Blog Flux Directory Subscribe in NewsGator Online Subscribe with Bloglines http://www.wikio.com Blog directory
And, yes, I DO take it personally
Mandy: Great blog!
Mark: Thanks to all the contributors on this blog. When I want to get information on the events that really matter, I come here.
Penny: I'm glad I found your blog (from a comment on Think Progress), it's comprehensive and very insightful.
Eric: Nice site....I enjoyed it and will be back.
nora kelly: I enjoy your site. Keep it up! I particularly like your insights on Latin America.
Alison: Loquacious as ever with a touch of elegance -- & right on target as usual!
"Everybody's worried about stopping terrorism. Well, there's a really easy way: stop participating in it."
- Noam Chomsky
Send tips and other comments to: profmarcus2010@yahoo.com

And, yes, I DO take it personally

Friday, October 07, 2011

Acapulco photoblogging from Wednesday and Friday

i'm taking a little break in a place i haven't been for a long, long time... here's two pics from the place i'm staying in old acapulco on the cliffs right over the ocean...

from my bedroom window...


Photobucket

sunset from my balcony...

Photobucket

and, in case you're wondering about the current state of tourism in mexico given all the recent goings-on, here's an article i ran across from a few days ago...
Come On in, the Water’s Fine

Never mind the beheadings, the kidnappings, the mass graves. Mexico wants its tourists back.

the hotel referenced in the first paragraph of the article, los flamingos, is approximately 5 blocks up the street from the house i'm staying at...

Labels: , , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Mexico's war is how the future will look - global government by multinational banks

a truly grim but nonetheless brutally accurate vision of capitalism run amok...

from the guardian...

Mexico's carnage is that of the age of effective global government by multinational banks – banks that, according to Antonio Maria Costa, the former head of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, have been for years kept afloat by laundering drug and criminal profits. Cartel bosses and street gangbangers cannot go around in trucks full of cash. They have to bank it – and politicians could throttle this river of money, as they have with actions against terrorist funding. But they choose not to, for obvious reasons: the good burgers of capitalism and their political quislings depend on this money, while bleating about the evils of drugs cooked in the ghetto and snorted up the noses of the rich.

Mexico's war is how the future will look, because it belongs not in the 19th century with wars of empire, or the 20th with wars of ideology, race and religion – but utterly in a present to which the global economy is committed, and to a zeitgeist of frenzied materialism we adamantly refuse to temper: it is the inevitable war of capitalism gone mad. Twelve years ago Cardona and the writer Charles Bowden curated a book called Juarez: The Laboratory of Our Future. They could not have known how prescient their title was. In a recent book, Murder City, Bowden puts it another way: "Juarez is not a breakdown of the social order. Juarez is the new order."

i hadn't framed what was going on in mexico in these terms but, i must admit, they make a tremendous amount of sense, albeit horrifying...

Labels: , , , , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 2 comments

Sunday, January 09, 2011

Odds & ends, Sunday, 9 January

let's hear it for mcclatchy and its spot-on indictment of the u.s. news media for abandoning wikileaks...

i've been meaning to post a note about one of my favorites and a first-class character in his own right, joe bageant, who recently revealed his bout with terminal cancer but i think i may have been struggling with a little bit of denial...

in a previous life i was a frequent visitor to acapulco and even lived and operated a business there so it's particularly painful to read news like this...

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Thursday, September 03, 2009

"Mr Gomez, Tear Down This Wall"

This jewel was sent to me from And, Yes, I DO Take It Personally friend, Betmo. Thanks, Kiddo!

From the Miami Herald..........

Mexico nabs 6 in theft of border-fence steel

TIJUANA, Mexico -- Police in the Mexican border city of Tijuana say they have arrested six men for stealing pieces of the U.S. border fence to sell as scrap metal.

[...]

Police said Wednesday in a statement that the men may face federal charges because the fence area is considered federal property.

Slooooooowly I turned..........

Labels: , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Saturday, May 02, 2009

Still terrified of the coming pandemic...? Get over it...

here's the pig but where's the lipstick...?

Photobucket

meanwhile, back in the reality-based community...
Flu death toll 'less than feared'

Mexico has revised down the suspected death toll from swine flu from 176 to 101, indicating that the outbreak may not be as bad as was initially feared.

Health Minister Jose Angel Cordova told the BBC that, based on samples tested, the mortality rate was comparable with that of seasonal flu.

comparable with that of seasonsal flu...? wait...! wait just a minute...! i thought i was supposed to be sequestered in some safe spot, isolated from the rest of humanity, wearing a mask, and trembling for fear of catching some deadly virus... now that i've swallowed the hype, hook, line and sinker, you tell me it's 'less than feared'...? have i summoned up all this paranoia for NOTHING...? hmmmmph...

Labels: , , , , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

What do the U.S., Argentina, Mexico, Nigeria, South Korea, and Ukraine have in common?

jim lobe writing in ips...
The basic democratic principle that "the will of the people should be the basis for the authority of government" is supported by overwhelming majorities throughout the world, according to a major new survey of more than 17,000 adults in 19 countries released here Monday.

Large majorities in most of those countries also believe that their own governments are not living up to that principle, according to the poll which was conducted and published by WorldPublicOpinion.org (WPO).

Indeed, an average of 74 percent of respondents in the 19 countries, which represent 59 percent of the world's total population, believe that "the will of the people" should have more influence in how their country is concerned than it currently does.

And an average of 63 percent of respondents say their country is being run by a "few big interests looking out for themselves," rather than "for the benefit of all the people."

The belief that governments were being run by "a few big interests" was particularly pervasive in Ukraine (84 percent), Mexico (83 percent), the United States (80 percent), Nigeria and South Korea (78 percent), and Argentina (71 percent).

"The perception that governments are not responsive to the popular will appears to be contributing to the low levels of confidence in government found around the world," noted Steven Kull, who directs both the WPO and its parent organisation, the University of Maryland's Programme on International Policy Attitudes (PIPA).

"Most see their governments as primarily serving big interests rather than the people as a whole," he added.

[...]

Among all 19 countries, respondents in the U.S. thought their government took into account world public opinion the least.

it's been a long time since i've viewed my government as being responsive to its citizens but it's only been in the past decade or so that i've come to believe that my government doesn't give a tinker's damn about the rest of the world unless it's about what we can get out of them...

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Tuesday, April 08, 2008

Meanwhile, back at the WaPo shill factory - er, editorial staff - they're DEFENDING Mark Penn

even the title is un-friggingly-believable...
The Sin of Speaking Truth

and it just gets worse from there...

item...

Yet another Democratic adviser is in trouble for having more common sense that his candidate -- or at least, more than his candidate has the courage to admit having.

item...
Austan Goolsbee, Sen. Barack Obama's economic adviser ... suggested to Canadian officials that a President Obama probably wouldn't be foolish enough to repudiate [NAFTA, but since] Mr. Obama had been running hard against NAFTA, blaming it for a million lost jobs and ignoring the good it has done for the poorer people of Mexico, Mr. Goolsbee's comments had to be repudiated.

item...
Mark J. Penn, was helping Colombia's government win congressional approval of a U.S.-Colombia free-trade agreement that Ms. Clinton opposes.

[...]

This is a particular danger in the case of Colombia, since the arguments against the pact are so flimsy.

[...]

Both Democratic candidates rest their opposition on supposed concern about assassination of trade unionists in Colombia, although such violence has fallen so much that the crime rate for them now is lower -- as we've pointed out in past editorials -- than for the population at large. Mr. Obama committed a particularly egregious libel last week when he said, referring to Colombian President Álvaro Uribe, who has taken on the violent left and the violent right at considerable risk to himself, "You've got a government that is under a cloud of potentially having supported violence against unions, against labor, against opposition."

and, finally, the jaw-dropping conclusion...
Does Ms. Clinton really believe a newly elected president should adhere to a year-old timetable for troop withdrawal, regardless of circumstances? Are they each unaware of the real statistics on NAFTA's effects? Voters are left to wonder, and to ponder which would be worse: that the candidates are sincere and misguided or are insincere and lacking the courage to speak honestly.

i wouldn't even know where to begin... is claiming that nafta has been good for the "poorer people of mexico" more patently ridiculous than portraying colombia's chief drug-runner and total washington toady, Álvaro Uribe, as a risk-taker for democracy...? the wapo apparently believes that "the courage to speak honestly" equates with espousing bush administration-approved and wapo-adopted talking points... this is what passes for journalism in our nation's capital...

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Sunday, February 03, 2008

Dental tourism

my dental history since 2003 has been a case in point...
It was fear of the hefty bill as much as fear of the drill that kept American musician Don Clay away from U.S. dental clinics for 30 years.

When a sorely infected tooth eventually drove him to the dentist last month, it was to a clinic in a Mexican border city better known for violent crime and drug cartels.

Shrugging off concerns about hygiene and Mexico's brutal drug war, thousands of Americans are heading to Ciudad Juarez and other Mexican border cities for cheap dental treatment.

"I had to get my teeth fixed. I need a perfect smile to make a successful career in music. Treatment in the United States is so pricey," said Clay, a Texan trying to get a record deal as a hip-hop artist.

U.S. dental treatment costs up to four times as much as in Mexico, making it tough for uninsured Americans to treat common problems such as abscessed teeth or pay for dentures.

A dental crown in the United States costs upward of $600 per tooth, compared to $190 or less in Mexico.

Aspiring Mexican dentists are moving to border cities in droves and are luring American patients away from farther flung discount destinations such as Hungary and Thailand.

Americans have long crossed the border for cheap medicines, flu vaccines, eye surgery or specialist doctors, but dentists are now in highest demand.

a few years ago, i needed some dental work done when i was working in macedonia... i was referred to a young woman who had worked in the u.s. for two years under a dentist in atlantic city... i was vastly impressed, not only by the quality of her work, but also by the thorough explanation she gave of her methods, how she followed the european treatment model rather than the u.s. treatment model, and even her explanation of the type of materials and instruments she used and where she obtained them (germany), something i had never heard from a u.s. dentist... then there was the price... i obtained two crowns for 80 euros or roughly $USD103 each... (that was at the then $USD1/€1.29 exchange rate which has since ballooned to $USD1/€1.48...) from that point through summer 2006, i paid her regular visits every time i was in-country... (as a side note, she told me that she also did dental work for many italians who were working in the country... i later learned that many greeks travel across the border to macedonia specifically for dental services, particularly interesting due to the fact that there is zero love lost between greeks and macedonians...)

after i returned to the u.s. from buenos aires last september, i had a large filling break loose (while eating VERY crunchy, dried, fried peas coated in wasabi, idiot that i am), leaving a gaping hole in a tooth... i knew it needed to be fixed and didn't want to wait until the now-vulnerable inner tooth decayed further, or, worse yet, started to hurt... however, i knew that a visit to a u.s. dentist would set me back at least $200 - probably a conservative estimate - so i kept putting it off... i returned here to buenos aires a week ago yesterday and, on wednesday, i visited my landlady's dentist who lives right around the corner from me, my first experience with an argentine dentist... after asking me right off the bat whether i supported hillary or obama, he made short work of fixing it, did a great job, and charged me $30AR, a little less than $USD10 ($USD1/$3.16AR at the current exchange rate)... he also advised me to lay off the super-crunchy stuff... ;) you can bet who i am going to see for my dental work from now on...

Labels: , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Here it comes, the next big story - U.S. inflation

i was largely non compos mentis during the last period of serious inflation in the u.s. in the early and mid-70s... yeah, i knew it was going on and, yeah, i knew it was a problem, but i honestly either don't remember or perhaps didn't experience much of a personal impact... contrast that with my more recent experience in argentina, which has been trying to grapple with what government figures declare is a 9% inflation rate, but my first-hand, on-the-street experience of watching prices rise literally before my eyes tells me is at least 12% percent and maybe even as high as 19%... so, if WHOLESALE inflation in the u.s. for ALL of 2007 is 6.3 percent, you have to believe that, with the recent steep rises in food and basic commodity prices, the real personal impact is a minimum of several points higher...

i had an experience with u.s. inflation just this past sunday while i was perusing the menu prices at a down-scale, storefront, strip mall, family-run, mexican restaurant, usually the very best bet for value... the average entree is now 25% more than last year at this time, and a full 60% more than early 2003...

Wholesale inflation shot up in 2007 by the largest amount in 26 years even though falling gasoline costs allowed price pressures to moderate in December.

The Labor Department reported that wholesale inflation was up 6.3 percent for all of 2007, reflecting a huge increase for the year in various types of energy costs ranging from gasoline to home heating oil.

The year ended on a more positive note, with wholesale prices falling by 0.1 percent in December. That reflected decreasing costs at the time for gasoline and other energy products. It was a significant slowdown after prices had soared by 3.2 percent in November, which had been the biggest one-month increase in 34 years.

Meanwhile, the Commerce Department reported that retail sales fell by 0.4 percent in December. It was a worse-than-expected decline and increased worries that the country could topple into a recession.

i've noticed the decrease in gasoline prices and am at a loss to explain why... mexico recently announced that it will cease to ship crude to the u.s. west coast, opec claims it is operating at peak capacity (but george is still asking for more), the u.s. is on the outs with venezuela and iran, and more than 300,000 barrels of oil are missing from the u.s. strategic petroleum reserve, so why are gasoline prices coming down...?

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Saturday, December 01, 2007

Kansas R's dumping abortion in favor of immigration (and the violence and hypocrisy that comes with it)

interesting...

from the la times...

[A]s the political season revs up, the executive director of the Kansas Republican Party has issued a stern warning to his fellow conservatives: Abortion is not a winning issue.

"This is not something that the Kansas GOP is going to go out and lead on," Christian Morgan said.

Morgan said that he and his party remain firmly opposed to abortion. Most Republican voters in Kansas feel the same, he said. But Morgan also believes that those voters are fed up with years of fruitless political and legal maneuvering aimed at driving abortion clinics out of business. They would much prefer to see an all-out focus on curbing illegal immigration or cutting taxes, he said.

In an e-mail rebuffing an antiabortion activist who asked for more GOP support, Morgan explained: "My job is to win elections. . . . Your agenda does not fit my agenda."

so, kansas r's are "fed up" with the "fruitless" campaign against abortion and its related violence, so they're choosing to put their money on the wedge issue of immigration and ITS violence instead, eh...? let's see how THAT'S working for them...

this is from the southern poverty law center in an introduction to a list of the more egregious physical and psychological violence waged against latinos in the past two and one-half years...

There's no doubt that the tone of the raging national debate over immigration is growing uglier by the day. Once limited to hard-core white supremacists and a handful of border-state extremists, vicious public denunciations of undocumented brown-skinned immigrants are increasingly common among supposedly mainstream anti-immigration activists, radio hosts and politicians. While their dehumanizing rhetoric typically stops short of openly sanctioning bloodshed, much of it implicitly encourages or even endorses violence by characterizing immigrants from Mexico and Central America as "invaders," "criminal aliens" and "cockroaches."

meanwhile, arguably one of the more vicious individuals to implicitly condone a violent response to immigration problems displays what has become the oh-so-predictable repub hypocrisy... ladies and gentlemen, i give you the odious tom tancredo...

from max blumenthal in alternet...

When Tancredo (presidential candidate and R-CO) hired a construction crew to transform his drab basement into a high-tech pleasure den in October 2001, however, he did not express concern that only two of its members spoke English. Nor did he bother to check the workers’ documentation to see if they were legal residents of the United States. Had Tancredo done so, he would have learned that most of the crew consisted of undocumented immigrants, or “criminal aliens” as he likes to call them. Instead, Tancredo paid the crew $60,000 for its labor and waited innocently for the completion of his elaborate entertainment complex.

During the renovation process, two illegal workers hired by Tancredo were alerted to his reputation for immigrant bashing. They went straight to the Denver Post to complain. Tancredo “doesn't want us here, but he'll take advantage of our sweat and our labor,” one of the workers complained to the Post on September 19, 2002. “It's just not right.”

The Post report momentarily threw Tancredo on the defensive. In a fiery speech soon after the story’s publication, Tancredo blamed his foibles on the INS. “I haven't the foggiest idea how many people I may have hired in the past as taxi drivers, as waiters, waitresses, home improvement people,” he boomed from the House floor. “I haven't the foggiest idea how many of those people may have been here illegally, and it is not my job to ask them.” Then defiance gave way to vitriol as the congressman dubbed undocumented immigrants, “the face of murder.”

Only days before the Post’s story appeared, Tancredo had personally reported an honor student profiled in the Denver Post to the INS because the 14-year-old was not a legal resident of the United States. The stunt forced the boy’s family to go into hiding.

now tell me that calling undocumented immigrants "the face of murder" isn't an implicit invitation to violence...

i've mentioned before that i had a one-degree of separation moment with tancredo when i was living in colorado in 2002... my friend, the vice consul at the mexican consulate in denver, was being seriously slimed by the vile tancredo for merely doing his job, helping his own country's citizens, one of whom was the honor student mentioned in the last paragraph of the excerpt above... i won't bore you with the details, but anyone who has followed tancredo's history of bile can easily fill in the blanks...

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Sunday, November 18, 2007

David Sirota and The Who on Hillary - "Meet the new boss..."

there's no way our country can afford to be fooled again...

from david sirota via daily kos...




i have to confess... i supported nafta, and, in fact, used the nafta debate that was happening at the time as the basis for a negotiation simulation in a class i was teaching in international management... it's just a perfect example of how, as every single year passes, i look back on the previous year and marvel at how much i have learned and grown...

what i supported about nafta was precisely what it was NOT intended to accomplish, which was, in my naive world view of the time, to help blur artificial national boundaries and bring people closer together... i find it amazing that, in hindsight, i couldn't see it for the naked ploy it was, a scheme for the rich to get richer on the backs of everyone else, regardless of race, creed, color, religious belief, or nationality...

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Sunday, October 21, 2007

More on the four TONS of cocaine aboard the Gulfstream jet that crashed in the Yucatan

i posted on this story back at the end of last month... i now see that madcow has been busy running down more of the ugly details...
A pilot accused of owning the Gulfstream business jet (N987SA) which broke in two and crash-landed in the Mexican Yucatan carrying nearly 4 tons of cocaine has pointed a finger at a notorious convicted drug smuggler as the true owner of the drug-running airplane, the MadCowMorningNews can report exclusively.

Don Whittington, whose WORLD JET INC at the Fort Lauderdale Executive Airport was widely reported to have been deeply involved in CIA rendition flights, provided $2 million in cash to purchase the Gulfstream business jet, according to Greg Smith, one of two pilots in Fort Lauderdale Florida who have been accused of owning the plane.

[...]

Many of the Learjets associated with CIA renditions came from the World Jet, Inc (including N-numbers N229WJ, N500ND, N252WJ), all of which have been tracked making numerous stops at Guantanamo.

check out the teaser for the coming attractions...
NEXT: THE BUSH CONNECTION.

Labels: , , , , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Friday, October 12, 2007

The richest one percent of Americans earned a postwar record of 21.2 percent of all income in 2005, up from 19 percent a year earlier

folks, let's be clear... this is exactly the kind of income disparity that you see in many lesser-developed countries, where the moneyed elites occupy a very thin slice of the population at the very top and call the shots for all the rest of us... we're headed there damn quick...
The richest one percent of Americans earned a postwar record of 21.2 percent of all income in 2005, up from 19 percent a year earlier, reflecting a widening income disparity among different classes in the nation, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing new Internal Revenue Service data.

The data showed that the fortunes of the bottom 50 percent of Americans are worsening, with that group earning 12.8 percent of all income in 2005, down from 13.4 percent the year before, the paper said.

stop for a moment and really think about those percentages... they're staggering... ONE PERCENT of the population earns TWENTY-ONE POINT TWO PERCENT of the income... FIFTY PERCENT earns THIRTEEN POINT EIGHT PERCENT... phew... now THAT'S come income gap...

i had the opportunity to get to know and observe one or two of the moneyed elites in mexico several years ago... among them, they literally own the entire country - retail businesses, apartment buildings, hotels, resorts, food production and distribution, transportation, banks - and control the politicians, government officials, the military and law enforcement from the sidelines... (stop me if any of this sounds familiar...) i can remember talking to a gentleman while we were sitting on the beach one day... he and his companion traveled the world, going from one delightful resort to another, all places where they owned large chunks of real estate, and staying in their own villas or condos... once or twice a day, he would call his office for the sole purpose of seeing if his money was busy and working hard for him from dawn to dusk... what a life, eh...?

Labels: , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Monday, October 01, 2007

The border fence protects the environment

from those scummy, litterbug, illegal immigrants who are leaving their families behind and risking their lives trying to find a better life...
Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff on Monday defended the construction of a fence along the southwest border, saying it's actually better for the environment than what happens when people illegally cross the U.S.-Mexico line.

"Illegal migrants really degrade the environment. I've seen pictures of human waste, garbage, discarded bottles and other human artifact in pristine areas," Chertoff said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. "And believe me, that is the worst thing you can do to the environment."

there's one thing that officials in the bush administration have in common... they all have the sensitivity and compassion of a goddamed toilet seat...

Labels: , , , , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Saturday, September 29, 2007

Four TONS of cocaine aboard Gulfstream jet that crashed in the Yucatan

less than 24 hours after i posted on the book, unholy alliance, a book which, among other things, deals with precisely this scenario, lookee what i read about this morning (courtesy of cryptogon) from what has become one of the few news outlets actually ATTEMPTING to give us the truth...




The four TONS of cocaine [emphasis added] found aboard a U.S.-registered business jet that crashed in Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula on Monday belonged to Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, this country's most notorious drug trafficker, Mexican authorities said Friday.

[...]

The complex sale of the Gulfstream II jet and its end in the Mexican jungle highlight the increasingly complicated illicit drug trade.


Gulfstream II

but wait, it gets better...
U.S. authorities say as much as 90 percent of the cocaine sold in the U.S. is shipped through Mexico.

At least three suspects, including a Mexican pilot, are in Mexican custody. Mexican authorities say two of the men offered them money if they would give back the cocaine and release any crewmembers.

and better...
A bill of sale obtained by McClatchy Newspapers indicates that Florida pilot Clyde O'Connor bought the plane on Sept. 16 — eight days before it went down in the Yucatan jungle. Another Florida pilot, identified by his license number and signature as Greg Smith, also signed the document, but his relationship to O'Connor isn't detailed.

[...]

Attempts to reach O'Connor and Smith weren't successful; the listed phone number for one of O'Connor's companies, Execstar Aviation in Fort Lauderdale, was disconnected.

[...]

Logs found on a plane-tracking Web site, www.flightaware.com, show that a flight plan was filed for the Gulfstream two days later for a trip from Fort Lauderdale to Cancun, but who piloted the craft is unknown. FAA records show that neither O'Connor nor Smith was certified to fly a multiengine aircraft like the Gulfstream. The plane crashed near Merida, 200 miles from Cancun.

but, you're REALLY gonna like THIS part...
Adding to the plane's mystery are allegations that it made trips in 2003, 2004 and 2005 between the United States and Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where the U.S. detention center for suspected terrorists is located.

toldja...

Labels: , , , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

The EPR has been busy once again



i posted back in mid-july on the Ejército Popular Revolucionario [EPR], the little-known group that's blowing up Mexican natural gas pipelines... it looks like they may have been at it again...
In an apparent case of politically motivated sabotage, six explosions blew apart oil and natural gas pipelines operated by Mexico's Pemex state oil and gas monopoly early Monday in Veracruz and Tlaxcala states, causing fires and forcing the evacuation of 15,000 people from surrounding towns.

The blasts forced Pemex to shut down at least four affected pipelines and prompted federal authorities to close two major roads. No injuries were reported.

Mexico is the world's sixth-largest oil producer and a major supplier of petroleum to the U.S. The outages drove the price of oil above $78 a barrel in futures trading Monday.

Monday's attacks occurred two months after a leftist guerrilla group, the Popular Revolutionary Army, known by its Spanish initials EPR, took responsibility for carrying out four similar bomb attacks on Pemex pipelines and a switching station in the central states of Queretaro and Guanajuato.

these people obviously know what kind of destructive action is most effective at disrupting not only mexican but also the global economy...

Labels: , , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Ejército Popular Revolucionario, the little-known group that's blowing up Mexican natural gas pipelines



mcclatchy has an interesting report on the group claiming responsibility for the bombings of the mexican natural gas pipelines on july 5 and july 10...
When saboteurs blew up several natural gas pipelines in central Mexico this month, temporarily shutting down production for U.S. automakers and other important manufacturers, a small and shadowy Marxist guerrilla group called the Popular Revolutionary Army reportedly claimed responsibility.

[...]

General Motors and Nissan are said to have lost millions of dollars in production at their plants in the region.

[...]

The Mexican government hasn't officially blamed the Popular Revolutionary Army, which is known by its Spanish-language acronym EPR, although major Mexican newspapers reported that the group has claimed responsibility and has demanded the return of two colleagues imprisoned or missing in the southern state of Oaxaca.



the website of the PDPR-EPR (Partido Democrático Popular Revolucionario - Popular Democratic Revolutionary Party - and the Ejército Popular Revolucionario - Popular Revolutionary Army)...



is anybody else but me reminded of the ezln...?

Labels: , , , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Thursday, July 05, 2007

The North American Future 2025 Project and The Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America



brought to you by the governments of canada, mexico, and the united states, and your good friends at the center for strategic and international studies...

the executive summary [PDF]...




the project...



the u.s. government portion of the project is called The Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America and has its own website... the key players in the u.s. effort - michael chertoff, condolleeza rice, and carlos gutierrez - are listed in this org chart [PDF]... (click on image for full-size version...)



just take a few moments to absorb what's being proposed... then sit back and wait for september which is when the final report will be presented to congress...

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Friday, June 22, 2007

Mexico's Supreme Court acts aggressively to defend its constitution



once again, the u.s. is being left in the dust by other countries more intent on serving their citizens than propping up business interests and creating an authoritarian, one-party state...
"They don't know what we're made of," [Supreme Court Justice Sergio Salvador Aguirre Anguiano] said. "We're here to fulfill the duty entrusted to us … without political influence upon us, simply according to our convictions, impartially, without raucous talk, just as is laid out in the constitution."

wow...! what a CONCEPT...!

here's what's been going on...

Key rulings by the court have produced a subtle but important shift in Mexico's political landscape. The court has reined in one of the nation's most powerful business interests and is moving against two rogue governors.

[...]

On Thursday, the court agreed to create a committee to investigate the political violence and disorder in the southern state of Oaxaca, ruled by the almost universally reviled Gov. Ulises Ruiz.

On Monday, it's scheduled to begin considering whether it should form a similar panel to investigate Puebla Gov. Mario Marin, absolved by lower courts of abuse-of-power charges in the case of an investigative journalist arrested in his state.

[...]

On June 7, the court used this power to overturn a law that granted huge concessions to the nation's two largest media conglomerates. The legislation was known here as "the Televisa law" because lawyers for that company helped draft it.

Many here saw the law as a massive giveaway to the companies: Among other things, it would have granted both Televisa and TV Azteca 20-year licenses to the airwaves that were easily renewable.

so, why now...?
Analysts say the court is acting because President Felipe Calderón and a divided Congress have failed to move against entrenched interests and corrupt local leaders. Though most of its members were appointed by Mexico's previous two presidents, and all were confirmed by Congress, public outrage has forced the court to act, analysts say.

"The court is stepping up to the plate to fill a worrisome void," said John Ackerman, a law professor at the National Autonomous University of Mexico. Ackerman said the court's recent actions were unprecedented in Mexican history.

well, i'll be dipped... a country that takes its constitution seriously... what won't they think of next...?

note: keep in mind that Felipe Calderón is the u.s.-supported candidate that, in a highly suspect election last july, won over Andrés Manuel López Obrador, an event that i've posted on extensively (here, here, here, here, here, and here)...

Labels: , , , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

"A system called 'democracy' now gives peasants something called 'the vote'”

newsweek's howard fineman on bush's suicide mission on immigration policy...
Though I’ve never heard him use the term, my guess is that George W. Bush sees himself as a hacendado, an estate owner in Old Mexico.

That would give him a sense of Southwestern noblesse, duty-bound not just to work “his” people, but to protect them as well.

His advisor, Carlo Rove, has explained that a system called “democracy” now gives peasants something called “the vote.” It would be shrewd, Rove said, for hacendados to grant their workers’ citizenship.

That’s the best explanation I have for why Bush is in the midst of what may be a suicide mission on immigration policy—embarrassing for him and ruinous for his party.

fineman nails it with the "us vs. them" thinking, but fails completely to point out just who has been pouring gasoline on that fire virtually every day since 9/11...
As always, conservatives, who thrive on alienation, are spoiling for a fight. Now they have found it. Among the branch of conservatism fixed on “Us v Them” thinking, the enemy for decades was Communism. After the fall of The Wall, the “neocons” found a replacement Them in jihadist Islam. The old America-Firsters—what we used to call “isolationists,” who distrust foreign commitments—now have a homeland Them, in the form of 12-20 million illegal immigrants, most from Mexico.

i would hope george would feel free to embark on as many of these "suicide missions" as he cares to... the sooner he succeeds, the better off the country and the rest of the world will be...

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments