In Mexico, they don't have birth certificates... They don't have registration cards for voters. They have one national ID. We don't have a national ID.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I was born in the U.S., my wife was born in Mexico and emigrated here when she was in college, and my daughters were born in New York City. That makes them passport-carrying, natural-born, eligible-to-run-for-president Americans. But they're also Mexicans and they like that just fine.
We don't need a nation that has national identity cards.
I was born in Mexico, I am from Mexico City.
You have all these people in the city and everything has become centralized. If you live outside the city and you need a birth certificate or some official paper from the government, you have to travel to the city.
I would never call people that are born in this country who are from Mexico 'terror babies.'
My dad had been born in Mexico and his family had to leave during the Mexican revolution.
More than one-third of Mexicans in the United States own property in Mexico, nearly 80 percent send money home and 25 percent have a spouse in Mexico. Assimilation and becoming an American citizen are not the objective for many of them.
We're the only western country that doesn't have a national health care ID.
To get elected in Mexico today, you have to compete like any democracy, and you don't do that by being manipulated.
It is a sign of the times that the absence of meaningful ID requirements in many states leaves our voting process vulnerable to fraud and allows legal votes to be cancelled out by illegally cast ballots.
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