The useless war against drugs in Mexico

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As I said, mexicans need a revolution to overturn the stagnant and corrupt government.


the only problem
is that
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"the revolutions"
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are also as useless as the war against drug cartels
We've learned that only by experience
Now a days, Mexico is worse than 100 hundred years ago
:(
 
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We all Mexicans are very grateful,
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not only
to the United States of Amnesia’s citizens, because with their proclivity, not only to to inhale cocaine, but to smoke mariguana;
and also to our so clever President, Felipe Calderón Hinojosa that with his nonsense and stupid war against drug lords, we Mexicans have found a new and productive Job, being that as undertaker :rolleyes:

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We all Mexicans are very grateful,
011.gif
not only
to the United States of Amnesia’s citizens, because with their proclivity, not only to to inhale cocaine, but to smoke mariguana;
and also to our so clever President, Felipe Calderón Hinojosa that with his nonsense and stupid war against drug lords, we Mexicans have found a new and productive Job, being that as undertaker


The simplest way to solve the problem is for the Mexicans to stay home, claen up their own country, and put up a fence along the Northern border as they have on the Southern border.

In essence, if the Mexican people had any backbone, or even a sense of integrity, they would obey the laws of America, and not feed on the weaknesses of a few Americans to supply their own corrupt natures.
 
The simplest way to solve the problem is for the Mexicans to stay home, claen up their own country, and put up a fence along the Northern border as they have on the Southern border.

In essence, if the Mexican people had any backbone, or even a sense of integrity, they would obey the laws of America, and not feed on the weaknesses of a few Americans to supply their own corrupt natures.
You are so right, and we Mexicans are so happy that you Americans have shown us so much about " your backbone": one example would do.


you have the same backbone as Mr. Rod Blagojevich, who was trying to sell Mr. Barrack Obama seat in the Senate, when he was named as democratic nominee to the U. S. Presidency


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Democracy is hypocrisy
:D:p
The null vote is the best vote

Mejor anula siempre tu voto
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If the United States of Amnesia doesn’t know anything about their own boys fighting "for liberty and democracy" in Afganistán….,

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…how can we Mexicans dare to ask for their sincere help towards finishing this crazy and insane war against drug dealers in "our own country," just because they like too much to inhale cocaine & to smoke pot?.

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The overwhelming narcissism shown by this Mexican cartoonist makes me at least, to be profoundly embarrassed and ashamed
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He’s so naive to foolishly believe that the U. S. government could care or mind about their backyard .


Poor guy!
 
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Politics Enables Mexican Fugitive to Defang a Law
By RANDAL C. ARCHIBOLD
Published: December 14, 2010
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MEXICO CITY — Despite being a federal fugitive, accused of laundering millions of dollars for one of Mexico’s most ruthless drug cartels, Julio César Godoy says he simply walked into the national legislature here unnoticed in September, right past the cordon of federal police officers watching the building.
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Fernando Castillo/Associated Press

Julio César Godoy, center, was sworn in as a congressman at the National Congress in Mexico City in September.

He then raised his right arm, swore allegiance to the Mexican Constitution and, 15 months after disappearing from public view, finally claimed the congressional seat he won last year.

It was too late for prosecutors to do much about it. Mr. Godoy’s newly conferred status came with a special perk: immunity from prosecution.

Now, a political saga that underscores the persistent fears of political infiltration by drug cartels and the many frustrations of rooting it out continues to swirl around him.

Mexico’s attorney general has been incensed at Mr. Godoy’s ability to hide in plain sight, while others debate intriguing details in local news reports, like accounts that Mr. Godoy had actually been spirited into the building’s basement garage in another lawmaker’s car. ( Alejandro Charles Encinas Marx; the one, that being Mexico city’s mayor, allowed Mr. Andrés Manuel López obrador to take over Paseo de la Reforma Avenue and a ll Mexico City’s downtown for 6 ( Six) Weeks, as a pressure measure due to a supposed cheating in the vote counting for the Mexican presidential elections in 2006)
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“It undermined the seriousness of the Chamber of Deputies and the rule of law that he could just show up and take the oath,” said John J. Bailey, a Georgetown University professor who studies organized crime and democracy in Mexico. “The natural reaction was, ‘What is going on here?’ ”

On Tuesday night, the chamber, Mexico’s lower house of Congress, voted overwhelmingly to strip Mr. Godoy of his immunity and legislative duties, a development that could lead to his eventual arrest and trial — if he can be found.

Mr. Godoy has professed his innocence, calling the charges a political vendetta against him by President Felipe Calderón’s governing party. But he was not at Tuesday’s session. His lawyer attended the session in his place, leaving Mr. Godoy’s own whereabouts unclear.

That mystery has only added to an affair that for lawmakers and analysts has stood out for its sheer brazenness and fed a political firestorm that has lasted months.

It is certainly not unusual for political and government figures here to be implicated in organized crime. Dozens of mayors suspected of ties to criminal networks have been arrested or killed in recent years, and even the country’s former senior antidrug official was arrested and accused of taking bribes from a cartel.

Federal prosecutors contend that Mr. Godoy is an important associate of the top leaders of La Familia, a cultlike drug organization that is among the most violent in Mexico. A legislative panel on Monday said it found that Mr. Godoy had, among other things, not explained the origins of $2.2 million deposited in his bank accounts or calls from his cellphone to known leaders of the gang.

A memo from federal prosecutors to lawmakers said Mr. Godoy had been among a group of local mayors, police officers and other officials in the state of Michoacán serving as paid informers for the cartel. Mr. Godoy is the half brother of the state’s governor, Leonel Godoy, who has said he was unaware of any illicit activity his brother may have engaged in.

In a twist to a case with many of them, Julio César Godoy was supposedly caught on tape discussing cartel affairs with Servando Gómez, a top cartel leader known as La Tuta, who emerged last week in a drama of his own. It was discovered that Mr. Gómez had been collecting a salary for the past 15 years from the Education Ministry, from a previous job as a schoolteacher.

A former mayor, Mr. Godoy was elected to the legislature in 2009, but he disappeared from public only days later after federal charges were filed against him accusing him of ties to organized crime and money laundering. The federal government considered him a fugitive.

How Mr. Godoy eluded the police for so long remains a mystery.

When he surfaced, he no longer had a mustache, and news reports said his hair was noticeably grayer. Mr. Godoy said he was at his home the whole time.

But his supporters worked to get him into his legislative seat and attain the immunity that comes with it. Mexican law provides legislators freedom from prosecution as a check against political persecution by the executive branch.

Some experts have noted that the broader investigation in Michoacán initially swept up more than 30 mayors and other local officials, mostly members of Mr. Godoy’s party, which Mr. Calderón narrowly beat in 2006 to win the presidency. Michoacán is Mr. Calderón’s home state, and he has focused federal forces on it to break up organized crime.

But most of the people initially arrested have been released for lack of evidence or other problems with the case, said John M. Ackerman, editor of the Mexican Law Review. “Instead of collecting evidence they acted way too quickly, right around the 2009 elections,” Mr. Ackerman said.

While Francisco Blake Mora, the interior secretary, has insisted that the evidence against Mr. Godoy is solid, a judge last summer issued a ruling that Mr. Godoy had the right to take his seat despite the pending charges — though the ruling said nothing about how he would get into the legislative building without being arrested first.

The government had posted police officers around the building to prevent him from doing just that.

Still, Mr. Godoy arrived at the legislative building in the heart of the capital on Sept. 23 — driven in by a leader of his leftist Democratic Revolutionary Party, according to the Mexico City newspaper El Universal — and was sworn in, to the shock and dismay of the authorities.

Afterward, he walked out free, saying later, “I am no little angel, but neither am I a criminal.”

Since then, he has been swarmed by reporters, instead of police officers, at nearly all his public appearances.

One of the more intriguing tidbits came in October, when audio tapes were leaked to news organizations with a voice that sounded like Mr. Godoy’s chatting with Mr. Gómez, the cartel leader from La Familia. Mr. Godoy said the voice was not his.

La Familia, which blends its own form of Christian teachings with methamphetamine trafficking and the beheadings of rivals, is now also the focus of an assault by federal forces aimed at dismantling it.

The spiritual leader of the group, Nazario Moreno González, was believed to have been killed last week in a confrontation with the federal police, the government said.


Antonio Betancourt contributed reporting.
 
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