Saturday, November 20, 2021

BLOG LAUGH OF THE DAY - NANCY PELOSI TELLS PRESS 'LET'S JUST NOT PRESENT WHAT REPUBLICANS SAY AS ANY FACT' - AS IF ANYTHING THAT CAME OUT OF JOE'S MOUTH WAS ANYTHING BUT A FUCKING LIE!

 Nancy Pelosi, a horrid woman equally as without heart and soul, on Tuesday refused to have the names of the thirteen soldiers killed in Kabul read out on the floor of the House.  That should permanently indict her for being the wicked witch she is.  She is more devious, more calculating than the irresponsible Biden but every bit as beyond redemption as he is.  She will do anything to try to convince the American people, for whom she has only contempt, that whatever she and her party do is righteous no matter how loathsome and totalitarian.  PATRICIA McCARTHY

Biden lied about his undergraduate degree and his majors, lied about his rank in law school, lied aboutscholarships and educational aid he had  received, lied about his stance toward the Vietnam  war while in college, lied about his plagiarism of  other politician's writings and speeches, lied about  the circumstances around his first wife's fatal  accident, lied about how he met his second and  current wife, and lied about the affair they were having when they were both married.                                                        MARK CHRISTIAN

Most recently and dramatically, Biden lied about his knowledge of his son's shady dealings,  lied about his own involvement in corruption and ribery, and lied about his current presidential agenda and what he wants to implement in regards to energy, fracking, court-packing, health care, education, and COVID among other issues.

MARK CHRISTIAN


There it is.  That's the issue.  To begin, you have the corrupt family Biden.  They've been scamming us and our system well for almost fifty years.  The man is supposedly worth over 250 million dollars.  How is this possible on his salary?  It's not.  So where did his wealth come from?  Not from being a brilliant businessman. DAVID PRENTICE

 

Pelosi Instructs the Press: 'Let's Just Not Present What Republicans Say as Any Fact'

 By Craig Bannister | November 19, 2021 | 12:47pm EST

 
 
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
(Screenshot)

“Let’s not present what the Republicans say as any fact,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) instructed reporters Friday, responding to a question about Democrats’ $1.7 trillion  tax-and-spend “Build Back Better” bill.

At a press event celebrating House passage of the “Build Back Better” bill, a reporter asked Pelosi the following question:

"How do you respond to Republicans today that say Democrats lied to the American public when they said this plan costs zero dollars when the CBO says it, at least, adds $160 billion to the debt?"

"Let's just not present what the Republicans say as any fact that you’re predicating a question on. I mean, understand what’s happening around here, okay,” Pelosi told reporters.

Pelosi, then, turned the microphone over to Rep. Richard Neal (D-Mass.) chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, who explained the administration’s stance on the issue:

“So they hung their halts on the issue of the IRS. We believe, according to the IRS commissioner, a Republican appointed by the former president, who said, by the way, there could be up to a trillion dollars that's hanging out there. He said that. We didn't say it. We subscribed to the $400 billion mark which, not only that commissioner but the former commissioner subscribed to as well, in investment in software, for better modeling at the IRS, an investment in allowing auditors to upgrade their own skills. Your chances of being audited over the ETC are now greater than your chances of being audited if you're paid in dividends and capital gains.”

JOE BIDEN, NANCY PELOSI AND CHUCK SCHUMER PROMISE DEM PARTY DONORS - YOU SHOULD NEVER HAVE TO PAY A LIVING WAGE TO A LEGAL!

IF YOU THINK THERE'S A JOBS, HOUSING AND HOMELESS CRISIS, WAIT UNTIL JOE BIDEN DOUBLES U.S. POPULATION WITH 'CHEAP' LABOR ILLEGALS!


“With increasing homelessness, a soft approach to criminal prosecution, and the ongoing embracing of illegal immigration, violent crimes are increasing after having seen a reduction the past few years.” P.F. WHALEN

 

“Our entire crony capitalist system, Democrat and Republican alike, has become a kleptocracy approaching par with third-world hell-holes.  This is the way a great country is raided by its elite.” ---- Karen McQuillan  AMERICAN THINKER.com


Media Hides Democrats’ ‘Historic’ Migration Expansion

Central American migrants, part of a caravan hoping to reach the U.S. border, move on the road in Escuintla, Chiapas State, Mexico, Saturday, April 20, 2019. Thousands of migrants in several different caravans have been gathering in Chiapas in recent days and weeks. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)
Moises Castillo/AP
6:37

The immigration expansions in the House-passed Build Back Better bill are “the most historic immigration reforms in more than thirty years” says an investor advocacy group.

But there is minimal coverage in the establishment media of the law that would legalize 6.5 million illegals and also add “millions” of migrant workers, consumers, and voters to Americans’ society, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

The “immigration provisions in the Build Back Better (BBB) Act would be the most historic immigration reforms in more than thirty years,” says a statement from FWD.us, a pro-investor advocacy group founded by Mark Zuckerberg.

The group inserted provisions in the bill that allow millions of foreign consumers and perhaps one million foreign graduates in U.S jobs to buy green cards above the annual caps. “These measures would provide long overdue relief to [contract-worker] families trapped in the backlogs, and … making the U.S. an even more attractive destination for highly skilled [job-seeking] people from around the world,” said FWD.us statement, which is now pushing the Senate to quickly pass the visa giveaway

The ‘historic” description is echoed by other groups.

The pro-business, FWD.us-backed Niskanen Center says “these provisions would be largest update to our immigration system in 30 years.”

The Congressional Budget Organization says the bill will allow “millions” of extra migrants to get legal status in the United States.

But coverage of the green-cards-for-cash provision has been minimal in the establishment media — even though the establishment’s reporters know that Senate Democrats are trying to push the expansions past the 50 GOP Senators and the Senate’s parliamentarian.

The minimal coverage is surprising because the reporters are members of the economic class that is most threatened by the cash-for-green-cards rule — house-buying, white-collar professionals who want to get their kids into good universities.

This fast-track process helps investors to do what they prefer: Sideline a generation of outspoken U.S. graduates by instead importing a vast supply of clever and subordinate foreigners who will rationally work as lower-wage, compliant, indentured employees to get their life-changing green cards.

But the silence also reflects the stealth strategy adopted by investors, progressives, and their elite lobbyists and networks of covertly-funded astroturf groups. This stealth strategy is a big shift from 2013 and 2014 when a $1 billion P.R. barrage by pro-migration groups failed to dent the public’s deep and rational opposition to easier migration l0w-wage workers.

So, in 2021, the Associated Press November 19 coverage of the legislation did not mention the green card expansion.

The Washington Post‘s November 19 article did not mention the green card expansion.

The New York Times’ main November 19 article on the House approval of the BBB bill suggested there were no migration provisions:

Democrats must also ensure that the entire plan adheres to the strict rules that govern the reconciliation process and force the removal of any provision that does not have a direct fiscal effect. Those rules have already forced the party to abandon a plan to provide a path to citizenship in the bill for undocumented immigrants.

A sidebar article, titled “Everything in the House Democrats’ Budget Bill,” includes this number-less passage: “Allows individuals to pay a fee to access green cards faster; makes unused family- and employment-based visas from past years available for use, among other changes”

Bloomberg included a mention of the green-cards-for-cash rule, but provided no estimate of the scale:

The bill would … allow some foreigners to fast-track applications to adjust to legal permanent resident status and sidestep some numerical limits on visas, including per-country caps that have left hundreds of thousands of Indians in limbo.

One of Bloomberg’s reporters, however, tweeted:

The legal immigration measures, meanwhile, are MAJOR. Would salvage unused green cards going back decades & allow people to fast-track status adjustments & skip per-country caps that have left hundreds of thousands of Indian nationals (& others) in limbo

Most 0f the bill’s supporters are downplaying the raised immigration numbers.

Indian-born Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-WA) buried the migration expansions as the ninth bullet in her press release, as “humane immigration reform.”

The American Immigration Council, a spin-off of the American Immigration Lawyers Association, downplayed the change:

The immigration provisions included in the House’s budget reconciliation package could transform the lives of millions of immigrants and families across the country …. The House bill also includes critical improvements to our immigration system to help individuals and employers who have been stuck in limbo for far too long finally obtain the security of permanent status in the United States.

Sean McGarvey, the president of the North America’s Building Trades Unions (NABTU), touted the bill without mentioning the impact of the extra migration on U.S. construction workers:

This historic investment will take unprecedented steps forward by creating middle class jobs in the renewable energy sector, increasing labor protections and penalties for low road contractors and offering working families more access to pre-apprenticeship programs, affordable childcare, early childhood education programs and elder care.

Many polls show that labor migration is deeply unpopular because it damages ordinary Americans’ career opportunities, cuts their wages, and raises their rents. Migration also curbs Americans’ productivity, shrinks their political clout, widens regional wealth gapsradicalizes their democratic, compromise-promoting civic culture, and allows elites to ignore despairing Americans at the bottom of society.

For many years, a wide variety of pollsters have shown deep and broad opposition to labor migration and the inflow of temporary contract workers into jobs sought by young U.S. graduates. This opposition is multiracialcross-sexnon-racistclass-basedbipartisanrationalpersistent, and recognizes the solidarity Americans owe to each other.

GOP Donors’ Economist: Immigration Can Offset Risks in Foreign Trade

Central American migrants taking part on the 'Migrant Via Crucis' caravan towards the United States, obtain temporary permits from the Mexican Migration's National Institute, as they camp at a sport complex in Matias Romero, Oaxaca State, Mexico, on April 4, 2018. The hundreds of Central Americans in the migrant caravan …
VICTORIA RAZO/AFP/Getty Images
17:09

U.S. investors cannot safely invest in many poor countries, so the countries’ populations should migrate to the United States, a Republican-aligned economist said.

Throughout the 1990s, economists expected investors in wealthy countries to move job-creating investments to the developing world and, thereby, raise billions of people out of poverty, Douglas Holtz-Eakin, president of the GOP-linked American Action Forum, said.

However, “for any number of reasons — inability to enforce contracts, political problems — the capital [in wealthy countries] really didn’t flow that way. It stayed in these [wealthy] countries,” he said during an October 26 online talk organized by far-left public publication DemocracyJournal.org.

“But economics does abhor a vacuum, and so now the [poor] labor is coming for the capital,” via international migration, according to Holtz-Eakin, a pro-migration economist who formerly worked for Sen. John McCain and for President George W. Bush when he was pushing the open-borders “any willing worker” claim.

He added:

If the U.S. is going to be a place where people want to migrate for economic reasons, let’s have an immigration system that recognizes and takes advantage of that. And that, I think, is something that will be true five years now, 10 years from now, 15 years from now

Holtz-Eakin’s emphasis on migration over foreign investment is bad news for some developing countries, Mark Krikorian, director of the Center for Immigration Studies, responded

“It’s going to be a lot harder for them to attract the capital they need to develop, which in turn, means migration pressures will continue to remain high,” Krikorian told Breitbart News on November 8. Of Holtz-Eakin’s plan, he said:

It’s the opposite of the Vice President Harris’s “root causes” call for directing money and attention to developed countries. [In his] way, we just ignore [investment for development] and bring the relatively more productive parts of their workforce [and consumers] to the United States and Europe instead.

But Holtz-Eakin’s claim is false, responded Joseph Chamie, a former director of the United Nations Population Division.

Huge capital flows from wealthy countries have dramatically raised the wealth of billions of people in once-poor countries, such as China, India, Mexico, the Persian Gulf, and South America, he said.

Still, Chamie added, some U.S. investors cannot export their businesses to the developing world: “Real estate and housing construction, home care, social services have to be done here. You can’t go to India to get a haircut. To pick up the crops in California, you know, you need labor.”

Those U.S. investors “want more customers,” he said. So “they want more and more migrants — [to whom] they want to sell houses, they want to sell cars, they want more and more and more because it increases their bottom line.”

“If your business model requires growth through population growth, then you’re going to push for importing more people,” Krikorian said. It is “an anti-trade approach where we import the people instead of [trading] the goods.”

 

Global Population Growth 

The population of the developing world is growing rapidly. according to population predictions by the U.S. Census Bureau.

The United States now has a population of roughly 330 million people, and 3.6 million Americans were born in 2020. That is a shrinking share of the global population.

India’s population of consumers is expected to hit 1.7 billion in 2060, according to the bureau. And almost four million Indians have already moved to the United States, often as supposedly temporary visa workers for Fortune 500 companies. The Democrats’ pending Build Back Better bill will supercharge the inflow of legal and illegal Indian workers and consumers.

Afghanistan’s population will reach 63 million by 2050, and Biden is importing at least 100,000 Afghans, creating a future chain-migrant inflow. Mexico will have 157 million people in 2050.

Brazil’s population will reach 236 million in 2050, and Africa’s population is expected to reach approximately 2.5 billion by 2050 — although a small share is now trying to move into Europe. The population of the Democratic Republic of the Congo will hit 374 million by 2070, and the population of Nigeria will soar past 600 million by 2070.

The smaller African country of Cameroon has a population of 28 million, and it is expected to hit 57 million by 2050. Few Americans can pinpoint that country, but thousands of Cameroonians are using asylum claims to move into the United States. That flow rises every time the federal government releases migrants into the United States, in part, because the successful migrants use their cellphones to display their new homes and jobs in the United States to their left-behind, lower-status friends.

Roughly three million people have migrated from Central America into the United States over the last decade. In March 2021, Jim Clifton, the chairman and CEO of the Gallup polling company, posted a warning to President Joe Biden that another 42 million people in Central America would like to migrate into the United States. “What is the 10-year plan? 330 million U.S. citizens are wondering. So are 42 million Latin Americans,” he wrote.

 

Holtz-Eakin’s Allies

Holtz-Eakin’s pro-migration views are important because he is a leading voice in the advocacy groups entwined in the GOP’s very influential donor apparatus.

He is the president of the American Action Forum, a pro-business advocacy group. His organization has a campaign-focused “sister organization,” the American Action Network. The two groups share leaders and staff. For example, former Sen. Norm Coleman is chairman of the network’s board and is a leader in Holtz-Eakin’s forum.

In turn, the network reportedly shares ties with a political action committee named the Congressional Leadership Fund. The secretive PAC does not reveal its staff but is a leading donor to the GOP’s House election campaigns, and spent roughly $160 million in 2020. This economic clout gives it much influence over what campaign promises the GOP leaders make prior to each election campaign. Much of the group’s funding goes to pro-migration Republicans, including Mariannette Miller-Meeks (R-IA) and Brian Fitzpatrick (R-PA).

The group includes investors and CEOs who cannot easily create profitable businesses in developing countries or who own extensive U.S. properties. For example, one of the cofounders owned shares in a series of hotels around the United States.

And Holtz-Eakin’s welcome for many migrants from the developing world was echoed by Todd Schulte, the president of Mark Zuckerberg’s FWD.us advocacy group for West Coast investors. He told the October 29 event with Holtz-Eakin:

I think it is a very reasonable expectation for the future to say, 20 years from now, in the way that we’ve seen this huge increase in employment and immigration from India, [that] “You know over the last 20 years it is Nigeria where there’s a huge number of people coming — lots of English speakers, highly educated. There’s a growing population here now.” But that could be totally wrong.

In 2050, Nigeria’s population is expected to hit 428 million, according to the Census Bureau. It is expected to reach 800 million by the mid-2090s.

The U.S. government is trying to welcome roughly one million legal immigrants in 2021 and has also allowed at least one million migrants — both illegals and conditionally legal — across the southern border. But that current inflow of workers and consumers is not enough for Schulte. He told the group:

Whether they are someone who is going to move to Pittsburgh and is going to be able to work as a hospital administrator or in the back of the hospital … These are people we want, and we want to fight for those families and their parents because it’s the right thing to do. That benefits us.

Zuckerberg’s FWD.us network of coastal investors stands to gain from more government-provided cheap laborconsumers, and urban renters. The investor group is backing legislation that would accelerate the inflow of consumers, unskilled workers, and skilled workers into the U.S. economy, where they can help bump up the overall value of the stock market.

The breadth of investors who founded and funded FWD.us was hidden from casual visitors to the group’s website in early 2021. But copies exist at the other sites.

The consumers sought by these investors include unproductive, sick, and old consumers of medical care, consumers who rely on federal welfare, and children who consume without working. In early 2020, FWD.us joined a lawsuit that argued the federal exclusion of poor or unskilled migrants would be bad for the consumption of corporate goods and services:

Because [the green-card applicants] will receive fewer public benefits under the Rule, they will cut back their consumption of goods and services, depressing demand throughout the economy.

The New American Economy Research Fund calculates that, on top of the $48 billion in income that is earned by individuals who will be affected by the Rule—and that will likely be removed from the U.S. economy—the Rule will cause an indirect economic loss of more than $33.9 billion … Indeed, the Fiscal Policy Institute has estimated that the decrease in SNAP and Medicaid enrollment under the Rule could, by itself, lead to economic ripple effects of anywhere between $14.5 and $33.8 billion, with between approximately 100,000 and 230,000 jobs lost … Health centers alone would be forced to drop as many as 6,100 full-time medical staff.

The FWD.us investor network has funded many astroturf campaigns, and it “supported” the DemocracyJournal.org event with Holtz-Eakin. It has urged Democrats not to talk about the economic impact of migration and manipulated coverage by the television networks and the print media.

This month, FWD.us is lobbying the Senate to pass a bill that would allow at least three million extra chain migrants to arrive during the next few years. The skills or productivity of the chain-migration migrants is a subordinate issue — because the migrants will certainly increase consumption of retail goods, groceries, and fast food, also inflating the cost of real estate.

FWD.us and other advocates usually justify their demands for more migration by claiming they need more labor migration — even though they live in an age of increasing automation, free trade, global outsourcing, Internet-linked multinationals, proliferating robots, (almost) self-driving autos, and declining U.S. workforce participation and  dropping wages.

But the advocates do quietly push the claim that immigrants grow consumption. For example, Google is an advertising company, and in 2015, its chairman at the time, Eric Schmidt — an FWD.us funder — called for more immigration to offset slowing births in the United States. He said:

Most stock markets assume modest growth, right? So how are you going to over a couple of decades deal with the fact that one third of your customers are going to go away? Well, one is produce more customers through immigration or, you know, greater reproductive performance.

Zuckerberg’s pro-migration ally, Mike Bloomberg, uses his New American Economy advocacy group to tout migrants’ consumer spending:

The contributions immigrants make as both taxpayers and consumers are indispensable to the U.S. economy. Nationally, immigrants earned $1.3 trillion in 2014 … [giving them]  nearly $927 billion in spending power, which they frequently used to purchase goods and services, stimulate local business activity, and create jobs in the broader U.S. economy.

If just ten percent of that claimed spending power ends up as profit for public companies, it adds roughly $2 trillion to Wall Street values.

The Economic Innovation Group shares leadership with FWD.us and touts immigration as a way to boost housing prices. That strategy is good for real estate investors but is bad for American families, especially in California and New York.

In 2019, U.S. automaker Elon Musk and Chinese online retailer Jack Ma shared a podium, where Musk warned “the biggest issue in 20 years will be population collapse. Not explosion. Collapse.”

“I absolutely agree with that,” responded Ma. “The population problem is going to be facing a huge challenge. 1.4 billion people in China sounds a lot, but I think next 20 years, we will see this [declining population] will bring big trouble to China.”

As more Wall Street investors rely on imported consumption, there will be less political corporate and investor pressure in Congress’s logjam to boost Americans’ productivity, science, wealth, living standards, civic society, and health.

Today’s corporate demands for consumer migration are a sharp contrast from the 1972 Commission on Population Growth and the American Future. The report was known as the Rockefeller Report because the chairman was John Rockefeller, a pillar of the industrial-era establishment. In his cover letter, Rockefeller wrote:

After two years of concentrated effort, we have concluded that, in the long run, no substantial benefits will result from further growth of the nation’s population, rather that the gradual stabilization of our population through voluntary means would contribute significantly to the nation’s ability to solve its problems.

The Costs of Consumer Migration

Immigration does inflate the U.S. economy by adding more consumers and more workers. That is good for CEOs, employers, and investors, partly because Wall Street can expand by roughly $20 billion for every billion in extra profits from the imported consumers and workers.

It is also good for people in government because the extra taxes can be used to hire more employers, influence more companies, expand into new roles, and influence more business leaders.

However, legal immigration and illegal migration damages ordinary Americans’ career opportunities, cuts their wages, and raises their housing costs.

For example, housing prices are spiking in California because state legislators tried to cut housing costs by ending the key feature of suburbia — single-family zoning. The price-spike was described in a New York Times article about a Californian who buys, remodels, and flips single-family suburban houses into multi-family dwellings:

[Spicer’s] company bought 5120 Baxter Street for $700,000. He estimates the house would rent for $3,300 a month with a few renovations. Instead he spent about $400,000 building the new units and splitting the house, and believes he will get between $9,000 and $10,000 a month in rent [from multiple renters] across the property.

That return would increase the property’s value to about $1.7 million. The price would be galling to an aspiring homeowner who might have outbid another family before losing to Mr. Spicer and now feels cheated out of the American dream.

Migration also curbs Americans’ productivity, shrinks their political clout, and widens regional wealth gaps. It radicalizes their democratic, compromise-promoting civic culture, and allows elites to ignore despairing Americans at the bottom of society.

Moreover, the U.S. government’s welcome for many kinds of economic migrants also imposes a huge cost on small countries that lose many people to the U.S. economy. Haiti, for example, has lost most of its better-educated workers, so leaving the home with few resources to create a modern economy. The situation is similar for Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador, from which at least one million young people have been extracted by the federal government’s long-standing tolerance for a huge illegal-migrant workforce.

But for investors, Chamie said, “It is about the Benjamins, baby. … [They] don’t care about what the consequences are for the public.”

First, the criminal elements in Mexico have been emboldened by President Biden's border policy.  They are doing lots of business bringing people to the border and charging them a nice fee.  Furthermore, who knows what deal they are making with these people once they get here.  In other words, what future payments, cash or "services," are due once they settle into the U.S.?  

Multinational-Operation Leads to Arrests of Venezuelan, Brazilian Migrants near California Border

Border Patrol agents find 114 illegal aliens locked in a U-Haul box truck in Laredo, Texas. (Photo: U.S. Border Patrol/Laredo Sector)
File Photo: U.S. Border Patrol/Laredo Sector
3:30

San Diego Sector Border Patrol agents and Mexican officials teamed up to disrupt a transnational smuggling operation. The investigation led to the arrest of smugglers and migrants on both sides of the California-Mexico border.

Between October 28 and November 9, Border Patrol agents apprehended five groups of migrants who illegally crossed the border from Mexico. The groups consisted mostly of migrants from Brazil and Venezuela, according to information obtained from San Diego Sector Border Patrol officials. The five groups ranged in size from 43 migrants to 93 migrants.

During the preceding week, agents interdicted three more smuggling operations leading to the apprehension of 67, 69, and 72 migrants respectively. Nearly all of the groups consisted of citizens of Venezuela and Brazil, officials stated.

Officials reported:

etween Oct. 28 and Nov. 9, agents encountered five groups, mostly from Brazil and Venezuela. The groups all entered the United States illegally and consisted of men, women, and children and were 43, 49, 73, 84 and 93 people in size.

On Oct. 27, agents observed a box truck dropping off a group of individuals on the southside of the international border fence. The group proceeded to enter the United States through a compromised drainage tube. Agents responded to the area and encountered 67 men, women, and children from both Brazil and Venezuela.

On Oct. 26, agents encountered two groups of migrants that illegally entered the United States through a compromised sewer grate. The first group consisted of 86 Brazilian nationals. A few hours later, the second group, consisting of 69 Brazilian nationals, was encountered at the same location. Both groups consisted of men, women, and children.

On Oct. 23, agents observed a group of migrants illegally enter the United States through a drainage tube three miles west of the San Ysidro Port of Entry. Agents responded to the area and encountered 72 men, women, and children. Every person in the group was determined to be from either Brazil or Venezuela.

Beginning on November 4, Border Patrol officials with the San Diego Sector Foreign Operations Branch worked with the government of Mexico to investigate the transnational human smuggling operation. The investigation led to the arrest of two Mexican smugglers and the rescue of 75 migrants from Brazil, Portugal, and Venezuela who were all locked inside a box truck in Mexico.

“Partnerships with the government of Mexico continue to play a vital role in combating smugglers who exploit individuals for monetary gain,” said Chief Patrol Agent Aaron Heitke.  “We thank them for their support and will continue our joint effort to bring these criminals to justice.”

Bob Price serves as associate editor and senior news contributor for the Breitbart Texas-Border team. He is an original member of the Breitbart Texas team. Price is a regular panelist on Fox 26 Houston’s What’s Your Point? Sunday-morning talk show. Follow him on Twitter @BobPriceBBTX, Parler @BobPrice, and Facebook.


First, the criminal elements in Mexico have been emboldened by President Biden's border policy.  They are doing lots of business bringing people to the border and charging them a nice fee.  Furthermore, who knows what deal they are making with these people once they get here.  In other words, what future payments, cash or "services," are due once they settle into the U.S.?  


EXCLUSIVE: Border Patrol Migrant Got-Away Count Reaches 75K in 47 Days

A rancher's game-cam captures a group of migrants marching through his ranch to avoid a Border Patrol checkpoint. (Photo: Kinney County Sheriff's Office)
Photo: Kinney County Sheriff's Office
2:35

A law enforcement source within Customs and Border Protection revealed the number of migrants escaping apprehension reached 75,000 in Fiscal Year 2022, which began in October. The source says between 1,800 and 2,000 migrants are managing to elude apprehension daily along the southwest border.

On Tuesday, U.S. Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) questioned Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas about the issue. In a tense exchange, Mayorkas failed to provide the number.

Sen. Cruz: Now, you told another Senator, you don’t know how many ‘got-aways’ there have been?

Sec. Mayorkas: I will have to circle back, Senator, with that information.”

Cruz: So, that wasn’t a fact that you thought was relevant to this hearing?

Mayorkas: Oh, it is absolutely relevant. I understand why the question is posed. It’s a fact of great

Cruz: But you’re not prepared to answer it. How about this — how many deaths? How many illegal aliens have died crossing illegally into the United States under Joe Biden’s Administration?

Mayorkas: I don’t have that data.

The known got-away count is updated daily by the Border Patrol, according to the source. The data is entered into a system of record easily accessible to agency leaders.

At the current pace, the source says the migrant got-away count this year is likely to exceed the more than 400,000 as reported in Fiscal Year 2021.

The metric is usually not released by DHS. It is achieved by counting migrants who ultimately escape apprehension after being observed by aircraft and camera systems. Agents also use traditional sign-cutting techniques to identify footprints.

Sources report the got-away count is usually lower than reality. Another issue impacting the accuracy of the got-away count, according to the source, is the number of Border Patrol agents relegated to processing, transport and humanitarian care for the thousands of migrants apprehended daily.

Randy Clark
 is a 32-year veteran of the United States Border Patrol.  Prior to his retirement, he served as the Division Chief for Law Enforcement Operations, directing operations for nine Border Patrol Stations within the Del Rio, Texas, Sector. Follow him on Twitter @RandyClarkBBTX.


Democrats Block Motion to Strip Amnesty from Build Back Better

Sanctuary-Cities, Amnesty
Frederic-J.-Brown/AFP/Getty-Images
1:22

House Democrats blocked a Republican motion to strip the Build Back Better Act of its amnesty provisions, which House Minority Whip Steve Scalise (R-LA) called the “Democrats’ Socialist Spending Spree.”

If the Republicans had defeated the previous question on H. Res. 803, which is the rule for considering the Build Back Better Act, the House GOP planned to amend the rule by putting forth an amendment offered by Judiciary Committee Ranking Member Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) to strip the legislation of amnesty for illegal immigrants.

In a press release, Scalise said, “Democrats want to grant of amnesty to millions of people living in the country illegally. CBO estimates that their bill will provide nearly a half trillion dollars in benefits to illegal immigrants over the next 20 years.”

As Breitbart News reported, “The amnesty would allow close to seven million illegal aliens — and potentially more — to get green cards and after five years begin applying for naturalized citizenship.”

The vote to move forward with H. Res. 803 was passed along strict party lines, 220 – 210.

The House is expected to pass the Build Back Better Act on Thursday night.

US drug overdose deaths surged to 100,000 in first year of pandemic

More than 100,000 people died of drug overdoses in the United States during the 12-month period ending April 2021, according to new provisional data published Wednesday by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

This staggering number, a dismal record for human misery, coincides roughly with the first year of the coronavirus pandemic. COVID-19 killed about 509,000 people during that same timeframe, from May 2020 to April 2021.

The drug overdose death toll jumped 29.5 percent from the same period a year earlier and has nearly doubled over the past five years. Synthetic opioids, mainly fentanyl, caused 64 percent of these overdose deaths, up nearly 50 percent from the year before, according to the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics.

Sue Howland, right, a member of the Quick Response Team which visits everyone who overdoses to offer help, checks in on Betty Thompson, 65, who struggles with alcohol addiction, at her apartment in Huntington, W.Va., Wednesday, March 17, 2021. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

Fentanyl was introduced in the 1960s as an intravenous anesthetic. Cheaper, legally or illegally produced fentanyl is often mixed with other drugs like heroin, cocaine or marijuana by drug dealers and sold to users who may not be aware of its presence.

Increases in overdose death counts were almost universal across states, while varying in magnitude. Year-over-year increases of 50 percent were seen in California, Tennessee, Louisiana, Mississippi, West Virginia and Kentucky. Increases in deaths in the range of 40 percent were seen in Washington state, Oregon, Nevada, Colorado, Minnesota, Alaska, Nebraska, Virginia and the Carolinas.

Although the numbers were small, cases in Vermont increased by 85 percent during the year studied. Only New Hampshire, New Jersey and South Dakota saw overdose deaths drop.

Overdose deaths from methamphetamine and other psychostimulants also increased dramatically, up 48 percent in the year ending April 2021 compared to the year before, accounting for more than a quarter of all overdose deaths in the 12-month period studied. While previously fentanyl had been more widely used on the East Coast and methamphetamines on the West Coast, both drugs are now proliferating nationwide. Deaths from cocaine and prescription pain medication have also increased, although not as drastically.

The latest data from the CDC suggests that drug overdose deaths now kill slightly less than Alzheimer’s disease, which claimed about 121,000 lives in 2019, and slightly more than diabetes, about 88,000 lives. Heart disease was the leading cause of death in 2019, killing nearly 660,000 people, while cancer killed nearly 600,000.

Referring to the coming together of the COVID-19 pandemic and drug overdose deaths, Dr. Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, told CNN, “In a crisis of this magnitude, those already taking drugs may take higher amounts and those in recovery may relapse. It’s a phenomenon we’ve seen and perhaps could have predicted.” The rise of the synthetic opioid fentanyl, which is as much as 100 times more powerful than morphine, has exacerbated this deadly explosion of opioid deaths.

The death toll of 100,000 Americans from overdoses was more than deaths from car crashes and guns combined. This number was up almost 30 percent from the 78,000 deaths the previous year and more than double since 2015. Most of these deaths occurred among people aged 25 to 55, the so-called prime of life.

By contrast, of the more than 787,500 who have died from COVID-19 to date in the US according to Worldometer, three-quarters have been over the age of 65. It is likely that among American adults under 50 years of age, more died from opioids last year than from the worst pandemic the world has seen in a century.

The COVID-19 pandemic has created a perfect storm for the proliferation of drug overdose deaths. In the early stages of the pandemic, when lockdowns, school and business closures, and mask mandates were put in place in many states, resources to treat substance abuse were scaled back. Many suffering from addiction, particularly young adults, were isolated from their support systems and unable to access treatment. Many were left to overdose alone with no one with them to administer Narcan (naloxone) or call for help.

However, the loosening of restrictions—which has allowed the coronavirus to spread and kill—has not resulted in an improvement in access to care for substance abuse. “Even if COVID went away tomorrow, we’d still have a problem. What will have an impact is dramatic improvement to access to treatment,” Dr. Andrew Kolodny, medical director of opioid policy research at the Brandeis University Heller School for Social Policy and Management, told CNN. “These are deaths in people with a preventable, treatable condition,” he said “The United States continues to fail on both fronts, both on preventing opioid addiction and treating addiction.”

Due to the chaotic, unplanned character of the for-profit health care system and lack of resources, there is also no coordinated program to distribute naloxone (Narcan) widely and at no cost to health departments nationwide. This is also the case with fentanyl test strips, which can tell a user if the deadly opioid is present.

Substance abuse continues to be stigmatized in the US. Those suffering from addiction are chastised by the right and those in authority for their moral failings while programs and treatments are starved for cash. Presidential candidate Biden pledged to “Hold accountable big pharmaceutical companies, executives and others responsible for their role in triggering the opioid crisis,” but this was just hot air.

Lawsuits against such legal drug dealers have yielded a slap on the wrist or less. Earlier this month, a California judge said he would rule against several large counties in the state that accused four drug makers—Johnson & Johnson, Teva, Endo International and AbbVie—of fueling the US opioid epidemic, saying they failed to prove their $59 billion case.

In August, a bankruptcy judge approved a settlement by OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma and the Sackler family that the company values at more than $10 billion—a drop in the bucket for the mega-wealthy drug company owners and cold comfort for the millions of Americans who have suffered due to their marketing of deadly opioids.

Over the past three years, the Department of Health and Human Services, through the Health Resources and Services Administration, has invested a paltry $384 million in community-based grants and technical assistance on prevention, treatment and recovery services in rural communities to fight opioid use and other substance abuse disorders.

Speaking on the release of the new overdose death figures, President Biden claimed, “We are strengthening prevention, promoting harm reduction, expanding treatment, and supporting people in recovery, as well as reducing the supply of harmful substances in our communities. And we won’t let up.” He added, “Together we will turn the tide on this epidemic.”

Biden’s false and cynical statements cannot hide the reality. The United States will no more “turn the tide” in opioid deaths than on COVID-19 deaths, although in both cases, there are practical solutions at hand, if the necessary resources were provided.

Instead, the White House turns a blind eye to the enormity of the crisis. Anne Milgram, head of the Drug Enforcement Administration, said, “This year alone, DEA has seen enough fentanyl to provide every member of the United States population with a lethal dose and we are still seizing more fentanyl each and every day.”

In a call with reporters Wednesday, in support of his anti-China campaign Biden attempted to shift the blame for the opioid crisis from the US to Mexican drug cartels sourcing drug-making chemicals from China.

Contrary to suggestions that the surging overdose deaths have come because health care resources have been diverted from substance abuse treatment to the pandemic, the US ruling elite and the profit-based health care system are responsible for both catastrophes. Those dying from drug overdoses and those cut down by COVID-19 are both victims of the homicidal policies of corporate America and its political representatives.

WE CAN'T SAVE OUR COUNTRY  UNTIL WE RID OURSELVES OF BIDEN!

A Border Sheriff's Reality

Mark Dannels is the well-known and respected sheriff of Cochise County, Arizona, a large jurisdiction that put its first county seat in the iconic frontier town of Tombstone and took its name from one of the most famous and feared war chiefs of the Chiricahua Apache.  He is the chair of the Border Security Committee of the National Sheriff’s Association and was a member of the select DHS Homeland Security Advisory Council until removed by Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas in a sweeping political purge of its membership.  Dannels’ department patrols eighty-three miles of the state’s four hundred mile boundary with Sonora, Mexico, halfway down a narrow ribbon of thirty-one counties stretching from California to Texas. 

Border sheriffs in Arizona have long reckoned with illegal immigration, trodden for decades over the same sagebrush routes now used by the Sinaloa Cartel to ensure its majority share of the American drug trade.  Unlawful waves of migration have waxed and waned over the years, contingent upon the party in power.  Bush 43 wrestled with it, leaving it to flourish under Obama.  Trump brought it to an all-time low behind hundreds of miles of new and replacement wall fortified by Title 42 and Migrant Protection Protocols that kept the phalanxes of border crashers inside Mexico.  The Biden doctrine on unlawful migration has been to put a match to all things Trump while continuing to chip away at any regulatory headwinds that might slow the invasion.

For years Dannels and his fellow sheriffs have relied heavily on federal grants and state support to hold the line.  Operation Stone Garden represented a longstanding bipartisan funding effort to enhance police presence in embattled border towns.  Strong opposition to the effort arose in the Democrat stronghold of Tucson. Police Chief Chris Magnus, an Obama acolyte who took every opportunity to editorialize against Trump’s denunciation of sanctuary cities, withdrew from the grant program when the government denied his request to repurpose monies from enforcement to funding room and board for illegals.  Magnus’s immigration activism and coddling up to anti-police groups are the right stuff for another calamitous Biden appointment.  Over the objections of the sheriff’s associations, his nomination to head the Customs and Border Patrol now sits before the Senate.

If elections have consequences, 2020 predetermined a retreating American frontline both domestically and abroad.  Biden’s Inauguration Day executive actions wrenched the reins of public safety from the hands of the border sheriffs.  One of those fiats declared the southwest border a non-emergency, giving pretext to stop border wall construction and swing open America’s back door to huge pedestrian caravans pushing hordes of sick and abused migrants from more than 150 countries through gaps in the bollards.

In early 2020, things were looking up for cops and beleaguered residents in  Cochise County.  CBP was set to put up 32 miles of wall, filling in the open spaces and replacing worn and ineffective fencing. The wall was only the first line of defense.  An installed network of fiber optics, hidden cameras, sensors, and lighting would allow federal and local authorities to sense and respond promptly to breaches along the line.

No sooner had he secured the nomination than Biden began spurring illicit migration into America.  Dannels saw illegal immigration numbers jump from three hundred per month to 1,500 over the summer and topping 2,500 by year’s end.  To many, those were the good ‘ol days.  To date in 2021, enforcement in the Tucson sector have arrested 183,000 illegals, eighty-five percent of whom were single adult males.  More than 115,000 are estimated to have evaded capture.

On Inauguration Day, pressure by wildlife conservation groups and Democrat activists to halt wall construction was relieved by a single stroke of Biden’s pen.  Alternatively, Biden promised to invest in drones and smart technology.  Eleven months later, the Biden administration has yet to install a single light fixture or flip the switch on the high-tech equipment already installed by the Trump administration.  A quarter-billion in leftover border funds have been redirected to military projects, such as overseas schools, housing, and shops.

For Dannels, small gaps in the wall next to idled construction equipment and unassembled bollards quickly turned into express lanes for a year-to-year increase of two hundred percent in illegal migration.  Instead of facilitating vehicle patrols, unfinished dirt roadways on the American side offer migrants smooth passage into the arms of border agents handcuffed by presidential proclamation to do anything but catch and release.

From field interviews, Cochise deputies learned that many are headed to New Jersey, a deep blue state with lax immigration policies, hamstrung enforcement, and run by a progressive Wall Street type with a fondness for mixing business attire with lounge footwear and a conviction to put his half million undocumented residents on the taxpayer’s dole.

In early March, Biden further obstructed county enforcement efforts in Cochise County by shutting down three federal checkpoints near Wilcox and reassigning the three hundred border agents to immigrant childcare and processing duties.  Dannels was now on his own, increasingly dependent upon a principal deputy, Tim Williams, who commands the county’s Southeast Arizona Border Region Enforcement (SABRE) task force.  Singlehandedly, SABRE has labored long hours to stem the migrant flood, bolstered by a few state troopers and several dozen national guard personnel sent by the governor.

Success in suppressing Cochise border migration doesn’t account for the getaways.  With the help of hundreds of county-installed cameras in the desert, Dannels estimates that out of five thousand alien border crossings in October 2021, more than 3500 aliens may have eluded his thinned patrol ranks.  During 2021 to date, SABRE has encountered 33,000 aliens, arresting forty-seven drug mules and seizing more than eight hundred pounds of marijuana and other drugs such as methamphetamine and heroin.  Across the whole southwest border, authorities estimated 300,000 getaways in 2021, 100,000 of which occurred in the four Arizona counties comprising the Tucson sector.

Crime and trespassing complaints in the border towns have skyrocketed.  Ranchers walkabout their property well-armed, often bumping into small groups of migrants and drug couriers dressed in military-style camo and sporting heavy backpacks laden with belongings or narcotics.  SABRE’s covert cameras dispersed across the desert terrain have recorded taildraggers flying under American radar and conducting daytime drug drops.

Rampant COVID infection rates and other diseases picked up along the northward trek soon take their toll.  Cartel coyotes, who view delay as lost profit, abandon the sick or overheated to die in the desert.  Dannels’s deputies often make rescues of forsaken migrants.  Ranchers stumble over dead bodies, sometimes huddled in groups of three or four.  Since Biden took office, the Tucson sector has seen 162 migrant deaths, ninety-one in the past couple of months.

It is Democrat wordsmithing to imply that the Biden’s border strategy is humanitarian.  To claim that moral high ground is antithetical to its true purpose, to expand the blue electorate at the terrible cost of enriching the drug cartels, endorsing human trafficking and child abuse, killing hundreds for their efforts, and putting thousands more into forced labor, poverty, and crime on America’s streets.  It is a willful crisis of humanity and an insult to all Americans if the Biden regime believes it can varnish it over with a few teleprompted speeches and scripted pressers.

If you’re in Cochise County, those ramifications are existential.  You can just watch from your doorstep or talk to your local sheriff.

Image: Pixnio



EXCLUSIVE: Border Patrol Migrant Got-Away Count Reaches 75K in 47 Days

A rancher's game-cam captures a group of migrants marching through his ranch to avoid a Border Patrol checkpoint. (Photo: Kinney County Sheriff's Office)
Photo: Kinney County Sheriff's Office
2:35

A law enforcement source within Customs and Border Protection revealed the number of migrants escaping apprehension reached 75,000 in Fiscal Year 2022, which began in October. The source says between 1,800 and 2,000 migrants are managing to elude apprehension daily along the southwest border.

On Tuesday, U.S. Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) questioned Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas about the issue. In a tense exchange, Mayorkas failed to provide the number.

Sen. Cruz: Now, you told another Senator, you don’t know how many ‘got-aways’ there have been?

Sec. Mayorkas: I will have to circle back, Senator, with that information.”

Cruz: So, that wasn’t a fact that you thought was relevant to this hearing?

Mayorkas: Oh, it is absolutely relevant. I understand why the question is posed. It’s a fact of great

Cruz: But you’re not prepared to answer it. How about this — how many deaths? How many illegal aliens have died crossing illegally into the United States under Joe Biden’s Administration?

Mayorkas: I don’t have that data.

The known got-away count is updated daily by the Border Patrol, according to the source. The data is entered into a system of record easily accessible to agency leaders.

At the current pace, the source says the migrant got-away count this year is likely to exceed the more than 400,000 as reported in Fiscal Year 2021.

The metric is usually not released by DHS. It is achieved by counting migrants who ultimately escape apprehension after being observed by aircraft and camera systems. Agents also use traditional sign-cutting techniques to identify footprints.

Sources report the got-away count is usually lower than reality. Another issue impacting the accuracy of the got-away count, according to the source, is the number of Border Patrol agents relegated to processing, transport and humanitarian care for the thousands of migrants apprehended daily.

Randy Clark
 is a 32-year veteran of the United States Border Patrol.  Prior to his retirement, he served as the Division Chief for Law Enforcement Operations, directing operations for nine Border Patrol Stations within the Del Rio, Texas, Sector. Follow him on Twitter @RandyClarkBBTX.


How Long before Mexican Cartels Set Up Their Own States in the USA?

A few days ago, The Daily Caller released its first investigative documentary: Cartelville USA.  The film is short — only 36 minutes — and you can watch it here with a subscription or free trial.  There is also an interview on the Federalist Radio Hour with the director, Jorge Ventura, which is nearly as long as the documentary itself.

In case the title doesn't give it away, the topic of Cartelville USA is a string of communities in the California desert that have been taken over by drug cartels.  The cartels grow marijuana in hoop houses on land that may or may not be theirs, using slave labor and stolen water.  They pack heavy weapons and gun down whoever looks too much like a rival or a threat, and they generally do as they wish.

"These drug cartels are wreaking havoc on the entire antelope valley, and nobody is talking about it," says the narrator near the beginning of the film.  "This is the cartels.  We are very, very close to driving down the freeway, and seeing bodies hanging from the overpasses.  That is what's coming."

Ventura's disturbing look into the growing power of drug cartels on this side of the border caught my interest because it has two important political ramifications, one short-term and the other long-term.  But before I discuss those in detail, a summary of what I learned from the documentary is in order.

The setting is, for the most part, in rural Los Angeles County, though it extends into neighboring counties as well.  The inhabitants are, for the most part, old, working-class conservatives who settled there in their twilight years to get away from the bustle of city life, only to be rudely surprised by what is going on.  And you can tell that something is deeply wrong from the get-go by the fact that most of the people Ventura interviews (the sheriff and Congressman Mike Garcia being notable exceptions) have their faces blurred to avoid recognition.

Ventura and his crew reveal how a combination of Mexican, Chinese, and Armenian organized crime syndicates are growing marijuana in hoop houses in the California desert.  Some growers own the land or are in league with absentee landlords, while others are just squatters.  The hoop houses, complete with lights and irrigation systems, can be set up in just a day or two, and even when police get a search warrant, the law usually allows them to take only the marijuana plants, while leaving everything else, so the whole enterprise carries surprisingly little risk.

Labor is provided by illegal aliens brought from Mexico or China and forced to work by their traffickers; water is simply stolen, often from fire hydrants.

Most Californians are unaware of the severity of the problem: in their minds, since their state already legalized marijuana, they shouldn't have to worry about this kind of thing anymore.  "People just shrug their shoulders," says Ventura.  "Who cares, it's just pot, like, why are we even wasting our tax dollars fighting this issue?"

Yet Proposition 64, which passed in 2016, was in many ways a half-measure.  While Californians can now legally grow weed under some circumstances, there are enough licensing requirements, regulatory requirements, and production limits to ensure that it's still much more profitable to do it illegally — and that's before you add in the fact that, due to federal law still frowning on everyone involved in the cannabis trade, no money earned by selling the stuff can be deposited into a bank account.  Then tally up the costs saved by using stolen water and forced labor, and it's easy to see why working outside the law is still the most profitable option.

The ultimate takeaway from all this is that things that Americans are used to hearing about on the other side of the border are going to start happening on our own side, too, if enough people don't wake up to the gravity of the situation.

Or, as an interviewer from The Federalist put it when he began querying Ventura: "The Cartels generally know you can kill as many Mexicans as you want in Mexico, you can slave-trade as many humans as you want from foreign countries, but you don't mess with Americans, [or] Americans start to freak out.  It seems to be one of the very few remaining ideas of Pax Americana in the world as cartels know that's bad for business.  But you worry that might be changing?"

Yes, Jorge Ventura does worry that might be changing.

The immediate takeaway is that the leftists who govern the United States in general and California in particular are completely blind to serious national problems — even problems with high human costs borne largely by the people they claim to care about the most — when those problems don't fit into their political worldview.

If you're a Democrat, then one of the ways you prove to your party's base that you're a good Democrat is by going soft on crimes involving politically sensitive classes of people — in this case, Hispanics and illegal aliens.  (And it is of no consequence that Hispanic people who have to deal with these crimes up close — like Jorge Ventura and Mike Garcia — are often vehemently opposed to your nonchalance).

The same goes for reporters in the mainstream media.  If you work for the New York Times, CNN, NPR, or the like, you will not advance your career by drawing attention to the fact that the wide open border and the lenient attitude toward crime that gave rise to "Defund the Police" has nasty consequences for poor people and racial minorities.

It is rather disturbing that this has become a partisan issue; after all, in a healthy republic, defending the lives and property of one's countrymen would be something that all office-holders feel strongly about.  But at the moment, it isn't, and unless more voters start supporting people like Mike Garcia instead of the rabble who talk about defunding the police, we're going to get more of the same.

One can argue, quite convincingly, that the road to Cartelville USA starts with the kind of politicians who are willing to let BLM burn down police stations, and then say the important thing is that none of the "protesters" was harmed by the cops.

As for the long-term ramifications: if the U.S. government doesn't somehow get put into the hands of people who really, really want to turn things around — and by now, a turnaround is looking increasingly unlikely — then we are looking at the beginning stages of state formation.

This is a concise way of saying that, the longer this goes on, the more and more the cartels will take on the attributes of being sovereign governments in their own right.  They will hold undisputed authority over their territory and its inhabitants; they will make and enforce laws; they will collect taxes; they will wage war; and, if victorious, they will dictate the terms of the peace treaty, just as their counterparts already do in Mexico.

Perhaps you are familiar with the Battle of Culiacán, fought in October of 2019, in which 700 Sinaloa gunmen, wielding 50-calibre rifles, rocket launchers, grenades, and armored vehicles, defeated the Mexican National Guard, seized control of a city of 700,000 people, and demanded that the Mexican government release the imprisoned son of the Sinaloa Cartel's leader or else face a massacre.  President López-Obrador complied, as many people expected him to; he had, after all, run for office on a platform of rapprochement with the drug cartels.

America's Culiacán moment is still a long way off — decades away, in my opinion — but the longer politicians ignore events like the ones that Jorge Ventura is trying to bring to light in Cartelville USA, the closer that moment gets.

Twilight Patriot also writes at www.twilightpatriot.com.

Image: Bureau of Land Management California via Flickr, Public Domain.



Mexico's cartels did not get AMLO's 'hugs, not bullets' memo

A couple of years ago, President Lopez-Obrador said something about promoting hugs rather than bullets as his plan for halting Mexico's notorious cartels.   

It went like this:
 
Prior to becoming president, AMLO promised “hugs, not bullets,” a demilitarization of security, an end to high value targeting and a focus on social spending and anti-corruption to reduce the root causes of violence. 
 
It was "woke mexicano" and did not work any better than "woke americano." Mexico recently surpassed the 100,000-deaths milestone in its war with cartels, Jorge Ramos of Univision wrote. Not even Ramos, a lefty, thinks the 'hugs not bullets' strategy, is working.
 
A couple of days ago, the Mexican cartels sent a message about Cancun.  This is from The New York Post:   
 
The hand-printed signs, in neat block letters, appeared in the Tulum marketplace the morning after two tourists were shot dead and three others wounded at a roadside eatery in the bohemian Mexican resort town.
 
“Attention merchants of Tulum … this was a warning,” said the sign, which went on to threaten “managers and owners” of bars and restaurants on the “Mini Quinta” tourist zone. That’s where the foreigners, visiting the Malquerida Bar last month, had the bad luck of getting caught in cartel crossfire.
 
The signs were photographed by a local citizens’ advocacy group, which posted them to social media. The message threatened death to merchants who refuse to fork over bribes to the drug trafficking gangs and was signed by Los Pelones — “the bald ones.”
 
It caught the Mexican government's attention because they sent the armed forces to secure the area.
 
What we are seeing, according to a friend in Mexico, is several very interesting developments:
 
First, the criminal elements in Mexico have been emboldened by President Biden's border policy.  They are doing lots of business bringing people to the border and charging them a nice fee.  Furthermore, who knows what deal they are making with these people once they get here.  In other words, what future payments, cash or "services," are due once they settle into the U.S.?  
 
Second, we are watching a battle for territory between the cartels.  This is a gang fight not too different than what we see in Chicago every weekend.
 
Last, but not least, the Mexican government knows that violence involving tourists is bad news for a country desperately needing cash after the pandemic.   So they will use whatever force is necessary to keep the gangs out of Cancun.   My fear is that the cartels have simply grown to a point where they can't be stopped by Mexican authorities.  
 
Should you go to Cancun?   Be very careful.