Post by JoseBusinessWeek -
By DAN SEWELL Two Cabinet secretaries in Barack Obama's administration
and a former president of Mexico will take part in the upcoming
convention in Ohio ...
http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D9NOIMC00.htm
It must be a mystery to Business Week and the sponsors of the event as
to why the population of Hispanics doubles every decade -- or are they
trying to hide the fact that we are being invaded by Mexicans while
Proctor and Gamble and the Hispanic tokens in the Hussein Obama
Administration encourage this invasion? This whole event is
disgusting and racist and anti-American. Shame on the White House for
helping Mexico invade our nation and turn us into a Hispanic, Third
World failed narco-terrorist country like Mexico.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Two Cabinet secretaries in Barack Obama's administration and a former
president of Mexico will take part in the upcoming convention in Ohio
of a major Hispanic group, organizers said Thursday.
The League of United Latin American Citizens is meeting in Cincinnati
for the first time, in a nod to the region's fast-growing Hispanic
population. Former Mexican president Vicente Fox and U.S. Labor
Secretary Hilda Solis and Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen
Sebelius are among speakers lined up for the June 27-July 2 meeting
expected to draw some 20,000 people to downtown Cincinnati.
Organizers said that Cincinnati-based consumer products maker Procter
& Gamble Co. is the convention's lead sponsor. Besides $150,000, P&G
will back the convention with marketing help, a product booth and a
youth reading corner featuring journalist and author Maria Antonieta
Collins, co-writer with Juanita Castro of "My Brothers Fidel and
Raul."
Melanie Healey, North America Group president for P&G, called the
convention a perfect fit for the maker of Tide detergent and Pampers
diapers, which has been increasingly targeting sales growth among
Hispanics, a population growing at a faster rate than the U.S.
overall.
The Cincinnati's area's Latino population has doubled in the past
decade, with some 125,000 Hispanic residents.
"This is one of the largest rapidly emerging communities," said Brent
Wilkes, LULAC's executive director.
The gathering will help residents learn about available services and
there will be job and college fairs. Convention topics include
immigration, U.S.-Mexico border issues, and the future of Puerto Rico,
a U.S. commonwealth.