Why SCOTUS Should Nuke Mexico’s Bogus Lawsuit Against U.S. Gun Manufacturers
The Mexican government is attempting to blame American gun manufacturers and distributors for the damage Mexican criminals cause in Mexico.
While the Biden administration has failed to find a solution to the crisis at the southern border, Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has offered his.
That solution is that the United States commit $20 billion in aid to poor countries in Latin America and the Caribbean, lift sanctions on Venezuela and the Cuban embargo, and legalize millions of law-abiding Mexicans living in the U.S.
When asked by Sharyn Alfonsi on “60 Minutes” what would happen if the U.S. didn’t comply with his demands, he gave a terrifying answer.
“The flow of migrants will continue,” he answered, before being asked if he thought what he was doing was “diplomatic blackmail.”
“I’m speaking frankly. We have to say things as they are, and I always say what I feel. I always say what I think,” he answered.
Dave Rubin isn’t amused.
“It is diplomatic blackmail. The president of the country that’s to our south, that basically has the open border, is basically like give us $20 billion,” Rubin says.
The Mexican president also blamed the fentanyl crisis in America not on the open border but on the U.S. for producing it. He then blamed American culture for the widespread drug problem.
“You know why we don’t have the drug consumption that you have in the United States? We have customs, traditions, and we don’t have the problem of the disintegration of the family,” the president said.
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Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has roughly six months left in office. It appears in that time, he will continue to alienate the U.S. and curry favor with his country's terroristic cartels.
Obrador revealed Friday that he won't combat Mexican drug cartels at the request of the American government, suggesting that doing so would run contrary to his "Mexico First" policy.
This announcement and the disturbing insinuations that accompanied it come just weeks after Obrador underlined what he expects from the U.S. in exchange for Mexico's cooperation in remedying the crisis at the border.
According to the National Center for Drug Abuse Statistics, drug overdose deaths are up 30% year over year. There are over 96,700 fatal drug overdoses every year, 72% of which are from opioids.
Much of that fatal opioid supply comes from Mexico. Often using precursors provided by the communist Chinese, Mexican cartels manufacture and traffic the drugs over the porous U.S.-Mexico border.
Obrador nevertheless suggested Friday that the drugs are a uniquely American problem, not a Mexican problem, reported the Associated Press.
The leftist president has repeatedly emphasized that demand, not supply, is the problem.
Last year, Obrador suggested the fentanyl crisis was caused by a "lack of hugs, of embraces."
"There is a lot of disintegration of families, there is a lot of individualism, there is a lack of love, of brotherhood, of hugs and embraces," said Obrador. "That is why they [U.S. officials] should be dedicating funds to address the causes."
After displacing blame over the opioid crisis once again, Obrador said in an interview with CBS News' "60 Minutes" Friday, "We are not going to act as policemen for any foreign government."
"Mexico first. Our home comes first," said Obrador.
The outgoing president added, "Of course we are going to cooperate in fighting drugs, above all because it has become a very sensitive, very sad humanitarian issue, because a lot of people are dying in the United States because of fentanyl."
While Obrador provided a nationalistic rationale for not helping the U.S. tackle the cartels, he might have less noble reasons for failing to tackle his country's criminal elements.
The New York Times reported last month that American law enforcement officials have looked into allegations that elements of Obrador's regime have met with and taken millions of dollars from drug cartels — allegations the leftist president has called "completely false."
While it has long been understood that the cartels have infiltrated the Mexican state, it is unclear how far the corruption extends. One informant reportedly told U.S. investigators that Obrador's closest confidants met with Ismael Zambada García, a senior leader of the Sinaloa drug cartel, before the Mexican president's 2018 electoral victory.
Another informant told the investigators that following Obrador's election, the funder of the Zetas cartel gave the leftist president's allies $4 million in hopes of getting freed from prison.
One source claimed to have videos of the president's son picking up drug money.
There have been other allegations, including those detailed by ProPublica, that drug traffickers poured millions of dollars into Obrador's first campaign in return for him turning a blind eye to their operations while in power. Obrador coincidentally campaigned on a "hugs, not bullets" approach to the drug war and has advocated against "demonizing" the cartels.
Earlier this month, the New York Times reported that Obrador expects the Biden administration to confer legal status upon at least 5 million illegal aliens from Mexico presently residing in the U.S. His demands did not stop at amnesty for those flouting American immigration law.
Obrador also expects the Biden administration to call off its sanctions against Venezuela, lift the blockade against Cuba, and pour $20 billion every year into Latin American and Caribbean countries.
The Mexican regime, which announced last week it would refuse to accept deportees from Texas, has demonstrated in recent months that it is capable of damming the northward flood of illegal aliens.
CBS News reported that after over 250,000 illegal aliens stormed across the U.S.-Mexico border in December, Biden asked Mexico to contain the flow of migrants. Temporarily obliging the U.S. government, Mexico managed to help bring down the number of border crossings by 50%.
Obrador told "60 Minutes" that Mexico managed this reduction by being "more careful" about its own southern border as well as by asking the Cuban and Venezuelan regimes to help curb the flow of migrants.
Mexico reportedly also increased patrols at the border, deported migrants, and flew others to the south of the country. These efforts apparently were short-lived, as border-crossing numbers have recently begun to significantly spike again.
When pressed on what will happen if he does not get his way, Obrador told "60 Minutes" that "the flow of migrants will continue."
In addition to threatening to continue unlawfully exporting migrants to the U.S., Obrador claimed former President Donald Trump's threats to close the border and finish the border wall — a wall now supported by the majority of Americans — amounted to bluffs "because he needs Mexico."
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Some American lawmakers were prickled by Obrador's threat.
Rep. Tom Tiffany (R-Wisc.) wrote, "Mexico's corrupt leader is not our friend."
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) tweeted, "This is a war. He is basically saying either we meet his demands or the invasion continues."
Voters will soon have an opportunity to test Obrador's theory about whether Trump is bluffing about walling off the border. Trump has also contemplated doing what Obrador appears unwilling to do: Use military force to reduce the cartels to ash.
Trump is not the only Republican who has advocated for exterminating Mexican drug traffickers with extreme prejudice.
Reps. Mike Waltz (R-Fla.) and Dan Crenshaw (R-Texas) introduced a resolution last year that would "authorize the use of United States Armed Forces against those responsible for trafficking fentanyl or a fentanyl-related substance into the United States or carrying out other related activities that cause regional destabilization in the Western Hemisphere."
The resolution did not advance in the previously Democrat-controlled Congress.
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It remains unclear whether the courts will ultimately permit the Lone Star State to assume some of the basic duties the Biden administration appears unwilling or at the very least incapable of doing — namely the enforcement of immigration law amid an unprecedented border crisis.
Regardless of how the battle over Texas' Senate Bill 4 pans out, Mexico underscored Tuesday that when it comes to the tens of millions of foreign nationals who have transited its lands in order to trespass into the U.S., there will be no take-backs.
SB 4, ratified by Gov. Greg Abbott (R) on Dec. 18, was supposed to take effect this month. The law makes illegal entry into Texas a class B misdemeanor and allows for foreign nationals who refuse to leave the country to be charged with a second-degree felony, which carries prison time of up to 20 years.
Under SB 4, illegal aliens found in Texas "at any time" who have previously been convicted of two or more misdemeanors involving drugs, crimes against a person, or both, would be charged with a third-degree felony.
The law also grants local law enforcement officials with the ability to deport illegal aliens.
The Biden administration, which has overseen the unlawful entry of well over one million illegal aliens into the country since October, joined radical leftists groups and a foreign regime in condemning SB 4.
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre called SB 4 "an extreme law that will not and does not make the communities in Texas safer."
The Biden Department of Justice sued Texas "to enforce the supremacy of federal law" in early January. The following month, a Texas federal judge placed a preliminary injunction on SB 4, claiming Texas "is unlikely to succeed on the merits."
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton's office immediately appealed the ruling to the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, which reversed the ruling. This prompted the Biden administration to appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, which temporarily blocked the law.
The Supreme Court allowed SB 4 to go into effect Tuesday, but this proved to be short-lived. Hours later, the federal appeals court let the lower court's earlier injunction stand.
Amid this back-and-forth — which University of Texas Austin law professor Steve Vladeck told the Texas Tribune was "indefensibly chaotic" — Mexican authorities chimed in, indicating they would remain an exporter, not an importer, of illegal aliens.
The Mexican Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued a statement Tuesday, claiming the Mexican regime "condemns the entry into force of SB4 in Texas, which aims to stop the flow of migrants by criminalizing them, promoting the separation of families, discrimination and racial profiling that threaten the human rights of the migrant community."
Apparently, the ministry did not consider the possibility that migrant families could be reunited and live in Mexico.
The ministry further stated that the Mexican regime "categorically rejects any measure that allows state or local authorities to exercise immigration control, detain and return nationals or foreigners to Mexican territory."
"Mexico will not accept, under any circumstances, repatriations by the State of Texas," claimed the ministry.
Intimating that the border crisis, which it has in many ways exacerbated, is America's alone to deal with, the ministry accused Texas of "generating hostile environments" for millions of residents of Mexican origin and subjecting them to "expressions of hatred, discrimination and racial profiling."
Mexico, which has received billions of dollars in direct U.S. foreign assistance in recent years, further indicated it will attempt to put its thumb on the scale with regards to the Texas case before the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals and "provide relevant information on the impact that this law will have on the Mexican and/or Mexican-American community, as well as its effect in U.S.-Mexico relations."
Mexico's top diplomat for North America reiterated the regime's rebuff of Texas' efforts to re-establish its sovereignty, writing, "Our country will not accept repatriations from the state of Texas. The dialogue on immigration matters will continue between the federal governments of [Mexico] and [the U.S.]."
In addition to pushing back against Texas' desperate effort to tackle a fatal and costly problem, Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador wants the Biden administration to give legal status to at least five million illegal aliens in the U.S., reported the New York Times.
Obrador also has blasted proposals to build a wall along the southern border as "electoral propaganda."
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The presumed remains of the five Mexican college students, ages 19 to 22, who went missing last Friday and were subsequently seen being butchered in a nightmarish video, have been discovered in and around a warehouse in the western state of Jalisco.
When initially asked about the grisly ordeal, which was broadcast on national television, Mexico's leftist president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, joked about being unable to hear reporters, then walked away.
When pressed again about the matter on Thursday, Obrador — who previously thanked President Joe Biden for not securing the American border with "even one meter of wall" — called the situation "very regrettable," then instead spoke at length about baseball, reported the Los Angeles Times.
Five childhood friends were reported missing after attending a fair in Lagos de Moreno, Mexico, on Aug. 11.
Family members later indicated that "there is a high probability" that college students Roberto Olmeda, Diego Lara, Uriel Galvan, Dante Cedillo, and Jaime Martinez were the victims seen battered, bound, and bleeding in the footage, reported the Daily Mail.
Witnesses told Héctor De Mauleón of El Universal that 10 armed men dragged the victims out of their car late last Friday and forced them into a white pickup and van with blacked-out windows.
There is some indication that at least two of the five men had been lured to the fair with the promise of gainful employment as security guards, having previously spoken with an individual who had connections in a call center.
The Daily Mail reported that the individual who had dangled employment opportunities before some of the victims was actually a Jalisco New Generation cartel member.
Cartels routinely list fake job postings, offering competitive salaries and benefits. Applicants unfortunate enough to show up are apparently given the option of death or working for the cartel. Those who choose life often have to kill on command.
According to security analyst David Saucedo Torres, the CNJG has opened multiple call centers and made "Lagos de Moreno a key operational site, specifically for recruiting and training squads of hitmen."
"The five young people who were kidnapped seem by all indications to have been caught in some sort of training program by the Jalisco Cartel, which sets tests for the new recruits — forcing them to carry out assassinations," said Torres, adding that the requirement that one captive kill the others would have been a routine initiation.
The footage broadcast on television reportedly shows one of the captives crushing his friend's head with a brick thrown to him by his off-screen captor. The captive then proceeds to decapitate his brained friend with a knife under orders.
It appears the one captive's brutal compliance didn't save his life.
The Jalisco State Prosecuto'rs Office Thursday said investigators had discovered the charred remains of four decapitated bodies along with four skulls in the western state of Jalisco, home to the terroristic CJNG — whose logo is featured in the gruesome film. The remains were inside a building near where the men were kidnapped and filmed being tortured.
Mexican authorities found a fifth body nearby in Olmeda's torched vehicle.
Jalisco Governor Enrique Alfaro stated, "What we are seeing here is an act clearly linked to organized crime. ... These are irrational, violent and direct attacks against the stability of Jalisco state, and they demand a reaction from the [federal] government."
The U.S. State Department notes that violent crime is ubiquitous in Mexico and advises Americans not to travel to the following states: Colima, Guerrero, Michoacan, Sinaloa, Tamaulipas, and Zacatecas.
It further recommends reconsidering travel to the following states: Chihuahua, Durango, Guanajuato, Jalisco, Morelos, Sonora, and Baja California.
For all but Campeche and Yucatan state, the U.S. federal government recommends that travelers altogether exercise caution when visiting Mexico on account of the rampant crime and/or risk of being kidnapped.
While Americans can avoid Mexico, with a porous southern border, they may find it difficult to avoid its criminal elements.
Just last week, suspected Mexican cartel members equipped with rifles and wearing body armor were seen entering Texas, reported the New York Post.
Another five suspected cartel members were encountered in the same area in June, similarly carrying rifles.
According to U.S. Customs and Border Protection, over 144,000 illegal aliens stole into the nation in the month of June. Well over 1.8 million illegal aliens were encountered crossing the southern border in the eight previous months.
TheBlaze previously reported that Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis recently indicated that he would not rule out using drones as president, stressing he would "use whatever force we need to to defend the country."
He stressed that the cartels are "killing tens of thousands of Americans" as well as trafficking individuals into the U.S. and perpetrating sexual abuse. "It's really the worst of humanity," he said, adding that he "would categorize them as something akin to a foreign terrorist organization."
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The attack took place at the La Palma resort around 4:30 p.m. in the Cortazar municipality of Guanajuato state, reported the Associated Press.
While initial reports indicated that around 20 people had been attacked and 10 injured, officials later confirmed that three women, three men, and a child had been murdered.
According to Reuters, an eighth victim inside the resort was left seriously injured.
Graphic photos show a chaotic scene, including bloodied bodies and overturned plastic chairs nearby a swimming pool. There was a pink backpack and children's belongings on a table nearby the bodies. The child killed in the attack appears to have been a little boy.
After the massacre, the bandits reportedly ransacked the spa shop and stole its security cameras.
A witness claimed "heavily armed sicarios" were responsible in a video documenting the aftermath.
Following the massacre, Mexican soldiers and local police attempted to track down the bandits, but no arrests have been made so far.
Guanajuato, a low-rent manufacturing hub for carmakers such as Toyota, is Mexico's most violent state.
Two cartels that traffic lethal drugs into the U.S. are competing for superiority in the region: the Jalisco New Generation Cartel and the local Santa Rose de Lima gang, backed by the Sinaloa Cartel.
\u201cAlthough Cortazar is part of the territories under the control of the CSRL, their enemies from the CJNG launch periodic attacks against them, trying to establish a beachhead either in the municipal center or in some of its rural communities. They have not succeeded so far.\u201d— Borderland Beat (@Borderland Beat) 1681675151
Mexico's leftist president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, has routinely downplayed the violence, reported the New York Times.
"Our adversaries are exaggerating," said Obrador. "It’s like staged, it’s propagandistic. There is no major problem, but they do want to grab that banner of violence."
DW reported that there have been over 350,000 murders in Guanajuato since 2006.
3,500 people were murdered in Guanajuato in 2019. Murders skyrocketed to nearly 5,000 in 2020, reported the Mexico Daily Post.
In May 2022, 15 hooded gunman reportedly opened fire at a Mexican hotel, slaughtering seven women and three men. An eleventh victim later died in hospital. The massacre took place just hours after dismembered bodies were discovered nearby in plastic bags, reported the New York Post.
In October, a dozen people, mainly women, were gunned down in another bar. 10 more were left dead after a shooting in September.
The U.S. State Department maintains its travel warning to American travelers that "Violent crime — such as homicide, kidnapping, carjacking, and robbery — is widespread and common in Mexico."
The State Department asks Americans to reconsider travel to Guanajuato state, where this shooting took place, citing crime, kidnapping, and a high number of cartel-related murders.
While Guanajuato is especially deadly, tourists in more frequented Mexican states are still up against significant risks.
In March, a U.S. tourist was shot in the leg at a Mexican resort just south of Cancún, reported the Associated Press.
TheBlaze previously detailed how Dustan Jackson was mugged, butchered, and left for dead when attempting to leave Cancún.
An American family of nine, including 8-month-old twins, were brutally slaughtered in 2019 while traveling through Chihuahua, Mexico, just 100 miles south from the Arizona border.
Paul Nielsen and Janet Vasquez of Utah were also targeted in 2019. While they were both robbed and murdered in Guerrero, Mexico, their son survived with minor injuries.
Two Canadian tourists were gunned down at an upscale hotel in Mexico in January 2022.
Shooting at Mexico resort leaves 1 child, 6 adults dead youtu.be
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