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And You Think Its Tough To Work In America ?
6 comments | Posted by bwjtx 35 months ago
Jimmy Pozin's Ramblings
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I work

with SW BELL in Mexico City.

I spent five years working in Mexico.

I worked under a tourist visa for three months and could legally renew it
for three more months. After that you were working illegally. I was
technically illegal for three weeks waiting on the FM3 approval.

During that six months our Mexican and US Attorneys were working to secure a
permanent work visa called a FM3. It was in addition to my US passport that
I had to show each time I entered and left the country. Barbara's was the
same except hers did not permit her to work.

To apply for the FM3 I needed to submit the following notarized originals
(not copies) of my:

1. Birth certificates for Barbara and me.

2. Marriage certificate.

3. High school transcripts and proof of graduation.

4. College transcripts for every college I attended and proof of graduation.

5. Two letters of recommendation from supervisors I had worked for at least
one year.

6. A letter from The St. Louis Chief of Police indicating I had no arrest
record in the US and no outstanding warrants and was "a citizen in good
standing."

7. Finally; I had to write a letter about myself that clearly stated why
there was no Mexican citizen with my skills and why my skills were important
to Mexico. We called it our "I am the greatest person on earth" letter. It
was fun to write.

All of the above were in English that had to be translated into Spanish and
be certified as legal translations and our signatures notarized. It
produced a folder about 1.5 inches thick with English on the left side and
Spanish on the right.

Once they were completed Barbara and I spent about five hours accompanied by
a Mexican attorney touring Mexican government office locations and being
photographed and fingerprinted at least three times. At each location (and
we remember at least four locations) we were instructed on Mexican tax,
labor, housing, and criminal law and that we were required to obey their
laws or face the consequences. We could not protest any of the government's
actions or we would be committing a felony. We paid out four thousand
dollars in fees and bribes to complete the process. When this was done we
could legally bring in our household goods that were held by US customs in
Laredo, Texas. This meant we rented furniture in Mexico while awaiting our
goods. There were extensive fees involved here that the company paid.

We could not buy a home and were required to rent at very high rates and
under contract and compliance with Mexican law.

We were required to get a Mexican drivers license. This was an amazing
process. The company arranged for the licensing agency to come to our
headquarters location with their photography a nd finger print equipment and
the laminating machine. We showed our US license, were photographed and
fingerprinted again and issued the license instantly after paying out a
six-dollar fee. We did not take a written or driving test and never
received instructions on the rules of the road. Our only instruction was
never give a policeman your license if stopped and asked. We were
instructed to hold it against the inside window away from his grasp. If he
got his hands on it you would have to pay ransom to get it back.

We then had to pay and file Mexican income tax annually using the number of
our FM3 as our ID number. The companies Mexican accountants did this for us
and we just signed what they prepared. It was about twenty legal size pages
annually.

The FM 3 was good for three years and renewable for two more after paying
more fees.

Leaving the country meant turning in the FM# and certifying we were leaving
no debts behind and no outstanding legal affairs (warrants, tickets or
liens) before our household goods were released to customs.

It was a real adventure and If any of our senators or congressmen went
through it once they would have a different attitude toward Mexico.

The Mexican Government uses its vast military and police forces to keep its
citizens intimidated and compliant. They never protest at their White House
or government offices but do protest daily in front of the United States
Embassy. The US embassy looks like a strongly reinforced fortress and
during most protests the Mexican Military surround the block with their men
standing shoulder to shoulder in full riot gear to protect the Embassy.
These protests are never shown on US TV or Mexican TV. There is a large
public park across the street where they do their protesting. Anything can
cause a protest such as proposed law changes in California or Texas.
America....Land of the Free,and the Brave....Love it or Leave it ~


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Community Comments  Post Comment

 
View Profile for DEEDEEDEEDEE
Posted on May 01, 2006 at 12:11 AM
1,944 tokens, 5.73 days wasted
wow. what an ordeal.

Blessed are the flexible, for they will not get bent out of shape.

 
View Profile for stutterflystutterfly
Posted on May 01, 2006 at 09:17 PM
628 tokens, 1.5 days wasted
that wuz long i cudn't finish dun worry it's not u it's me i have a short attention span

il ove cho.co.lat[e]

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bang bang

 
View Profile for SoR_AWCSoR_AWC
Posted on May 02, 2006 at 10:00 AM
7,309 tokens, 1.03 months wasted
Make sure to email this to your senator.

When the 12 million illegal mexicans complete all the same steps they can enter the country

Until then they can GTFO

And revoke Fox's green card while they are at it.


 
View Profile for Phoenix_84Phoenix_84
Posted on May 02, 2006 at 11:18 AM
2,200 tokens, 1.47 weeks wasted
on a side note, my Grandparents live in AZ, about 5 miles from the border. The mexicans run through their back yard on there way to the city. The police wanted to arrest my Grandfather because an Illegal Alien was trying the steal water out of his garage and my grandfather stopped him. the police said he had to provide water to the border crasher because it was some sort of murder by ommision type bullshit. gotta love this country man

Do Not Meddle in the Affairs of Dragons, for You are Crunchy and Taste Good with
Ketchup

Veni, Veni, Dormivi!

Licetne mihi ambulare ad latrinam?

I do not mean to pry, but you don't by any chance happen to have six fingers
on your right hand?

 
View Profile for SoR_AWCSoR_AWC
Posted on May 02, 2006 at 01:20 PM
7,309 tokens, 1.03 months wasted
Comment in reply to Phoenix_84's original comment

Set up a webcam on gramps property with a remote triggered shotgun.


 
View Profile for hunnybunnyhunnybunny
Posted on May 03, 2006 at 09:57 AM
8,950 tokens, 3.24 weeks wasted
OMG sounds like you had to go thro a lot dont get me started on this, hey you should of come to the UK they let anybody in

Marriage is a relationship in which one person is always right, and the other is
a husband.


http://www.myspace.com/donna28

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