Mexico’s Deadly Drug War

Mexico's Deadly Drug War

The U.S. and Mexican 1% Are tag -team raping the good people of both countries. Since 2006 Mexican President Felipe Calderon and the U.S. backed drug war in Mexico have left somewhere between 40,000 and 60,000 people dead. Not to worry, according to Napolitano the border has never been safer.

Do you ever wonder why we seldom if ever hear any U.S. politicians criticize the corrupt, cartel-run Mexican “government” for anything? Could it be that Mexican trade, oil, labor and drug profits are more important to U.S. politicians than the human rights and human lives of our neighbors to the South?

Are the corporate-corrupt 1% who run our “government” in or on the same bed with the 1% cartel-corrupt who run the Mexican “government”?

I think so. We (the US taxpayer and the good citizens of Mexico) are being tag teamed raped by the bi-national 1% and their failed drug and immigration policies. Yet American voters swallow the 1%’s politicians’ propaganda like some magic pill that will make the undocumented pay and be taken away.

There is a portion of the bi-national 1% who profit from the failed drug and immigration policies of both countries. If American voters don’t wake up, smell the coffee and blame those who are really responsible, these problems will never end.

Why does the Mexican “government” happily export an entire sub-class of its citizens to the U.S.? Because said “government” does not have to provide for these people (the U.S. taxpayers will do that)! And don’t forget the billions in remittances and the millions in foreign aid that is yearly sent back into Mexico from the U.S. Read On>>

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Buzz This
Vote on DZone
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Kick It on DotNetKicks.com
Shout it
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)
avatar

About Edgardo

Born in Houston, Texas and moved to Raymondvile, Texas in 1969. Family bought a radio station and helped with the family business until it was sold in 1997. Since then started an agency and mostly writes about experiences in Deep South Texas. Writers of the Rio Grande founder, editor and contributing author.