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#mexico – @diegueno on Tumblr

Is It in My Head?

@diegueno / diegueno.tumblr.com

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When I hear folks say that: ‘Well, maybe we should just admit the Christians but not the Muslims,’ when I hear political leaders suggesting that there would be a religious test for which person who’s fleeing from a war-torn country is admitted, when some of those folks themselves come from families who benefited from protection when they were fleeing political persecution, that’s shameful,” “That’s not American. That’s not who we are. We don’t have religious tests to our compassion.

President Obama, are you sure that you want to go there? Your record on dealing with refugees from Latin America is (to be kind) spotty, too. The ACLU has made a project out of it and it's awful right now.

You could have covered it up with rhetoric saying that your hand was forced by right wing reactionairies to treat refugees who have been here for at least a year like this, but you didn't bring it up in Antalya at your press conference today.

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Mexico is once again witness to terrible violence, this time in Chilapa de Álvarez in the western coastal state of Guerrero, where in recent days about 30 people have gone missing in an operation carried out by a so far unidentified armed group.
Community guards or self-defense groups (which have are becoming more common in Mexico given the “war” against drug trafficking), as well as several groups involved with organized crime, operate in the state.
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Meanwhile, Ceballos says, mirreyes have started mimicking the children of narcotics traffickers. “Mirreyes, who don’t have anything to do with narcos, seem like they’re competing with them to see who has more,” he says. “We’ve suddenly seen it in the kind of fashion or the bling-bling. There’s more influence from the narcos.” This also reflects the infiltration of money from shady sources into high society—much as it’s suspected to have seeped into the political process. The old guard doesn’t necessarily embrace the newly moneyed right away, but will do so, to a degree, as their children interact and form friendships. “All money is now welcome,” says Guadalupe Loaeza, a columnist and author of several books on the upper crust. “There are no longer any scruples.

The brattiest pack in Mexico: A generation of spoiled, entitled children of the ruling elite is running wild. Meet Mexico’s future leaders.

Source: macleans.ca
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The country has been seized by the story of the missing forty-three, though many refuse to believe the worst until it can no longer be denied—my dentist, for example, says that this is all just a student prank that went too far, and that the students will turn up any day now, sheepish and contrite. Meanwhile, concealed graves full of human remains keep turning up in the mountains and hillsides of impoverished Guerrero. One recently discovered grave held sandals and backpacks. Federal authorities discovered yet another grave on Monday, in the municipal dump of remote Cocula. There has been speculation that the grave could hold the remains of at least some of the students, but nothing has been confirmed yet. An announcement from the government could come any minute, or it might not come at all. Even if the government does announce that it believes it has found the students, it could take weeks before the independent Argentine forensics team working on the case can complete its DNA testing. That might be all the time that President Enrique Peña Nieto’s government will have to prepare for the widespread social tumult and condemnation that a confirmation of the students’ deaths is likely to provoke.Every day, here in Mexico City and around the country, there are marches and other civic actions, most of them peaceful. On Wednesday, students from Instituto Politécnico Nacional, a large university in Mexico City, took control of toll booths on the highways leading into the city and allowed traffic to pass without paying. In Guerrero, protestors continue to burn government buildings. There will be a march in Mexico City on October 31st, coinciding with the Day of the Dead holidays, and a “mega march” is scheduled for November 5th, the day that Mexico’s universities and colleges are planning a national strike.Many in Mexico have wondered why the missing forty-three have inspired such outrage in a country that has long since grown anesthetized to mass violence. This past June, twenty-two young people were massacred in a Mexico State warehouse by soldiers who claimed they’d been engaged in a long gun battle. The victims included a seventeen-year-old girl who was shot in the head. Her mother, when she recovered the body, said a soldier’s boot imprint was still visible on her daughter’s face. The case would have been covered up had it not been for human-rights groups and some early Associated Press wire-service reports bringing it to light. Even then, the Attorney General’s office didn’t agree to investigate the case until three more months had passed. Two weeks ago, in the city of Reynosa, a young physician and mother named María del Rosario Fuentes Rubio was kidnapped. She had been writing for the site Valor por Tamaulipas (where people post information and warnings about local narco activities) as an anonymous blogger, but narcos discovered her identity. Her murderers posted photos of her corpse on her Twitter account along with a tweeted message: “Close your accounts, don’t put your families at risk like I did, I ask your forgiveness.”

The U.S' policy of prohibition of mind altering chemicals has done this to Mexico.

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They sure did.  Critics pounced on Time's puff piece; interestingly, one of the more helpful pieces came from USA Today (2/19/14), under the headline "Everyone Giddy Over Mexico–Except Mexicans." It turns out that while Time thinks Peña Nieto is saving Mexico, Mexicans give him very low marks; he has a 32 percent approval rating. And those "reforms" being touted by Time leave many Mexicans wondering if they'll see any benefit; foreign oil companies might profit from oil drilling, but what will that do for Mexican citizens? And actual growth in 2013 was 1.3 percent–well short of the sunny 3.5 percent growth that was forecast. One critic, Bill Conroy of NarcoNews (2/17/14), noted that a few weeks earlier Time had published a 14-page advertising spread touting Mexico's turnaround, sponsored by the government and corporate interests. Conroy argues that Time's journalism and this advertorial bore some striking resemblances. The magazine disagreed, of course; but it's worth recalling that Time, Inc. has already declared that part of  the company's new business strategy will include blurring the line between editorial and advertising (FAIR Blog, 1/2/14). As the New York Times reported (12/30/13),  "The newsroom staffs at Time Inc.'s magazines will report to the business executives."
Source: fair.org
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reblogged
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reuters

The number of women who have been murdered in Mexico has increased steadily in the last five years.  

An estimated 80,000 people living in Mexico have died in drug-related violence since 2007. Mexican authorities found bodies of eight kidnap victims in Guerrero state, officials said on Monday. http://reut.rs/1d5EzCp  The victims were all related and their bodies were identified by relatives. Some of the dismembered bodies were placed in plastic bags. The bodies included two women, said an official with the local prosecutor’s office who declined to be identified. Authorities are still searching for three more people who were kidnapped with the group last Thursday. Mexican police arrested a man in Jalisco suspected of orchestrating a string of crimes including more than 200 murders, the country’s interior ministry said on Tuesday. http://reut.rs/18S2ubs  In late November, 33 mutilated corpses were found in 19 ditches in La Barca, on the border between the states of Michoacan and Jalisco, where rival drug cartels operate.  

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diegueno

Again, prohibition is ineffective. Now we have more evidence that it again (the Colombian cocaine wars) is a human rights problem. Now the trouble has come to our borders. Why isn't the USA seeing more people seeking asylum from drug violence in Mexico?

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Without asking the people that live and work in the Valle de Guadalupe, Torres, like a thief in the night, has attempted to subversively push through an aggressive land reuse program titled the Sectorial Program for the Urban Touristic Development of the Wine Producing Valleys.This pinche cabron from the PRI plans to dedicate 48% of the Valle soil to fancy condos and recreation, like the golf course Torres is already working on, in an all too predictable Mexican pattern of build first and think later that has ruined many great cities in Mexico. If you've enjoyed the unspoiled country that Anthony Bourdain had referred to as "the New Tuscany", now is the time to act.
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The $46-billion security package in the immigration bill would benefit aerospace, technology and security companies, as well as border states.

Just like I thought, this is all about funding a new industry feeding at the teet of the government treasury, not about fixing a broken immigration system.

All of this protection will give Erich Honecker's corpse a hard on.

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In this war for territory, the journalists have become victims. Because, unlike in traditional wars, in Mexico journalists don’t die in the crossfire, from a stray bullet, from walking in a minefield. In Mexico, the killers hunt down journalists, dragging them out of their offices and their houses, intercepting them in the street.

This is the result of

  • prohibition
  • a War About Drugs™ that Richard Nixon started that no one seems to to be ending some time soon.
  • a cynical process to create a penal industrial complex changing people in to cattle to profit from penning in
  • xenophobia
  • solipsism
  • sloth
  • no one lighting a big enough fire under congress' ass to fix it
  • Americans not confronting how they have been trying to get the genie back in the bottle
Source: gijn.org
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...I remember when Monsignor Guillermo Schulemberg [sic] (who was the head of the Basilica of Guadalupe for 40 years) publicly declared that Guadalupe was a sham. Msgr. Schulemberg wrote a letter to the Vatican stating that Juan Diego (the guy who claimed encounters with Guadalupe) never existed. True to form, the Vatican canonized Juan Diego. Schulemberg resigned as head of the Basilica and had hired goons, armed guards, outside of his home in one of the wealthiest neighborhoods in Mexico City (Lomas).

She backs up her comments with links to stories about the event.

Source: patheos.com
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She spoke about reporters who were slain trying to expose corruption in a country that had become a battlefield. She talked about how drug traffickers threatened reporters, causing some to flee to the United States only to earn wages for doing menial work.Also, she told of how of how the violence has affected the psyche of targeted journalists: One asked a friend for a pistol to kill himself rather than face a torture squad. Another reporter kissed his family members in their sleep and waited in his living room to be taken away by assailants.
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