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    Mexico Woes

    Posted for public debate and discussion to encourage citizen awareness of critical issues. Posted on this non-profit site under fair-use criteria.

    http://www.omaha.com/index.php?u_pg=54&u_sid=2174806


    Police enraged by the kidnapping of six officers club unarmed detainees. A bloody battle between steelworkers and police leaves two miners dead. Drug lords post the heads of decapitated police on a fence to show who is in charge.

    Less than two months before Mexicans elect their next president, many fear that the country is teetering on the edge of chaos - a perception that could hurt the ruling National Action Party's chances of keeping the presidency and benefit Mexico's once-powerful Institutional Revolutionary Party, whose candidate has been trailing badly.

    Some blame President Vicente Fox for a weak government. Others say rivals are instigating the violence to create that impression, hoping to hurt National Action candidate Felipe Calderon, who has a slight lead in recent polls.

    A recent poll published in Excelsior newspaper found that 50 percent of respondents feared that the government was on the brink of losing control. The polling company Parametria conducted face-to-face interviews at 1,000 homes across Mexico. The poll had a margin of error of 3 percentage points.

    The conflicts are "a warning sign," said Yamel Nares, Parametria's research director.

    Security is the top concern for Mexicans, and Fox has struggled to reform Mexico's notoriously corrupt police. Meanwhile, drug-related bloodshed has accelerated, with some cities seeing killings almost daily.

    In April, suspected drug lords posted the heads of two police officers on a wall outside a government building where four drug traffickers died in a Jan. 27 shootout with officers in the Pacific resort of Acapulco.

    A sign nearby read: "So that you learn to respect."

    Earlier this month, Zapatista rebel leader Subcomandante Marcos said Mexico was in a "state of rage" and warned that tensions were similar to those that preceded the Zapatistas' brief armed uprising in January 1994 in the southern state of Chiapas.

    He said his group is committed to peace, but many fear that his increased public profile - after years of hiding in the jungle - could foreshadow greater polarization among Mexican voters.

    The masked leader said a May 3 clash that left a teenager dead and scores injured in San Salvador Atenco, 15 miles northeast of Mexico City, is an example of the growing tensions.

    Marcos has been leading nearly daily demonstrations in the town following the incident, which began when a radical group of townspeople kidnapped and beat six policemen in a dispute over unlicensed flower vendors. Police responded with rage the next day. Television crews captured officers repeatedly beating unarmed protesters, and several detained women alleged that officers raped them.

    The clash followed another bloody battle between steelworkers and police trying to break up an illegal strike at a plant in Lazaro Cardenas last month. Unions later threatened to shut down the country.

    George Grayson, a Mexico expert at the College of William & Mary, said the violence reflects Fox's lack of leadership.

    "The state has become much weaker under his watch," Grayson said.

    Recent polls show Calderon has overtaken longtime presidential front-runner Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, whom opponents have portrayed as a leftist demagogue similar to Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.

    But that could change if PRI candidate Roberto Madrazo can convince voters that Mexico was more stable under his party's 71-year reign, which ended with Fox's victory in 2000. Mexican law bars presidents from seeking re-election.

    Madrazo has tried to paint himself as the law-and-order candidate - though his poll numbers have remained well behind those of Calderon and Lopez Obrador.
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    Why stay home and make things better for yourself, your family, your country?

    The Gringos have already done all the hard work, paid the price in lives and blood. Let's just waltz in to GringoLand and DEMAND and take and take.

    Stoopid Gringos!!!!!

  2. #2
    Super Moderator Newmexican's Avatar
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    Why stay home and make things better for yourself, your family, your country?

    The Gringos have already done all the hard work, paid the price in lives and blood. Let's just waltz in to GringoLand and DEMAND and take and take.

    Stoopid Gringos!!!!!
    I think you have nailed this one.
    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at https://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  3. #3

    Join Date
    Jan 1970
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    I read else where that Mexico is on the verge of colapse economically!

    T
    Those who would sacrifice liberty for security deserves neither.
    -Benjamin Franklin

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