- El Paso Times: Report: Mexican Drug cartels adopting military tactics
- New York Times: US widens its role in battle against Mexican drug cartels
- Reuters: Top Mexico trafficker claims he was DEA informant
- Reuters: Under fire in drug war, Mexican media falls silent
- Wall Street Journal: Mexico elbows into US meth trade
- InSight: Mexico should cut hype over drug gang arrests
- Avionics Intelligence: Ultralight aircraft pilots may face stiffer penalties
- Las Cruces Sun-News: Azteca power grab in Midland stymied by RICO crackdown
- NPR: Business booms on Mexican border despite violence
- Narco News: The war on drugs and the Mexican movement to end it
Ahhhhh, marijuana, crack, etc. – the Status Quo’s stash cash cow.
ReplyDeleteEnd this senseless war overnight - legalize it all.
ReplyDeleteLegalize MJ. Start tracking guns and stop selling assault rifles except to duly licensed people who really need them (ranchers?).
ReplyDeleteWork harder to stop the flow of money, ammo and guns going south. Reduce barriers to trade to give the countries south of the border a more level playing field on which to compete in things like citrus, basic industries, legal crops (rice, wheat) and stop subsidizing industries that can't compete in the US without thievery from the pockets of the taxpayer.
Feds (BATF, FBI, DEA, ICE, CIA, Homeland Security) are all starting to show involvement in trafficking drugs north of the Rio and weapons south of the Rio. Ya think maybe the Attorneys General should start investigating showing he gives a damn about Texans?
ReplyDeleteRecent Houston news article:
Congressional Inquiries Turn To Houston Over Gun Trafficking Investigation
http://www.click2houston.com/news/28781637/detail.html
I have to question the reliability of Narco News when they said, "In Mexico, 90 percent of the weapons recovered in drug-related violence are manufactured in the United States."
ReplyDeleteUnless they have different data it sounds like the 90% lie everyone keeps using.
Dropcrate, I agree with you about the guns-from-the-US number. The US is a significant source, but probably not 90%.
ReplyDeleteI posted the link because I've seen very little English-language coverage of the growing anti-violence movement in Mexico, not to endorse every jot and tittle in Narco News or any of these accounts.
90% of weapons from the US is a LIE...Unless you count from your local federal govt.
ReplyDeleteWatch:
http://rpginn.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1435&Itemid=1
Pictures of seized weapons:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.ar15.com/forums/t_1_5/1102948_.html&page=1
Yup, lots come from Central America and many also are stolen from the Mexican army, police, etc.. (And yes, I do count guns they got via the federal government "from the US.")
ReplyDeleteQuite a few guns are smuggled south, though. The 90% number is overstated, but one should not make the leap from that conclusion to deciding that no guns come from the US at all. They do, and in significant numbers.
"Sandy said...
ReplyDeleteEnd this senseless war overnight - legalize it all."
Now, Sandy, you are asking congress to do something rational. Won't happen.
I went to an Austin Texas gun show and asked about buying grenades, 50cal. machine guns explosives and anti tank rockets. I must say that the Austin police are very polite and have some of the best coffee. It was the best 2 days I have ever spent, much nicer than the week I spent with homeland security.
ReplyDeleteMy point those shows are blanketed with law enforcement, and I went to 05:13 link and most of those are military weapons.