The New York Times kindly  linked to my blog  item about Jorge Castañeda,  the author of their latest pro-amnesty op-ed (go here  to the op-ed and page down to the bottom). I must say, though, that I've gotten  more traffic from Larry  Auster's View from the Right linking to it than from the NYT's link.
Here are three more interesting things about Castañeda  that I only learned recently even though I read almost everything about  him published in English back in 2000-2001, when he became Vicente Fox's foreign  minister.
1. He is known in Mexican newspapers  "as 'El  Guero' ('the Blond One') for his fair complexion."
2. His Soviet mother was an employee of Stalin's government when his  father met her.
In 2002, Bianca Vazquez Toness  wrote in the Princeton alumni magazine:
"Perhaps  the biggest irony of Castañeda’s rise as a full-time opponent of the old  system is that he is a product of that system. His father, PRI member Jorge  Castañeda de la Rosa, was once foreign minister. His mother, a Russian Jew and  naturalized Mexican, met her husband while working as a translator at the U.N.  in New York. Young Jorge’s pedigree gave him advantages unavailable to most  Mexicans: He grew up a polyglot between New York and Geneva, perfecting his  English and his French, while his father served as Mexican ambassador to the  U.N. He enrolled at Princeton in 1970...
His doctorate gave him clout upon returning to Mexico at age 25, but his family  connections opened the door to the political elite. Castañeda, a political  science professor at the national university, called himself a Communist, but  that didn’t stop him from moonlighting for his father, who was appointed  foreign minister in 1979. The son convinced his father to abandon Mexico’s  historically anti-interventionist policy. Calling on contacts made during his  school days in France, the younger Castañeda helped negotiate a joint  recognition with France of rebel forces in El Salvador, much to the dismay of  the U.S., which supported the government in the civil war against the Marxist  guerrillas.
3.  Castaneda's chief advisor while he was Foreign Minister was his older  half-brother, Ambassador-at-Large Andres Rozental, who is his mother's son by a  previous marriage. Rozental personally advised  Mexico's immigration negotiators with the Bush administration.
Isn't it remarkable how little the press tells us about the men running  Mexico?
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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