TehCookie said:
Now if you want to say you are American without using north or south you are shortening the full name which is exactly what people of the United States of America do! In case you didn't realize America is part of the country's name and we are lazy and don't feel like saying the entire thing. I think being lazy Americans we should shorten our name further to merikkan
Actually, I'd support a change to Merican. When people ask, you can say you are a Merican, so there's little functional difference, but there's great symbolic difference.
As pertains to illegal immigrants, the only problem I have with them is that they really should learn English if they're going to work in the service industry, or shop. It's not technically the US's official language (we don't have one) but we know that's really just a formality. Them coming up here and working for less is something I am perfectly fine with. America believes in a free market economy, and for most people the one thing they have to market is their labor. I see no reason to impede that. Of course, good luck getting citizens to work for less. Prices would come down if the minimum wage dropped, elasticity being what it is, but you'd have more luck herding cats than convincing people to receive a smaller but functionally identical paper number.
I'd also like to note that allowing that should probably come with some changes to the tax structure. If a larger percentage of taxes are from sales, whether or not someone is a citizen ceases to matter. Everyone will contribute an amount equal to what they want to consume. As a bonus, that by its nature includes a sliding scale based on income, as those who earn more tend to spend more.
BTW: I have no problem with Pancho Villa. I'd consider him a guerilla, not a terrorist. And I don't see how we can fault him for that, guerilla tactics are how we started our war for independence.
On the portions of the US that used to be Mexico, I'm pretty sure we legally purchased most of that from Spain. However, Texas was not sold. A large segment of the population of that area wanted to be a part of the US, and the US was glad to support something that would add to it's landmass.
I'm sure I don't have the right idea about everything, but I'd like to think that at least some of this post makes sense.