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18 answers

It's more like ruining than conquering.

2007-10-04 16:32:05 · answer #1 · answered by Huevos Rancheros 6 · 7 1

This is the stated objective of La Raza - The Razor. Prior to the Razor of Aztlan, the Samurai of Japan made the same claim of territory possession of the American Southwest. I would advise the Mexican Razor to steer clear and away from Atzlan, since China has its' sights on Los Angeles and Las Vegas.

2007-10-04 16:36:34 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

From the article ;The Fiscal Cost of Low-Skill Immigrants to the U.S. Taxpayer// The following paragraph reflects why illegals think there is a Aztlan. We call it lack of education. Educated people contribute uneducated people are a financial drain whether they work or not. If illegals stayed in school they would know Aztlan does not and never did exist. //////The Declining Education Levels of Immigrants//////
Current immigrants (both legal and illegal) have very low education levels relative to the non-immigrant U.S. population. As Chart 1 shows, at least 50 percent, and perhaps 60 percent of illegal immigrant adults lack a high school degree. Among legal immigrants the situation is better, but a quarter still lack a high school diploma. Overall, a third of immigrant households are headed by individuals without a high school degree. By contrast, only 9 percent of non-immigrant adults lack a high school degree. The current immigrant population, thus, contains a disproportionate share of poorly educated individuals. These individuals will tend to have low wages, pay little in taxes, and receive above average levels of government benefits and services. There is a common misconception that the low education levels of recent immigrants is part of a permanent historical pattern, and that the U.S. has always admitted immigrants who were poorly educated relative to the native born population. Historically, this was not the case. For example, in 1960, recent immigrants were no more likely than were non-immigrants to lack a high school degree. By 1998, recent immigrants were almost four times more likely to lack a high school degree than were non-immigrants. As the relative education level of immigrants fell in recent decades, so did their relative wage levels. In 1960, the average immigrant male in the U.S. actually earned more than the average non-immigrant man. As the relative education levels of subsequent waves of immigrants fell, so did relative wages. By 1998, the average immigrant earned 23 percent less than the average non-immigrant.

2007-10-04 18:28:37 · answer #3 · answered by T 4 · 0 1

The Mexicans at one time thought that they conquered the States of Arizona and New Mexico. They were known for there raids on the Navajo tribes to take there Women and return into the safety of Old mexico. They became to brave and went further into upper new Mexico where they ran into fearless Indian tribes such as the Apache and the Crow Indian tribes. They were masicured and rightfuly so in my opinion. I reside in Arizona and I am moving out of this State on count of the huge population of illegal mexicans within Arizona.
My license plate reads GOHOME As usaul the only way that they can fight is in numbers. One on one? Never. Still the cowards that they were after they met the Crow Indian tribes.

2007-10-04 17:46:32 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

This Aztlan nonsense is a concoction of a small number of Chicano Studies professors in a few universities. To quote Orwell, "One has to belong to the intelligentsia to believe things like that: no ordinary man could be such a fool."

2007-10-04 19:25:45 · answer #5 · answered by Thomas M 6 · 1 0

No they are not.This is a lost, pitiful hope. The American Indian will not take over again. The cave man will not re establish his home land. The South will not rise again. One people will always recede and give way to the next. This has happened all through hiostory

2007-10-04 22:55:11 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

They think they are. I think they need to re-think. More legal US Citizen's are waking up to what's happening.

At the close of the 1970 movie, “Tora, Tora, Tora,,” Admiral Isoruko Yamamoto warns his staff: "I fear all we have done is to awaken a sleeping giant and fill him with a terrible resolve." The words are those of the screenwriter, not the Admiral: there is no evidence that Yamamoto ever said this. No matter, the words fit our times.

2007-10-04 16:40:11 · answer #7 · answered by shespeaks! 3 · 1 1

OMFG, Somebody actually believes in Aztlan, what a moron.

2007-10-04 16:39:43 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

LOL....Not this dribble again....


No. Aztlan is a myth, just like NeverNeverland, Peter Pan.

Doesn't exist. Never did, not now, not ever.

2007-10-04 16:33:39 · answer #9 · answered by Dirty Martini 6 · 3 1

No! Here's why.

Secessionists meeting in Tennessee
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071003/ap_on_re_us/secessionist_movement

2007-10-04 17:48:13 · answer #10 · answered by StoneCold 6 · 1 0

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