Thursday, March 26, 2009

WAR ON DRUGS IN MEXICO

SINS OF PEOPLE

2 TIMOTHY 3:1-5
1 This know also, that in the last days perilous times shall come.
2 For men shall be lovers of their own selves, covetous, boasters, proud, blasphemers, disobedient to parents, unthankful, unholy,
3 Without natural affection, trucebreakers, false accusers, incontinent, fierce, despisers of those that are good,
4 Traitors, heady, highminded, lovers of pleasures more than lovers of God;
5 Having a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof: from such turn away.
6 For of this sort are they which creep into houses, and lead captive silly women laden with sins, led away with divers lusts,
7 Ever learning, and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth.

DECIEVERS WAXING WORSE AND WORSE.

2 TIMOTHY 3:13
13 But evil men and seducers shall wax worse and worse, deceiving, and being deceived.

DRUG PUSHERS AND ADDICTS

REVELATION 18:23
23 And the light of a candle shall shine no more at all in thee; and the voice of the bridegroom and of the bride shall be heard no more at all in thee: for thy merchants were the great men of the earth; for by thy sorceries (DRUGS) were all nations deceived.

REVELATION 9:21
21 Neither repented they of their murders, nor of their sorceries (DRUGS), nor of their fornication, nor of their thefts.

DEUTERONOMY 27:25
25 Cursed be he that taketh reward to slay an innocent person. And all the people shall say, Amen.

DEUTERONOMY 28:41-43
41 Thou shalt beget sons and daughters, but thou shalt not enjoy them; for they shall go into captivity.
42 All thy trees and fruit of thy land shall the locust consume.
43 The stranger (IMMIGRANT) that is within thee shall get up above thee very high; and thou shalt come down very low.

WOW THIS DRUG CARTEL MURDERING IN MEXICO IS JUST TO VIOLENT.WAREZ MEXICO HAS 9,500 TROOPS IN ITS TOWN TRYING TO STOP THE DRUG CARTEL BOSSES SINCE THE LOCAL POLICE COULD NOT STOP THEM. THERES BEEN AN AVERAGE OF 10 MURDERS A DAY IN WAREZ FOR THE LAST 2 WEEKS UNTIL THESE TROOPS CAME IN 2 or 3 DAYS AGO NOW NO MURDERS FOR NOW.

OBAMA CLAIMS ITS A JOINT TASK TO STOP THE DRUG DEALERS.95% OF THE GUNS USED IN MEXICO COME FROM THE US SAYS ANDERSON COOPER OF CNN. THE BORDER MUST BE MILITARIZED SAYS A MEXICAN.


How the Cartels sneak dope in to the USA across the border?

The drug dealers ship 3 trackertrailers full of 40 tons of dope. The cartel does the setup this way. They send 3 or 4 cars (decoys) ahead with 6Killos of dope in them,when one of them get stopped by Police officers and Sheriffs and sniffer dogs to check then this gives the 3 tracktertrailers time to get the 40 tons through as there is only 1 officer left flagging the vehicles across the border. And of course there is currupt Border officers on both sides that get paid off to let the trucks across the border also.

Theres hundreds of places were drugs are smuggled across America bringing in BILLIONS of tons of Cocaine,Meth,Marijuana,Heroin from Alaska to Georgia. Heres how the Drugs are smuggled in. It starts in Columbia with a TON of cocaine shipped in Coffee tins in a semi truck.Then a professional courier starts driving north through Central America to the USA border. When the drug shipment gets to the border the driver waits to get in by these tactics. They wait for heavy traffic across the border,or on hollidays or they try to go when the weather is bad anything to try to distract law inforcement. When the time is right a signaler will give the driver a tip and the truck blends in with the traffic and croses the border.


At least 4 drug cartels are in NEWMEXICO,TEXAS,ARIZONA,CALIFORNIA. Once the truck gets over the American border they get outta town quick. They then turn into delivery vans going to Los Vegas,Los Angeles,Portland or San Fransico. In each area a local cartel dealer gets the money and orders from the local drug dealers,gets the dope from the truck driver and it gets mixed with talcom powder to make the one TON of cocaine to 5 TONS when mixed. Within 48 hours the cartels whole load is distributed to the local dealers around America to sell to the addicts and so on. This is a very vicious way of making money,addicting our children and killing them.....all for greed of money......sick is all i have to say. No wonder the world is judged for being decieved by drugs and the violence that comes from the cartels and the dealers ETC.

Hillary Clinton admits US blame for Mexico drug violence ,America's insatiable demand for illegal drugs is to blame for much of the violence engulfing Mexico, Hillary Clinton has said.By Tom Leonard in New York 12:28AM GMT 26 Mar 2009

The US secretary of state also acknowledged America's inability to stop weapons being smuggled across the border from the US and being used by the drug cartels in a bloody turf war.Mrs Clinton made her candid remarks as she flew to Mexico City for a two-day visit where she will discuss US plans to ramp up border security with President Felipe Calderon.Our insatiable demand for illegal drugs fuels the drug trade. Our inability to prevent weapons from being illegally smuggled across the border to arm these criminals causes the death of police officers, soldiers and civilians,she said during her flight to Mexico City.I feel very strongly we have a co-responsibility.

She said US efforts to ban drugs such as cocaine and heroine had clearly not worked and it was unfair to blame Mexico for its drug cartel problem. Although Barack Obama has pledged to devote an additional 360 federal agents to border security, the US Congress this month trimmed the amount of drug aid money it will set aside this fiscal year to $300 million from $400 million last year. Mrs Clinton later pledged $80m for helicopters to help the fight against drugs. By contrast, President Felipe Calderon has spent more than $6.4 billion, assigning 45,000 troops and federal police, on fighting the cartels he tookd office in December 2006. Mexico has repeatedly said it cannot contain the increasingly brutal cartels, now armed with grenades and rocket launchers, if America does not do more to stop the drugs gangs buying guns in the US, where they are much easier to obtain. It's not only guns. It's night vision goggles. It's body armour,said Mrs Clinton. These criminals are outgunning the law enforcement officials. More than 8,000 people have been killed in drug-related fighting since January 2008.

Sunday, March 15, 2009 Beheadings for terror effect in Mexico
Houston Chronicle:


And now the violence has come to this small town on the high arid mesa outside Guadalajara, where five heads were tucked neatly into cheap coolers and adorned with menacing messages. I’m going to finish all of them off just like these, read one of the notes, I’m coming for you, Goyo.Everyone in the town of 8,000 surrounded by cattle pastures and maguey cactus plantations knew who Goyo was: a man long suspected of involvement in the drug trade. When something like this comes to a town, its impact is impressive, Francisco Sanchez, the town’s 32-year-old mayor, said of the heads.They are sending a message: We are here.Many townspeople assume they are the Zetas, the assassins for the Gulf Cartel drug syndicate based in cities bordering far south Texas. And the fact they are here might be very bad news indeed for Ixtlahuacan (pronounced Eekst-lah-wah-KAHN).Probably few acts of violence strike as much primordial fear in human beings as decapitation. That’s why conquering armies in centuries past once catapulted enemy heads into besieged castles, why kings put their rivals’ heads on spikes at the city walls .But beheadings are becoming distressingly routine amid Mexico’s gangland turmoil. More than 200 victims have been decapitated in the past few years, according to the count by the National Human Rights Commission, a government agency. Four more beheaded victims were discovered in a Juarez grave on Saturday.You hear about these things on the news, in distant places, but now it has come for us, said Maria Magdalena Perez, manning the counter of a roadside store outside town. Imagine how we feel. The terror has come.

Goyo,whom the town’s police and residents identified as Gregorio Gonzalez, was well known in Ixtlahuacan and never caused trouble in town. But Gonzalez and his family haven’t been seen since the heads were discovered in the early morning darkness Tuesday. The men’s bodies have not turned up.Two days later, soldiers seized a large clandestine methamphetamine lab in a walled compound about a 20-minute drive from town. The authorities did not say who owned the lab.If anybody in town was surprised by the violence and the drug lab, perhaps they shouldn’t have been.Guadalajara, whose lights are visible from the edge of Ixtlahuacan on clear nights, was Mexico’s gangland capital a generation ago .Zetas also have been marauding in Zacatecas state, whose border is a 15-minute drive north of Ixtlahuacan. Should the Zetas descend upon Ixtlahuacan, there’s little to stop them. A half-dozen state police and a squad of Mexican soldiers patrolled Ixtlahuacan last week. But the state and federal forces aren’t permanently based here. The town’s first line of defense rests with its 32 policemen.You can feel the fear, said Sanchez, the mayor. The town has been transformed.To defeat a criminal insurgency like that in Mexico requires a high force to space ration and persistence. That squad of soldiers may need to be platoon strength and it needs to be in the city patrolling with the local police daily. That is the way you get intelligence on the enemy activities and find out where they are hiding.The Houston Chronicle has probably done a better job than any other paper in covering what has become a significant criminal insurgency in Mexico. It is one example of why we need newspapers to survive. Posted by Merv at 9:59 AM

Mexico drugs war: cartels recruit child assassins ,Special Report: In Ciudad Juarez, North America's most dangerous city, the warring drug cartels have found a new weapon even more effective than rocket launchers or grenades. By Tom Leonard in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico 8:19PM GMT 24 Mar 2009

Army soldiers arrive to patrol Ciudad Juarez, Mexico Photo: AP The new addition to the world's most bloodthirsty gangs are sicaritos, or child assassins. As guerrilla forces have discovered in Africa, 13 and 14-year-old children on the margins of society make fearless killers. In Juarez, now Mexico's drug addict capital, they are almost certain to be high on crack cocaine. The city of 1.8 million people, separated by just a bridge over the Rio Grande from El Paso in Texas, sits on a major drug route and has been the epicentre of the brutal drug violence gripping Mexico and increasingly creeping over the border into the United States. In a city now empty of the Americans who used to flock here for the lively bars and flea markets, taxi drivers can instead offer visitors a macabre tour of the many murder spots as well as streets where drug deals can be seen being conducted within yards of the local police.In one street alone, home to a strip of non-descript, cartel-owned bars, 16 people have been killed in the past two months. Usually, the gunmen - teenagers among them - will saunter in and spray indiscriminately with AK-47 assault rifles, hitting both their targets and innocent bystanders. Few suspects are ever arrested as the local police are often working for the same cartels. A few streets away is a bar where a local cartel chief nicknamed Jesus the Devil was recently killed just three days after getting out of jail, shot seven times in the head.They killed him real bad,said the driver.

Those captured by the cartels are even less fortunate. Many are tortured and beheaded. Police officers, almost all suspected of working for the drug barons, have frequently been among the dead. The local morgue is currently doubling in size to cope with demand. But at last Juarez's battered citizens have been offered some respite. Army convoys now rumble through the narrow streets day and night, machine gun-armed troops and special forces soldiers crowded into pick-up trucks as they stop cars and raid houses. Government officials were able to announce this week that a surge involving 10,000 soldiers and federal police has cut by 70 per cent a murder rate previously averaging five a day. Belated efforts to tackle the cartels, long ignored by a US distracted by Islamic extremism, are also being stepped up north of the border. Playing down recent claims that Mexico is as much at risk as Pakistan of becoming a failed state, the US government has promised to send more troops and equipment to fight the cartels along the border. Washington may be reassured by the situation in Juarez where some semblance of normal life has returned to a city previously ruled by the warring drug factions of the Juarez cartel and Joaquin Guzman, recently added to the Forbes magazine's list of billionaires. But law enforcement sources fear it may be too late to tighten up the border as the cartels are already firmly established in an estimated 230 US cities. In Phoenix, Arizona, alone there have been 700 cartel-related crimes in the past two years, including kidnappings and shootings by gangs prepared to shove a gun into a baby's mouth to get their way. Although the cartels have warned that they will treat American law enforcement no differently than Mexican police, experts are split over whether the cartels are willing to use the same level of violence in the US. Many cartel members are already thought to live quietly just over the border, one reason that may explain why, despite the carnage across the river, El Paso is one of the safest cities in America. The drug violence exploded after a crackdown on the cartels ordered more than two years ago by the Mexican president, Felipe Calderon. According to Diana Washington Valdez, an El Paso investigative reporter who has covered the cartels extensively, Mr Calderon is isolated, allegedly surrounded by officials who are paid as much as $500,000 (£340,000) a month to supply the cartels with information. The big guys haven't been arrested. The authorites know where they are but they're always tipped off and protected,she said. If the Mexicans are serious, they have to go after these politicians who are on the take.The Juarez troop surge was financially unsustainable, she said. What's missing is a decisive plan of action. The cartels will lie low for a while and then get back to business. I'm afraid the violence will go on until everyone who is meant to die, dies.

ALLTIME