Mexico’s crimes against the U.S.

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Mexico, much like China, is not a reliable or worthy trading partner. The trading partners we need to work with are Western democracies like Europe and Canada. Nations that actually have modern economies, that do not exploit their labor or environment and who we have a common cause with.

Mexico has allowed the Biden invasion to occur by not preventing transit through their country without documentation knowing that their destination would be the US because no one wants to live in a crime ridden shit hole like Mexico.

Mexico’s crimes against the U.S.

Drugs, cartels, illegal migration and sewage keep flowing north

Mexico is a lousy neighbor. It has been a flood that relentlessly carries bad things into America.

From the Mexico side, the southern border has been an open door for criminals, drugs and even untreated sewage.

The four-year Biden border put the betrayal in plain sight. Did the Mexican government stop the flow of 15 million illegal immigrants marching through its land when it had multiple chances to block and reverse the human tide? Not that I saw.

All that Americans witnessed were masses of unknowns breaking in or being processed because President Joe Biden and the Democrats made a political decision to recruit more foreign voters.

For large fees, Mexican drug cartels smuggled in the potential voters. The most vicious bandits on Earth took on the job of deciding who gained access to American neighborhoods. The cartels let in criminals, gang members, murderers, deadly drivers, pedophiles, thieves, terrorists and hundreds of thousands of lost children.

Gangs like Tren de Aragua from Venezuela and South American Theft Group from Chile set up shop in multiple states to steal and murder. To stop this crime committed by Mr. Biden on the American people, Mexico needed to confront the cartels. Mexico did not, making it a co-conspirator with both the cartels and the Democrats.

Every day, Americans get to read the horrible crimes the invaders are committing. By and large, the stories don’t show up in the liberal media. But two sources keep America informed. The Trump Department of Homeland Security and objective local news stories. Their info has been curated by conservative journalists and spread across social media.


 
Corruption and criminal enterprise run Mexico. The bolded is one of the worst things in my opinion.

With a press conference and video, the Trump Justice Department cast a spotlight for all the world to see on the long-term, deadly alliance between two U.S. enemies: China and the cartels. China’s aim is to kill Americans. Sinaloa also buys Chinese pharmaceutical chemicals to make fentanyl, the deadliest of all, killing over 100,000 here each year.

What does Mexico do to confront China? Not much.

“The cartels are able to operate vast drug production and smuggling operations in Mexico thanks to the complicity of corrupt Mexican officials,” the Heritage Foundation reported in 2024. “The challenge of narco-corruption in Mexico has grown exponentially over the past several years, making it so that the Mexican government is, in practice, no longer a dependable good-faith partner to the United States on fentanyl trafficking.”

It added: “Chinese precursor chemicals reach Mexico often at a port or other shipping facility. Cartels bribe corrupt officials at Mexican ports to ensure their ability to access and remove the chemicals.”

In January, as Mr. Trump considered direct military action, he said the major problem is the free ride the cartels are being given: by the Mexican administration.

“The cartels are running Mexico,” he told Fox News. Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum “is not running Mexico. … She’s very frightened of the cartels.”

Last month, the Justice Department indicted 10 former and current Mexican government officials, accusing them of conspiring with the Sinaloa cartel. The 10 include a sitting member of the Mexican Senate.

The same month Mr. Trump was bemoaning the Mexican president, investigative journalist Peter Schweizer came out with his new book, “The Invisible Coup.” He alleges that adversaries use mass migration to disrupt America, and he names Mexico as their ally.

He says Mexico operates a network of 53 U.S. consulates who organize protests against ICE raids designed to catch illegal immigrant criminals. The consulates, he says, distribute special Spanish-language textbooks to ensure that kids see themselves as Mexicans first, not Americans.
 

NAFTA’s Effect on Immigration to the United States​


Despite ebbing and flowing over time, Mexican immigration to the United States is often seen as an issue isolated from the forces and policies that propel it. Recently, we have largely failed to examine why millions of Mexicans immigrated north in the 1990s and 2000s, and what role the United States had in contributing to this phenomenon. While the election of Donald Trump has led to recent reflection on NAFTA’s (North American Free Trade Agreement) effects on the U.S. economy, less energy has been devoted to looking at how this free trade agreement propelled the massive wave of Mexican migration to the United States, and how the type of free trade and financial liberalization that the United States has preached, spread, and imposed around the world contributes to the movement of people.

While NAFTA did help Mexico’s non-oil exports and led to an increase in manufacturing along the US-Mexico border, it was devastating to rural farmers, particularly those that grew corn. Playing a central role in Mexican agriculture, corn accounts for over two thirds of agricultural production in the country, with millions employed in its cultivation.With the signing of NAFTA, Mexican corn suddenly was forced to compete with US-grown corn, which receives massive subsidies form the American government that remained in place despite all the proclamations of free trade. Meanwhile, Mexican subsidies to farmers and the tortilla industry disappeared faster and more completely than required by NAFTA. As a result, the price of tortillas rose by 279% in the first decade of NAFTA, while the price at which Mexican farmers could sell their corn fell by 66%. One million Mexicans lost their job in the first year of NAFTA’s implementation, and the Mexican rural poverty rate of 35% from 1992-1994 rose to 55% in 1996-1998. By 2010, 20 percent of Mexicans lived in extreme poverty, mostly in rural areas. With their agricultural livelihoods no longer viable, many Mexicans left their farms for the United States, leaving villages depopulated. The number of Mexican migrants in the United States doubled from 1990 to 2000.

 
Corruption and criminal enterprise run Mexico. The bolded is one of the worst things in my opinion.

With a press conference and video, the Trump Justice Department cast a spotlight for all the world to see on the long-term, deadly alliance between two U.S. enemies: China and the cartels. China’s aim is to kill Americans. Sinaloa also buys Chinese pharmaceutical chemicals to make fentanyl, the deadliest of all, killing over 100,000 here each year.

What does Mexico do to confront China? Not much.

“The cartels are able to operate vast drug production and smuggling operations in Mexico thanks to the complicity of corrupt Mexican officials,” the Heritage Foundation reported in 2024. “The challenge of narco-corruption in Mexico has grown exponentially over the past several years, making it so that the Mexican government is, in practice, no longer a dependable good-faith partner to the United States on fentanyl trafficking.”

It added: “Chinese precursor chemicals reach Mexico often at a port or other shipping facility. Cartels bribe corrupt officials at Mexican ports to ensure their ability to access and remove the chemicals.”

In January, as Mr. Trump considered direct military action, he said the major problem is the free ride the cartels are being given: by the Mexican administration.

“The cartels are running Mexico,” he told Fox News. Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum “is not running Mexico. … She’s very frightened of the cartels.”

Last month, the Justice Department indicted 10 former and current Mexican government officials, accusing them of conspiring with the Sinaloa cartel. The 10 include a sitting member of the Mexican Senate.

The same month Mr. Trump was bemoaning the Mexican president, investigative journalist Peter Schweizer came out with his new book, “The Invisible Coup.” He alleges that adversaries use mass migration to disrupt America, and he names Mexico as their ally.

He says Mexico operates a network of 53 U.S. consulates who organize protests against ICE raids designed to catch illegal immigrant criminals. The consulates, he says, distribute special Spanish-language textbooks to ensure that kids see themselves as Mexicans first, not Americans.
Open borders was Biden's fault, not Mexico's. Trump closing the border is proof of that.

Mexico's internal problems are the result of centuries of Spanish rule followed by Leftist, Socialist rule under PRI.
 

NAFTA’s Effect on Immigration to the United States​


Despite ebbing and flowing over time, Mexican immigration to the United States is often seen as an issue isolated from the forces and policies that propel it. Recently, we have largely failed to examine why millions of Mexicans immigrated north in the 1990s and 2000s, and what role the United States had in contributing to this phenomenon. While the election of Donald Trump has led to recent reflection on NAFTA’s (North American Free Trade Agreement) effects on the U.S. economy, less energy has been devoted to looking at how this free trade agreement propelled the massive wave of Mexican migration to the United States, and how the type of free trade and financial liberalization that the United States has preached, spread, and imposed around the world contributes to the movement of people.

While NAFTA did help Mexico’s non-oil exports and led to an increase in manufacturing along the US-Mexico border, it was devastating to rural farmers, particularly those that grew corn. Playing a central role in Mexican agriculture, corn accounts for over two thirds of agricultural production in the country, with millions employed in its cultivation.With the signing of NAFTA, Mexican corn suddenly was forced to compete with US-grown corn, which receives massive subsidies form the American government that remained in place despite all the proclamations of free trade. Meanwhile, Mexican subsidies to farmers and the tortilla industry disappeared faster and more completely than required by NAFTA. As a result, the price of tortillas rose by 279% in the first decade of NAFTA, while the price at which Mexican farmers could sell their corn fell by 66%. One million Mexicans lost their job in the first year of NAFTA’s implementation, and the Mexican rural poverty rate of 35% from 1992-1994 rose to 55% in 1996-1998. By 2010, 20 percent of Mexicans lived in extreme poverty, mostly in rural areas. With their agricultural livelihoods no longer viable, many Mexicans left their farms for the United States, leaving villages depopulated. The number of Mexican migrants in the United States doubled from 1990 to 2000.

Leftists just love their fake news, serial lying and deflecting. ;)
 
Open borders was Biden's fault, not Mexico's. Trump closing the border is proof of that.

I guess you missed the point. Mexico had to let them cross into their country and travel thousands of miles without documentation. They were illegals before they even reached out border. ;)

Mexico's internal problems are the result of centuries of Spanish rule followed by Leftist, Socialist rule under PRI.

Preaching to the choir Gardner. :dunno:
 
I guess you missed the point. Mexico had to let them cross into their country and travel thousands of miles without documentation. They were illegals before they even reached out border. ;)

Mexico is almost totally incapable of stopping the cartels from human trafficking. There are parts of Mexico that are all but under control of cartels or revolutionary groups. I'm not blaming the government for what they clearly cannot control.
 
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