Mexican Diplomat Says Obama Invited The Sinaloa Drug Cartel To Smuggle ‘Tons’ Of Drug

Okay this may sound crazy but why not secure the border and boot all the illegals the fuck out of our country?
You're as funny as Trump. It would tie up all crime fighters in the US to deport 11,000,000 illegals. Your taxes will go sky high.

Yet another liberal who ignores the simple way to get rid of illegals.
It's always about rounding them up since that would be the most difficult path.
Cut them off and they will leave on their own.

Have you seen the property values and some of the homes built in Mexico?

When I was living in California I would occasionally go down the Baja peninsula.

You could live in Mexico for a couple hundred a month. With a little more you could hire a staff.

Alot of American dollars are being sent back to their home country and some move back and live quite well.

This doesn't include the drug money.
 
Why is that funny?
You're as funny as Trump. It would tie up all crime fighters in the US to deport 11,000,000 illegals. Your taxes will go sky high.
I read that it would take 20-30 years to deport all of them legally.

And yet another prime example of liberals ignoring the easy way to get rid of illegals.
Must be in the play book.
so you would get rid of illegals illegally?

Nothing illegal about denying them jobs or government assistance of any kind.
We are talking about deportation.

That has to be the most pathetic attempt to at obfuscation I've ever seen.
Sticking to the playbook I see.
 
Mexican Diplomat Says Obama Invited The Sinaloa Drug Cartel To Smuggle ‘Tons’ Of Drugs Into Chicago
patdollard.com ^

Mexican Diplomat Says Obama Invited The Sinaloa Drug Cartel To Smuggle ‘Tons’ Of Drugs Into Chicago « Pat Dollard

Excerpted from Business Insider: Leaked emails from the private U.S. security firm Stratfor cite a Mexican diplomat who says the U.S. government works with Mexican cartels to traffic drugs into the United States and has sided with the Sinaloa cartel in an attempt to limit the violence in Mexico.

Many people have doubted the quality of Stratfor’s intelligence, but the information from MX1—a Mexican foreign service officer who doubled as a confidential source for Stratfor—seems to corroborate recent claims about U.S. involvement in the drug war in Mexico...

Can find a source that is slightly more credible that Illuminati theorists?
 
Why is that funny?
I read that it would take 20-30 years to deport all of them legally.

And yet another prime example of liberals ignoring the easy way to get rid of illegals.
Must be in the play book.
so you would get rid of illegals illegally?

Nothing illegal about denying them jobs or government assistance of any kind.
We are talking about deportation.

That has to be the most pathetic attempt to at obfuscation I've ever seen.
Sticking to the playbook I see.
Word of the day toilet paper? You are the pathetic one.
 
Why is that funny?
And yet another prime example of liberals ignoring the easy way to get rid of illegals.
Must be in the play book.
so you would get rid of illegals illegally?

Nothing illegal about denying them jobs or government assistance of any kind.
We are talking about deportation.

That has to be the most pathetic attempt to at obfuscation I've ever seen.
Sticking to the playbook I see.
Word of the day toilet paper? You are the pathetic one.

So you'd rather spend billions trying to track them down so you can deport em,rather than cutting all funding that supports them and they'll leave on their own.
You're a special kind of retard ain't ya?
One of the perils of following the progressive playbook.....looking like a dumbfuck.
 
Sinaloa drug lord "El Guero" arrested in Mexico, sent to same jail as El Chapo...
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Drug lord Palma arrested in Mexico on return from U.S.
June 16, 2016 - Drug lord Hector "El Guero" Palma, one of the founders of the Sinaloa Cartel, returned to his native Mexico after serving almost a decade in a U.S. prison and was immediately transported to another maximum-security lockup where he will await trial for two murders.
U.S. authorities handed over Palma in Matamoros, across the border from Brownsville, Texas, according to a statement from the Mexican Attorney General's Office. Palma had been released from federal prison in California on Friday and put into the custody of U.S. immigration officials. The drug lord was flown to Mexico City late Wednesday and then transported to the Altiplano prison outside the capital, the same prison that Sinaloa Cartel leader Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman escaped from in 2015. Palma was detained under an arrest order from the western state of Nayarit.

He is accused of ordering the 1995 killings of a deputy police chief and a person who was with the officer, a federal official with knowledge of the case told The Associated Press on Thursday. The official was not authorized to discuss the case publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity. The person said the deputy police chief apparently worked for the Sinaloa Cartel but decided to switch loyalties to the Arellano Felix brothers of the Tijuana Cartel, and allegedly was killed in retaliation. If authorities had not brought charges against Palma, he would have gone free.

Palma was arrested in June 1995 in western Mexico and later extradited to the U.S. where he pleaded guilty to cocaine trafficking charges and was sentenced to 16 years in prison. The U.S. Embassy said Palma received early release for good behavior. Some experts believed that Palma could have returned to drug trafficking if allowed to walk free, but would have faced a world that has changed since he helped Guzman found the Sinaloa cartel in the early 1990s. "He could try to get involved, but I don't know how directly," said Mexico City-based security analyst Alejandro Hope. Palma may have lost much of his money and his connections since he was arrested following a plane crash.

Once released, he could have just disappeared into Mexico's hinterlands, "just like Caro Quintero," Hope noted, referring to the last major old-guard drug lord released, Rafael Caro Quintero. Freed by apparent judicial misconduct in 2014, and currently sought on a re-arrest warrant, Caro Quintero hasn't been seen since. Given that he participated in the 1985 torture-slaying of U.S. DEA agent Enrique "Kiki" Camarena, Caro Quintero's release was a major embarrassment for the Mexican government. Palma's return threatens to be another headache. Even before he was extradited to the United States in 2007, Palma had compiled an excellent track record of beating charges in Mexico. He was acquitted, or had the charges dismissed, for accusations including multiple counts of murder, kidnapping, robbery and drug possession.

MORE

See also:

Contentious Education Reform in Mexico in the Spotlight as Labor Unrest Continues
June 16, 2016 – A newly released study says Mexico needs to shift the focus of education reform urgently from primary to secondary schools and higher education, as the government wages a pitched battle with teachers and unionists who blocked highways and occupied buildings in ongoing protests against reforms passed in 2013.
The reforms, aimed at breaking the national union’s iron grip on teacher hiring and imposing measures to evaluate teacher performance, now face a new challenge as the government ratchets back spending on education for the first time in 10 years, according to Fiorentina Garcia, an investigator with the think tank CIEP. A 1.8 percent reduction in spending this year may be a sign of more cuts to come as the government faces the impact of lower oil revenues, pressure on the value of the peso and shifts in priorities towards infrastructure and social spending, she said. The government had increased education spending by 29 percent over the past decade.

A CIEP study released Tuesday found that Mexico spends 15 percent of the government’s total budget on education – more than any other single item. Some 97 percent of all education spending goes to primary schooling, and 87% of that is spent on teachers’ salaries alone. Less than 1 percent of the total government education budget is spent on higher education, with just 1.3 percent spent at high schools, shortchanging young Mexicans, Fiorentina said. Some 30 percent of Mexicans aged 15-24 do not work or study and only 29 percent are enrolled in public schools. “Mexico has to transition from focusing only on primary school to secondary and higher education,” she said.

The lower levels of enrollment in higher education will cost the government in lost tax revenues, Fiorentina said, noting that for every year of higher education students can expect a 20 percent increase in salary compared to their peers with just a high school education. According to Sergio Cardenas, a professor and researcher with the Mexican think tank CIDA, a recent government study tied lower higher education enrollments to a lack of space at institutions of higher learning and insufficient family resources needed to support students at university.

The government, Cardenas said, actually spends more per pupil per capita on higher education than it does on primary or secondary education, but because higher-ed students tend to come from families with more resources, the spending favors students with more means. He agreed current education reforms are not targeting higher education, and said union and teacher resistance is “predictable” given unions’ loss of hiring controls, and a shortage of government resources needed to enact reforms and improve teacher training. Ongoing teacher protests in several states may be due to the fact that those states haven’t been distributing the resources needed to fund the reforms required by federal law, he said.

MORE
 
But when I tell people that the biggest drug dealer in the hood in the US government , I'm crazy. If it wasn't for the US government we wouldn't have crack. The CIA turned a small time dealer name Freeway Ricky Ross into the biggest dealer on the west coast. When rich white folks were paying $70,000 a kg for coke. Rick had it for $13,000. Now explain to me how the small time dealer was getting coke that cheap. To get rid of the coke faster the CIA showed Rick how to make crack. They had to unload all that coke they were getting from the contras. Now look up Rick and the CIA connection. Look how untouchable Rick was til they didn't need him anymore. Cops in the LAPD went to jail just for getting to close to Rick. This shit didn't just start

This sounds like supply side economics if you ask me. The demand alone could not cause the increase in business but the increase in business could create the demand as in the case of dumping a product onto the streets to sell. No one wanted it before but once it was introduced people wanted right away. It is kind of like the ipod and things like that.
 
Why is that funny?
You're as funny as Trump. It would tie up all crime fighters in the US to deport 11,000,000 illegals. Your taxes will go sky high.
I read that it would take 20-30 years to deport all of them legally.

And yet another prime example of liberals ignoring the easy way to get rid of illegals.
Must be in the play book.
so you would get rid of illegals illegally?

Nothing illegal about denying them jobs or government assistance of any kind.
We are talking about deportation.
Dude, you are so fucking stupid.

They would SELF DEPORT if they couldnt get government welfare or jobs.
 
Why is that funny?
I read that it would take 20-30 years to deport all of them legally.

And yet another prime example of liberals ignoring the easy way to get rid of illegals.
Must be in the play book.
so you would get rid of illegals illegally?

Nothing illegal about denying them jobs or government assistance of any kind.
We are talking about deportation.
Dude, you are so fucking stupid.

They would SELF DEPORT if they couldnt get government welfare or jobs.
You are the stupid one. They would still be better off in America than in Mexico. There are ways to get around the system.
 
Another one bites the dust...
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Mexican Navy kills Sinaloa Cartel bodyguard 'El Pancho Chimal'
April 17, 2017 -- Mexico's Navy said security forces killed Francisco Javier "El Pancho Chimal" Zazueta Rosales, a key bodyguard of the eldest son of drug lord Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, in a shootout.
In a statement published Saturday, the Mexican Navy said the suspect was killed by officers who "repelled an aggression near the municipality of Badiraguato, Sinaloa."

Mexican-Navy-kills-Sinaloa-Cartel-bodyguard-El-Pancho-Chimal.jpg

Mexico's Navy said it engaged in a shootout with organized crime members, presumably of the Sinaloa Cartel, on Friday. Javier "El Pancho Chimal" Zazueta Rosales, the bodyguard of drug lord Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman's eldest son, was killed.​

The Navy said the shootout occurred after officers located an area in which they knew organized crime members held meetings. "Yesterday, naval elements went to the area, where they were attacked by alleged offenders" that led to the shootout, the Navy said in a statement. "It should be mentioned that, during the confrontation, no naval element was injured."

After the shootout, Navy officers found several weapons, including a rocket launcher.

Mexican Navy kills Sinaloa Cartel bodyguard 'El Pancho Chimal'
 
Granny says, "Dat's right -follow the money...
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Mexico arrests alleged Sinaloa cartel financial operator
Aug. 1, 2017 -- Authorities in Mexico arrested Nahum Abraham Sicairos Montalvo, an alleged financial operator for the Sinaloa cartel wanted by the United States, Mexico's Attorney General's office said.
The office said Monday that federal agents detained Nahum Abraham Sicairos Montalvo, also known as El Quinceañero, for extradition to the United States.

Mexico-arrests-alleged-Sinaloa-cartel-financial-operator.jpg

Police arrested Nahum Abraham Sicairos Montalvo and another suspect at a residence in Atizapán de Zaragoza.​

Sicairos Montalvo and an alleged associate identified as Filiberto N. were arrested at a residence in Atizapán de Zaragoza. The associate had 20 "doses" of a drug with characteristics similar to methamphetamine, officials said.

In addition to the extradition request, Sicairos Montalvo had an Interpol red notice, meaning he was wanted by an international tribunal.

Mexico arrests alleged Sinaloa cartel financial operator
 
Corrupt Mexican police arrested in sweep...
:clap2:
158 Mexican police officers arrested
Sun, Jan 20, 2013 - Authorities arrested 158 police officers in two northern Mexican towns over alleged links to drug traffickers on Friday, forcing the army and state police to fill the security void, prosecutors said.
The army, federal and state police rounded up 110 municipal officers in the town of Lerdo and another 48 in neighboring Gomez Palacio, including their two chiefs, Durango State Attorney General Sonia de la Garza Fragoso said. The army and state police had to take over security in both towns since the remaining municipal officers will undergo training and background checks to ensure that “links with criminal groups are eradicated,” her office said in a statement.

The massive purge highlights the often cozy relationship between local police and drug cartels in Mexico, a country plagued by drug-related violence that has left more than 70,000 dead since 2006. The powerful Sinaloa cartel controls drug trafficking in the state of Durango, which has endured a bout of violence in recent months.

The detained officers “are part of a structure within organized crime,” de la Garza told local radio, adding that some of the officers took part in kidnappings. Authorities had already stripped the municipal officers of their weapons to investigate their possible use in crimes.

Some detained officers told investigators that a gang launched a wave of robberies in the towns last week in a ruse to make residents put pressure on authorities to return the guns to the municipal cops, de la Garza said. Authorities had already fired 145 Gomez Palacio officers in November after they failed vetting tests.

Mexican police officers arrested - Taipei Times


If only we'd arrest our corrupt government officials.
 

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