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  1. #1
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    Death in Mexico by Bill O'Reilly

    Death in Mexico
    by Bill O'Reilly

    09/04/2010

    One of the most underreported ongoing stories around is the war in Mexico between the government and the drug cartels. Here are the grisly stats: More than 28,000 people have been killed in drug-related violence since 1996. In Iraq, 4,421 Americans have been killed. In Afghanistan, 1,141.

    The truth is that Mexican drug merchants are even more deadly than al-Qaida. They have more firepower and more money and are just as willing to kill civilians as are the homicidal jihadists. Yet, we Americans know little about the chaotic situation south of the border.

    The reason is that the drug cartels don't seem to threaten us directly. But, of course, they do. Illegal narcotics from Mexico wind up in almost every community in the United States. The FBI estimates that about 70 percent of crimes from coast to coast are drug-fueled.

    The latest atrocity in the Mexican drug war was the discovery of 72 bodies on a ranch 100 miles south of Texas. The dead -- 58 men and 14 women -- were migrants from South and Central America. The lone survivor of the massacre says that cartel gunmen shot the unarmed folks because they resisted an extortion attempt.

    The reliably anti-American New York Times partially blamed the mass killings on the USA: "Mexico's drug cartels are nourished from outside, by American cash, heavy weapons and addiction; the northward pull of immigrants is fueled by our demand for low-wage labor."

    I had to read that editorial three times to believe it. Here we have the Times, which opposes putting the National Guard on the border, the tough anti-alien law in Arizona and most other measures that might secure the border, complaining about the illegal gun and drug traffic. Can you believe this? Hey, you pinheads, if the United States would send ten thousand National Guardspeople to help the border patrol, drugs and guns would not be able to cross the border so easily. Comprende?

    This entire grisly charade is infuriating. This country has the power to stop the smuggling of human beings and drugs across the southern border. We could do that. But, for political reasons, we don't. Meanwhile, the drug cartels kill at will and create terror on a scale not seen anywhere else on earth at this time.

    Mexico, itself, is at fault because it won't ask for American help. Apparently, they think 28,000 dead is acceptable. Well, it's not. U.S. law enforcement and troops should be assisting Mexican authorities in the destruction of the cartels. The fact that these drug animals have been able to operate their murderous industry so openly for so long is beyond shameful.

    Manuel Noriega turned his country, Panama, into a narco-state, and in 1989, the elder President Bush sent U.S. forces in to remove him. President Obama might study that campaign. Something needs to be done in Mexico.

    http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=38850
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  2. #2
    Senior Member oldguy's Avatar
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    If we consider the huge America dollars going into the Mexican economy from the drug trade that "may" be one reason Mexico does not want to totally shut it down.

    Like it or not Mexico is supported via America greenbacks through illegal worker wages and drugs. I read that most transactions in Mexico are 80% cash so if it were shutdown it would send this money either south or north, and I expect the Mexican government is concerned over the results if stopped.
    I'm old with many opinions few solutions.

  3. #3
    Senior Member LadyStClaire's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by oldguy
    If we consider the huge America dollars going into the Mexican economy from the drug trade that "may" be one reason Mexico does not want to totally shut it down.

    Like it or not Mexico is supported via America greenbacks through illegal worker wages and drugs. I read that most transactions in Mexico are 80% cash so if it were shutdown it would send this money either south or north, and I expect the Mexican government is concerned over the results if stopped.
    MEXICO DON'T WANT THAT BORDER SHUT DOWN AND THEY AS MUCH AS SAID SO WHEN THEY TOLD THE U.S. GOVERNMENT THAT IT WAS ALRIGHT FOR THEM TO SEND TROOPS TO THE BORDER, BUT THEY WERE NOT TO STOP ILLEGALS OR DRUG SMUGGLERS FROM COMING INTO THE U.S. ANOTHER REASON THEY WANT IT TO REMAIN OPEN IS SO CALDERON CAN KEEP COMING HERE BEGGING FOR MONEY TO HELP WITH HIS WAR ON THE DRUG CARTELS. THE U.S. NEEDS TO STOP GIVING THESE PEOPLE MONEY LIKE THEY DO, BECAUSE WE DON'T KNOW WHATS BEING DONE WITH IT. MEXICO HAS RECEIVED A COUNTLESS AMOUNT OF MONEY FROM THE U.S. AND THE DRUG CARTELS ARE STILL AS ACTIVE AS EVER. SO, WHERE/WHO IS THIS MONEY GOING TO

  4. #4
    Administrator ALIPAC's Avatar
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    Mexico needs gun rights like Americans.

    Right now, the Mexican government has guns and criminals have guns and the Mexican citizens are powerless sitting ducks.

    The key to Mexico's security and prosperity can be found in the US Constitution.

    W
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  5. #5
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    My vote is all I or any of us need to make whats wrong,right again. Thanks Alipac for having my back!

  6. #6
    Senior Member Justthatguy's Avatar
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    The U. S. needs to bring it's troops home and put them on the border. That's how this problem will be solved. As for Mexico, it's up to them to figure out how to fix their internal problems, not the U. S. Legal or illegal Mexicans have access to guns.

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