by wisconsin_cur » Mon 06 Oct 2008, 04:23:56
NYTimes: The right thing to wear on the wrong end of a gun
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')ut tucked on a leafy side street in the Polanco neighborhood is a shop unlike the others, one whose bustling business says much about the dire state of security in this country. At Miguel Caballero, named after its Colombian owner, all the garments are bulletproof.
There are bulletproof leather jackets and bulletproof polo shirts. Armored guayabera shirts hang next to protective windbreakers, parkas and even white ruffled tuxedo shirts. Every member of the sales staff has had to take a turn being shot while wearing one of the products, which range from a few hundred dollars to as much as $7,000, so they can attest to the efficacy of the secret fabric.
“If feels like a punch,” a salesman said of the shot to the stomach he received.
Just who is willing to fork over thousands of dollars for these chic shields? Customers include Presidents Hugo Chavez of Venezuela and Alvaro Uribe of Colombia, not to mention assorted royalty, movie stars and other V.I.P.’s.
As Mexico grapples with an increase in drug-related violence, sales are steadily on the rise, the company said, though it declined to provide precise figures.
http://www.thenewfederalistpapers.com
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by wisconsin_cur » Mon 20 Oct 2008, 04:51:04
Drug Killings impact youth
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')exico’s explosion of drug-related violence has caught the attention of the country’s children. Experts say the atrocities that young people are hearing about, and all too frequently witnessing, are hardening them, traumatizing them, filling their heads with images that are hard to shake.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'E')xchanging gruesome stories is nothing new for schoolchildren, who have a way of overstating their brushes with danger. But the 12 tortured, tongueless bodies that were the talk of the playground recently were no exaggeration. In the early hours of Sept. 29, the bodies of 11 men and one woman, bound and partly dressed, were found in an abandoned lot opposite the school.
The headmaster, Miguel Angel Gonzalez Tovar, canceled classes soon after the bodies were discovered, but that did not stop some students from getting a glimpse of them and many others from hearing about them.
“There’s no doubt these images affect the children,” said Mr. Gonzalez, who recently met with government psychologists to plan counseling sessions with the students. “Some of them are very quiet now. Some are asking us, ‘Why did they die?’ ”
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')nd the bodies dumped outside the school are only one of several macabre displays, forcing teachers to compete with the killers for the attention of Mexico’s youth.
Indeed, it is hard to find a student here who does not know some of the gruesome details of recent killings, like the several vats of acid that were found outside a seafood restaurant, containing what the authorities said they believed were human remains. Or the two bodies wrapped in what resembled cellophane that were found near a road sign that said, “Thank you for visiting Tijuana.”
Mr. Gonzalez’s biggest fear is that the awful scenes playing out across much of Mexico are so common that they will eventually lose their shock value among the young, making killing an expected, even acceptable, part of life.
“They may grow up with this sort of thing being normal,” he said.
And when something is "normal" it is then natural to partake in such activities or believe that this is the way that world works.
Sleep well those along the southern border.
by wisconsin_cur » Wed 05 Nov 2008, 03:26:46
Sometimes a plane crash is just a plane crash but this smells funny.
Mexican Interior Minister Killed in Plane Crash
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')EXICO CITY — Mexico’s interior minister and seven others onboard a government jet died Tuesday night when it crashed into a tony business district here during rush hour, igniting cars and sending dozens of people to local hospitals.
The minister, Juan Camilo Mourino, 37, had been one of President Felipe Calderon’s closest advisers and a rising star in the National Action Party. He headed the government’s security apparatus and was the president’s point man in the increasingly bloody drug war.
Mr. Calderon, in an emotional news conference, said Mr. Mourino’s children ought to know that he had worked “until his last moment to leave them with a better country.”
The Lear jet, carrying three crew members, Mr. Mourino and four of his aides, came down on busy Reforma Avenue about 6:45 p.m., scattering wreckage over a vast area.
“It fell on top of all the traffic, which you know is completely stopped,” said Arturo Sanchez Rios, a food vendor. “I saw 10 to 15 cars explode in a manner of seconds.”
http://www.thenewfederalistpapers.com
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by TheDude » Wed 05 Nov 2008, 18:48:49
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('natts', 'T')oo bad, the crash doesn't seem so accidental.
Nothing seems so accidental to peakoilers.
You need to read the
M3 Report and learn what is actually going on in Mexico before casually dismissing this as an accident.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'E')l Universal (Mexico City) 11/4/08
- According to records kept by El Universal since 2005, the 24 hours of Monday (yesterday) were the most violent for the year in the country, with 58 murders linked to organized crime. This figure surpasses the record set on Sept 12 when 41 murders occurred within a 24-hour period. Among those murdered yesterday were seven police commanders and officers. One police officer was wounded and the severed head of a private security guard was left in a gasoline station restroom.
by bratticus » Wed 12 Nov 2008, 00:17:11
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')u]
Juan Camilo Mourino benefited from PemexMexico City-The documents last Sunday Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador delivered to the coordinators of the parliamentary Progressive Broad Front (FAP)-PRD, Convergencia and PT-containing a series of agreements to provide transportation service that Pemex Refining held with the Ivancar Specialized Transportation Company, which appears today the signing of Interior Minister Juan Camilo Mourino.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')u]
Juan Camilo Mourino, Secretario de Gobernacion, killedPolitically, resistance to the Administration’s proposed PEMEX reforms -- pushed by Mourino -- will mean the Calderon Administration will be in even more difficulty and resistance from the opposition parties to other domestic programs is likely to increase
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')u]
Juan Camilo Mourino (RIP) and Energy Reform in Mexico Mr. Mourino's energy legacy is mixed: The energy reforms of 2008 are likely to benefit those service companies that, already, have lucrative contracts with Pemex. The reform of Article 33 of the Federal Administration Law provides that the Energy Ministry will submit to the Foreign Ministry (SRE) proposals for agreements and treaties for cross-border oilfields.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')u]
The Battle for Pemex: a Mexican Oil Worker Explains Energy ReformPosted by Kristin Bricker - November 4, 2008 at 6:25 pm:
Mexican Congress approves light reforms for the state oil company; legislators vow to continue the campaign to privatize Pemex... Narco News: How do you respond to politicians’ statements in the media that Mexico is running out of petroleum, so Pemex needs to be privatized before this happens?
Gomezcana Morales: Peak oil is a reality. Peak oil is petroleum’s downfall. This year we’ve hit peak oil at a global level--we’ve reached the zenith, and now comes the drop in petroleum reserves. We’re seeing this in Mexico. Mexico will stop producing petroleum. We’re not finding new oilfields. We’re already experiencing a strong decrease in petroleum reserves globally.
The problem is that there aren’t alternative projects. The few projects that exist that are searching for alternative energy sources are redundant. Foreigners are carrying out these projects. It’s written into Plan Puebla Panama that in the case of Mexico's wind power, instead of the [state-owned] electric company[4] having the responsibility to invest in wind power projects, they grant the right to install windmills in this zone to foreign private companies like Spain’s Repsol. It’s our wind, even though that sounds a little abstract. The profits won’t be for Mexico. The profits are for the foreign companies. Repsol doesn’t even have the infrastructure to carry out these types of projects. Repsol subcontracts the work to other foreign companies, just like Halliburton does. And they keep granting these projects to Repsol and Halliburton because the neoliberal governments--like Mexico’s--allow it.
Something else very important is going on in Mexico. No other country would permit the conflict of interests that exists in the Mexican Ministry of the Interior (Segob in its Spanish initials). Felipe Calderon’s little pet
Juan Camilo Mourino [the current Secretary of the Interior] has a conflict of interest in our country’s energy sector.[5] He’s Spanish. So he’s promoting Spanish investment in our country. They have vested interests here. To sum it up, there are two completely different projects here: the Global South’s project and the North’s project. Those of us from below, and the powerful. Those of us who defend all of our resources--one of them being petroleum--from projects like Plan Puebla Panama, and those who want what’s ours. ...
[4] Electricity is also nationalized in Mexico under the government’s Federal Electricity Commission (CFE in its Spanish initials).
[5] In 2002 and 20003, while working as an aid to then-Secretary of Energy Felipe Calderon, Mourino signed at least three energy contracts as an official representative of his father’s Mexican transportation company Transportes Especializados Ivancar. The contracts were for services provided to Pemex. Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who presented the contracts to the media, said, “He obtained million-peso contracts by directly awarding them in order to benefit his family business.”
by TheDude » Sat 15 Nov 2008, 04:17:04
Mexico Hedges All Oil Exports in '09 at $70
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')exico said it has hedged all of its oil exports for next year against a price of oil below $70 a barrel, in a sign of how some resource-rich nations are trying to protect themselves against slumping commodity prices amid a global economic slowdown.
Mexico's Finance Ministry said Thursday that it bought $1.5 billion of put options that guarantee Mexico will get at least $70 a barrel for some 330 million barrels.
If the price is above $70, then Mexico can choose not to exercise the option and sell for the market price.
Mexico has been hedging against the price of oil for years, but normally the country covers only a fraction of total exports. But the steep fall in the price of oil from last year's highs alarmed Mexican officials. The price corresponds to Mexico's expectations of oil income for next year's budget.
"We started this back in July, doing it very slowly to avoid affecting the market," said Rodrigo Brand, a Finance Ministry spokesman.
With oil at Wednesday's closing price, Mexico would have made $9.55 billion on the hedges, the Finance Ministry said.
Campeche Hold 'Em!
Cogito, ergo non satis bibivi
And let me tell you something: I dig your work.
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by wisconsin_cur » Sat 15 Nov 2008, 04:50:14
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('wisconsin_cur', 'S')ometimes a plane crash is just a plane crash but this smells funny.
Mexican Interior Minister Killed in Plane CrashAnd sometimes something smells funny and it turns out to be amazingly... pedestrian.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')EXICO CITY — The pilot of a small government jet that crashed last week, killing Mexico’s interior minister, flew too close to a jumbo jet that it was following and lost control of the plane in the turbulence created by the larger plane, the authorities said Friday.
NYTimes
http://www.thenewfederalistpapers.com
by wisconsin_cur » Mon 22 Dec 2008, 09:56:40
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')exican police discovered the heads of nine men in plastic bags yesterday, seven of them belonging to soldiers who had taken part in a military crackdown on the drug cartels.
Their tortured bodies were found a few hours later at the side of a motorway an hour north of Acapulco in the southern state of Guerrero.
More than 5,300 people have been murdered across Mexico this year in a wave of drug-related attacks, despite a government clampdown on cartels involving the deployment of 36,000 troops across the country.
Residents of the town of Chilpancingo found the heads before dawn, local police said in a statement.
Link
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