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  1. #1
    Administrator Jean's Avatar
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    New Mexican 'revolución' crosses border, infects U.S.

    First time I've seen Roger with an article at WND.
    For those of you who do not know, he is a popular talk radio host on a San Diego station and was once the mayor.
    ~~

    New Mexican 'revolución' crosses border, infects U.S.
    Roger Hedgecock
    Posted: May 26, 2008
    1:00 am Eastern

    © 2008

    There's a growing revolution in Mexico that pits the emerging smuggling-based illegal economy built by wealthy cartels, against the traditional, oil and tourist-based economy, the army and privileged classes of old Mexico. This revolution threatens the national security of the United States but is a non-event in the U.S. press and unknown to most Americans.

    Those of us who live close to the border between the United States and Mexico are used to the daily reports of violent atrocities that accompany the incessant smuggling of people, drugs, weapons and whatever along its 1,600-mile span.

    The media, in border towns on either side, are filled with stories of the travails of immigrants, the costs of immigrants and the violence that comes with this illegal tsunami of people. Every immigrant yearning to breathe free and every terrorist yearning to blow us up knows that the border with Mexico is open to all for the right price. The income from this trade is huge and has long ago attracted a consolidation of skilled and violent smuggling cartels who have carved out territories over which they exercise as much or more control as the Mexican government.

    The war on drugs has gone on longer than any war in our history and is an abject failure. The revenue from drug smuggling is the second pillar of this emerging illegal Mexican economy.

    From San Diego, Calif., to Brownsville, Texas, the value of all this smuggling rivals the (increasing) value of legal, NAFTA trade between the two countries. Legal and illegal trade is sometimes intertwined. Mexican police busted a Sharp Electronics warehouse in Rosarito Beach, Baja Calif., finding 1.5 tons of marijuana hidden inside TVs marked for shipment to Ontario, Canada.

    In the 18 months since President Felipe Calderon took office vowing to defeat the cartels, the Mexican army, increasingly equipped with modern American-made arms, vehicles and communication, has been deployed across the country in a running battle against the cartels. The death toll is rising. The cartels have executed more than 4,000 people: judges, police chiefs and officers, mayors, military commanders and rival gang members, in a continuing battle over control of territory, particularly in the states of Chihuahua, Sinaloa and Durango.

    Portions of the Mexican army have been compromised, and many Mexican soldiers are now cartel enforcers. Many "Zetas," or Mexican special forces, have deserted and joined the cartel gangs. This week, six "Zetas," who had been caught and tried in Nuevo Laredo, were sentenced to long prison sentences for protecting drug traffickers.

    In Ciudad Juarez, on the border with Texas, a military officer assumed command of the city police last week, following the assassination of the police chief nine days earlier. The Juarez city government has purchased two up-armored SUVs to transport city officials in that dangerous city.

    In the state of Guerrero, the 15-member police force in the small town of Zirandaro quit last week as the local cartel took over the town. Two weeks ago, a Mexican police chief showed up on the U.S. side requesting asylum, fearing for his life.

    Even in the capital city, the highest ranks of government officials live in fear. Mexico's acting federal police chief, Edgar Millan Gomez, was assassinated in his home in Mexico City May 8 by someone with keys to his house.

    The value of Tijuana, Baja Calif., to the smuggling cartel is so great that the drop in tourism revenue caused by the violence of this new revolution is hardly missed. Tijiuana is the staging point for all kinds of smuggling operations, including more than two dozen tunnels that have been discovered under the border fence between Tijuana and San Diego. More and more, small boats leaving the beach west of Tijuana bring drugs and illegals on shore all along San Diego's beaches.

    Kidnapping and killing of Americans is epidemic, causing even a cautious State Department to issue a travelers advisory warning Americans about the dangers of travel in Mexico. It's about time. The State Department's own statistics show 128 Americans "executed" in Mexico from Jan. 1, 2005 to Dec. 31, 2007.

    The danger now is that revenue from smuggling is so great that cartels can not only bribe officials to get their way, but they can permanently buy off (or kill off) key army, government, political and media figures, rendering Mexico a state dominated by the cartels. Things can get much worse in Mexico than they are today. And that means, things can get much worse for America, too. President Calderon deserves U.S. support as he fights the smuggling cartels for control of Mexico.


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  2. #2
    Senior Member MyAmerica's Avatar
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    It's estimated the drug smuggling from Mexico grosses $142 billion a year with drug sales to the U.S. and Canada.

    Couldn't each illegal alien crossing the border be considered a potential drug dealer and working in an established drug network? We have to stop illegal aliens from entering the U.S.

    Coruption has infilitrated all levels of the Mexican government so shouldn't we consider the possibility of corruption within the network of 50 consulates located through-out the U.S.?

    Arent open border proponents and groups supporting illegal immigration also suspect? There may be ulterior motives to keep the border in addition to illegal immigrant crossings.
    "Distrust and caution are the parents of security."
    Benjamin Franklin

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  3. #3
    Senior Member Rockfish's Avatar
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    Like I've said before, if the feds are really interested in stopping the drug flow and the threat of teorrists from crosssing our borders, they would do something about it. But they aren't and this do-nothing activity has to make one wonder about the fed's true intentionss regarding the future of the United States and the legitimacy of their claims surrounding the event of 911.

    America is not America anymore. We are being led by a bunch of thugs who think they will decide everything for us. (Mod Edit). It's the people who are supposed to have the power, not the politicians.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

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