Bloodshed in Mexico

Geez.  Ah geez.

I emanated these vocal sounds involuntarily as I writhed/ cringed on the chair in front of the computer monitor, which displayed the latest news about drug cartels in Mexico.

At the risk of sounding like a doomsday bugler, war clouds are unmistakably looming over certain parts of the world today.  It is easy to shake your head disdainfully when reading about the latest proclamation of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad that “Israel will be wiped off the map very soon”.  It is easy to chuckle softly to yourself and utter “crazy” under your breath when you glimpse footage of a million Iranians rallying around a giant missile in a typical Tehran parade, shouting “Death to Israel!”.  There is Hugo Chavez, whose Venezuela has seen homicide rates rise 67 percent since taking office, even as massive, national military drills each month to prepare for an “American Invasion”.  There is Kim Jong Il, whose North Koreans are six inches shorter (malnourishment) than their otherwise genetically identical Southern ilk.  Yet, the populations these guys oversee eat out of their palms, voluntarily or not.

But at least these David Koreshes have the dense simplicity to herald their plans in plain language, and at least they are thousands of miles away.  Besides, I find it hard to believe the true power within the smaller government of our government actually feel threatened by these silly little men who are inching towards acquiring one or two nukes; the U.S. has 40, 000 nuclear warheads alone and is comparatively invulnerable in a nuclear war.

These cartels are a quieter, more insidious and seemingly faster-growing threat to the U.S.  While the groups are not overtly engaging in acts of war -swaggering about their nuclear potential or conducting intense military drills as a country- their increasing political power from drug money is gradually pervading the pillars of Mexico’s civilized society.  The cartels’ rapid wealth accumulation is literally starting to buy legitimacy in Mexico, fostering a culture of fear among denizens of cartel-plagued areas that law enforcement officials are increasingly being bribed by cartels.

Then there is the bloody campaign of the cartels itself, the casualties.  The use of car bombs by cartels has risen sharply in the last months of 2010.  Kingpin after kingpin is killed, often buried in an elaborate mausoleum in a prominent part of town (see National Geographic’s April 2010 issue) and replaced by kingpin after kingpin.  The cartels are amorphous, faceless, nameless.  The modus operandi, killing, is the only non-variable.  There is no declaration of war and a shout of “charge!”, or a definite ending and beginning.  The cartels are fighting each other, the government is fighting the cartels, and violence is incidental to the whole business.  In the last year, 2500 people were killed in Ciudad de Juarez (Juarez City) alone.  That’s five times the homicide rate of Chicago, which has the highest rate in the U.S.

Very recently, prominent economists and politicians alike said tourist areas are safe from the cartels, but now that’s out the window, too.  In April, gunmen from the Arellano-Felix cartel raided a Holiday Inn in Montery, even having the temerity to block off all roads leading to the Holiday Inn with paramilitary tanks, in case any local cops decided to get fresh and rush to the scene.  Four hotel guests and two employees were abducted; no word yet on their whereabouts.  In October, a similar raid occured at an Acapulco resort.  This is further bad news for a country whose number one industry, tourism, has already taken a dive because of its recent swine-flu outbreak and the growing perception of it as an unsafe vacation spot.

Pew Global Research, as of 2009, ranked Mexico second most likely to suffer a governmental/ economic collapse (Pakistan was no.1), in spite of being an ostensibly stable nation.

The very infrastructure of Mexico is crumbling because of this pernicious bloodshed.  Also, problems have been known to migrate.  Our country has its own violence issues, with battery, school shootings and gangs.  But imagine if Mexico’s carnage went just northerly, which there is growing evidence of along the US-Mexico border.  Most Americans I know wince when they drive past roadkill.  Imagine if it were commmonplace for a U.S. town of 300,000 to have eight murders a day.  Would roadkill still disturb us?

About chevalier747

Any news European, Mideastern or South American instantly has my attention. Listening to/ strumming baroque music and playing soccer are my chief cups of tea. People of interest: anyone who makes a tremendous sacrifice, great artists or inventors, or freaks of nature, be their realm intellectual, physical or metaphysical (i.e. Michael Jordan, J. Robert Oppenheimer, E.T., et al, get it? Bahdahp psht
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