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Effects of Mexico’s Drug War Hit El Paso

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Alfredo Corchado, Dallas Morning News, January 12, 2009

Touted as one of the safest cities of its size in the nation, El Paso is awakening to its southern neighbor’s bloody nightmare.

City officials say that drug-related violence across the border in Ciudad Juárez is having a growing impact in El Paso. And the situation across Mexico is deteriorating so fast that retired five-star Gen. Barry McCaffrey warned in a new assessment of a refugee catastrophe that could devastate border cities.

“Mexico is on the edge of abyss,” he said in a Dec. 28 report. “It could become a narco-state in the coming decade,” and the result could be a “surge of millions of refugees crossing the U.S. border to escape the domestic misery of violence, failed economic policy, poverty, hunger, joblessness, and the mindless cruelty and injustice of a criminal state.”

The report helped ignite what has already been a sense of urgency among city leaders. Last week, the City Council unanimously passed a resolution that called for solidarity with Juárez. The resolution ignited local and national controversy after City Councilman Beto O’Rourke added a line calling for a once unthinkable strategy to neutralize Mexico’s powerful cartels: legalizing drugs.

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On Monday, President-elect Barack Obama and Mexican President Felipe Calderón will meet in Washington and are expected to discuss the growing violence in Mexico and its impact on border communities, including El Paso-Juárez.

Few border communities have been hit as hard. More than 1,600 of the total 5,700 drug-related killings nationwide in 2008 took place in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico’s fourth largest city with a population of 1.7 million. In the first days of the new year, about 30 people have been killed.

El Paso, with a population of 600,000, sells itself as the third-safest city of its size in the United States. But Howard Campbell, a border anthropologist at the University of Texas at El Paso, said El Paso and other U.S. cities provide the infrastructure for drug distribution—warehouses, money laundering centers, weapons and even hitmen, some of them American teenagers.

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The El Paso Police Department has said it knows of no kidnapping cases, and County Attorney José Rodríguez also said he knew of no cases.

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Although precise figures are unavailable, anecdotal accounts indicate that many violence-weary residents of Juárez are taking up permanent residency in El Paso and sending their children to its schools.

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Hotel occupancy rate, usually 87 percent, has risen in recent months to 95 percent, said Mayor John Cook.

“We have noticed that many Mexicans check into hotels for the weekend to rest from the constant violence,” he said.

EL Paso hasn’t felt the full brunt of he nationwide mortgage crisis yet, said real estate agent Juan Uribe, attributing the relatively healthy economy to the Fort Bliss military base and Mexican clients.

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Dozens of victims of violence—many of them U.S. citizens—were treated at El Paso’s County Thomason Hospital in 2008, costing taxpayers more than $1 million, city and county officials said.

At City Hall, O’Rourke is incredulous at the firestorm generated by the 12 words—“supporting an honest, open, national debate on ending the prohibition on narcotics”—added to a resolution that passed unanimously.

Mayor Cook later vetoed the resolution, saying that such wording could “hurt El Paso’s federal legislative agenda.”

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Original article

Email Alfredo Corchado at acorchado@dallasnews.com.

(Posted on January 12, 2009)

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Comments

1 — Question Diversity wrote at 6:03 PM on January 12:

In a related story, HLS Sec Chertoff said that the Feds are ready if Mexican drug violence spills north of the border.

“If?” And what border?

Really, “if” (rimshot) the dope wars spill north from Mexico into Aztlan, the Feds’ solution will be to disarm you.

2 — Anonymous wrote at 6:25 PM on January 12:

” Last week, the City Council unanimously passed a resolution that called for solidarity with Juárez”

How will this lame resolution help?

“On Monday, President-elect Barack Obama and Mexican President Felipe Calderón will meet in Washington and are expected to discuss the growing violence in Mexico and its impact on border communities, including El Paso-Juárez.”

Translation:

On Monday, President-elect Barack Obama and Mexican President Felipe Calderon will meet. President-elect Obama will promise a 100 billion foreign aid package to solve the problem. He will also promise to disband the Border Patrol and issue a Presidental order giving instant citizenship to anyone who makes it over the border.
Out going Sec of State Dr. Rice and incoming Sec of State Clinton made a conference call to Sr. Calderon and asked him to bring one of his checks with the account number on it so that the money can be directly deposited to his account.


3 — ice wrote at 7:59 PM on January 12:

If the US doesn’t legalize drugs as it did alcohol, the country will go the same way as it did during Prohibition, which is closer and closer to a gang controlled government.

Mexico surely will be taken over by the cartels, at least behind the scenes, but known to all. Most of their officials are in the pay of the drug gangs right now. About the only thing left to do is to move their influence right into the presidents circle of influence, and that will accomplish a political takeover for all intents and purposes. From there it will evolve into an overt narco state.

If that point is reached, the US will have to decide on unilateral action as it did in Iraq, but will the US be in its present geographical form after years of turmoil brought about by the depression?

If the US breaks up, with the Southwest going Hispanic, I think we will see the Southwest eventually ruled by drug lords, just like Mexico.

Legalizing drugs would put a halt to the advancement of cartel influence and take the profit out of drugs. It’s the only thing that will cause this cartel juggernaut to halt.

4 — Anonymous wrote at 11:08 PM on January 12:

This is just another reason not to use illegal drugs. Yet many people still use them. It would seem the very ones who always ‘care so much’, don’t really care at all.

5 — jim wrote at 1:32 AM on January 13:

if you live in a border area, you should have already stocked up on shotguns, AR-10’s, and lots of ammo. we all know how the our border patrol of 40% mexicans “protects” our border. Wait till the drug cartels themselves cross the border.

6 — Anonymous wrote at 2:42 AM on January 13:

Just more reason to shut the border, arrest the 12-20 million illegals, send them back home, and our country would be the great country she used to be, bot the multicultural distortion she is now.

7 — Anonymous wrote at 10:10 AM on January 13:

Crime and corruption are the cornerstones of Mexican society. All organized crime from drug trafficking to the trafficking in illegals is owned and controlled by the Mexican government. The military weaponry (fully automatic weapons, hand grenades, high explosives and RPGs) the drug cartels utilize are provided by the Mexican police and military and not gun shops in Texas…

8 — Californian wrote at 1:55 PM on January 13:

For years Americans demanded a war on drugs. And now they have one. The US conducted law enforcement and military operations in Latin American countries against drugs since at least the 1980s. This has included using herbicides in the Andes, something that has caused no small rancor against the US. Plus we have seen US agents performing extrajudicial renditions against drug criminals abroad. Even the RAND Corporation has warned in the past that drug interdiction efforts are not accomplishing anything positive. Now we are seeing some of the blowback. Given the environment of mass illegal immigration, the drug cartels have a massive “sea” in which to “swim”.

It’s simply one more example of how U.S. frontiers have ceased to exist.

9 — Unemployed WASP wrote at 3:17 PM on January 13:

True anonymous at 10:10AM. The “Golden” state should be renamed the brown state. The Los Angeles mayor is accused of loafing and the Orange County sherrif is on trial for bribery. Mexican values are becoming American values rather than the other way around. The neocons and the dems are both to blame.

10 — Sardonicus wrote at 3:25 PM on January 13:

Certain anti-gun groups would love to use the violence of the Mexican drug dealers as an excuse to ban semi-automatic weapons in America. I agree with Anonymous that most of the weapons come from the Mexican police or army—the rest are bought from Columbia drug runners.

11 — Jim Sachsen wrote at 3:46 PM on January 13:

Repealing alcohol prohibition was the wisest political decision out grandparents ever made. Eventually we will wise up and end our war on dried vegetable products. Whether we’ll have any freedom left at that point is another question entirely.

12 — Jack wrote at 5:07 PM on January 13:

Regrettably this is a result of Americans insatiable appetite for drugs

13 — Bobby wrote at 11:31 PM on January 13:

Regrettably this is a result of Americans insatiable appetite for drugs.— Jack

Yes sir. I agree completely. When one reads about the number of Americans that take “casual drugs”, it makes you realize that the fight for a decent, intelligent and lawabiding America is probably over. I haven’t even mentioned all of the gullible senior Americans on all kinds of unneccessary drugs that affect the brain. How can any nation survive such a citizenry?

14 — Not a Doper wrote at 12:08 AM on January 14:

How about a free market solution: If the government has decided that it doesn’t want us peons to have drugs, why doesn’t it buy them all and burn them?

What would be the pros and cons of this idea?

15 — Schoolteacher wrote at 2:46 PM on January 14:

The value of drug laws is that they give the cops a pretext to jail a lot of worthless people. I know, there are tragic cases of good kids gone bad because of drugs, but most dopers were not destined to become honest, self-supporting citizens anyway. And by keeping dope illegal, we do limit its availability to those good kids that we want to grow up and have healthy White families. I ask those who support legalization, do you want the same sort of degenerates as those who run the music and movie industries to be in a position to sell drugs to Americans?

16 — mrk wrote at 3:13 PM on January 28:

“And by keeping dope illegal, we do limit its availability to those good kids that we want to grow up and have healthy White families”

Drugs are so easy to get in schools. Not just pot but anything. When you can control a drug by taxing and regulations, then it is out of the school yards. Kept behind the counter where it is hard to obtain. When I was in school it was so easy to get a bag of pot, acid, mushrooms, coke or hash anything but alchol was pretty easy for me to get my hands on. I really don’t thing that has changed.

” I ask those who support legalization, do you want the same sort of degenerates as those who run the music and movie industries to be in a position to sell drugs to Americans?”
No not really they seem better than the people running these cash crops now!
My only problem with legalization is the pharmacutical companies will copyright the cannabis strains now availbe to us and ruin possibilties of new genetics.


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