The Economist beclowns itself, recommending against adoption of El Salvador's successful anti-crime policies



The Economist claims to "produce journalism of sometimes radical opinion with a reverence for facts." Judging from a recent Economist article concerning Latin America's problems with crime, it appears the London-based publication might be short on reverence.

A May 8 article entitled "How to pacify the world's most violent region" kicks off with a note on crime in Durán, Ecuador, where the murder rate last year was 148 per 100,000 residents. The article suggests that Durán is the "worst example of a scourge that has brought misery to Latin America. Despite being home to just 8% of the world's population, the region accounts for a third of its murders."

The anonymous author suggested that to remedy such nightmarish states of play, Latin American leaders might reflexively resort to "mano dura, the iron fist."

'Officials from across the region praise and seek to copy what they call the "Bukele model." They shouldnt.'

While admitting that this tough-on-crime approach has recently worked, the Economist author concluded that the crime-fighting approach that transformed El Salvador from a gang-ravaged and blood-soaked battlefield into a nation with fewer murders nationally than Chicago experiences in a year is not worth attempting.

"Officials from across the region praise and seek to copy what they call the 'Bukele model.' They shouldn't," wrote the anonymous author.

The article has been slapped with a Community Notes fact-check on X and ridiculed by Bukele himself.

The 'Bukele model'

Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele, 42, was re-elected president earlier this year with over 83% of the vote. His party also swept the National Assembly, securing 58 out of 60 seats.

A large part of what has made Bukele so beloved and popular amongst Salvadorans is his approach to crime. Bukele regards violent crime as a cancer and gangs as "metastases" in need of excision.

Blaze News previously reported that there were 51 homicides per 100,000 in 2018, the year prior to Bukele's election. Under his leadership, the homicide rate had fallen to 7.8 by 2022 such that the country saw fewer homicides that year (495) than were reported in Chicago during the same time period (695).

According to Reuters, Salvadoran security authorities observed the number of homicides drop again in 2023, this time by 70%, leaving the nation with a murder rate of 2.4 per every 100,000, bested only by Canada. America's mortality rate, by way of comparison, is 8 per 100,000.

In order to bring about this end, Bukele's administration took extreme measures, admittedly cracking down on some civil rights and throwing over 1% of the adult population into jail. The anti-crime measures have largely angered foreign leftists such as Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) and liberal publications, including the Economist.

The armchair critic's model

The anonymous Economist author stated as a fact that the Bukele model "undermines justice systems and leads to authoritarianism" then concluded it "will not work elsewhere."

The author reasoned that the Bukele-style crackdown worked in El Salvador but would alternatively fail in Mexico or Ecuador because of the caliber of the gangs, which have included MS-13.

The Economist did not go so far as to suggest criminal groups in other Latin American countries are impervious to bullets. Instead, it suggested they are "much richer and better armed and can often draw on help from foreign criminal affiliates. ... Such groups are unlikely to be defeated through force alone."

Instead of throwing violent criminals in prison or the ground, the Economist recommended the legalization of cocaine production and consumption. Recognizing, however, that is unlikely to happen, the anonymous author suggested that governments spare the gangs and bosses and instead "aim to discourage their most violent members from brutal acts."

In addition to creating government incentives for murderers not to keep murdering — citing Mexico as an exemplar — the Economist recommended leaning on police action contra military action; avoid mass incarceration; and keeping kids in school.

Backlash

When shared to X, the article was swiftly tagged with a community note linking to a Reuters article that highlights the precipitous drop in crime under the Bukele model.

Bukele responded to the article, which was captioned, "Gangs are gaining ground in Latin America. This is why iron-fist policies won't beat them back," with "We just did."

In addition to sharing the article, Bukele noted in a follow up, "There was a 70% drop in 2023… However, since the approval of the Exception Regime, there has been a 86% drop, and since we entered the government in 2019, the drop has reached 95%. We project a 97% drop for 2024."

There was a 70% drop in 2023\u2026\n\nHowever, since the approval of the Exception Regime, there has been a 86% drop, and since we entered the government in 2019, the drop has reached 95%.\n\nWe project a 97% drop for 2024.\n\nReceipts: https://t.co/SMlpyQcaf6
— (@)

Max Keiser, a senior adviser to Bukele and so-called Bitcoin bull, tweeted, "Restoring human rights for 6 1/2 million Salvadorans has virtually eliminated gang violence. El Salvador is now the safest country in the hemisphere. The Economist's blatant and grotesque act of journalistic malpractice here is mind boggling."

Blaze News columnist Auron MacIntyre responded, "The main purpose of the press is to lecture you about the evils of living in a well ordered and prosperous society."

The main purpose of the press is to lecture you about the evils of living in a well ordered and prosperous society
— (@)

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America's ON FIRE, and China's holding the gas can!



Author Peter Schweizer has blown the lid open on just how insidious China’s influence over America really is.

“China’s holding an empty can of gasoline, and our leaders are basically not saying or doing anything,” Schweizer tells Sara Gonzales.

“It’s not that they caused these problems, but they’ve exacerbated them and made them worse,” he adds.

Some of those problems are the violent left-wing groups operating in America’s streets and the fentanyl epidemic that's killing thousands of Americans every year.

According to Schweizer, the drug cartels in Mexico may be the junior partners overseeing the fentanyl crisis — but the Chinese are the senior partners. The Chinese start the process when they ship the “component parts of the fentanyl” to a port in Mexico.

This port is run by a Chinese company, which then sends the parts to northern Mexico, where it’s made into fentanyl. That fentanyl is then distributed to the 2,000 Chinese nationals in northern Mexico before it makes its way across the border.

“The cartels are helping kill their customers, but the profit margin for fentanyl is 8 to 10 times what it is for cocaine, so they’re willing to suffer those casualties. Meanwhile, the senior partner, the Chinese,” Schweizer explains, “what they really want to do is kill Americans.”

Now, fentanyl is the leading cause of death for Americans under 45.

“That’s the thing, China’s like, 'Good, we want to kill Americans,'” Gonzales says, disturbed.


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El Salvadoran president praises God and dunks on haters after landslide re-election



Nayib Bukele, El Salvador's tough-on-crime president, has been re-elected with 83% of the vote, leaving his "pulverized" opposition in the dust, roughly 70 points behind. The 42-year-old populist's New Ideas party also appears to have secured 58 out of the 60 seats in the National Assembly, which will enable Bukele to maintain the controversial state of emergency that has all but ensured the elimination of gang violence in the country.

Both in the lead-up to Bukele's landslide victory and in the days since, foreign leftists such as Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) and liberal publications such as the Economist have concern-mongered about Salvadorans threatening democracy by exercising their civic right to elect Bukele to another term.

Bukele made sure to send such foreign critics a message in his victory speech Sunday night, stressing, "The Salvadoran people have spoken. And they haven't just spoken loudly and clearly; they have made the clearest statement in the history of democracies around the world."

Hours after telling reporters Sunday that El Salvador had overcome the cancer "with metastases that were the gangs" and is now set to recover and "be the person we always wanted to be," Bukele took to the presidential balcony with his wife, Gabriela, to the sound of REM's "It's the End of the World as We Know It."

After boasting about his latest accomplishment, Bukele gave a brief summary of the country's triumph over crime: "We have gone from being literally, and this is no exaggeration — it's not hyperbole — we have gone from being literally the most dangerous country in the world to being the safest country in the entire Western Hemisphere."

Blaze News previously reported that there were 51 homicides per 100,000 in 2018, the year before Bukele first entered office. The homicide rate dropped to 7.8 in 2022 under his leadership, such that El Salvador saw fewer homicides that year (495) than were reported in Chicago during the same period (695).

"We lived through 50 horrible years of wars and killing, and everything has changed," Ana Rodriguez, a 70-year-old voter, told the Economist.

The homicide rate in El Salvador last year was reportedly 2.4 per 100,000. Canada's, by way of comparison, was 2.25 in 2022, and the U.S. is pushing 8 per 100,000.

Bukele told thousands of his supporters Sunday, "[El Salvador is] the safest country in the American continent. And what did they tell us? 'You're violating human rights.' Whose human rights? The rights of the honest people? No. Perhaps we have prioritized the rights of the honest people over the criminals' rights. That is all we have done."

Rep. Omar and other Democratic lawmakers urged the U.S. State Department to lean on El Salvador ahead of its national election last week, noting in a statement, "President Bukele is amassing power and establishing authoritarian rule in El Salvador. The Members of Congress are urging the State Department to review its relationship with El Salvador and use America's diplomatic influence to defend democratic values."

"I ask these organizations, I ask the governments of these foreign nations, I ask these journalists: 'Why do you want them to kill us? Why do you want to see Salvadoran blood spilled? Why aren't you happy to see that blood doesn't run in our country as it did before?"continued the Salvadoran. "'Why should we die? Why should our children die? So that you can be happy that we are respecting your false democracy, which you don't even respect in your own country?'"

The president shared an anecdote about a conversation with a Spanish journalist who supposedly asked him why he wanted to "dismantle democracy."

"I answered: 'What democracy are you referring to? Democracy means the power of the people. Demos and kratos. That's where the word democracy comes from,'" said Bukele. "And if this is what the Salvadoran people want, then why should a Spanish journalist come and tell us what Salvadorans can and can't do? What democracy is he talking about? He's talking about the democracy that his bosses in Spain want."

Bukele suggested the alternatives were imperialism, colonialism, elitism, or plutocracy in disguise.

After telling off his foreign detractors, Bukele dismissed secularist anxieties, then praised God.

"We must give all glory to God," said Bukele, eliciting applause and cheers from the crowd. "Because what are we if not His instruments? We are all the tools of God. God chose to heal our country. ... We respect all religions; we respect atheists and agnostics. We are their friends, but let us believe in God."

Alluding to possible concerns over his religious statement, Bukele added, "Maybe the problem [of praising God] is that it sets an example. Because maybe the people in your countries who you have tried to indoctrinate into atheism will once again believe in God."

Félix Ulloa, Bukele's vice president, reportedly indicated that now that the government has "cleaned the house" of crime, the administration will make education, health, and infrasructure top priorities.

— (@)

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'He is a documented member of a violent street gang': Illegal immigrant set to be removed from US again, according to ICE



A Salvadoran who had previously been removed from America after illegally entering the country will be removed from the U.S. again, according to a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement press release.

"This Salvadoran noncitizen represented a threat to the residents of Maryland," ERO Baltimore acting Field Office Director Darius Reeves noted, according to the press release. "He is a documented member of a violent street gang using our communities to hide out from authorities in his home country. ERO Baltimore will not allow the world’s criminals to use Maryland neighborhoods to escape justice."

The individual had been arrested by Border Patrol in May 2011. He was removed from the U.S. in July 2011.

"The San Salvador Police Department arrested and charged the Salvadoran national for crimes relating to public peace, illicit groups and illegally carrying a firearm in July 2013 and identified him a member of the 18th Street criminal gang at that time," the press release notes. "The San Salvador Police Department again arrested and charged the Salvadoran citizen for illegally carrying a firearm in November 2015."

At an unknown point in time, the individual illegally reentered the U.S., according to ICE, which notes that Border Patrol encountered him, as well as his spouse and child, in March 2021.

"The noncitizen filed an application for asylum and for withholding of removal with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services in May 2022. A Department of Justice immigration judge in Baltimore rejected his application the following month," the press release notes. "In February 2023, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services officially closed the noncitizen’s case, reinstating his removal."

"Deportation officers from ERO Baltimore’s Fugitive Operations Team arrested him at his residence in Cockeysville and served him a notice of intent/decision to reinstate prior removal order. The Salvadoran national will remain in ICE custody pending his removal from the United States," the press relase states.

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Facebook removes GOP lawmaker's post promising to ‘drop any 10' armed protesters who come to Louisiana and into his neighborhood



Facebook removed two posts from a Louisiana congressman's account in which the Republican lawmaker promised to "drop any 10" armed protesters "where [they] stand" should they come to Louisiana and into his neighborhood in a threatening manner.

The first post was removed for breaking the company's "Violence and Incitement" policies, a Facebook spokesperson reportedly told Baton Rouge news outlet, The Advocate, on Tuesday.

In that now-removed post, Rep. Clay Higgins (R-La.) displayed a picture of protesters armed with long guns and wrote: "If this shows up, we'll consider the armed presence a real threat."

"We being, We, the People, of Louisiana," he added. "One way ticket fellas. Have your affairs in order."

Some outlets reporting on the news noted that Louisiana is an open-carry state, meaning a permit is not needed in order for someone to visibly carry a firearm in public.

Higgins, who formerly worked as a sheriff's deputy before entering politics, is known for his unwavering support for law enforcement and his vigorous anti-crime stance.

"Me? I wouldn't even spill my beer. I'd drop any 10 of you where you stand," he warned in the post. "We, are SWAT. Nothing personal. We just eliminate the threat. We don't care what color you are. We don't care if you're left or right. if you show up like this, if We recognize threat...you won't walk away."

BuzzFeed News reporter Salvador Hernandez was able to screenshot the post before it was taken down:

Rep. Clay Higgins has spoken at Oath Keepers events and appeared with other militia groups before. But when a rumor… https://t.co/CxP5ElQH7q
— Salvador Hernandez (@Salvador Hernandez)1599074530.0

"We don't want to see your worthless ass nor do we want to make your Mothers cry," Higgins added later in the post before implicitly threatening to meet the protesters with lethal force.

"You're the ones threatening, if you show yourselves, aggressively natured and armed in my presence. In my neighborhood. Where I work. Anywhere close enough to put my family or my fellow citizens in danger. That is where your journey will end. Fast," he wrote. "How fast? 1,450 FPS fast."

Protests over racial injustice and police brutality have frequently turned into violent and destructive riots in many communities across the country, including Portland, Oregon; Chicago, Illinois; and Kenosha, Wisconsin.

Higgins' Facebook post came as protests continued in Lafayette, Louisiana, over the death of Trayford Pellerin, a black man killed by police late last month.

In response to the first post's removal, Higgins took to Facebook with a second post, which was ultimately removed from the platform for "incitement" as well.

In that post, Higgins wrote: "No, I did not remove my post. America is being manipulated into a new era of government control. Your liberty is threatened from within. Welcome to the front lines, Ladies and Gentlemen. I suggest you get your mind right. I'll advise when it's time gear up, mount up, and roll out."

On Wednesday, Rep. Cedric Richmond (D-La.) characterized Higgins' posts as "dumb and reckless" and in need of "serious condemnation."