Showing posts with label Mexico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mexico. Show all posts

Major Earthquake Hits Mexico, Unscrubs Malia Obama's Vacation Story

March 20, 2012 - Mexico - Two powerful earthquakes struck southwestern Mexico today, the strongest measuring 7.4 magnitude at 12:02 PM local time (1:02 PM Chicago time).  The epicenter is about 100 miles (162 km) west southwest of Oaxaca (16.662°N, 98.188°W), and 200 miles (322 km) south southeast of Mexico City. (Details at USGS.) There are no reports of major damage at this time.

At least three aftershocks measuring over 5.0 magnitude struck within an hour of the initial quake. Mexico's President Felipe Calderon said that no serious damage had been caused by the strong quake.

Malia Obama in Oaxaca: The girl is alright
"The quake was felt strongly in southern Guerrero state," says the Houston Chronicle, "where the epicenter was located about 15 miles (25 km) from the city of Ometepec. Neighboring Oaxaca state also shook heavily, including with two aftershocks. Governors in both states reported on their Twitter accounts that there were not major reports of damage."

Barack Obama's oldest daughter Malia, 13, is vacationing in Oaxaca with a school group. The White House says that Malia is safe and was not in any danger during the earthquake events. Agence France-Presse, it seems, has done more to ruin Malia Obama's vacation that any earthquake could. The earthquake activity today also made stories such as "Media scrubs Malia Obama vacation story" seem a bit overblown – or justified. Perhaps God Himself didn't want that story to go away.

Top Mexico Drug Lord 'El Chango' Captured Alive

June 21, 2011 - One of the head honchos of Mexico's "La Familia" was captured by Mexican federal agents today. (Video below, en Espanol) Officials call the arrest of Jose de Jesus Mendez Vargas, also known as 'El Chango' or 'The Monkey,' a major blow to the drug cartel. He was one of Mexico's most-wanted drug lords, He was taken down in the central Mexican state of Aguascalientes. Authorities say there was no struggle in the arrest. Although they have reason to celebrate, Mexican authorities know all too well that other cartel leaders will quickly move to replace him in the hierarchy. However, there are probably even some drug cartel leaders who are happy about El Chango's arrest. The competition among rival crime gangs, after all, is fierce and deadly. Mendez Vargas was "locked in an especially deadly internal fight in recent months," reports the Los Angeles Times. He led a faction of La Familia, says their report, that was a "ruthless and sometimes cult-like network that authorities say specializes in producing and shipping methamphetamine to the United States. La Familia is based in Michoacan, the home state of President Felipe Calderon and a region strategically important for drug trafficking because of its rough terrain and large seaport." More about the arrest of Mendez Vargas at the LA Times...

The Real Meaning of the Execution-Style Lawndale Murders

It's no ordinary multiple murder. Four men were found shot dead, bound with duct tape, in a residential garage in the Lawndale neighborhood on Chicago's south side in the 6100 block of South Kildare Avenue.  

When we broke that story the night it happened, September 2, we noted that police investigating the scene suspected "Mexican drug cartel" involvement in the killings. (I'll take it further and say today that this may be an indication coming bloody battles between two or more drug cartels right here in Chicago.)

We also reported that this was an execution-style operation. Although not known for certain, the evidence points to the bloody hands of the cartels. The police themselves think so.

That begs a few questions:

1) Has the Chicago Police Department said that they suspect cartel involvement?
2) If CPD has not said so, why not?  
3) If so, why have none of the Chicago media mentioned that in any of their coverage of this sensational crime (as of 1:30 p.m. on Sept. 4)?

Huffington Post noted that "police told the Chicago Sun-Times the slayings appear to be drug-related, and multiple weapons were found at the scene" and "This type of violence is uncommon in the West Lawn neighborhood, police said."
No kidding. As common as shootings and killings are in Chicago, execution-style multiple murders reminiscent of the St. Valentine's Day Massacre are "uncommon" anywhere in the city - for the moment, at least.

Mayor Daley and CPD Supt. Weis love to tell us that Chicago's homicide rate is going down. It's gone down somewhat, but not enough. The Lawndale killings, however, have police privately worried that Mexican drug cartels may be starting to flex their muscle as they begin to move north into cities and states where they've had zero or very little presence. The Mexican cartel has operated primarily in the southwestern U.S. for obvious geographical and cultural reasons.

If the Mexican drug cartel is beginning to stake out serious territory in Chicago (I emphasize "if"), it is very worrisome. The recent case of Edgar Valdez Villarreal (alias "the Barbie") highlights this worry. The Atlanta Constitution Journal (ACJ) reported on August 31, 2010 that Valdez is the "allegedly brutal drug lord who federal authorities said ran a drug operation that brought cocaine by the truckload to Atlanta and sent those trucks back to a Mexican cartel carrying millions of dollars in cash." He was arrested on August 30 by Mexican authorities in a suburb of Mexico City.

ACJ's report is chilling. It said that in Mexico, "Valdez has been blamed for bloody drug and gang turf wars in which rivals were beheaded and hung from bridges." Perhaps even more stunning is the fact that "he's the rare American who has risen through the cartel ranks."

Although the recent Lawndale murders may seem like an isolated case to the casual observer, it should be remembered that there were drugs found at the crime scene. Daley and Weis may be reluctant to say the word "cartel" in referrence to the case because they don't want to acknowledge that the situation is bigger than they can handle. Remember, too, that CPD is shamefully understaffed and can't even keep up with regular street crime, let alone go into battle with the likes of a highly organized, well-funded and brutal Mexican drug cartel.

Worse yet, the Lawndale executions could indicate the beginning of an all-out street war between two competing drug cartels.

Just over a year ago, First Assistant U.S. Atty. Gary Shapiro said that Chicago is an important city for the international drug networks. In a Chicago Tribune report by Jeff Coen on August 20, 2009, Shapiro was quoted as saying that Chicago is "a major distribution hub of narcotics in the U.S." and that "drugs in huge quantities flow directly from Mexico to Chicago." Shapiro was speaking at a briefing in Chicago regarding a set of major indictments against, as Coen wrote, "36 individuals, including three cartel leaders, [who] were charged in eight indictments unsealed in Chicago, and additional defendants .... in New York. The three most significant defendants in the cases are leaders of two feuding cartels, authorities said."

In a related press conference coordinated with the one in Chicago that same day, Patrick Fitzgerald, U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, "said the cases trace tons of cocaine that made their way to Chicago through Mexico 'by plane, by boat, by submarine' before being distributed, 'with hundreds of millions of dollars going in the other direction'."

Hundreds of millions of dollars, just in Chicago. To some that's more than enough incentive to shoot four guys in a garage. These guys make the Gangster Disciples look like nothing more than surly lemonade stand operators. The cartels, to a large extent, are the distributors to the local gangs. The real action, the real money and the real power in the local narcotics game is found with the cartels.

In Mexico, where drug-related violence has kille more than 28,000 people since 2006, the cartels wield more power than the government. Meanwhile, U.S. authorities are working hard to keep Mexican drug cartel violence from spilling across border. On Sept. 2, 2010, CBS News reported that "Gangs have employed warfare tactics previously unseen in Mexico, including car bombs and blockades in front of police stations and army garrisons. Underscoring the point, a shootout later Thursday between soldiers and suspected cartel gunmen in Nuevo Leon state, near Texas, left 25 suspects dead."

The cartels' presence north of the US-Mexican border is growing. NPR reported in March, 2009 that "The Justice Department says the cartels now have operations in at least 230 American cities, up from 50 in 2006. Many of those are smaller, agricultural cities with Hispanic communities — places like Mount Vernon, Wash. Less than an hour from the Canadian border, it's the last place you might expect to encounter the Mexican cartels. But Skagit County Sheriff's Deputy Chris Kading says the cartels are definitely here."

Back to Daley and Weis, who struggle daily to convince you and me that they're in control, not the ordinary street gangs. They are frightened, and rightly so, that the cartels will try to do in Chicago what they have successfully done in our southwest and in so many towns and cities in Mexico. With brutality, financing and technology that even Al Capone could not have dreamed of, the cartels have the potential of unleashing full blown terror on our streets. To acknowledge this publicly would certainly cause heavy political damage to Mayor Daley. To not acknowledge it is a tremendous disservice to the public, who are already frustrated by the insufficient numbers of cops on the streets. Shame on the media, as well, for not asking about cartel involvement in the Lawndale killings, and for not letting us all know what the next phase of Chicago street crime is destined to become. Perhaps they're simply afraid.

RELATED:

ACLU's Hypocritical Arizona Travel Alert

July 1, 2010 - The ACLU has issued a "travel warning" to people considering a visit to Arizona. According to FoxNews today: American Civil Liberties Union affiliates in Arizona, New Mexico and 26 other states put out the warnings in advance of the Fourth of July weekend. The Arizona chapter has received reports that law enforcement officers are already targeting some people even though the law doesn't take effect until July 29, its executive director said. The ACLU "warning" is incredibly - and typically - hypocritical. I'm not going to rehash the virtues of the Arizona law (SB1070) here. Instead, let's wonder here why the ACLU and others are so concerned about Arizona's alleged human rights violations, while they give the Toilet Republic of Mexico a free pass for its own gross and well-documented brutal treatment of foreigners on its own soil. Some examples: Migrants assaulted by federal agents return to their country (English tranlation from Migrantes asaltados por federales regresan a su país, June 14, 2010) As has happened in other occasions earlier this year, Mexican federal police in Chahuites, state of Oaxaca, assaulted some 300 Central American migrants riding a freight train. A priest from a shelter for transients in that area said that, “As in the previous two assaults, the agents acted brutally……..and kicked them while (the victims) were face down on the ground.” After the assault, a group of migrants complained to the National Human Rights Commission with the help of the local Salvadoran Consul. But afterward, federal police agents threatened them with firearms and demanded that they retract the allegations in front of video cameras. (Source: Tuscon Citizen) Mexico: Hold Military to Account on Rights Abuses (Mexico City) - April 29, 2009 - Mexico is failing to hold members of the military who commit human rights violations accountable, undercutting its efforts to curb drug-related violence and improve public security, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today. (Source: Human Rights Watch) Mexico Human Rights - Human Rights Concerns Human rights concerns persist, particularly at the state level where violence surrounds local elections and misuse of the judicial system is common. Federal efforts to combat violence against women in the border town of Ciudad Juárez have continued with limited success. A number of human rights defenders have been threatened and at least three journalists have been killed despite proposed legislation to strengthen human rights protection in the Constitution. (Source: AmnestyUSA.org) Mexico migrants face human rights crisis, says Amnesty "Migrants in Mexico are facing a major human rights crisis leaving them with virtually no access to justice, fearing reprisals and deportation if they complain of abuses," said Rupert Knox, who contributed to the report, Invisible Victims: Migrants on the Move. "Persistent failure by the authorities to tackle abuses carried out against irregular migrants has made their journey through Mexico one of the most dangerous in the world," he added. (Source: BBC News) Time to Speak up on Military Abuse in Mexico The Mexican army's human rights record is very troubling. Soldiers deployed in counternarcotics operations have engaged in grave abuses, such as killings, torture, rape, and beatings. And if the abuses themselves aren't worrisome enough for the Obama administration, their impact on the efficacy of the drug war should be. Each time that civilians are abused, Mexican soldiers contribute to the climate of violence and lawlessness in which the cartels thrive. Worse, the force's abuses have cost it public trust and cooperation, both of which are vital to effective counternarcotics operations. (Source: Foreign Policy) Paramilitaries Kill Two Human Rights Activists in Oaxaca In Mexico, two human rights activists have been shot dead in the state of Oaxaca. The victims have been identified as Beatriz Cariño, director of the Mexican human rights group CACTUS, and Jyri Antero Jaakkola, a human rights observer from Finland. They were traveling as part of a convoy attempting to deliver aid to a town that’s been targeted by paramilitary blockades since the 2006 uprising against Governor Ulises Ruiz. (Source: DemocracyNow.org) Mexico rights agency decries slaying of reporter Mexico's National Human Rights Commission urged authorities Tuesday to investigate the killing of a reporter in the Pacific coast state of Guerrero, the fourth slaying of a Mexican journalist this year.... The rights commission said in a statement that "the impunity of attacks against journalists is unacceptable." The panel says at least 61 journalists have been killed in Mexico since 2000 -- 12 last year and four so far in 2010. Press freedom groups say Mexico is one of the world's most dangerous countries for journalists. (Source: Bloomberg BusinessWeek) With years and years of profound human rights violations on the part of Mexico's military, police and others against it's own indigenous peoples and migrants from neighboring nations, why has the ACLU not issued a "travel warning" for people going there?

The Violent and Deadly Politics of Mexico

Hurricane Alex is currently pounding the U.S.-Mexican border. A much deadlier storm of sorts, however, has been ravaging Mexico and the U.S.-Mexico border for years - and shows no sign of clearing any time soon. That storm is the rampant violence that has claimed thousands of lives in Mexico, one of the three North American nations in which violence - deadly violence - is a frequent part of the political landscape. Like Hurricane Alex, that storm is spilling over the border into the U.S. "More people now die violently on our southern border," reports the NY Post, "than in Somalia, Yemen or even Afghanistan." Gunfire killed Rodolfo Torre Cantu on Monday, June 28. He was the front-runner candidate for governor in the Mexican state of Tamaulipas, running as the Institutional Revolutionary Party's (PRI) candidate. Torre died instantly when he and "at least four other people" were en route to a campaign event near the state capitol, reports the Financial Times, and Mexican authorities say that the murder "is the latest act of intimidation by Mexico's powerful drugs cartels." Tamaulipas is one of 11 Mexican states in which voters will vote in gubernatorial elections on Sunday, July 4. There is little doubt that Torre's murder was the work of the cartels. Time Magazine says that "as Torre left the state capital to conclude his campaign, assailants showered his convoy with gunfire from automatic rifles and heavy-caliber weapons, killing him instantly. Army commanders said the attack bore all the signs of the Zetas, a paramilitary drug gang that was born in the state." Mexico's political system has long been deeply corrupt, from the cop on the street to the top level of the country's federal government. That system has also spawned frequent political violence. Because of the corruption, the Mexican government at all levels is inept. If Mexico had its act together, it would have made use of it's incredible beauty and natural resources long ago to become one of most prosperous nations in the world. Instead, Mexico is a violent, corrupt, filthy basket case with civil war in its south and drug gangs running the show in many cities. Those gangs, the drug cartels such as the Zetas, have become very effective paramilitary organizations, operating with professionalism that is alarming. This frightening efficiency is detailed by Ted Galen Carpenter at The National Interest: Two features of Torre's assassination on Monday are indicative of just how brazen and powerful the drug gangs have become. One is the status of the victim; Torre's death is the most high-profile assassination since the killing of presidential candidate Luis Donaldo Colosio in 1994. The cartels thereby sent a message that no one, no matter how prominent, is beyond their reach. The second alarming aspect is the professionalism of the hit. His car was ambushed on the road to the airport, with one attacking vehicle blocking in front and another closing off any retreat, thereby creating a perfect free-fire zone. Multiple gunmen then sent a hail of bullets into their helpless target, killing Torre and several aides and bodyguards. Unfortunately, that technique increasingly characterizes cartel attacks on Mexican officials, police and even military personnel. This is not just a problem for Mexico, but also for its neighbors to the north. The drug cartel violence often spills over to the border states in the U.S. Imagine two houses. In one, the residents are constantly fighting, often violently, and sometimes the gunfire from within flies into the house next door. Now and then, some of the violent neighbors sneak into the house next door and do their illegal business there while completely ignoring requests to leave. Worse yet, the violent neighbors occasionally kidnap or kill some of their hapless neighbors. When the vicitms call on other neighbors for help, they are accused of being racists. Welcome to California, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas. Despite the assassination of Torre, the Mexican government has said that the elections will be held as scheduled on Sunday, July 4. According to the Homeland Security News Wire (March, 2009), "The biggest and most violent combatants are the Sinaloa cartel, known by U.S. and Mexican federal law enforcement officials as the 'Federation' or 'Golden Triangle,' and its main rival, 'Los Zetas' or the Gulf Cartel, whose territory runs along the Laredo,Texas, borderlands. The two cartels appear to be negotiating a truce or merger to defeat rivals and better withstand government pressure. U.S. officials say the consequences of such a pact would be grave. 'I think if they merge or decide to cooperate in a greater way, Mexico could potentially have a national security crisis,' the defense official said. He said the two have amassed so many people and weapons that Mexican President Felipe Calderon is 'fighting for his life' and 'for the life of Mexico right now'." We wish the Mexican voters all the best, but also send our sympathies. The drug cartels, after all, are not elected officials and will continue their deadly activities regardless of how the elections turn out. RELATED: After elections, will Mexico's drug war return opposition to power? CSM.com Mexican Drug Cartels Threaten Arizona Police ABC News Cartel threatens Nogales, Arizona police PoliJAM Drug Cartels Threaten Texas Water Supply Dallas Blog Mexico's civil war brings more than 15000 killed ArticlesBase US Congresswoman: Hezbullah is working with drug cartels Jerusalem Post Mexican drug cartels employ more foot soldiers than Mexican army HSNW Mexican Drug Cartels Control Parts of Arizona Human Events Mexico/Organised Crime: Gunmen kills 19 in Chihuahua Intelligence Quarterly

Live Stream Tracking of Hurricane Alex

June 29, 2010 - Watch live streaming of the development of hurricanes (at ustream.tv). Hurricane Alex is featured as it crosses over northern Mexico and southern Texas. Also see: Worldwide: The oil spills that don't make the news.

Full Text of Arizona's SB1070 Immigration Law

As a service to Mexican President Felipe Calderon, Comrade Barack Hussein Obama, US Atty. Gen. Eric Holder, that idiot Napolitano woman, and Democrats everywhere, here's the full text of Arizona's controversial and misunderstood immigration law: http://www.azleg.gov/legtext/49leg/2r/bills/sb1070s.pdf Now, read it before you go mouthing off about it. Then, compare it to the draconian immigration laws of Mexico: http://www.oas.org/Juridico/MLA/en/mex/en_mex-int-text-const.pdf RELATED: Mexico's Glass House: How the Mexican constitution treats foreign residents, workers and naturalized citizens by J. Michael Waller, Ph.D. , Center For Advanced Defense Studies Calderon Criticism of Arizona Law Overlooks Mexico's Tough Immigration Policy FoxNews

Let's Try Mexico's Immigration Law Here in the USA

Suppose you were a foreigner in Mexico, whether as a tourist or an immigrant. How would you be treated by Mexico? Not very well, amigo. In fact, you'd find yourself wishing you were an illegal immigrant from Mexico, suffering in the U.S. with welfare, court advocates, free ER visits, and more.

J. Michael Waller, Ph.D. wrote an brief but eye-opening article called "Mexico's Immigration Law: Let's Try It Here At Home." It's timely reading in 2010, even if he wrote it four years ago.

Waller also wrote a four-page document (pdf) called "Mexico's Glass House: How the Mexican constitution treats foreign residents, workers and naturalized citizens." It's packed with facts that will surprise you and make you wonder how Mexican officials can be so incredibly hypocritical when they criticize the immigration policies of the United States.

The Mexican Constitution begins with this pretty phrase in Chapter 1, Article 1: "Every person in the United Mexican States shall enjoy the guarantees granted by this Constitution, which cannot be restricted or suspended except in such cases and under such conditions as are herein provided." Ah, but there's the catch. One of the "cases" and "conditions" includes foreigners and being a non-Mexican.

Chapter 2, Article 32 says that "Mexicans shall have priority over foreigners under equality of circumstances for all classes of concessions and for all employment, positions, or commissions of the Government in which the status of citizenship is not indispensable."

In brief, the Mexican Constitution states that:

• Immigrants and foreign visitors are banned from public political discourse.
• Immigrants and foreigners are denied certain basic property rights.
• Immigrants are denied equal employment rights.
• Immigrants and naturalized citizens will never be treated as real Mexican citizens.
• Immigrants and naturalized citizens are not to be trusted in public service.
• Immigrants and naturalized citizens may never become members of the clergy.
• Private citizens may make citizens arrests of lawbreakers (i.e., illegal immigrants) and hand them to the authorities.
• Immigrants may be expelled from Mexico for any reason and without due process.

You can read an authoritative English translation of the Constitution of Mexico, published by the Organization of American States, on the Website of Illinois State University. Quotations in this document are from the OAS translation. Or you can go directly to the PDF of the Mexican constitution at the OAS website.

Oh, and by the way: As soon as the Federal Government of Mexico declares that all people with any European ancestry will leave Mexico and go back to Europe, I'll agree to giving Arizona, California and other territory won in 1848 back. Until then, Mexico, shut the hell up.

Mexico Negligent in Swine Flu Response

Mexico, it seems, has responded to the two-week old swine flu crisis in a manner that can only be described as criminally negligent. The government has issued no medicine or treatment to thousands of people know to have been in contact with people who have died from swine flu. First responders are too afraid to do their jobs. God only knows how many poor people living in remote areas of the country are dead or dying with no official recognition or response. 
MEXICO CITY – Two weeks after the first known swine flu death, Mexico still hasn't given medicine to the families of the dead. It hasn't determined where the outbreak began or how it spread. And while the government urges anyone who feels sick to go to hospitals, feverish people complain ambulance workers are scared to pick them up....
"Nobody believes the government anymore," said Edgar Rocha, a 28-year-old office messenger. He said the lack of information is sowing distrust: "You haven't seen a single interview with the sick!" FULL STORY at AP/Yahoo! News....

Meanwhile, U.S. federal, state and local governments and pretend to care about this crisis from down south, while doing nothing significant to curb the free flow of illegals crossing the southern border every hour of every day. If Washington really cared, they would have shut down the US-Mexican border completely a week ago. How many of illegal border crosser are carrying swine flu into the US, into your city, into your neighborhood, your local grocer, church, public transportation? (See, folks, diseas control is one of the primary reasons that immigration control makes sense, and why proponents of an open border are out of their damned minds.)



Photo: An unregulated, uninspected, unlicensed, untaxed food vender in Rogers Park, Chicago sells unrefrigerated food on Morse Avenue near N. Clark Street. The City of Chicago, a sanctuary city, knowingly allows hundreds of carts like this to pose a public health threat every day.  

Swine Flu Closes All Schools in Mexico

The federal government of Mexico has closed all schools in the nation as a precautionary measure to help stop the spread of swine flu. At present, the known death toll in Mexico is 149, but is expected to rise.

According to Associated Press, Mexico's Health Secretary Jose Angel Cordova "says only 20 of the deaths have been confirmed to be from swine flu and the government was awaiting tests results on the rest....Cordova says school at all levels nationwide are suspended until May 6. Schools had already been suspended in Mexico City and five of Mexico's 32 states."  Full Article...

CommieBama Hats and More
Chicago News Bench RSS Feed
Follow ChiNewsBench on Twitter

TOP MEXICAN GOVT OFFICIALS PROTECTING DRUG CARTELS

Corrupt public officials in Mexico is nothing that raises eyebrows, but a report from By Ricardo Ravelo at Proceso tells us that the corruption in Mexico reaches higher and deeper than many previously thought. Imagine major narcotics cartels "owing" the highest officials in the US Government. That, in effect, is the situation in Mexico. The big drug traffickers of Mexico, writes Ravelo, are protected at the highest levels of Mexico's federal government. NarcoNews has excellent translation from the original Spanish and notes by Kristin Bricker. An excerpt (emphasis mine): The animosity between the heads of Federal Attorney General’s Office and the Public Security Ministry don’t just immobilize the federal government and make its crusade against drug traffickers and organized crime futile. It also shows that both institutions are so porous that the gangsters have already positioned themselves in them. The infiltration is of such magnitude that even Eduardo Medina Mora and Genaro Garcia Luna have become suspect. FULL ARTICLE at NarcoNews.com... This is serious stuff. Mexico, already a basket case of economic inefficiency and corruption, is losing out big time in the international arena. It's so bad that the Mexico stock exchange says the drug war is scaring off IPOs (Reuters). In other words, it's so bad down there that businesses in Mexico "are scrapping plans to float shares on the stock exchange for fear of raising their profile amid a brutal drug war and a surge in kidnappings, the bourse president said on Tuesday." RELATED: Narcos Infiltrate the Mexican Military High-ranking SIEDO officials detained...

Mexico's National Police (Maybe)

This could happen, and soon, in the living hell known as "Mexico." The Mexican daily El Universal recently obtained an executive summary of a 600-page proposal drafted by Mexican generals that, if adopted, would create a National Police force “with military discipline” that would replace the Army in President Felipe Calderón’s war on drugs and organized crime.... The generals’ proposal to the Defense Department includes the creation of a special legal structure for the police, different from the laws and instruments that apply to civilians. Full story at NarcoNews... Related: Air-conditioned drugs smuggling tunnel discovered on US-Mexico border Mexico peso hit hard by Europe growth view, oil Mexican General: Tijuana Cops Crooked

Mexican General: Tijuana Cops Crooked

Don't call the cops if you need help in Tijuana, says a Mexican general. He advises people to call the army instead because, he says, the cops in Tijuana are all on the take. Now the general is in hot water with the Mexican Government: The general's fate reflects larger questions in Mexico about how to control drug-fueled violence, which has soared in the years since President Felipe Calderon moved to openly confront the cartels that move cocaine into the United States. Some Mexicans see the police as corrupt and the army as the only hope, but others fear soldiers are overstepping their authority and abusing their power by raiding the homes of suspected criminals. [LA Times] Perhaps Illinois Governor Blagojevich can send some of our State Troopers down there to help out.

OBAMA'S MEXICO CITY DISASTER

HOT - DEVELOPING: From Narco News, this headline and sub-head: The Democrats’ Schism at a Mexico City Fundraiser The “NAFTA Generation” of Corporate Ex-Pats Deceived the Obama Campaign and the Attendees at a Fundraising Event Last Tuesday Last Tuesday, an event featuring Maya Soetero-Ng, the sister of Senator Barack Obama who had successfully organized his February 19 victory in the Hawaii caucuses, was held in Mexico City to raise funds from US citizens abroad for the presidential campaign. Maya Soetero-Ng, sister of US Presidential Candidate Barack Obama, in Mexico City on Tuesday, July 22. The host of that event, however, used it to launch what may become a civil war among Democrats abroad when he lectured the assembled – according to those who were there, aghast at what they heard – that “we need assurances” from Obama “about not reopening NAFTA.” FULL STORY at NARCO NEWS...

Cinqo de Mayo Confusing for Liberals

O Liberals! How confusing May 5th must be for you. Cinqo de Mayo is a celebration of nationalism, sovereignty, and violence. To top it off, it encourages drunk driving and is therefore a threat to the safety of children all over the U.S. My, my, my. Cinqo de Mayo encourages drunk driving. Where are Mothers Against Drunk Driving on this? Cinqo de Mayo," an excuse for drunks in the United States to tie one on, as with St. Patrick's Day, is more of a U.S. celebration than it is in the countries they pretend to celebrate. Cinqo de Mayo celebrates nationalism! Yep, it was all about the Battle of Pueblo, in which Mexicans defended their national sovereignty! Yes, their borders! Cinqo de Mayo celebrates violence in defense of national sovereignty! So, how do all those nutty Liberals who wear buttons that say "Violence Is Not The Answer" feel about this celebration of carnage at the Battle of Pueblo? The Battle of Pueblo is what Cinqo de Mayo commemorates. It was a battle that Mexico won against French imperialist forces, but did not prevent France from actually winning the war. The French forces suffered some embarrassing early defeats, [such as the Battle of Pueblo] but were able to occupy Mexico City in June 1863. They established a puppet government under Austro-Hungarian Archduke Fernando Maximilian, who was named emperor of Mexico in 1864. (Source) So, eventually, the French won the war. Cinco de Mayo remembers the Mexican victory over France on May 5th, 1862 at the Battle of Pueblo.... The French would regroup and eventually take Mexico City. The Emperor Maximilian ruled portions of Mexico on behalf of France until he was executed in 1867. However, the heroism of the Mexicans at Pueblo showed the French and the world that they were willing to defend their country. The Mexicans had no intention of losing badly as they had in the Mexican-American War a mere 15 years earlier. (Source) As would be with their Panama Canal effort, the French just couldn't complete the mission and ultimately failed miserably. But the Battle of Pueblo had nothing to do with the ultimate failure of the French occupation. Tonight, while you're getting sloppy on tequila and margaritas, toast the brave efforts of those violent patriots who so bravely defended their national sovereignty.

HUCKABEE'S MEXICAN CONSULATE

Big kudos to The Caucus Cooler, with this exclusive story about what they call Huckabee's "pet project" - a Mexican consulate in lil' ol Little Rock, Arkansas. For those that don't know, Governor Huckabee lobbied aggressively for the addition of a Mexican consulate in Little Rock, at the taxpayers expense of course. This consulate served as a resource for illegal immigrants living in Arkansas, and some Huckabee opponents claim it drew additional illegal immigrants to the state. This is explosive stuff. The Cooler continues: The Mexican consulate helps Mexicans, legal or illegals, with papers,and hands out a consular identification - which critics argue gives illegals a valid ID which helps them meld into society. All of the costs associated with this come out of taxpayers pockets. Our take is twofold...

Down With Fox

Vicente Fox, that is, the former president of Mexsicko. In a scene reminiscent of the toppling of Saddam Hussein's statue, a statue erected in honor of Vicente Fox was pulled down by protestors, amid accusations of corruption circling the former Mexican president. See "Protestors Tear Down Vicente Fox Statue" (CBS News) Yes, there are people in Mexico who absolutely hate Senor Fox. They accuse him of being corrupt! Imagine that - a corrupt Mexican official! Can that be?

Heads in the Sand

Building a North American Union Conspiracy by Dana Gabriel The deniers, white washers, shills, and propaganda masters are purposely misleading the public into believing that that the North American Union is a conspiracy theory. Unfortunately, most people are too busy or lazy to care and check it out for themselves. Some of the articles debunking the NAU do little of the sort, but even bad propaganda can fool the people. The NAU is being kept secret in the sense that working groups are meeting without public participation or knowledge in some cases, and are conducting business without debate or oversight. Wouldn't the NAU require massive amounts of legislation with new agencies and institutions having to be created? The whole point is to bypass this process. It is through these working groups that the NAU is being formed with unelected and unaccountable bureaucrats assuming the power. In fact, the only legislation that has been introduced by Congress or state legislatures is resolutions to block the NAU. The push for total amnesty, open borders, and the NAU will continue even with the Senate recently blocking the immigration bill. When one starts to read the documentation pertaining to the creation of an NAU, they will find out for themselves that it is much worse than I or others are reporting. FULL ARTICLE...