Tag Archive for mexico

Drug War: Mexico update (w/video)

from Dead Line Live

Mexico Shooting Exposes Secret CIA Involvement in the Drug War

September 1, 2012 by 

By Mario Andrade

The failed ambush that took place last week on  two CIA agents in Mexico continues to raise questions by both  people in Mexico and in the U.S. The Mayor of Mexico City is asking the federal government to clarify what the exact role of the CIA is in the so-called drug war. In the United States, some Republicans are beginning to ask the Obama Administrations for answers about this recent incident, which parallels the shooting of ICE Agent Jaime Zapata when he was ambushed and killed by Los Zetas almost two years ago. Last Friday August 24 at approximately 8:30 in the morning, a Toyota SUV with two CIA agents, one Mexican Marine Captain, and a drug cartel informant onboard was ambushed by cartel members and the Mexican Federal Police. . . . Read Complete Report

from youtube

Mexican president to leave behind unpopular drug-war legacy

Published on Sep 2, 2012 by 

The war on drugs will be the biggest legacy of outgoing Mexican president Felipe Calderon.

During his six-year term, authorities seized 114 tonnes of cocaine and nearly 11,000 tonnes of marijuana.

But the fight has also killed tens of thousands of people, as Al Jazeera’s Adam Raney reports from Acapulco in Gerrero state. . . . Text posted with video on youtube

Letter from Mexico: Archaeology, Interrupted

Photo: Archaeological Zone of Paquimé, Casas Grandes SOURCE: Wikimedia Commons.

from Archaeology.com 

by Kathleen McGuire

An archaeologist’s daughter surveys the rich cultural heritage of northern Mexico—and the impact of violence on researchers working there.

As the young daughter of an archaeologist in the late 1990s, I was raised to understand that Indiana Jones is no more real than Luke Skywalker. I had been on digs and spent hours in my father’s lab where I concluded that, no matter what my classmates thought, my father was just another boring scientist, even if he did wear cowboy boots and skipped the lab coat. Adolescent that I was, I was similarly unimpressed with his work south of the U.S. border in northern Mexico. I knew nothing of the lawless Mexico that people saw on television because my own visits were graced with warm tortillas, birthday piñatas, kind faces, and Coca-Cola in tiny glass bottles. It was at the Thanksgiving table, then, when I was 14, that I first discovered my father’s job might actually be dangerous. . . . Read Complete Report

Obama Gives Part of Arizona to Mexico (video) – How the Border Patrol uses tech to combat smugglers

Photo: Rio Grande River Crossing between Brownsville Texas and Matamoros Mexico CREDIT Dennis Crenshaw (Public Domain)

from CNET News

Every day, hundreds of people cross the border illegally into the Arizona desert. In Tucson, the Border Patrol uses a wide mesh of technology to try to stop them. CNET Road Trip checks it out.

TUCSON, Ariz.–It’s summer in the Southwest, and there may not be a hotter border anywhere in the United States. For one thing, the mercury is easily over a hundred every day. And then there’s the steady flow of organized smugglers trying to sneak themselves and their substantial cargo — of migrants and/or drugs — across Mexico’s long desert frontier with Arizona.

There are nine U.S. Border Patrol sectors stretching across America’s southwestern frontier. And back in 2000, the agency was snagging more than 2,000 people a day for crossing illegally into its Tucson sector — which is responsible for 262 linear miles of border and about 90,000 square miles of territory — making it one of the busiest.

But these days, that number has plummeted to between 300 and 350 a day, and the Border Patrol’s adoption of a broad set of new technology aimed at combating smugglers — a complex network of cameras and sensors in the ground, on towers, on the back of mobile trucks, or mobile agents, and airborne — has played a large part in the reduction. After all, if a smuggler knows that he and a group of migrants he’s shepherding are likely to be spotted thanks to the technology, he’s more likely to try another area. . . . Read Complete Story w/ photos

from Fox News via youtube

Obama Gives Part of Arizona to Mexico

Uploaded by  on Jun 15, 2010

Unknown Small Humanoid Found in Mexico

This article puts me in mind of when I studied the Reptilian/human connection way back in the 1990s.. See GO DEEPER below. . . . EDITOR

from Brazil Weird News

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

MEXICO. In a farm near the of town of Camargo (Santa Rosalia de Camargo), in the Maizales street of the colony Infonavit Cuatro Milpas, a couple of garbage collectors recilável found the mummified body of a strange being. Small, approximately 10 cm of long – the creature has an elongated head, arms, legs – apparently suitable for to move in water and a kind of appendage that appears to be a tail. . . .Read Complete Report

 

GO DEEPER: John Rhodes: The Human/Reptilian Connection

Grandmother Receives Life In Prison For First-Time Drug Offense

Photo: What is wrong with our justice system? CREDIT Curtis Gregory Perry/flickr SOURCE takepart.com

from Take Part

May 22, 2012
Why is Elisa Castillo being so harshly punished for being an unknowing participant in a drug deal?

Written by Judy Molland

The federal government didn’t offer a reward for the capture of Houston grandmother Elisa Castillo, nor did it accuse her of touching drugs, ordering killings or getting rich off crime.

But three years after a jury convicted her in a conspiracy to smuggle at least a ton of cocaine on tour buses from Mexico to Houston, the 56-year-old first-time offender is locked up for life, without the possibility of parole.

Three years ago, Elisa Castillo entered into an unusual business arrangement at the urging of her boyfriend: a Mexican businessman agreed to partner with her to purchase three tour buses that would travel between Mexico and Houston. He fronted the money for the buses, but they were kept in her name. Castillo claims she was unaware the buses were also fitted with secret compartments enabling them to smuggle cocaine across the border, but she was convicted nonetheless.

Locked Up For Life Because She Couldn’t Trade Valuable Information . . . Read Complete Report

Border Wars: Nightclubs burned, chaos in the streets of Nuevo Laredo (w/video)

Photo: Nuevo Laredo Mexico Coat of Arms SOURCE Wikipedia (public domain)

from Valley Center

Posted: 05.24.2012 at 12:41 PM

Nuevo Laredo residents woke up to chaos following a nightclub fire, a car bombing and a chase that led through a college campus.

Residents turned to the #LaredoFollow hashtag on the social media network Twitter to report the violence.

An early morning fire took down Club Maranhao early Thursday morning but it’s not the first incident.

Nuevo Laredo residents told Action 4 News that other nightclubs and bars have been burned over the past few nights. . . . Read Complete Report

from youtube

Meet My Town Nuevo Larado

uploaded by on Aug 4, 2011 ☞

Yes!, this is my town, Nuevo Laredo 🙂

As you can see, it doesn’t have any special or particular thing to show off to the world – except for the notorious drug problems that we commonly have here in the Mexican borders – (shame on us LOL).

Parta Dos: Umm, I mean “Part 2” Commentary by Rick Osmon

Rick Osmon – THEI Columnist

4/5/2012

After Dennis posted his take on the investigative report from Indianapolis News 13, WTHR, regarding illegal immigrants , oh, sorry, “undocumented resident aliens”, I felt obliged to add my two pesos worth. One of the happy recipients of your money and mine in the tax fraud story lives about 15 miles from me. He is a hard-working and peace loving criminal, not just for tax fraud criminal, but rather a criminal just for being here.

In a different part of town is a family of legal immigrants from Thailand. They are all adult siblings and moved here legally under a program enacted by Congress and fostered by faith-based organizations. More power to ’em, I say. Welcome to the neighborhood. About the only work available to folks like them is near minimum wage positions at the poultry processing plant or the wood working factory, both places have work that is dangerous, arduous, and has few prospects for rapid advancement, or, maybe, no advancement at all. I have a feeling, though, that our new Thai neighbors will advance quickly as their linguistic skills improve. They want to not only work here, they want to be part of the community, and that is the most significant difference.

The opportunities for advancement for many of the Mexican and other Hispanic residents, both legal and not, and whether they wish it or not, is tied to how much crystal meth moves in and through the county. Which begs the question, if Congress enacted the rules allowing illegal immigrants to claim twenty dependents, that may or may not still be in Mexico, and the associated earned income credits, shouldn’t they have known that the people who cheat the most are those who are already criminals? So here we have a whole covey of crimes being fostered by Congress itself. And when the crystal meth becomes part of the equation, people get hurt or killed. It seems obvious that the $4 Billion per year sent by IRS is much better and more efficient than the old ways of money laundering.

Our county has already lost several buildings to fires or explosions just this calendar year and there are fewer than 32,000 legal residents in the entire county. We’ve also sent several county residents, both legal and not, to Federal prisons this year. We have life lined two or three to hospitals outside the county after incidents almost certainly related to meth traffic. Last year, we had to fire a deputy who allegedly traded tips to dealers and or manufacturers in exchange for sexual favors.

However, while my view of the problem is concentrated on my own neighborhood, the same things are happening in your neighborhood. Your money is being stolen and sent out of the country. Your kids are being exposed to some of the most dangerous recreational drugs ever devised (invented by the US Army Air Force, incidentally). Houses and shops in your neighborhood are potential firebombs. And a few of your own cops are turning to the dark side, the money or other “rewards” are simply too tempting or the coercion is too effective.

Please think about these things as you watch part 2 of the WTHR special report.

WTHR Part 2 HERE

Extraterrestrial artifacts found in Mexico presented in 2012

from youtube

The artifacts shown were found 55 years ago by a tribe in central Mexico, they have been using many of these alien artifacts as necklaces.

Music: Ashi – Ancient Rituals / The Rite © PIAS
All Rights Reserved to Original Artists.
No Copyright Infringement intended.

Death Knell of the One World Order: Made in America

Is it even possible to build a an entire home with strictly American made products?

Yes!
Watch HERE

According to this report, if only 5% of new homes contractors used this list of all American products, 220,000 new American jobs would result.

If all contractors did so, that comes out to 4.4 million new jobs.

But how much more would the new home cost? According to the architects and economists, only about 1% more. According to some of the contractors who already pursue this plan, the actual cost is lower because the initial quality of the American made materials is higher, resulting in fewer warranty repairs and lower long term ownership or maintenance costs. Read more

Legal U.S. gun sales to Mexico arming cartels

from CBSnews.com

Legal U.S. gun sales to Mexico arming cartels

By Sharyl Attkisson
(CBS News)  

Selling weapons to Mexico – where cartel violence is out of control – is controversial because so many guns fall into the wrong hands due to incompetence and corruption. The Mexican military recently reported nearly 9,000 police weapons “missing.”

 

Yet the U.S. has approved the sale of more guns to Mexico in recent years than ever before through a program called “direct commercial sales.” It’s a program that some say is worse than the highly-criticized “Fast and Furious” gunrunning scandal, where U.S. agents allowed thousands of weapons to pass from the U.S. to Mexican drug cartels.

 

CBS News investigative correspondent Sharyl Attkisson discovered that the official tracking all those guns sold through “direct commercial sales” leaves something to be desired.

 

One weapon – an AR-15-type semi-automatic rifle – tells the story. In 2006, this same kind of rifle – tracked by serial number – is legally sold by a U.S. manufacturer to the Mexican military.

 

Three years later – it’s found in a criminal stash in a region wracked by Mexican drug cartel violence. . . .continue