Translate

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Muslim headchopper influence is showing in Mexican gang violence


Were Mexicans behaving like cavemen from the Middle East about 10-15 years ago?  I don't think so.

Drugs are coming in from Afghanistan and elsewhere to Mexico and the drug cartels are now heavily infiltrated by Muslim drug lords.  Mexico has become a dangerous country.   There are daily stories of bodies found hanging like shown in the pic below and headless torsos  found at street corners,  chopped off heads with notes pinned to them left on sidewalks or at the doors of policemen and prosecutors.

It's always a good thing to nip trouble in the bud.  Once it gets out of hand like this situation in Mexico,  the police are rendered useless and the only way to control the lawlessness is through military action.  No democratic government  would want to send their soldiers into civilian areas and to prevent that happening  law makers and keepers in the other two countries of North America got to be extra vigilant that the Mexican immigrants  and their Muslim buddies don't start anything like this over here.

From YahooNews, March8:
....Five corpses wrapped head to toe in white sheets  were found early Friday on a highway in the northern Mexican city of Saltillo, victims of suspected gang-related slaying.
The attorney general's office of Coahuila state said three of the bodies were hung by rope from a bridge and two were on the ground. All were male and lacked identification.
A message in a style associated with drug cartel murders was found nearby, officials said, though they did not disclose the contents of the message.
Police and the attorney general's office are investigating the deaths, a spokesman for the office said. The cause of death for the five men was still being established, the spokesman added.
Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto, who took office in December, has vowed to curb the drug-related violence that raged under his predecessor, Felipe Calderon.
Calderon launched a military offensive against drug cartels when he took office in late 2006, but instead of reducing the violence, it increased. In December, the Mexican government estimated that some 70,000 people had died as a result of the drug war during Calderon's six years in power.
Though killings have fallen in parts of Mexico over the last 18 months, Coahuila, which has a long border with the United States, has become one of the epicenters of the violence.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.