Tag: Mexico

  • Keystone Stereoview Waterfront of Mazatlan, Mexico of Rare 1200 Card Set #67 DNN



    Keystone Stereoview Waterfront of Mazatlan, Mexico of Rare 1200 Card Set #67 DNN

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    Keystone Stereoview Waterfront of Mazatlan, Mexico: A Rare Gem from the 1200 Card Set #67 DNN

    If you’re a collector of vintage stereoview cards, then you’ll definitely want to add this rare gem to your collection. The Keystone Stereoview card featuring the waterfront of Mazatlan, Mexico is part of the coveted 1200 card set #67 DNN.

    The stunning image captures the vibrant colors and bustling activity of Mazatlan’s waterfront, showcasing the beauty and charm of this Mexican coastal town. From the palm-lined beaches to the colorful buildings and bustling marketplaces, this stereoview card truly transports you to another time and place.

    Whether you’re a seasoned collector or just starting out, this rare Keystone Stereoview card is a must-have for any enthusiast. Don’t miss out on the opportunity to own a piece of history and add this unique card to your collection today.
    #Keystone #Stereoview #Waterfront #Mazatlan #Mexico #Rare #Card #Set #DNN,dnn

  • Mexico refuses to accept a U.S. deportation flight


    WASHINGTON — Mexico denied a U.S. military plane access to land Thursday, at least temporarily frustrating the Trump administration’s plans to deport immigrants to the country, according to two U.S. defense officials and a third person familiar with the situation.

    Two Guatemala-bound Air Force C-17s, carrying about 80 people apiece, flew deportees out of the U.S. Thursday night, the sources said. The third flight, slotted for Mexico, never took off.

    A White House spokesperson did not reply to a text message seeking comment on Mexico’s stance.

    It was not immediately clear why Mexico blocked the flight, but tensions between the U.S. and Mexico, neighbors and longtime allies, have risen since President Donald Trump won the November election. Trump has threatened to slap 25% across-the-board tariffs on Mexico in retaliation for migrants crossing the border the countries share. But he has not yet put them in effect.

    The Mexican Embassy did not immediately return a request for comment.

    Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum’s government has said it opposes Trump taking “unilateral” action to implement restrictive immigration standards — including the reinstatement of a “remain in Mexico” policy that forces migrants to stay in that country while they await adjudication of asylum claims. Flying deportees into a foreign country requires the cooperation of that nation’s government, and Mexico declined to give its consent.

    The military deportation flights are part of a broader Trump administration crackdown on illegal immigration that has been set in motion with executive orders signed in his first week in office. During his campaign, he vowed to stop illegal immigration into the U.S. and pursue a campaign of mass deportation of undocumented immigrants already living in the country.

    In addition to the flights, he has enlisted the military to beef up its presence on the border with an additional 1,500 troops.



    In a bold move, Mexico has refused to accept a deportation flight from the United States, sparking controversy and tension between the two countries. The flight, which was carrying individuals who had been ordered to be deported from the U.S., was turned away by Mexican authorities at the border.

    This decision comes amidst growing criticism of the Trump administration’s immigration policies, which have led to an increase in deportations and crackdowns on undocumented immigrants. Mexico’s refusal to accept the deportation flight is seen as a sign of the country’s resistance to these policies and its commitment to protecting the rights of immigrants.

    The move has drawn praise from human rights organizations and immigration advocates, who see it as a positive step towards promoting justice and fairness in the treatment of immigrants. However, it has also sparked anger and frustration among U.S. officials, who view Mexico’s decision as a challenge to their authority and a breach of diplomatic protocol.

    As tensions continue to rise between the two countries, it remains to be seen how this latest development will impact their relationship and the future of immigration policy in the region.

    Tags:

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    #Mexico #refuses #accept #U.S #deportation #flight

  • Mexico and other countries could hamper Trump border plans


    President Donald Trump’s plans to seal the U.S.-Mexico border and conduct mass deportations might soon run into a major roadblock: Mexico and the countries where the immigrants come from might not accept some of them back.

    Trump on Monday signed an order to revive of the “Remain in Mexico” policy, which requires asylum-seekers to stay outside the United States as their claims are processed. But on the front lines of the U.S.-Mexico border, that requires a degree of cooperation from the Mexican government, which appears resistant.

    Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum told reporters Wednesday she has not agreed to accept non-Mexican migrants seeking asylum in the United States, and such a move would require Mexico to agree, according to report in Reuters.

    An expert witness at a House Judiciary Committee hearing Wednesday listed other countries that have refused to take back migrants, such as Cuba, Venezuela, China, India, Bangladesh and Iran.

    Sen. Gary Peters of Michigan, the top Democrat on the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, said Thursday that getting Mexico to cooperate with the Remain in Mexico policy “could be very problematic.”

    “It’s really hard to actually institute that program if the Mexican government doesn’t agree, and I don’t think we can take that for granted, that they’re going to agree,” Peters said.

    Peters also said the issue of Mexico being forced to accept migrants who are not from the Western Hemisphere, such as those from China, “complicates things as well.”

    “The type of migration we’re seeing is different, and it is coming from outside of Latin America,” Peters said. “Not totally, but increasing numbers are coming from outside of Latin America. People are flying into Mexico. People are flying into Canada, they’re flying into other countries and then coming across the border.”

    Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., at a hearing last week, enumerated a few of the kinds of migrants Mexico would not be willing to accept again.

    “These are folks that are coming in from Tajikistan and other areas the Mexicans are not going to take back,” Lankford said. “These are recalcitrant countries that are not accepting folks back.”

    In fiscal 2024, nearly 38,000 nationals from China were found by Border Patrol to have come into the United States illegally from Mexico, which is a steep climb from the 2,200 encountered in the whole of fiscal 2022.

    Lankford said international organizations like ISIS are sending people from Tajikistan in from Mexico because they saw the success drug cartels were having with immigrants coming into the United States.

    The senator concluded that “some sort of legal response” is needed, including a legislative change that would give authority to the State Department to put pressure on some of these countries as well.

    Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., during the same Homeland Security hearing last week, questioned why Mexico would be able to resist migrants from outside the Western Hemisphere when they entered Mexico in the first place to try to enter the United States.

    “They get into Mexico and then they come to the United States — why shouldn’t that be Mexico’s problem?” Scott said. “Why shouldn’t we just say, ‘You’re the one who let them into your country’? Why [is it] our problem? It’s their problem. You raise their tariffs until they do it.”

    The previous versions of the Remain in Mexico policy had some level of agreement from Mexico, some of it the result of the sort of tactics Scott mentioned.

    Back to ‘Remain’

    In his first term, Trump announced the Remain in Mexico policy in 2018 with the cooperation of Mexico’s then-President Andrés Manuel López Obrador.

    The reasoning behind why Mexico initially agreed to accept migrants in 2018 under the program is unclear, Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, senior fellow at the American Immigration Council, said Thursday.

    “We don’t entirely know,” Reichlin-Melnick said. “As a matter of fact, there was a lot of confusion over what the specific boundaries of the deal were, and we are still not entirely clear about it.”

    While the program was at first limited to one point of entry and specific nationalities, Trump’s threat in 2019 for 25 percent tariffs got Mexico to agree to expand it further, Reichlin-Melnick said.

    “So very clearly, Mexico played a significant role in deciding the boundaries of the program,” Reichlin-Melnick said. “Nevertheless, the official position of the Mexican government has always been, ‘This actually has nothing to do with us. We didn’t choose to do this.’”

    Although Trump has said Mexico has agreed to it, the Mexican government has signaled it has not, Reichlin-Melnick said.

    “We don’t have full agreement on this,” Reichlin-Melnick said. “What does that actually mean? It’s a little bit more confusion, and we are waiting to hear more from the Trump administration on how the program will … come back, who it will be applied to, and when.”

    Ariel Ruiz, senior policy analyst for the Migration Policy Institute, said that whether Mexico agrees to the policy again in 2025 depends on new factors because the “negotiation landscape between Mexico and the United States is very different.”

    “Mexico, since May, has been detaining more migrants in Mexico than Border Patrol has detained at the U.S.-Mexico border every month since May,” Ruiz said. “And that’s a really significant achievement, because Mexico has a fraction of the funding that U.S. agencies will receive.”

    Doris Meissner, director of the U.S. Immigration Policy Program at the Migration Policy Institute, said during a conference call on Tuesday that Trump’s other policies “could really hamper” cooperation between the United States and Mexico on the return of migrants.

    “The issue of tariffs on Mexico, imposing 25 percent starting very soon, renaming the Gulf of Mexico the Gulf of America, threats to retake the Panama Canal will make it much more difficult for those countries to cooperate with the United States going forward,” Meissner said. “So there are those impediments and those internal tensions, similarly with mass deportations.”

    Other issues

    The human cost of forcing migrants to return outside the U.S.-Mexico border is another factor in play. Critics of the policy stay it essentially subjects asylum-seekers to the whims of drug cartels, who exploit migrants for money, rape and kidnapping.

    Adam Isacson, director for defense oversight at The Washington Office on Latin America, testified at the Senate hearing last week that the policy turned migrants into “sitting ducks for the cartels.”

    “Foreigners have to pay just to exist for a long time in cartel-dominated neighborhoods,” Isacson said. “If you don’t pay, it’s not safe to go outside your shelter, even if the United States is helping support.”

    Kenneth Cuccinelli, a top official in the Homeland Security Department during the first Trump administration, said at a Senate hearing last week that Mexico has long had “very permissive entry,” but said he agreed with Scott “100 percent” that a tougher approach may be the best one.

    “I think Mexico would start to finally develop some vetting for people coming into Mexico if we dumped everybody back into Mexico. And there are people in this room, I’m sure, [who] wouldn’t like that, and it would be ugly for a period of time,” Cuccinelli said. “But if people knew they could not get into the United States, and they wouldn’t be allowed to wait around for the 1,013 days for the hearing that they wouldn’t show up for, they won’t come in the first place.”

    Under questioning from Rep. Tom Tiffany, R-Wis., at a House committee hearing Wednesday, a witness said the State Department isn’t required to withhold visas to countries that won’t accept these migrants.

    “The State Department, historically, has been very reluctant to use visa sanctions to impose consequences on countries that are not fulfilling their international obligation to take their citizens back,” Jessica Vaughan, director of policy studies at the Center for Immigration Studies, said.

    Congress could pass a law to require the executive branch to use visa sanctions or other diplomatic tools, such as withholding foreign assistance, Vaughan said.



    As President Trump continues to push for his controversial border wall, countries like Mexico and others could potentially throw a wrench in his plans. With tensions already high between the US and Mexico over immigration and trade issues, it wouldn’t be surprising if Mexico sought to resist or undermine Trump’s efforts to build a wall along the southern border.

    Additionally, other countries could also play a role in complicating Trump’s border plans. For example, Central American countries like Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador have been major sources of migrants seeking to enter the US. If these countries were to push back against US border enforcement measures, it could further complicate the situation at the border.

    Overall, Trump’s border plans are likely to face significant challenges from other countries, and the situation could easily escalate into a diplomatic standoff. It remains to be seen how these countries will respond to Trump’s border policies, but it’s clear that the issue of immigration and border security will continue to be a contentious issue on the international stage.

    Tags:

    1. Trump border plans
    2. Mexico border
    3. Immigration policies
    4. US-Mexico relations
    5. Border security
    6. Trump administration
    7. International diplomacy
    8. Immigration restrictions
    9. Cross-border issues
    10. Political tensions

    #Mexico #countries #hamper #Trump #border #plans

  • Mexico refuses to accept a U.S. deportation flight


    WASHINGTON — Mexico denied a U.S. military plane access to land Thursday, at least temporarily frustrating the Trump administration’s plans to deport immigrants to the country, according to two U.S. defense officials and a third person familiar with the situation.

    Two Guatemala-bound Air Force C-17s, carrying about 80 people apiece, flew deportees out of the U.S. Thursday night, the sources said. The third flight, slotted for Mexico, never took off.

    A White House spokesperson did not reply to a text message seeking comment on Mexico’s stance.

    It was not immediately clear why Mexico blocked the flight, but tensions between the U.S. and Mexico, neighbors and longtime allies, have risen since President Donald Trump won the November election. Trump has threatened to slap 25% across-the-board tariffs on Mexico in retaliation for migrants crossing the border the countries share. But he has not yet put them in effect.

    The Mexican Embassy did not immediately return a request for comment.

    Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum’s government has said it opposes Trump taking “unilateral” action to implement restrictive immigration standards — including the reinstatement of a “remain in Mexico” policy that forces migrants to stay in that country while they await adjudication of asylum claims. Flying deportees into a foreign country requires the cooperation of that nation’s government, and Mexico declined to give its consent.

    The military deportation flights are part of a broader Trump administration crackdown on illegal immigration that has been set in motion with executive orders signed in his first week in office. During his campaign, he vowed to stop illegal immigration into the U.S. and pursue a campaign of mass deportation of undocumented immigrants already living in the country.

    In addition to the flights, he has enlisted the military to beef up its presence on the border with an additional 1,500 troops.



    The Mexican government has made a bold decision to refuse to accept a deportation flight from the United States, citing concerns about the safety and well-being of the individuals on board.

    This move comes amidst growing tensions between the two countries over immigration policies, with Mexico pushing back against the Trump administration’s aggressive stance on deportation.

    In a statement, Mexican officials stated that they will not be accepting any deportation flights until they can be assured that the individuals being sent back are being treated humanely and have access to proper legal representation.

    This decision has been met with praise from human rights organizations and advocates for immigrants, who have long criticized the conditions in U.S. immigration detention centers and the lack of due process for individuals facing deportation.

    As the debate over immigration continues to rage on, Mexico’s refusal to accept a deportation flight sends a powerful message about the importance of upholding the rights and dignity of all individuals, regardless of their immigration status.

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  • Horario, canal, cómo y dónde ver en vivo a Las Águilas en Liga MX Femenil – La Crónica de Hoy México


    Atlas vs América femenil

    Atlas Femenil recibe hoy a Club América Femenil en el estadio Jalisco para disputar la jornada 4 del Clausura 2025 de la Liga MX Femenil.

    El partido de este martes es uno de los más interesantes porque ambos equipos suelen brindar juegos con muchos goles; las rojinegras están dispuestas a sumar su segunda victoria consecutiva luego de vencer a Tigres Femenil, uno de los equipos con mejor plantilla del futbol femenil; por eso en su casa no se achican ante Las Águilas que marchan invictas en la presente temporada.

    La Liga MX Femenil sigue acaparándonoslos las miradas cada jornada y en esta ocasión no es la excepción. Los aficionados azulcremas se identifican cada vez más con su equipo al igual que los seguidores y seguidoras de Atlas, que estarán pendientes de cómo va su equipo en la transmisión en vivo, en donde se podrá seguir el resultado en tiempo real del juego de hoy en tierras tapatías.

    Previa: Atlas Femenil vs. América Femenil | Jornada 4 Clausura 2025 de la Liga MX Femenil

    Las Águilas suman tres victorias consecutivas, es una de las ofensivas más poderosas del futbol femenil. Con 14 goles en tres jornadas y con una jugadora letal como Priscila Flor Da Silva, el conjunto dirigido por Ángel Villacampa podría perder el invicto este martes 21 de enero ante las Rojinegras, que vienen inspiradas después de ganar en el Volcán; por ello hoy buscan ganarle a América después de un registro de cuatro derrotas y un empate en los últimos cinco encuentros directos.

    ¿A qué hora es el partido de Atlas Femenil vs América Femenil?

    El partido arranca a las 19:00 horas

    Transmisión en vivo: ¿En qué canal pasan el partido de Atlas vs. América Femenil?

    Caliente TV

    Alineaciones Atlas vs. América Femenil

    América: Sandra Paños; Karina Rodríguez, Irene Guerrero, Angelique Saldívar, Jana Gutiérrez; Scarlett Camberos, Jocelyn Orejel, Karen Luna, María Mauleon; Nicolette Hernández y Priscila Flor Da Silva

    Atlas: Daniela Solera, María Elena Sainz, Vanessa Sánchez, Fernanda Limón, Daniela Cruz, Maritza Maldonado; Alexa Huerta, Karen Flores, Brenda Cerén; Jaquelín García y Paola García.



    ¡No te pierdas ningún partido de Las Águilas en la Liga MX Femenil! Aquí te dejamos el horario, canal, cómo y dónde ver en vivo a nuestro equipo:

    – Equipo: Las Águilas
    – Próximo partido: Por confirmar
    – Horario: Por confirmar
    – Canal: Por confirmar
    – Cómo verlo en vivo: A través de la señal de televisión o por streaming en línea
    – Dónde verlo: En la plataforma oficial de la Liga MX Femenil o en la página web del equipo

    ¡Apoya a Las Águilas en cada encuentro y vive la emoción del fútbol femenil en México! ¡No te lo pierdas! #VamosÁguilas #LigaMXFemenil

    Tags:

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  • Fans approve of Camila Cabello’s outfit for Féria de Leon concert in Mexico


    Camila Cabello performed at the Féria de Leon in Mexico on January 16, 2025. For the concert, the Shameless hitmaker was dressed in a tan bikini top which she paired with a white see-through corset. The quirky outfit also included light brown shorts worn over ripped white tights.

    Cream leg warmers and white sneakers matched the white belt and corset. A furry shoulder cardigan in cream, rounded up the look. Her black hair was styled with soft bangs to frame her face and she wore bold red lips.

    @PopBase shared visuals of the pop star from the concert on X and fans reacted to the daring outfit choice:

    “Loving the bold fashion choices and the confidence you exude. You’re truly a style icon!” a fan commented.

    Similar reactions followed approving of her outfit for the concert

    “Love this fit,” a comment read.

    “Camila never misses a beat with her style!” Another fan added.

    “Serving looks! Obsessed with this vibe,” another comment read.

    Netizens praised Camila Cabello’s visuals:

    “She always knows how to captivate with every shot,” a comment read.

    “My queen,” a fan praised.

    She looks stunning,” an X user tweeted.

    Some fans questioned the outfit choice.

    “Why would she wear a Korsett thingy over something else? She looks good I admit but I will question this outfit,” a fan stated.

    “Is this really what stuns means now!” Another Netizen asked.


    Camila Cabello on her most recent album, C XOXO, and her connection to her hometown

    The Havana hitmaker was interviewed by Nylon Magazine in December 2024 and she revealed the process of creating her C XOXO album and the role that Miami, her hometown, played in it.

    “I remember listening to Bad Bunny’s album Un Verano Sin Ti, which was so attached to Puerto Rico. I’m not from Puerto Rico, but it made me love where I’m from. And I like the contagiousness of that, of pride in where you’re from. I think Miami is the only place that I’ve ever felt like is my home. I love London, I love New York, but I don’t feel completely myself there. My past and my future self, all my selves, are in Miami.”

    Camila Cabello described the C XOXO album as her “hyper femme villain arc” and a record that explores hip-hop, pop, and global rhythms.


    Camila Cabello’s C, XOXO was released in June 2024 and was preceded by the release of the track I Luv It with Playboi Carti which peaked at 81 on the Billboard Hot 100 and He Knows featuring Lil Nas X. The album peaked at number 13 on the US Billboard 200 and 20 on the UK Albums chart.