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Sunday, October 1, 2017

Mayor of San Juan to Trump: "Frankly my dear, I don't give a damn." - September Stats for Homicidios Dolosos Are Coming In Slowly: At 7:00am Frontera Reports 201 Executions in Tijuana During the Month of September, 2017

 - Let's do Trump first.  I mentioned to a commenter a few days back that Puerto Rico's conditions looked worse off than Mexico's affected earthquake areas. And it didn't only look as though conditions were worse in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria as far as receiving help, they were and still are worse despite the sugar coated reports we are receiving from the White House.

From this morning's The Guardian: 10/01/17


Puerto Rico: Trump Spat with San Juan Mayor Escalates As All Sides Double Down
By, Amanda Holpuch & Ed Pikington

At the Intercept many reports on Puerto Rico, as well as Democracy Now!

More over on Counterpunch , Common Dreams, Truth Out. Truthdig, Bill Moyers et al.  

From Counterpunch:

Memento Mori: A Requiem For Puerto Rico
by, Miguel A. Cruz-Diaz


Puerto Rico and Trump's rush to arrest hundreds of immigrants in Sanctuary Cities (believed to be in response to pending and proposed lawsuits against his Wall prototypes now under construction in San Diego and a reluctance by some politicos to use the DACA kids as a bargaining chip for him to receive funding for the Wall), his outrageous tax proposal which would only benefit the most wealthy, his call to have NFL players fired for taking the knee again demonstrate his insanity - but this one takes the cake; his response to Rex Tillerson's statements of negotiation with North Korea:


From The Guardian: 10/01/17

Trump Says Rex Tillerson 'Wasting His Time' With North Korea Negotiations 
by, Martin Pengelly & Ed Pikington


The Trump Tweets:



I probably missed a few, you can fill in the blanks.

**********

The September 2017 Executions In Tijuana

 - On 09/30 at 8:00am, Frontera gave us the latest statistics from the PGJE of homicidios dolosos/executions in Tijuana.  At that point, according the the authorities, the number stood at 198 in Tijuana with the YTD figure at 1,263.

Lo Acribillan Cuando Salia a Su Trabajo
por,  Angel F. Gonzalez


 - This morning Frontera reported at 7:00am that September of 2017 closed with 201 executions
in Tijuana YTD just in Tijuana then would be 1,265.

Cerro Septiembre con 201 Asesinatos
por, Luis Gerardo Andrade

Watch for updates on these figures in the coming weeks.

**********

 - So Here's The Fix:


From The Intercept - 09/26/2017: Link within title

Brazil’s Latest Outbreak of Drug Gang Violence Highlights the Real Culprit: the War on Drugs

09/26/2017



"On July 1, 2001, Portugal enacted a law to decriminalize all drugs. Under that law, nobody who is found possessing or using narcotics is arrested in Portugal, nor are they turned into a criminal. Indeed, neither drug use nor possession is considered a crime at all. Instead, those found doing it are sent to speak with a panel of drug counsellors and therapists, where they are offered treatment options.

Seven years after the law was enacted, in 2008, we traveled to Lisbon to study the effects of that law for one of the first comprehensive reports on this policy, the findings of which were published in a report for the Cato Institute. The results were clear and stunning: This radical change in drug laws was a fundamental and undeniable success.

While Portugal throughout the 1990s was (like most Western countries) drowning in drug overdoses along with drug-related violence and diseases, the country rose to the top of the charts in virtually all categories after it stopped prosecuting drug users and treating them like criminals. This stood in stark contrast to countries that continued to follow a harsh criminalization approach: the more they arrested addicts and waged a “war on drugs,” the more their drug problems worsened.

With all the money that had been wasted in Portugal to prosecute and imprison drug users now freed up for treatment programs, and the government viewed with trust rather than fear, previously hopeless addicts transformed into success stories of stability and health, and the government’s anti-drug messages were heeded. The predicted rise in drug usage rates never happened; in some key demographic categories, usage actually declined. As the 2009 study concluded: “The data show that, judged by virtually every metric, the Portuguese decriminalization framework has been a resounding success.”
“The data show that, judged by virtually every metric, the Portuguese decriminalization framework has been a resounding success.”
Over the weekend, New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof, writing from Lisbon, re-visited this data, now even more ample and conclusive than it was back in 2009. His conclusions were even more stark than the Cato report of eight years ago: namely, Portugal has definitively won the argument on how ineffective, irrational, and counterproductive drug prohibition is. 

The basis for this conclusion: Portugal’s clear success with decriminalization, compared to the tragic failures of countries, such as the U.S. (and Brazil), which continue to treat addiction as a criminal and moral problem rather than a health problem. Kristof writes:
After more than 15 years, it’s clear which approach worked better. The United States drug policy failed spectacularly, with about as many Americans dying last year of overdoses — around 64,000 — as were killed in the Vietnam, Afghanistan and Iraq Wars combined.
In contrast, Portugal may be winning the war on drugs — by ending it. Today, the Health Ministry estimates that only about 25,000 Portuguese use heroin, down from 100,000 when the policy began.
The number of Portuguese dying from overdoses plunged more than 85 percent before rising a bit in the aftermath of the European economic crisis of recent years. Even so, Portugal’s drug mortality rate is the lowest in Western Europe — one-tenth the rate of Britain or Denmark — and about one-fiftieth the latest number for the U.S.

Kristof succinctly identified one key reason for this success: “It’s incomparably cheaper to treat people than to jail them.” But there are other vital reasons, including the key fact that when it comes to efforts to persuade addicts to obtain counseling, “decriminalization makes all this easier, because people no longer fear arrest.”

 Perhaps the most compelling evidence highlighting Portugal’s success is not the empirical data but the political reality: Whereas the law was quite controversial when first enacted 16 years ago, there are now no significant political factions agitating for its repeal or for a return to drug prohibition.
This evidence is of vital importance to the citizens of any country that continues to treat drug users and addicts as criminals. It is simply unconscionable to break up families, force children to remain apart from imprisoned parents, and turn drug addicts into unemployable felons, particularly if the data demonstrates that those policies achieve the opposite results as their claimed intent.


But moral questions aside, the drug-related violence now sweeping Brazil, particularly the horrific war that is engulfing the Rio de Janeiro favela of Rocinha — just a few years after it was declared “pacified” — makes these questions of particular urgency for Brazilians and citizens of any country. Brazil has witnessed repeated outbreaks of horrific violence in the favelas of its largest cities, many of which have long been ruled not by the government but by well-armed drug gangs. But this past week’s war — and that’s what it is — in Rocinha, located in the middle of Rio de Janeiro’s fashionable Zona Sul, has been particularly shocking.


 Competing drug gangs have “invaded” the favela
 and are in open warfare for control of the drug trade,
 in the process forcing schools to close,
 residents to cower in their homes,
 and stores to remain shuttered.
As Misha Glenny reported on Monday in The Intercept,
 “The immediate cause of violence is the
 ongoing struggle between and now within factions,”
 but the violence portends the high 
 likelihood of a wider war for control of the drug trade. 


In the face of drug-related violence, there is a temptation to embrace the seemingly simplest solution: an even-greater war on drugs, more drug dealers and addicts in prison, more police, more prohibition.
Those who peddle this approach want people to believe a simple-minded string of reasoning: the cause of drug-related problems, such as violence from drug gangs, is drugs. Therefore, we must eliminate drugs. Therefore, the more problems we have from drugs, the more aggressively we rid society of drugs and those who sell and use them.


But this mentality is based on an obvious, tragic fallacy: namely, that the war on drugs, and drug criminalization, will eliminate drugs or at least reduce its availability. Decades of failure prove this will not happen; rather, the opposite will occur. Like the U.S., Brazil has imprisoned hundreds of thousands of citizens for drug-related crimes — mostly poor and nonwhite — and the problem has only worsened. Any person with minimal rationality would be forced to admit this string of logic is false.


Supporting a failed policy by hoping that, one day, it will magically succeed, is the definition of irrationality. In the case of drug laws — which spawn misery and suffering — it is not only irrational but cruel. 


A 2011 report from the Global Commission on Drug Policy — featuring multiple world leaders including former United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan and former Brazilian President Fernando Henrique Cardoso — examined all relevant evidence and put it simply: “The global war on drugs has failed, with devastating consequences for individuals and societies around the world.”
The primary fact in this conclusion is vitally important. The key cause of all drug-related pathologies — particularly gang violence of the type now suffocating Rocinha — is not drugs themselves, but rather the policy of criminalizing drugs and the war waged in its name.



The nature of drugs — their small size, the ease of smuggling, the natural demand humans have for them — means they can never be eliminated or meaningfully reduced by force. Only changes in human behavior, which can happen with sustained and professional treatment, can foster those improvements. The only effect of drug criminalization, beyond the massive human and financial waste of imprisoning addicts, is to empower and enrich drug gangs by ensuring that the profits from selling an illegal product remain irresistibly high.


For that reason, the most devoted opponents of drug legalization or decriminalization are drug gangs themselves. Nothing would erase the power of drug gangs — such as the ones violently battling for control of Rocinha — more quickly or severely than the elimination of drug prohibition. As adept businesspeople, drug traffickers know that very well.

'THE MOST DEVOTED OPPONENTS OF DRUG LEGALIZATION OR DECRIMINALIZATION ARE DRUG GANGS THEMSELVES"

In 2011, the journalist Johann Hari, author of one of the most influential books on drug addiction, wrote an article in The Huffington Post titled: “The Only Thing Drug Gangs and Cartels Fear Is Legalization.” As he put it:
When you criminalize a drug for which there is a large market, it doesn’t disappear. The trade is simply transferred from off-licenses, pharmacists and doctors to armed criminal gangs. In order to protect their patch and their supply routes, these gangs tool up — and kill anyone who gets in their way. You can see this any day on the streets of a poor part of London or Los Angeles, where teenage gangs stab or shoot each other for control of the 3000 percent profit margins on offer.
We have a perfect historical analogy that proves this point: alcohol prohibition in the U.S. in the 1920s. When alcohol was made illegal, it did not disappear. Control of its sale and distribution simply shifted: from the corner grocery story to violent drug gangs of the type that Al Capone became famous for ruling.


In other words, making alcohol illegal did not stop people from consuming it. What it did do, though, was empower vicious gangs of organized crime for whom the massive profits of selling illegal alcohol made them willing to do anything, or kill anyone, to protect it.


What finally eliminated those violent prohibition gangs was not the police or the imprisonment of illegal dealers or alcoholics: During prohibition, when the gangs weren’t bribing the police, they were killing them. What eliminated those gangs was the re-legalization of alcohol: by regulating the sale of alcohol, the end of prohibition made the gangs irrelevant, and they thus disappeared. 


Violent drug gangs do not fear the war on drugs; to the contrary, as Hari notes, they crave it. It is the criminalization of drugs that makes their trade so profitable. Hari quotes a long-time drug enforcement official in the U.S. as relating: “On one undercover tape-recorded conversation, a top cartel chief, Jorge Roman, expressed his gratitude for the drug war, calling it ‘a sham put on the American tax-payer’ that was ‘actually good for business.’”


In 2015, Danielle Allen, a political theorist at Harvard University, wrote an op-ed in the Washington Post titled “How the war on drugs creates violence.” In it, she explained that one key reason to “decriminalize drugs flows from how the war on drugs drives violent crime, which in turn pushes up incarceration and generates other negative social outcomes.” As she explained: “You just can’t move $100 billion worth of illegal product without a lot of assault and homicide. This should not be a hard point to see or make.”


Why is Rocinha filled with guns and ruled by drug gangs that are capable of such violence? Why can an influential Brazilian politician, linked to some of the most powerful figures in the country, employ a pilot who was caught transporting millions of dollars in cocaine in a helicopter owned by the politician, with no consequences for anyone? 


The answer is clear: because laws that outlaw drugs ensure that the drug trade is extremely profitable, which in turn ensures that gangs of organized criminals will arm themselves, and will kill, in order to control it. Situated in the middle of Zona Sul with easy exits, Rocinha will inevitably be a drug haven for rich tourists, middle-class professionals, and impoverished addicts. The vast sums of profits created by the war on drugs ensure that police forces will not only be out-armed but also so corrupted that their efforts will inevitably fail.


It is now undeniably clear that it is the war on drugs itself which is what causes — not stops — drug-related violence.


If you’re horrified by the violence in Rocinha or places around the world like it, the last thing you should do is support more policies that fuel the violence: namely, criminalization and the war on drugs. To do so is like protesting lung cancer by encouraging people to smoke. The data is now sufficient to state confidently: those who support ongoing drug criminalization are the ones abetting this drug violence and the related problems of addiction and overdose.


It may be slightly paradoxical at first glance, but the data leaves no doubt: The only way to avoid Rocinha-style violence is through full drug decriminalization. We no longer need to speculate about this. Thanks to Portugal, the results are in, and they could not be clearer."


David Miranda is the husband of Intercept co-founder Glenn Greenwald and a city councilmember for Rio de Janeiro (PSOL).

**********

Meanwhile an update on Paris:  We heard back from Vet Playas who wanted another consultation re her surgery and indicated that a plate in her leg could be iffy with complications, particularly at this late date and development. We do like Dr. Fimbres, he has been completely honest with us.  So we are going back up to the States to VCA in Kearny Mesa for a consultation with Dr. Jackson hopefully this week. Won't know more until we do that, but the time is pressing.  Next, cleaning out her huge crate I took the knee(s) and pulled my back out of whack.  I'm moving a little better but Mike has had to do all the chores.

P.S. If you can afford it, this Saturday the 7th at the McCullum Theatre in Palm Desert, Bill Murray and Jan Vogler are presenting their "New Worlds" - wish we could go.

**********

Christ, I almost forgot Dotard's UN Speech:





Mayor of San Juan to Trump: "Frankly my dear, I don't give a damn." - September Stats for Homicidios Dolosos Are Coming In Slowly: At 7:00am Frontera Reports 201 Executions in Tijuana During the Month of September, 2017

 - Let's do Trump first.  I mentioned to a commenter a few days back that Puerto Rico's conditions looked worse off than Mexico's affected earthquake areas. And it didn't only look as though conditions were worse in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria as far as receiving help, they were and still are worse despite the sugar coated reports we are receiving from the White House.

From this morning's The Guardian: 10/01/17


Puerto Rico: Trump Spat with San Juan Mayor Escalates As All Sides Double Down
By, Amanda Holpuch & Ed Pikington

At the Intercept many reports on Puerto Rico, as well as Democracy Now!

More over on Counterpunch , Common Dreams, Truth Out. Truthdig, Bill Moyers et al.  

From Counterpunch:

Memento Mori: A Requiem For Puerto Rico
by, Miguel A. Cruz-Diaz


Puerto Rico and Trump's rush to arrest hundreds of immigrants in Sanctuary Cities (believed to be in response to pending and proposed lawsuits against his Wall prototypes now under construction in San Diego and a reluctance by some politicos to use the DACA kids as a bargaining chip for him to receive funding for the Wall), his outrageous tax proposal which would only benefit the most wealthy, his call to have NFL players fired for taking the knee again demonstrate his insanity - but this one takes the cake; his response to Rex Tillerson's statements of negotiation with North Korea:


From The Guardian: 10/01/17

Trump Says Rex Tillerson 'Wasting His Time' With North Korea Negotiations 
by, Martin Pengelly & Ed Pikington


The Trump Tweets:



I probably missed a few, you can fill in the blanks.

**********

The September 2017 Executions In Tijuana

 - On 09/30 at 8:00am, Frontera gave us the latest statistics from the PGJE of homicidios dolosos/executions in Tijuana.  At that point, according the the authorities, the number stood at 198 in Tijuana with the YTD figure at 1,263.

Lo Acribillan Cuando Salia a Su Trabajo
por,  Angel F. Gonzalez


 - This morning Frontera reported at 7:00am that September of 2017 closed with 201 executions
in Tijuana YTD just in Tijuana then would be 1,265.

Cerro Septiembre con 201 Asesinatos
por, Luis Gerardo Andrade

Watch for updates on these figures in the coming weeks.

**********

 - So Here's The Fix:


From The Intercept - 09/26/2017: Link within title

Brazil’s Latest Outbreak of Drug Gang Violence Highlights the Real Culprit: the War on Drugs

09/26/2017



"On July 1, 2001, Portugal enacted a law to decriminalize all drugs. Under that law, nobody who is found possessing or using narcotics is arrested in Portugal, nor are they turned into a criminal. Indeed, neither drug use nor possession is considered a crime at all. Instead, those found doing it are sent to speak with a panel of drug counsellors and therapists, where they are offered treatment options.

Seven years after the law was enacted, in 2008, we traveled to Lisbon to study the effects of that law for one of the first comprehensive reports on this policy, the findings of which were published in a report for the Cato Institute. The results were clear and stunning: This radical change in drug laws was a fundamental and undeniable success.

While Portugal throughout the 1990s was (like most Western countries) drowning in drug overdoses along with drug-related violence and diseases, the country rose to the top of the charts in virtually all categories after it stopped prosecuting drug users and treating them like criminals. This stood in stark contrast to countries that continued to follow a harsh criminalization approach: the more they arrested addicts and waged a “war on drugs,” the more their drug problems worsened.

With all the money that had been wasted in Portugal to prosecute and imprison drug users now freed up for treatment programs, and the government viewed with trust rather than fear, previously hopeless addicts transformed into success stories of stability and health, and the government’s anti-drug messages were heeded. The predicted rise in drug usage rates never happened; in some key demographic categories, usage actually declined. As the 2009 study concluded: “The data show that, judged by virtually every metric, the Portuguese decriminalization framework has been a resounding success.”
“The data show that, judged by virtually every metric, the Portuguese decriminalization framework has been a resounding success.”
Over the weekend, New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof, writing from Lisbon, re-visited this data, now even more ample and conclusive than it was back in 2009. His conclusions were even more stark than the Cato report of eight years ago: namely, Portugal has definitively won the argument on how ineffective, irrational, and counterproductive drug prohibition is. 

The basis for this conclusion: Portugal’s clear success with decriminalization, compared to the tragic failures of countries, such as the U.S. (and Brazil), which continue to treat addiction as a criminal and moral problem rather than a health problem. Kristof writes:
After more than 15 years, it’s clear which approach worked better. The United States drug policy failed spectacularly, with about as many Americans dying last year of overdoses — around 64,000 — as were killed in the Vietnam, Afghanistan and Iraq Wars combined.
In contrast, Portugal may be winning the war on drugs — by ending it. Today, the Health Ministry estimates that only about 25,000 Portuguese use heroin, down from 100,000 when the policy began.
The number of Portuguese dying from overdoses plunged more than 85 percent before rising a bit in the aftermath of the European economic crisis of recent years. Even so, Portugal’s drug mortality rate is the lowest in Western Europe — one-tenth the rate of Britain or Denmark — and about one-fiftieth the latest number for the U.S.

Kristof succinctly identified one key reason for this success: “It’s incomparably cheaper to treat people than to jail them.” But there are other vital reasons, including the key fact that when it comes to efforts to persuade addicts to obtain counseling, “decriminalization makes all this easier, because people no longer fear arrest.”

 Perhaps the most compelling evidence highlighting Portugal’s success is not the empirical data but the political reality: Whereas the law was quite controversial when first enacted 16 years ago, there are now no significant political factions agitating for its repeal or for a return to drug prohibition.
This evidence is of vital importance to the citizens of any country that continues to treat drug users and addicts as criminals. It is simply unconscionable to break up families, force children to remain apart from imprisoned parents, and turn drug addicts into unemployable felons, particularly if the data demonstrates that those policies achieve the opposite results as their claimed intent.


But moral questions aside, the drug-related violence now sweeping Brazil, particularly the horrific war that is engulfing the Rio de Janeiro favela of Rocinha — just a few years after it was declared “pacified” — makes these questions of particular urgency for Brazilians and citizens of any country. Brazil has witnessed repeated outbreaks of horrific violence in the favelas of its largest cities, many of which have long been ruled not by the government but by well-armed drug gangs. But this past week’s war — and that’s what it is — in Rocinha, located in the middle of Rio de Janeiro’s fashionable Zona Sul, has been particularly shocking.


 Competing drug gangs have “invaded” the favela
 and are in open warfare for control of the drug trade,
 in the process forcing schools to close,
 residents to cower in their homes,
 and stores to remain shuttered.
As Misha Glenny reported on Monday in The Intercept,
 “The immediate cause of violence is the
 ongoing struggle between and now within factions,”
 but the violence portends the high 
 likelihood of a wider war for control of the drug trade. 


In the face of drug-related violence, there is a temptation to embrace the seemingly simplest solution: an even-greater war on drugs, more drug dealers and addicts in prison, more police, more prohibition.
Those who peddle this approach want people to believe a simple-minded string of reasoning: the cause of drug-related problems, such as violence from drug gangs, is drugs. Therefore, we must eliminate drugs. Therefore, the more problems we have from drugs, the more aggressively we rid society of drugs and those who sell and use them.


But this mentality is based on an obvious, tragic fallacy: namely, that the war on drugs, and drug criminalization, will eliminate drugs or at least reduce its availability. Decades of failure prove this will not happen; rather, the opposite will occur. Like the U.S., Brazil has imprisoned hundreds of thousands of citizens for drug-related crimes — mostly poor and nonwhite — and the problem has only worsened. Any person with minimal rationality would be forced to admit this string of logic is false.


Supporting a failed policy by hoping that, one day, it will magically succeed, is the definition of irrationality. In the case of drug laws — which spawn misery and suffering — it is not only irrational but cruel. 


A 2011 report from the Global Commission on Drug Policy — featuring multiple world leaders including former United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan and former Brazilian President Fernando Henrique Cardoso — examined all relevant evidence and put it simply: “The global war on drugs has failed, with devastating consequences for individuals and societies around the world.”
The primary fact in this conclusion is vitally important. The key cause of all drug-related pathologies — particularly gang violence of the type now suffocating Rocinha — is not drugs themselves, but rather the policy of criminalizing drugs and the war waged in its name.



The nature of drugs — their small size, the ease of smuggling, the natural demand humans have for them — means they can never be eliminated or meaningfully reduced by force. Only changes in human behavior, which can happen with sustained and professional treatment, can foster those improvements. The only effect of drug criminalization, beyond the massive human and financial waste of imprisoning addicts, is to empower and enrich drug gangs by ensuring that the profits from selling an illegal product remain irresistibly high.


For that reason, the most devoted opponents of drug legalization or decriminalization are drug gangs themselves. Nothing would erase the power of drug gangs — such as the ones violently battling for control of Rocinha — more quickly or severely than the elimination of drug prohibition. As adept businesspeople, drug traffickers know that very well.

'THE MOST DEVOTED OPPONENTS OF DRUG LEGALIZATION OR DECRIMINALIZATION ARE DRUG GANGS THEMSELVES"

In 2011, the journalist Johann Hari, author of one of the most influential books on drug addiction, wrote an article in The Huffington Post titled: “The Only Thing Drug Gangs and Cartels Fear Is Legalization.” As he put it:
When you criminalize a drug for which there is a large market, it doesn’t disappear. The trade is simply transferred from off-licenses, pharmacists and doctors to armed criminal gangs. In order to protect their patch and their supply routes, these gangs tool up — and kill anyone who gets in their way. You can see this any day on the streets of a poor part of London or Los Angeles, where teenage gangs stab or shoot each other for control of the 3000 percent profit margins on offer.
We have a perfect historical analogy that proves this point: alcohol prohibition in the U.S. in the 1920s. When alcohol was made illegal, it did not disappear. Control of its sale and distribution simply shifted: from the corner grocery story to violent drug gangs of the type that Al Capone became famous for ruling.


In other words, making alcohol illegal did not stop people from consuming it. What it did do, though, was empower vicious gangs of organized crime for whom the massive profits of selling illegal alcohol made them willing to do anything, or kill anyone, to protect it.


What finally eliminated those violent prohibition gangs was not the police or the imprisonment of illegal dealers or alcoholics: During prohibition, when the gangs weren’t bribing the police, they were killing them. What eliminated those gangs was the re-legalization of alcohol: by regulating the sale of alcohol, the end of prohibition made the gangs irrelevant, and they thus disappeared. 


Violent drug gangs do not fear the war on drugs; to the contrary, as Hari notes, they crave it. It is the criminalization of drugs that makes their trade so profitable. Hari quotes a long-time drug enforcement official in the U.S. as relating: “On one undercover tape-recorded conversation, a top cartel chief, Jorge Roman, expressed his gratitude for the drug war, calling it ‘a sham put on the American tax-payer’ that was ‘actually good for business.’”


In 2015, Danielle Allen, a political theorist at Harvard University, wrote an op-ed in the Washington Post titled “How the war on drugs creates violence.” In it, she explained that one key reason to “decriminalize drugs flows from how the war on drugs drives violent crime, which in turn pushes up incarceration and generates other negative social outcomes.” As she explained: “You just can’t move $100 billion worth of illegal product without a lot of assault and homicide. This should not be a hard point to see or make.”


Why is Rocinha filled with guns and ruled by drug gangs that are capable of such violence? Why can an influential Brazilian politician, linked to some of the most powerful figures in the country, employ a pilot who was caught transporting millions of dollars in cocaine in a helicopter owned by the politician, with no consequences for anyone? 


The answer is clear: because laws that outlaw drugs ensure that the drug trade is extremely profitable, which in turn ensures that gangs of organized criminals will arm themselves, and will kill, in order to control it. Situated in the middle of Zona Sul with easy exits, Rocinha will inevitably be a drug haven for rich tourists, middle-class professionals, and impoverished addicts. The vast sums of profits created by the war on drugs ensure that police forces will not only be out-armed but also so corrupted that their efforts will inevitably fail.


It is now undeniably clear that it is the war on drugs itself which is what causes — not stops — drug-related violence.


If you’re horrified by the violence in Rocinha or places around the world like it, the last thing you should do is support more policies that fuel the violence: namely, criminalization and the war on drugs. To do so is like protesting lung cancer by encouraging people to smoke. The data is now sufficient to state confidently: those who support ongoing drug criminalization are the ones abetting this drug violence and the related problems of addiction and overdose.


It may be slightly paradoxical at first glance, but the data leaves no doubt: The only way to avoid Rocinha-style violence is through full drug decriminalization. We no longer need to speculate about this. Thanks to Portugal, the results are in, and they could not be clearer."


David Miranda is the husband of Intercept co-founder Glenn Greenwald and a city councilmember for Rio de Janeiro (PSOL).

**********

Meanwhile an update on Paris:  We heard back from Vet Playas who wanted another consultation re her surgery and indicated that a plate in her leg could be iffy with complications, particularly at this late date and development. We do like Dr. Fimbres, he has been completely honest with us.  So we are going back up to the States to VCA in Kearny Mesa for a consultation with Dr. Jackson hopefully this week. Won't know more until we do that, but the time is pressing.  Next, cleaning out her huge crate I took the knee(s) and pulled my back out of whack.  I'm moving a little better but Mike has had to do all the chores.

P.S. If you can afford it, this Saturday the 7th at the McCullum Theatre in Palm Desert, Bill Murray and Jan Vogler are presenting their "New Worlds" - wish we could go.

**********

Christ, I almost forgot Dotard's UN Speech:





Wednesday, September 20, 2017

The 7.1 Mexico Earthquake - Update: USAID - Update: Don't Forget To Use Otay This Weekend If You Are Crossing Into Mexico UPDATE: Have added Frontera & Zeta's Full and Ongoing Coverage - Don't Miss The Ones About Graco Ramirez and Theft/Hoarding of Supplies Meant For Earthquake Victims From Zeta --Update 9/24 : GSA Opening Up San Ysidro 12 Hours Earlier

Rescue teams from Tijuana and Ensenada are already on their way down to Mexico City to help in any way they can.  Meanwhile, there are established centers to drop off goods needed so badly locally:

Frontera

Decenas de Centros de Acopio se Instalan en Tijuana


For the latest up to date English reports & videos of the earthquake, we have been watching this:

The Guardian

Mexico Earthquake: President Declares National Mourning As Death Toll Rises - Latest News 


Update/12:02 am: Noted that the Guardian has ended their minute by minute coverage, but are still offering updates of importance.

**********

Update/edit 09/21:

I should have added this last night, full coverage here: (also check other local TIJ/Ensenada news)




Frontera|Tags|Sismo


Interesting Report from TeleSur with pics and video:

Mexicans Organize Citizen Brigades After Earthquake As Distrust Towards Government Grows
 by, Carla Gonzalez

 end edit.

 Update:  Zeta has also had special ongoing coverage: (More Nationals on the sidebar)

Zeta

Sismo 19 de Septiembre


Check This One Out  - A quick pasted translation because I'm in a hurry and BTW these reports I have not seen in the USA corporate media at all:

From Zeta: 09/24/17

"Graco Ramirez es el Javier Duarte de Morelos": Javier Sicilia, Quien Recomienda Canalizar Viveres Hacia la Universidad Auto noma del Estado de Morelos
por, Enrique Mendoza Hernandez



Be careful Javier



"Graco Ramírez is Javier Duarte de Morelos": Javier Sicilia, who recommends channeling food to the Autonomous University of the State of Morelos



  • Following the 7.1-degree earthquake that shook Morelos, Puebla and Mexico City on Tuesday, September 19, 2017, the poet Javier Sicilia supported the denunciation made by the bishop of Cuernavaca, Ramón Castro y Castro, in the sense that the government Graced by Graco Ramirez, he monopolizes food through his political structure; so the writer said that one option is to channel humanitarian aid to the Autonomous University of the State Morelos (UAEM), as it has collection and distribution centers in 22 of the 33 municipalities of Morelos.
"It is true that the Graco Ramírez government is hoarding humanitarian aid, it is absolutely true; this man has an authoritarian political structure in the old style of the PRI to beat, control the media and kidnap, "ZETA Seminary Javier Sicilia told Sunday, September 24 after the bishop of Cuernavaca Ramón Castro y Castro reported that on Friday September 22, three trucks were stolen with provisions; even the singer Belinda also denounced the theft of a truck with humanitarian aid.


Sicilia expressed in an interview with this Weekly that the hoarding of bastidas by part of the political structure of the government of Graco Ramirez is with "truly electoral purposes", since its administration concludes in 2018, year in which there will also be elections to renew the governorship of Morelos:

 
"Graco Ramírez is politically dead at the federal level, his party (PRD) does not see it with good eyes, and what remained was the ruins of his kingdom, which he wants to perpetuate to cover his back with his stepson Rodrigo Gayosso, and this , the natural tragedy, is using it to cover his back in order to prop up Gayosso, who is the leader of the PRD in Morelos. The Graco has been a poor government with high crime rates, with clandestine graves product of the Prosecutor's Office, then now that this natural tragedy of the earthquake happens because it decides to hoard, that is, to exceed the citizenship in their moment of solidarity, and Graco decides in a false state imposition to hijack solidarity with truly electoral purposes. "

Warehouses allegedly hoarded by authorities
 
Given the hoarding of provisions by the political structure of the Graco Ramirez government, Javier Sicilia made two recommendations;

 First:"The recommendation is to denounce, to continue, not to be controlled by the State or by the parties, this is the moment of the citizens, it is the moment of solidarity, it is the moment to show that the State does not and that we create networks of solidarity to denounce these atrocities such as those committed by the government of Graco Ramírez. "


And secondly, in addition to directly bringing humanitarian aid to the villages of Morelos, another option is to channel food to the UAEM, which has a presence in 22 of the 33 municipalities in the state of Morelos:
 
"The most reliable institution now is the Autonomous University of the State of Morelos, there they are carrying everything, we have a very good collection and distribution center, in addition the University is present in almost 33 municipalities; the University has a presence in 22 municipalities, there are also collection centers; now the University has become a point of reference, it is difficult to be touched because they immediately see.


Javier Sicilia detailed that in addition to Jojutla, where the earthquake of 7.1 degrees on Tuesday 19 September was the epicenter, other villages in the eastern part of Morelos adjacent to Puebla occupy 
humanitarian aid:
 
"The east of Morelos is very bad, in general the whole east is very devastated; everything is concentrated in Jojutla because it is a large population, then the ravages are very spectacular, but proportionately to the east, as in Tepalcingo, because the situation is so serious, Tepalcingo is a town of the Colony, was absolutely devastated; other villages such as Telela del Volcán, which is close to the border with Puebla, we have arrived with solidarity assistance, both the Autonomous University of the State of Morelos and other institutions such as UNAM.
 
"Right now Bishop Ramón Castro was revealing that 75 percent of religious architecture from the 16th to the 19th century is at risk; Until then, unfortunately, the INAH considers historical monuments, lacking the accounting of the twentieth century; then the religious heritage of 500 years is at risk, and this is amazing, because it means that an earthquake of this nature had not happened in 500 years. "
 
Finally, Javier Sicilia warned: "I am calling the Graco Ramírez party (PRD), a call to the federal authorities, because they continue to condone Graco Ramírez who is Javier Duarte de Morelos, the damage he is committing are immense, it is already time to stop it; Graco already has serious visions of what Duarte was in Veracruz. "


end edit.



**********

Although Trump did call Pena Nieto  and express his condolences this time around, why doesn't he just airlift down supplies/manpower for these people? They are screaming for help. These could be there in short hours. Just do it asshole.

Update 12:03am:  Well looks like he did do something, here is the press release:


USAID 09/20/17



**********

Slightly late and maybe USAID will be able to help
somewhat despite a very bad track record over the years.
 Several years back, Pando had a good expose of USAID;
the following reports are more recent, but you get the drift:

The Nation

A Brutal Expulsion in Guatemala
Shows How Neoliberalism Gets Greenwashed
by, Greg Grandin


 From JACOBIN:

USAID's Trojan Horse
by, Hilary Goodfriend


**********

Still, pray for everyone and no more huge disasters. Reports on the homicidios dolosos here will have to wait, they haven't stopped...they have increased.

***********

Just a reminder that El Chaparral/San Ysidro entry crossing will be closed this weekend into Monday, use the Otay crossing. The closure is due to the complete closure on the States side of 5 and 805 from 905 for 57 hours:

Closed:

Saturday 23 -- closed at 3:00 AM

Closed for 57 hours.

**********

Another Update: 09/24/17

GSA is opening up San Ysidro 12 hours earlier; in addition there will be four lanes open on the freeways going into Mexico instead of three:

Frontera - 09/24/17 4:30pm

GSA Reabrira San Ysidro 12 Horas Antes de lo Previsto




**********

P.S. Unsure when I'll return to the executions and violencia, the way the Mexican people are suffering from these quakes has knocked me off my feet.

The 7.1 Mexico Earthquake - Update: USAID - Update: Don't Forget To Use Otay This Weekend If You Are Crossing Into Mexico UPDATE: Have added Frontera & Zeta's Full and Ongoing Coverage - Don't Miss The Ones About Graco Ramirez and Theft/Hoarding of Supplies Meant For Earthquake Victims From Zeta --Update 9/24 : GSA Opening Up San Ysidro 12 Hours Earlier

Rescue teams from Tijuana and Ensenada are already on their way down to Mexico City to help in any way they can.  Meanwhile, there are established centers to drop off goods needed so badly locally:

Frontera

Decenas de Centros de Acopio se Instalan en Tijuana


For the latest up to date English reports & videos of the earthquake, we have been watching this:

The Guardian

Mexico Earthquake: President Declares National Mourning As Death Toll Rises - Latest News 


Update/12:02 am: Noted that the Guardian has ended their minute by minute coverage, but are still offering updates of importance.

**********

Update/edit 09/21:

I should have added this last night, full coverage here: (also check other local TIJ/Ensenada news)




Frontera|Tags|Sismo


Interesting Report from TeleSur with pics and video:

Mexicans Organize Citizen Brigades After Earthquake As Distrust Towards Government Grows
 by, Carla Gonzalez

 end edit.

 Update:  Zeta has also had special ongoing coverage: (More Nationals on the sidebar)

Zeta

Sismo 19 de Septiembre


Check This One Out  - A quick pasted translation because I'm in a hurry and BTW these reports I have not seen in the USA corporate media at all:

From Zeta: 09/24/17

"Graco Ramirez es el Javier Duarte de Morelos": Javier Sicilia, Quien Recomienda Canalizar Viveres Hacia la Universidad Auto noma del Estado de Morelos
por, Enrique Mendoza Hernandez



Be careful Javier



"Graco Ramírez is Javier Duarte de Morelos": Javier Sicilia, who recommends channeling food to the Autonomous University of the State of Morelos



  • Following the 7.1-degree earthquake that shook Morelos, Puebla and Mexico City on Tuesday, September 19, 2017, the poet Javier Sicilia supported the denunciation made by the bishop of Cuernavaca, Ramón Castro y Castro, in the sense that the government Graced by Graco Ramirez, he monopolizes food through his political structure; so the writer said that one option is to channel humanitarian aid to the Autonomous University of the State Morelos (UAEM), as it has collection and distribution centers in 22 of the 33 municipalities of Morelos.
"It is true that the Graco Ramírez government is hoarding humanitarian aid, it is absolutely true; this man has an authoritarian political structure in the old style of the PRI to beat, control the media and kidnap, "ZETA Seminary Javier Sicilia told Sunday, September 24 after the bishop of Cuernavaca Ramón Castro y Castro reported that on Friday September 22, three trucks were stolen with provisions; even the singer Belinda also denounced the theft of a truck with humanitarian aid.


Sicilia expressed in an interview with this Weekly that the hoarding of bastidas by part of the political structure of the government of Graco Ramirez is with "truly electoral purposes", since its administration concludes in 2018, year in which there will also be elections to renew the governorship of Morelos:

 
"Graco Ramírez is politically dead at the federal level, his party (PRD) does not see it with good eyes, and what remained was the ruins of his kingdom, which he wants to perpetuate to cover his back with his stepson Rodrigo Gayosso, and this , the natural tragedy, is using it to cover his back in order to prop up Gayosso, who is the leader of the PRD in Morelos. The Graco has been a poor government with high crime rates, with clandestine graves product of the Prosecutor's Office, then now that this natural tragedy of the earthquake happens because it decides to hoard, that is, to exceed the citizenship in their moment of solidarity, and Graco decides in a false state imposition to hijack solidarity with truly electoral purposes. "

Warehouses allegedly hoarded by authorities
 
Given the hoarding of provisions by the political structure of the Graco Ramirez government, Javier Sicilia made two recommendations;

 First:"The recommendation is to denounce, to continue, not to be controlled by the State or by the parties, this is the moment of the citizens, it is the moment of solidarity, it is the moment to show that the State does not and that we create networks of solidarity to denounce these atrocities such as those committed by the government of Graco Ramírez. "


And secondly, in addition to directly bringing humanitarian aid to the villages of Morelos, another option is to channel food to the UAEM, which has a presence in 22 of the 33 municipalities in the state of Morelos:
 
"The most reliable institution now is the Autonomous University of the State of Morelos, there they are carrying everything, we have a very good collection and distribution center, in addition the University is present in almost 33 municipalities; the University has a presence in 22 municipalities, there are also collection centers; now the University has become a point of reference, it is difficult to be touched because they immediately see.


Javier Sicilia detailed that in addition to Jojutla, where the earthquake of 7.1 degrees on Tuesday 19 September was the epicenter, other villages in the eastern part of Morelos adjacent to Puebla occupy 
humanitarian aid:
 
"The east of Morelos is very bad, in general the whole east is very devastated; everything is concentrated in Jojutla because it is a large population, then the ravages are very spectacular, but proportionately to the east, as in Tepalcingo, because the situation is so serious, Tepalcingo is a town of the Colony, was absolutely devastated; other villages such as Telela del Volcán, which is close to the border with Puebla, we have arrived with solidarity assistance, both the Autonomous University of the State of Morelos and other institutions such as UNAM.
 
"Right now Bishop Ramón Castro was revealing that 75 percent of religious architecture from the 16th to the 19th century is at risk; Until then, unfortunately, the INAH considers historical monuments, lacking the accounting of the twentieth century; then the religious heritage of 500 years is at risk, and this is amazing, because it means that an earthquake of this nature had not happened in 500 years. "
 
Finally, Javier Sicilia warned: "I am calling the Graco Ramírez party (PRD), a call to the federal authorities, because they continue to condone Graco Ramírez who is Javier Duarte de Morelos, the damage he is committing are immense, it is already time to stop it; Graco already has serious visions of what Duarte was in Veracruz. "


end edit.



**********

Although Trump did call Pena Nieto  and express his condolences this time around, why doesn't he just airlift down supplies/manpower for these people? They are screaming for help. These could be there in short hours. Just do it asshole.

Update 12:03am:  Well looks like he did do something, here is the press release:


USAID 09/20/17



**********

Slightly late and maybe USAID will be able to help
somewhat despite a very bad track record over the years.
 Several years back, Pando had a good expose of USAID;
the following reports are more recent, but you get the drift:

The Nation

A Brutal Expulsion in Guatemala
Shows How Neoliberalism Gets Greenwashed
by, Greg Grandin


 From JACOBIN:

USAID's Trojan Horse
by, Hilary Goodfriend


**********

Still, pray for everyone and no more huge disasters. Reports on the homicidios dolosos here will have to wait, they haven't stopped...they have increased.

***********

Just a reminder that El Chaparral/San Ysidro entry crossing will be closed this weekend into Monday, use the Otay crossing. The closure is due to the complete closure on the States side of 5 and 805 from 905 for 57 hours:

Closed:

Saturday 23 -- closed at 3:00 AM

Closed for 57 hours.

**********

Another Update: 09/24/17

GSA is opening up San Ysidro 12 hours earlier; in addition there will be four lanes open on the freeways going into Mexico instead of three:

Frontera - 09/24/17 4:30pm

GSA Reabrira San Ysidro 12 Horas Antes de lo Previsto




**********

P.S. Unsure when I'll return to the executions and violencia, the way the Mexican people are suffering from these quakes has knocked me off my feet.

Tuesday, September 19, 2017

The DACA Kids Fight Back & Paris Agreement-Accord Updates

How anyone could believe that Donald Trump actually "cares" for the DACA kids or his claims that he really "loves them" is too far reaching for me.  Where we left off last blog, most of us were confused to their future status despite an accord reached between Trump and the dinosaurs of the Democratic Party Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer.  No details were made public, we were supposed to be mystified and relieved, even delighted.  But truthfully, it is difficult to trust any deals made by or with Trump, there's always an angle.

The DACA kids know the score and they blasted Pelosi out of the water:


"We are not your bargaining chip!" the group shouted while many held signs that read "Democrats Are Deporters" and "Fight 4 All 11 Million"—a reference to the full number of undocumented people estimated to live in the United States, as opposed to the approximately 800,000 who DACA is designed to protect. (Image: Screengrab/Twitter)


From Common Dreams: (with links to video within the report; don't miss all of their reports)

Refusing to Be Bargaining Chips, Dreamers Shut Down Pelosi's Pro-Dreamer Event


UPDATE/edit 09/20:  More on the Dreamers here:

DREAM ACT|Democracy Now

**********

THE PARIS AGREEMENT-ACCORD  (NRDC Summary within link)

Over the weekend, there was plenty of back and forth talk of Trump "re-joining" The Paris Accord.  First he was, then he wasn't, then he was and just a few hours ago, he wasn't. 

Gizmodo points out it was all spin.

Still, our first thoughts were what were his motives if he really should re-join?  We all know his first concern (other than himself) are the corporations and big banks and big oil, he doesn't give a shit about the environment; global warming he says is a "hoax."  His ratings are low, maybe after all the Hurricanes he was working the crowd ? Naomi Kline addresses his "position"  this morning; don't miss all the news at DN:

Democracy Now !

Naomi Kline Warns Europe May Water Down Paris Accord to Win Support From Trump 

 UPDATE - 09/20:

From The Intercept

The Paris Agreement Disputes Is a Distraction. The Real Battle Is Playing Out In The EPA
by, Kate Aronoff

**********

Probably one of the best don't miss reports on the environment (then again I'm a Chris Hedges fan); don't miss all of their reports:

From  Moyers & Company

The Great Flood
By, Chris Hedges - 09/12/17


**********


I'll be back with the latest homicidios dolosos stats, there are so many dead people it is becoming a blur; we are somewhere over one hundred just in TIJ this month.

 Meanwhile, here's an oldie but a goodie to hold you over:

The DACA Kids Fight Back & Paris Agreement-Accord Updates

How anyone could believe that Donald Trump actually "cares" for the DACA kids or his claims that he really "loves them" is too far reaching for me.  Where we left off last blog, most of us were confused to their future status despite an accord reached between Trump and the dinosaurs of the Democratic Party Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer.  No details were made public, we were supposed to be mystified and relieved, even delighted.  But truthfully, it is difficult to trust any deals made by or with Trump, there's always an angle.

The DACA kids know the score and they blasted Pelosi out of the water:


"We are not your bargaining chip!" the group shouted while many held signs that read "Democrats Are Deporters" and "Fight 4 All 11 Million"—a reference to the full number of undocumented people estimated to live in the United States, as opposed to the approximately 800,000 who DACA is designed to protect. (Image: Screengrab/Twitter)


From Common Dreams: (with links to video within the report; don't miss all of their reports)

Refusing to Be Bargaining Chips, Dreamers Shut Down Pelosi's Pro-Dreamer Event


UPDATE/edit 09/20:  More on the Dreamers here:

DREAM ACT|Democracy Now

**********

THE PARIS AGREEMENT-ACCORD  (NRDC Summary within link)

Over the weekend, there was plenty of back and forth talk of Trump "re-joining" The Paris Accord.  First he was, then he wasn't, then he was and just a few hours ago, he wasn't. 

Gizmodo points out it was all spin.

Still, our first thoughts were what were his motives if he really should re-join?  We all know his first concern (other than himself) are the corporations and big banks and big oil, he doesn't give a shit about the environment; global warming he says is a "hoax."  His ratings are low, maybe after all the Hurricanes he was working the crowd ? Naomi Kline addresses his "position"  this morning; don't miss all the news at DN:

Democracy Now !

Naomi Kline Warns Europe May Water Down Paris Accord to Win Support From Trump 

 UPDATE - 09/20:

From The Intercept

The Paris Agreement Disputes Is a Distraction. The Real Battle Is Playing Out In The EPA
by, Kate Aronoff

**********

Probably one of the best don't miss reports on the environment (then again I'm a Chris Hedges fan); don't miss all of their reports:

From  Moyers & Company

The Great Flood
By, Chris Hedges - 09/12/17


**********


I'll be back with the latest homicidios dolosos stats, there are so many dead people it is becoming a blur; we are somewhere over one hundred just in TIJ this month.

 Meanwhile, here's an oldie but a goodie to hold you over:

Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Dead Zone: Current Homicidios Dolosos (Executions) Baja California & Nationally During Pena's Term 12/2012 - 07/31/17 -- September TIJ Updates; Lots of Body Parts in Rosarito Beach & Ensenada --Update 09/14: El Sol de Tijuana Reports 93 Executions in TIJ 09/01 - 09/14/17 YTD=1,158....More Are Being Reported By Frontera

Before listing the current statistics of homicidios dolosos (executions) of Baja California and Nationally I felt this was an important report to keep in mind, particularly after the announcement by Mexico's Ambassador to the United States where he never mentions the Merida Initiative:


From Counterpunch: (link within title)



The U.S. is Fanning the Flames of Violence in Mexico


Photo by 16:9clue | CC BY 2.0


Over the past several months, drug-related violence in Mexico has been soaring, accelerating an already alarming trend of rising drug-related deaths and contributing to what one former U.S. official has called “a decade-long bloodbath.”

 To some extent, the latest spike in violence is nothing new for Mexico. For more than a decade, Mexico has experienced waves of drug-related violence as the Mexican government has waged an internal drug war against the country’s drug cartels. “Successive Mexican presidents have implemented policies aimed at disrupting these drug-trafficking organizations, but the result has been a decade-long bloodbath that has cost more than 100,000 deaths to the ensuing violence,” former State Department official Roger Noriega said earlier this year.


At the same time, the spike in violence shows that Mexico’s struggles are far from over. Although a steady decline in violence from 2012 to 2014 raised hopes that the situation was improving, the trend reversed in 2014 and has only worsened since then. “Mexico’s bloody drug war is killing more people than ever,” the Los Angeles Times reported in July.


Observers cite numerous reasons for the increase in violence. They blame everything from the fracturing of drug cartels to the inability of local police forces to deal with the situation.


Officials in the Trump administration, who entered office at a time of increasing violence, have provided their own novel interpretation. Citing the national opioid epidemic in the United States, administration officials have blamed U.S. drug users for breathing new life into the Mexico’s illicit drug business. “But for us, Mexico wouldn’t have the trans-criminal organized crime problem and the violence that they’re suffering,” Secretary of State Rex Tillerson recently argued. So “we really have to own up to that.”


At the Aspen Security Forum in July, Secretary of Homeland Security John Kelly, who is now Trump’s Chief of Staff, also blamed U.S. drug users for the spike in violence. Countries such as Mexico “suffer terribly because of the violence of the trafficking and the production,” Kelly said. “So as Americans we should be ashamed of ourselves that we have done almost nothing to get our arms around drug demand.”


Despite these arguments, the leaders of the United States know that they bear significant responsibility for the violence in Mexico. While it is true that an opioid epidemic is sweeping across the United States, claiming more than 100,000 lives over the past few years, U.S. officials are the ones who have played a far more direct role in fanning the flames of violence in Mexico. For starters, they are the ones who devised and implemented the Mérida Initiative, a multi-billion dollar assistance package that has been a primary cause of the drug-related violence. In addition, they are the ones who have spent more than a decade urging the Mexican government to confront the country’s drug cartels, even though various escalations have made the violence worse. Rather than blaming the growing violence on U.S. drug users, officials in Washington should be paying closer attention to the their own actions, which have been fueling Mexico’s decade of violence.


The War Begins


The ongoing crisis in Mexico dates back to December 2006, when Mexican President Felipe Calderón went to war against the country’s drug cartels. Although it was unclear whether Calderón was legally justified in launching the internal military campaign, he set aside such concerns and began deploying tens of thousands of military forces across the country, setting off a major drug war.


“Calderon has launched major military-backed surge operations against drug traffickers in nine of the most conflictive states,” U.S. diplomats in Mexico explained in an internal report in April 2007.


Right away, the military-backed surge operations had devastating consequences for Mexico. Not only did they prompt a vicious backlash from the country’s drug cartels, but they sparked an increase in drug-related violence, or “soaring Cartel-related bloodshed,” as U.S. diplomats described it.

Nevertheless, U.S. officials remained optimistic about the operations. Instead of questioning the logic of legally dubious military operations that were increasing violence in the country, they began thinking that they should help the Mexican government escalate the operations.


“Now is the time for us to show our appreciation and respect for our neighbor’s commitment to the rule of law by significantly increasing our material support to the GOM’s law enforcement efforts,” U.S. diplomats in Mexico insisted.


The Mérida Initiative


Taking the advice of its diplomats, the Bush administration began devising a new military assistance program for the Mexican government called the Mérida Initiative.


According to U.S. Senator Harry Reid, the Mérida Initiative was made possible by the resolve that Calderón had shown in going after the country’s drug cartels. “That resolve paved the way for USG action on the Mérida Initiative,” Reid told Calderón in November 2007.


The terms of the deal, which were finalized the following year, brought a whole new phase to the drug war. Not only did the Mérida Initiative provide the Mexican government with a massive infusion of U.S. military support, but it also opened the door to a more direct U.S. role.


“The U.S. is about to insert itself in a major way into this challenging environment with the impending rollout of the Mérida Initiative,” U.S. diplomats in Mexico reported in December 2008.


As U.S. officials began implementing the Mérida Initiative, drug-related violence in the country increased rapidly. It quickly surpassed the previous rise in violence that began with Calderón’s surge operations, claiming more lives in some of the most horrific ways possible. Beheaded and dismembered bodies, which had already become common sights throughout the country, kept appearing more frequently.


“Levels of violence show no signs of decreasing, with organized crime-related homicides and casualties suffered by security forces in the counterdrug fight likely to surpass 2008’s record figures,” U.S. diplomats in Mexico informed President Obama in July 2009.


The violence peaked in 2011 with more than ten thousand people killed. A few years into the Mérida Initiative, Mexico had become one of the deadliest countries in the world.


“Violence is unprecedented, people are afraid, mayors are being killed,” U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Carlos Pascual observed.


The Pause to Mérida 


The rising drug-related violence did not continue indefinitely. Starting in 2012 and continuing into the following years, Mexico experienced a slow and steady decline in drug-related violence, which for a time approached pre-Mérida levels.


The reversal was largely due to changes in Mexican politics. Not only were the Mexican people beginning to protest the drug war, but Mexican politicians began calling for major changes in the war.
During Mexico’s 2012 presidential campaign, all three leading presidential candidates pledged to shift tactics and reduce drug-related violence in the country.


The winner of the election, Enrique Peña Nieto, promised major changes. During his inauguration in December 2012, Peña Nieto announced that his primary goal was to reduce drug-related violence. “My government’s first aim will be to bring peace to Mexico,” Peña Nieto said.


Peña Nieto acted on his pledge. As U.S. officials later confirmed, Peña Nieto halted the implementation of any new programs under the Mérida Initiative. “There was a huge pause,” one U.S. official later said. The program came to a “screeching halt,” another U.S. official agreed.


Most important, the pause to Mérida programs addressed the concerns of the Mexican people by reducing drug-related violence. While U.S. officials kept trying to stop the pause and get the Mérida Initiative back on track, drug-related violence steadily declined in the following years. Indeed, Peña Nieto helped to reverse the alarming trends in drug-related violence by impeding one of its main causes, the Mérida Initiative.


The Revival of Mérida


In spite of these hopeful signs, the pause did not last long. Instead of making the pause permanent and extending it to the remaining Mérida programs, Peña Nieto eventually reversed course. Working closely with U.S. officials, he agreed to approve a series of new programs that revived the Mérida Initiative, thereby reigniting the drug war.


In May 2014, State Department official William Brownfield provided a basic explanation of what happened for the House Committee on Foreign Affairs. Essentially, “there was a period where both governments, logically and understandably, said let us review what is the nature of the cooperation that we have today,” Brownfield explained. “This process took some time. Much of the year 2013 was dedicated to it.”


In other words, the new Mexican government kept reviewing various Mérida programs before deciding to move forward with new operations.


After spending a year to review the programs, both the U.S. and Mexican governments then agreed to move forward with new operations. “We have reached an agreement on $438 million worth of 78 new programs,” Brownfield said.


A senior State Department official provided additional confirmation of the change. There has been some concern about “a slowdown in the Mérida Initiative and the funding that we were doing for some of the security projects,” the official said. “But you’ve now seen over $430 million of funds approved for projects, 78 projects approved. Those will now be pushed forward.”


The decision to push forward new Mérida programs had a familiar effect. Just as previous intensifications of military operations increased violence in the country, the revival of the Mérida Initiative sparked a new phase in drug-related violence.


In fact, drug-related violence quickly returned to its previous highs. Nearly 10,000 people died in 2015, more than 10,000 people died in 2016, and the total death toll is expected to be even higher for 2017.


“Mexico is reaching its deadliest point in decades,” the New York Times reported earlier this month.


Trump’s Plans


Making matters worse, the Trump administration has been eager to expand the programs. So far, the Trump administration has publicly supported the Mérida Initiative and indicated that it intends to intensify the drug war.


President Trump clearly articulated his intentions when he first entered office. Speaking with Peña Nieto in January, Trump said that he wanted to work more closely with the Mexican government to deliver a final blow against the country’s drug cartels. “Enrique, you and I have to knock it out – you and I have to knock the hell out of them,” Trump said. “Listen,” he added. “I know how tough these guys are – our military will knock them out like you never thought of.”


While it remains unclear whether the Trump administration will send U.S. forces to Mexico, additional officials have similarly called on Mexican officials to intensify the war. A few months after Trump made his proposal, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson advised Mexican officials to do more to confront the country’s drug cartels. “I told my Mexican counterparts it’s time to stop playing small ball, we’ve got to start playing large ball,” Tillerson told the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations in June.


In these ways, the Trump administration has urged the Mexican government to work more closely with the United States to escalate the drug war. Despite the fact that heavy U.S. involvement through the multi-billion dollar Mérida Initiative has only succeeded in bringing more violence to the country while fueling its decade-long bloodbath, the Trump administration has been moving to intensify the ongoing military efforts, placing even more lives at risk.


“Your citizens are being killed all over the place, your police officers are being shot in the head, and your children are being killed,” Trump said during his conversation with Peña Nieto. But for Trump, those were not reasons to reconsider U.S. policy. Instead, those were reasons to increase U.S. involvement in the ongoing fight against Mexico’s drug cartels.


“And we will knock them out,” he promised.


More articles by:
Edward Hunt writes about war and empire. He has a PhD in American Studies from the College of William & Mary.

**********


The National Numbers

So if maybe you were thinking that we are just in a bad spot right now and matters will improve, maybe it is time to stop believing that Trump (or anyone) will create drug treatment-educational centers in the U.S. and legalize at least some of the drugs; or even that suddenly that corruption on either side of the border with officials of both countries deeply involved in the drug business will end, that banks and other businesses on both sides of the border and worldwide will magically stop laundering money, and opportunities will appear like a miracle for the Mexican people to make decent wages removing them from the grinds of poverty which makes them soldiers for the cartels, or to stop start admitting that drugs are a billion dollar enterprise and everyone wants a piece of the  action.

 It is naive to think that drug addiction and use will be addressed and controlled but rather the sixty four thousand dollar question is who will control the drug flow - with or without U.S. intervention.

Meanwhile expect the establishment powers to continually try to convince you that "...there is so much more to Mexico" as they tacitly approve the situation here while supporting business interests. And if none of these issues bothers you at all, you will be perfectly fine down here.

Let's move on to the National figures.  On September the fourth, Zeta gave us a National Report on the numbers of homicidios dolosos during the term dates of Pena Nieto from December 2012 until the end of July of this year:


From Zeta: (Link within title)




104 thousand 602 executed with Peña Nieto (Pictures and graphs within the link)


 
Featured BCS
 Monday, 4 September, 2017 05:09 AM
 
The Fifth Report of the Government of the President of the Republic comes stained with blood like no other. His government will end up as one of the most violent and insecure in contemporary Mexican history. With the extradition of "El Chapo" Guzman, the atomization of the Sinaloa Cartel and the expansion of the CJNG 2017 will be the year with the highest number of executions

One of every four homicides in Mexico registered in the last 27 years, have been committed in the administration of the President of the Republic, Enrique Peña Nieto. His bloody numbers surpass even those of his predecessor Felipe Calderón, who declared the "war" against drug trafficking, awakening thousands of hit men under the orders of criminal groups in the country.

 
Thousands of families torn apart by homicide, orphans, wives or mothers, faces and names erased from the great total numbers: 104 thousand 602 registered felonious homicides since the PRI took protest as President of the Republic in December of 2012 and until 31 of July of this year.
 
This is the most current and closest figure in the abyss of drug trafficking and violence, in enforced disappearances, in narcotics, or in the disintegration of bodies, in the world of peoples far away from everything, with no records of their dead.
 
The killings during the peñanietista era represent 25 percent of the total homicides registered from 1990 to 2016, according to data from the National Institute of Statistics and Geography (Inegi).
The violence reflected in the deprivation of life exploded with Felipe Calderón. Adding the number of murders during the PAN government (2006-2012) to those of the current administration, they represent 49% of the 427 thousand 698 victims of homicide in the last 27 years, according to figures obtained by the same Inegi. One of every two murders occurred under the mandate of Calderón and Peña.
 

16 thousand 152 dead in the course of 2017
 
If the trend in executions continues as it has in the first seven months of 2017, it will break a record of spilled blood. From January 1 to July 31, the Executive Secretariat of the National Public Security System, fed by public prosecutors and procuratories of the states of the Republic, has registered 16,122 violent deaths.

 The chilling number itself gets a lot more nerve when compared to the first year that Calderon opened fire on the drug cartels. That is, more than 16 thousand homicides in the first seven months of 2017 are practically double the ones that the government documented in 2007 (8 thousand 867).
Each month, in 2017, 2 thousand 100 violent deaths (intentional homicides) and 2 thousand 461 have been recorded. Some 2,300 executions on average monthly, 78 each day, three deaths per hour. If this average is sustained, this year would end with a record number: 27,690 victims.



 
 
 
BC surpasses Veracruz, Michoacán, Jalisco and Chihuahua
 
So far this year, in Sinaloa, Chihuahua, a little Guanajuato and especially Baja California, violence has intensified, entities that represent strategic points for trafficking, production and distribution of drugs in the country.
 
At the end of 2016, the states with the highest number of violent deaths were:
  1. State of Mexico, 2 thousand 256.
  2. Guerrero, 2 thousand 213.
  3. Veracruz, thousand 522.
  4. Michoacán, thousand 477.
  5. Jalisco, thousand 470.
  6. Baja California, thousand 258.
  7. .
  8. Guanajuato, thousand 110.
  9. Mexico City, thousand 035.
  10. Oaxaca, thousand 013.
Compared to 2017, these states have displaced others highly known for the level of presence of criminal groups and violence. For example, Guerrero surpassed the State of Mexico, the latter with more than 17 million inhabitants.
 
Just below Guerrero and Estado de México is Baja California, where practically 80% of homicides occur in Tijuana. What is most serious is that in the top 3, the State of Mexico is six times larger population than Guerrero and Baja California, condensing a greater number of murders for every 100 thousand inhabitants.
 
From January to July of 2010, according to the Report of Victims of Homicide, Kidnapping and Extortion published by the Executive Secretariat of the National Public Security System, some states have gained ground on the scale of death.


  Homicide rate
 
If we divide the number of homicides committed so far this year among the population of each State (according to the National Population Council), these would be the most violent entities. He emphasizes that the State of Mexico, which generally heads the top, loses spaces in front of other places.
 

 
Reacomodo of the Sinaloa Cartel, power of the CJNG



 
For Dr. David Shirk, a researcher at the University of San Diego in the United States, the wave of violence in Mexico has to do with a variety of factors such as poverty and lack of social opportunities.
 

However, he clarifies, it is not the definitive, since the quadrants of the most severe poverty in the country do not coincide with the places of greatest violence. For this reason, he says that it is a case of the criminal reorganization that has left the capture of the former leader of the Sinaloa Cartel, Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán Loera and the atomization of the same group during the government of Enrique Peña Nieto.
 
At the same time, the exponential growth of the New Generation Jalisco Cartel (CJNG) are the reasons for the deaths that have increased and diversified throughout the country. "It has to do with the readjustment of the criminal world in the wake of the realm of the Sinaloa Cartel," he describes.
In an interview with ZETA , the master of International Relations also admits that "CJNG's growth effectively consolidated during the early years of Peña Nieto by achieving the largest elimination in terms of rivals such as Los Zetas, Los (Knights) Templars, in that time when there is a very important advance of Sinaloa ".
 
Shirk states: "The first capture made by the government of Peña to 'El Chapo' did not detract from its ability to operate, because it was able to escape, was in a situation of power despite being imprisoned, that means that the time of greater power of Sinaloa was in 2012 and 2013. Removing from the game to 'El Chapo' - continues the professor in Political Science - is when the instability begins, the increase of violence, was in the end of 2015, particularly after moving it to Chihuahua, the violence continued to grow after his extradition to the United States. "
 
Shirk is the director of the Justice in Mexico program at the University of San Diego and believes that violence will cease when a cartel succeeds in seizing the disputed territories or achieving alliances for a ceasefire to eliminate poverty or unemployment, education can not be carried out over two years, but in that period the dynamics between organized crime groups can be radically altered.
"The waves of violence have grown and decreased much faster than changes in politics or public administration, which means that despite the fact that politicians and police like to claim the merits of changes in violence, as in 2012 and 2014, there are other factors in the criminal groups themselves, "he says.
 
One of the biggest problems is impunity, since "the authority has neither the time nor the capacity to investigate and punish homicides. This is very problematic, because if I kill someone and nobody punishes me, I will do it again. "
 
That is why the margin for reducing violence by the state is to strengthen investigations and punish homicides.
 

"Government attacks symptoms, not causes": Semáforo Delictivo
 
For Santiago Roel, director of Semáforo Delictivo, the most ambitious citizen project in the country regarding the revision of figures on insecurity, "the government has been attacking the symptoms without attacking the causes, which is the black market for drugs."
 

The founder of Semáforo Delictivo defines that violent deaths do not respond both to "the drug export market" and to narco-trafficking, because "the export market is sometimes violent, but it tends to be solved because it is more intelligent and corrupting, violence is a cost. "
 
In contrast, he explains, retail drug sales "have to protect a whole square, a whole city or a whole state, a whole territory, generally young at risk recruited, the colony's thief in the beginning, it is not a very sophisticated organization, then they have to defend their territories with much violence, they have less funds, they have arms and they are collapsing to the authority. This is the first cause of violence in Mexico.
 
"It is a competition of mafias by the territory. When you have a single mafia that controls a drug market, the region is usually quiet. When you have competition, it causes a lot of violence. The problem is that the Mexican government itself has been creating this violence by atomising the cartels, creating more competition and war between them, "he concludes.
 
In addition, criminal groups can not be defined without the complicity of the governments in turn: "There is a recomposition in government and obviously, there is a recomposition in criminal groups, their alliances, their contacts within the government. Electoral turbulence creates turbulence in organized crime as well. "
 
To solve this, Roel suggests: "It's very simple and it's drug regulation. Take away the business, snatch the market from the mafias, take away the economic, war and social power with which recruit young people, families, authorities, police. Regulation does not imply promoting drugs. Promoting drugs is what has been happening today, mafias are promoting dangerous drugs freely throughout the country."
 
And he adds: "All the institutional attempts that you can or want to make with respect to reducing violence or corruption will not work if you do not take the money from these mafias first."
 
Roel knows that not a single political party has raised the agenda. And less now that the 2018 electoral process is at the door: "First the pressure of the DEA, CIA and other agencies of the United States in Mexico, who do not care that Mexico regulates because if it does, there they run out of piñata, they love to beat up their failure in their drug policy. "
 
The other reason is that "there are politicians involved in the narco. No narcopolytic will agree on the regulation of drugs, they would be shooting their foot. " And finally, "the lack of understanding on the part of society that continues to confuse regulation with drug promotion and is just the opposite. That's the way it is now, get any drug anywhere. "
 


Makeup figures
 
Jimena David is a researcher at the Center for Public Policy Analysis Mexico Evalúa, based one of her most recent research on how to make up the numbers of willful homicides by reclassifying them as wrongful killings.
 
"Ideally, these two categories should have no relation because one refers to accidental (wrongful) acts and the other to intentional (intentional) acts, so they would have to move completely differently," he says in an interview with ZETA.
 
However, when Jimena and two of his fellow investigators from Mexico's Security and Justice Program evaluate the behavior of the incidents of these two crimes, "we find very significant and rare relationships that should not exist. We can not know for sure if they are manipulating the figure, but the data behave in an atypical way, so there is probably a problem, "he notes.
 

Poverty as a factor but not as a source

The investigator points out that these reclassifications can be made in the corrections that each prosecutor sends to the Secretariat: "Sometimes homicides can be subtracted or added later when, for example, twenty intentional homicides were given and two are subtracted, one for natural causes and another accidental. There are several times when this can happen, either by decision or by mistake. "
Regarding the reliability of these databases, David considers: "Both state and national strategies are constructed with defective information."
 
According to what the researcher has collected in her research, "some public ministries are capturing data by hand on paper or have no electricity, this slows down the authorities' ability to correctly collect data and make the best use of it."
 
One of the ways it proposes to improve the databases on homicides in the country is for public ministries to form a more complete picture of the modalities of this crime, beyond the data that are traditionally classified as homicide type , weapon and location, as well as that of a watchdog."


************

 

   September 2017 Homicidios Dolosos-Executions: 84 so far this month, 1,149 YTD Tijuana


09/12:

Shortly after noon today, Zeta reported there had been 13 people killed in Tijuana in the past twenty-four hours. Their figures (which are I believe accurate) then would bring the total year to date homidcidios dolosos/executions in Tijuana alone to 1,149. With these figures and this report in September so far there have been eighty four (84) people killed.  The killings they said "...seems to have no end."

Zeta - 09/12/17
12:01pm

Tijuana: 13 ejecuciones en 24 horas 

**********

 But it doesn't end there by any means.

 - Rosarito Beach:

Today, a human head located which was thrown in front of a pre-school; the man who saw and reported it after leaving his daughter off at the high school said it was in a transparent bag, you could clearly see it was a head; he said it gave him the shivers:

Frontera

Tiran Cabeza Humana a la entrada de un Jardin de Ninos en Rosarito 
por, Carmen Gutierrez 

And, more body parts in Rosarito Beach, unknown if these are related to the head. Several bags thrown into the Ensenada-Rosarito turnoff with body parts inside:

Frontera

Localizan bolsas al parecer con restos humanos en Rosarito
Por, Sergio Ortiz


  - Ensenada:

In Ensenada today on the road to Ojos Negros, two bodies located wrapped in plastic bags: 

Hallan restos humanos en la carretera a Ojos Negros


**********

UPDATE/edit 09/14:

El Sol de Tijuana has reported that there have been 93 homicidio dolosos the first fourteen days of September in Tijuana, bringing the YTD total up to 1,158 in Tijuana.  This number is increasing rapidly, Frontera has reported even more this day, check link below:

El Sol de Tijuana 

Van 93 Homicidios en 14 Dias de Septiembre
por, Eduardo Lopez 


end edit.


To follow the mayhem go to:

Zeta

Frontera Policiaca

AFN - Seguridad

El Mexicano - Policiaca

El Sol de Tijuana 

**********


I'll be back with more stats. ...and the DACA situation where people are fearful the kids might be being held hostage for a "Wall" deal.

Seemed appropriate....

"The goose has gotten fat On caviar and fancy bars
 And subprime homes And broken homes
Is this the life, the holy grail?
 It’s not enough that we succeed
We still need others to fail

 Fear, fear drives the mills of modern man Fear keeps us all in line
 Fear of all those foreigners Fear of all their crimes
 Is this the life we really want? (Want, want, want, want)
 It surely must be so For this is a democracy and what we all say goes

 And every time a student is run over by a tank
 And every time a pirate’s dog is forced to walk the plank
 Every time a Russian bride is advertised for sale
 And every time a journalist is left to rot in jail
 Every time a young girl’s life is casually spent
 And every time a nincompoop becomes the president
 Every time somebody dies reaching for their keys
 And every time the Greenland falls in the fucking sea is because
All of us, the blacks and whites Chicanos, Asians, every type of ethnic group
 Even folks from Guadeloupe, the old, the young Toothless hags, super models, actors, fags, bleeding hearts Football stars, men in bars, washerwomen, tailors, tarts Grandmas, grandpas, uncles, aunts Friends, relations, homeless tramps Clerics, truckers, cleaning ladies

 Ants – maybe not ants Why not ants? Well because its true
 The ants don’t have enough IQ to differentiate between The pain that other people feel
 And well, for instance, cutting leaves
 Or crawling across windowsills in search of open treacle tins
So, like the ants, are we just dumb?
 Is that why we don’t feel or see?
Or are we all just numbed out on reality TV?

 So, every time the curtain falls
Every time the curtain falls on some forgotten life
 It is because we all stood by, silent and indifferent "

- Roger Waters