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Author Topic: Evil in Mexico  (Read 677 times)

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Offline poche

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Evil in Mexico
« on: May 06, 2014, 12:53:51 AM »
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  • The head of Mexico's anti-poverty program drew criticism Monday after she warned Indian mothers that government aid programs would help support only their first three children.

    Activists said the warning by Social Development Secretary Rosario Robles appeared insulting and aimed at punishing women who have more children.

    Robles' department said the three-child rule has actually been in place since July 2012, before current President Enrique Pena Nieto took office. The Associated Press found a reference to a similar guideline in government docuмents dating back to 2011, when the change appears to have first been made.

    Her office said the rules apply to Indians and non-Indians alike.

    Robles said she was just stating longstanding policy in a speech last week to Huichol and Cora Indian women in the Pacific coast state of Nayarit. She was talking about a series of government food aid, scholarships and health assistance programs known broadly as Oportunidades ("Opportunities") that provide a maximum of about $210 a month to poor families.

    But the tone, timing and audience may not have been the best, and Robles made it sound like the rule was new.

    "Opportunities is changing," Robles said in the speech. "By having a lot of children, you're not going to get more Opportunities. Opportunities is not going to benefit those who have a lot of children anymore; it is going to support those who have few children, because small families have a better life."

    Two-time unsuccessful leftist presidential candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador called her comments "offensive, discriminatory and racist."

    Regina Tames, director of the Group for Informed Reproductive Choice, also criticized Robles. "The way she announced this in front of Indian women is completely disrespectful ... she talked to them like they were children."

    "It's a threat," Tames added. "Such a policy might be good, if it were accompanied by a lot of other programs" to help women decide how many children they want and empower them to make that decision. But she noted Indian women are often victims of poverty, powerlessness and a lack of information.

    The debate touches on a common stereotype in Mexico that women from the country's 60 or so indigenous ethnic groups have a lot of children. But with life expectancy among Indians lower and maternal death rates higher, Indians have slowly but steadily declined as a percentage of Mexico's total population, dropping to around 7 percent by 2012, according to the country's National Social Development Policy Council.

    Of the country's 8.2 million Indians, about 72 percent are poor, and nearly 31 percent of them live in extreme poverty.

    Robles said the Opportunities program is undergoing "a total redesign," and defended the limit on family size. She stressed that in rural areas, not just among Indians, there is a serious problem with large, poverty-stricken families.

    "It is really incredible that in many places ... you see girls 12, 13, 14 years old with babies in their arms. They are mothers already, and they're children," Robles said last week. "So we have a serious problem."

    http://news.yahoo.com/mexico-anti-poverty-fund-draws-line-3-children-184122230.html


    Offline poche

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    Evil in Mexico
    « Reply #1 on: May 16, 2014, 04:01:29 AM »
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  • A Mexican cabinet minister, Rosario Robles, has called for the end to public assistance to indigenous women with more than three children, asserting that the women have more children in order to receive additional government benefits.

    Her comments have been met with criticism from indigenous rights activists, some political figures, and a retired bishop who lives in the forest, ministering to indigenous people, according to Proceso, a Mexican news magazine.

    Robles, Mexico’s Secretary of Social Development, “does not know the ethnic structure, does not even know that the women of the indigenous people do not know what abortion and contraceptives are,” said Bishop Arturo Lona Reyes, 88. “They only know about the miracle of life.”

    Robles, the prelate added, “should study the history of the indigenous people” and not make “absurd and discriminatory” remarks.

    http://www.catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=21424


    Offline hammertojezabel

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    Evil in Mexico
    « Reply #2 on: May 16, 2014, 07:30:03 AM »
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  • Just introduce them to NFP.  

    It is a method that is touted by its adherents as being 99% effective for controlling the number of children you want.

    It's cheap and effective birth control.

    Offline Emerentiana

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    Evil in Mexico
    « Reply #3 on: May 16, 2014, 01:26:46 PM »
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  • Quote from: hammertojezabel
    Just introduce them to NFP.  

    It is a method that is touted by its adherents as being 99% effective for controlling the number of children you want.

    It's cheap and effective birth control.


    Really?  You couldn't prove it by me!   Im the mother of 10  living children  + 2 more that didn't live.

    I started NFP with permission from my priest after # 5 (which I had in 4.5 years)   Didn't work at all!  Had 5 more children!

    Offline poche

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    Evil in Mexico
    « Reply #4 on: June 06, 2014, 02:24:25 AM »
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  • The murder of a Mexican cardinal in 1993 has been linked to important figures connected to both the drug trade and the administration of then-President Carlos Salinas.

    In a new book on the killing, author Jesus Becerra Pedrote says that Cardinal Juan Posadas Ocampo was gunned down because he showed a willingness to speak out against the corruption of the Mexican government at the time, and the links between top government officials and drug traffickers.

    Church leaders in Mexico have pushed for a full investigation of the killing, which was initially dismissed, after a cursory investigation, as the result of mistaken identity. Pedrote argues that the murder of the cardinal was carefully planned, and the investigation of his death deliberately blocked, by leading government officials.

    http://www.catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=21617