipment and technology would do far more to help them, since they already have a stable government.
2007-03-01 12:41:52
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answer #2
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answered by theeconomicsguy 5
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Respectfully, I don't know what military intervention on our behalf would solve. If the economy of Mexico were to improve, the start should be with better educated people there. The education AND availability of jobs there would help greatly; if the country were dedicated to this cause, we could send some people there to help with those issues BUT, remember commuinism...all the propaganda possible regarding what TRULY is. Enough said.
2007-03-01 12:50:37
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Would not do nothing to hellp Mexico with milltary intervention, and probadly end up with curropt Americans soliders, and politcans in the process.
Mexico is a market economy with mixture of 21st century style companies, and towns mixed in with traditional native villages. Mexico economy will slowly improve overtime, and Mexican economy similar to development like Untied States in the 1940s. Before the massive growth in Untied States after WW2. Chinese style growth will not happen in Mexico because the base of economy is a lot higher than China, and polically its impossible because democracy require accountbility which China does not have to deal with.
Mexico grow 3.5% a year for 30 years should slowly reduce migration, and narrow the income gap slowly with the Untied States. Mexico to grow over 5% it need real structural reform, but that not likely because of culutral, historical reasons..
2007-03-01 18:44:41
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answer #4
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answered by ram456456 5
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why military intervention? why not just send food to POOR people? then we could stop POOR Mexicans coming to the US. they just come looking for a better living. Mexico is a very POOR country, nearly one in every four Mexicans are classified as extremely POOR and unable to afford adequate food. we should at least try to help Mexico, but sending military intervention is not exactly the right way.
2007-03-09 02:15:22
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answer #5
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answered by blah... 3
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Military intervention to solve the problem that Mexico is poor? I'm not following your line of reasoning (non given) of how sending our military into Mexico would make it less poor. Other than our military spending their paychecks there.
2007-03-01 12:41:08
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answer #6
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answered by absynthian 6
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Intervention would not solve problems but would create many.The USA provides aid in the form of problem solving to countries such as Mexico.
2007-03-07 15:27:43
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answer #7
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answered by cawillms 3
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Absolutely not. Why should we send our military to solve Mexico's problems. If anything, we need to send our military to the border to halt the flow of illegal aliens. Let Mexico solve it's own damn problems. They're already taking our money as illegal aliens send 16 billion dollars a year over the boarder.
Screw Mexico!
2007-03-01 12:45:44
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Don't you think the U S better start looking after it's own back yard rather than becoming the "police" for the world?? Isn't the U S gov't already sticking it's nose in Iraq & Iran??? Hasn't the U S lost enough allies???
The answer is NO.
Note to Zingis... don't laugh. with Canada's abundant quantities of oil, the U S will be looking for weapons of mass destruction north of the border!
2007-03-08 19:46:25
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answer #9
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answered by front door 3
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That won't solve anything. You can't conquer poverty in a military sense. Among Mexico's many problems are a lack of capital, crumbling infrastructure, lack of effective government presence outside the major urban areas (and even within some of them), heavy presence of corruption and gang rule, booming population (tempered in part by emigration to the U.S.) and decay of traditional family support structures without replacement by anything else.
2007-03-01 13:08:51
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answer #10
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answered by Veritatum17 6
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