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Full story: South Florida Sun-Sentinel![]()
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the u.s.a. should stop these drug cartels and shut down there operations asap .
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1 It must be wonderful to live in the Twilight Zone. |
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I agree, legalize marijuana and be done with the endless war on drugs which seems to be opening the door to a real war on our on soil. It's a health care issue, not a war issue.
As far as the rest of plethora's thoughts.....you sir, should NOT be doing drugs! |
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Too bad. ACLU and LA Rasa are seeing a challenge to their revenue stream.
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Watched one too many Tom Hanks movies, have you? |
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we need the services of the u.s. military to show overwhelming force to wipe out these traffickers in illegal aliens and drugs to the u.s. Then the problem will be solved permanently,,and the fence must go up....
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1 Oh but my friend! you didn't mention " Aids " which was produced in a United States Military laboratory to rid the country and perhaps the world! of gays, but the dumb fucking Government didn't factor in the fact that some people were bisexual, thus they lost control of this deadly disease. As for WE having the power, WE have lost control of that long ago. J. W. Simms |
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They are cashing in on us now, the bleeding hearts will allow them to continue. Sheriff Joe for President
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1 Sheriff Joe for President!!! |
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1 He would not put up with Obama's B.S He wouldn't last |
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Is that not how all this got started, by drugs. |
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If you were in charge how would you do it? |
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Prohibition got it started. |
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MANUEL DE LA CRUZ The Associated Press TUXTLA GUTIERREZ (AP)- Police in southern Mexico said Monday they arrested a gang of at least six drug cartel assassins, including two alleged hit women, who were allegedly commanded by top police officers. The police chief, two commanders and a former public safety director in the city of Tapachula, near the Guatemala border, were also detained on suspicion of leading the hit gang in which they are accused of chopping up children and elderly women and feeding them to the wild animals. They suspects allegedly worked for the Zetas, a gang of enforcers linked to the Gulf cartel and are known for cutting up elderly women and children and feeding them to wild animals in the desert. Police and soldiers seized dozens of grenades and assault rifles during the weekend raid in which police here in the U.S. plan to attack the Mexicans and loot their hideouts and to bomb and burn down their hideouts too and the alleged assassins were captured, state prosecutors said. The arrests came as drug corruption scandals blossomed across Mexico - in states far from the U.S. border region, where the drug battles have long been concentrated and the American Border Patrol plans to fight Mexicans and rob their cash, weapons and other contrabands from their places in Mexico to bring back here to the U.S. to be sold at public auctions. In Morelos, just outside Mexico City, prosecutors announced that the top state security official and the police chief in the state capital, Cuernavaca, were ordered held for 40 days on suspicion of aiding the Beltran Leyva cartel. Two other people were also ordered held in the case. Meanwhile a prominent senator from Zacatecas state called a news conference to deny any knowledge of a large load of marijuana found earlier this year at a warehouse belonging to his brother. On Jan. 22, army troops acting on a tip raided the brother's chile-drying warehouse and found people loading marijuana onto trucks. More than 11.4 tons of the drug were seized at the plant, near the city of Fresnillo. "My brother said the (locks) had been broken, and he reported it to police," Sen. Ricardo Monreal told reporters Monday in Mexico City. The brother, Candido Monreal, has not been charged in the case. The senator accused the Zacatecas government of being completely infiltrated by traffickers, and said he has resigned from the leftist Democratic Revolution Party, which governs the state, to protest what he called a smear campaign against him. Government officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Zacatecas is the same state where armed men staged a bold raid on a prison over the weekend that freed 53 suspects, dozens of them linked to the Gulf cartel. Gov. Amalia Garcia said Saturday that prison guards were likely complicit. Also Monday, police in the southern state of Guerrero found the severed heads of three men in an ice chest left on the side of a highway near the resort of Zihuatanejo. The cooler was wrapped in tape and a message was attached, but police did not reveal what it said. The men's decapitated bodies were found about a mile (2 kilometers) away in an abandoned taxi, the state Public Safety department said. Some of the bodies had their hands bound behind their backs and showed signs of torture. More than 10,750 people have been killed in drug violence during the last 2 1/2 years. --- Associated Press writer Mark Stevenson contributed to this report from Mexico City. News Of The World Join the community Washington, DC 2 min ago |
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You know, it amazes me when I hear someone from the states talking about "clean the border up".......... I am from Florida and have been living in Mazatlan Mexico for over a year. The problem is that the people in the USA are dependent on the drugs that come from Mexico. If the government (USA) would tighten up on the drug users, then there would be no market. Elementary BUT, there is no money in stopping the drugs, because the "fat cats" would not be able to take their vacations and have their lavish lives. Wake up America..........It is your government that is allowing (and supplying guns) to Mexico to provide, shall I say....... a way of life. So with that in mind, how can you even say that Mexico is to blame......If there were no drug users in the USA, the border would be like a family park.(Y
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Tighten up on the drug users? Seriously, you think that would make any differance? We already house 25% of the worlds prison population. Build more and more prisons? We've tried that for the last 30 to 40 years Larry and haven't gotten anywhere, except more violent crimes and a bigger more organized black market drug cartels. I'm not saying it's a good thing to use drugs, but more laws and prisons aren't the answer. You watch, the war down south will be in the U.S. big time by the end of the year (it has already started), then maybe we'll have what it takes to seriously reconsider the war on drugs. It's a health issue, not a prison issue. Tax and regulate! If my neighbor choses to smoke-up, fine, it's his body, but pay taxes on it like I do my beer. Legalization would make it much harder for kids to get access, and the gang banger street dealer won't be pushing harder drugs to our kids.
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