courier-journal | Somewhere deep in Mexico's remote wilderness, the
world’s most dangerous and wanted drug lord is hiding. If someone you
love dies from an overdose tonight, he may very well be to blame.
And though few Americans know his name, authorities promise they soon will.
Rubén "Nemesio" Oseguera Cervantes is the leader of Cártel Jalisco
Nueva Generación, better known as CJNG. With a $10 million reward on his
head, he’s on the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration’s Most Wanted
list.
El Mencho’s powerful international syndicate is flooding the U.S.
with thousands of kilos of methamphetamines, heroin, cocaine and
fentanyl every year — despite being targeted repeatedly by undercover
stings, busts and lengthy investigations.
The unending stream of narcotics has contributed to this country’s
unprecedented addiction crisis, devastating families and killing more
than 300,000 people since 2013.
CJNG’s rapid rise heralds the latest chapter in a generations-old
drug war in which Mexican cartels are battling to supply Americans’
insatiable demand for narcotics.
A nine-month Courier Journal investigation reveals
how CJNG's reach has spread across the U.S. in the past five years,
overwhelming cities and small towns with massive amounts of drugs.
kctv5 | As the officer in charge of COMBAT, Jackson County’s Drug Trafficking
Task Force Dan Cumming deals with a lot of dangerous people.
“About
100% of what we recover, if you follow it back far enough up the drug
train so to speak, comes from Mexico and is cartel related,” Cummings
said.
Just last week, COMBAT worked a case at the request of Independence police.
A tip led them to a Kansas City, Missouri street where a search warrant led to the seizure of tires filled with meth.
“My guess is that’s the way it was shipped from Mexico to Kansas City,” Cummings said.
Cartels get creative when smuggling drugs in customs and border protection has a few recent examples.
Fentanyl in a vehicle transmission, heroine in a gas tank, marijuana inside a car door and cocaine in clay figurines.
Cummings says he’s seeing more cartel related drug busts in Kansas City now than he has in his 35 plus years in law enforcement.
“We switched from meth labs to Mexican cartels,” Cummings said.
kmbc | Two Mexican nationals have been sentenced in federal court for their
roles in a conspiracy that distributed more than 14 kilograms of heroin
in the Kansas City metropolitan area, some of which is believed to have
resulted in overdoses and deaths.
Julian Felix-Aguirre, 46, and
Martin Missael Puerta-Navarro, 38, were sentenced in separate hearings
before U.S. District Judge Gary A. Fenner on Wednesday. Felix-Aguirre
was sentenced to 24 years and seven months in federal prison without
parole. Pueta-Navarro was sentenced to 14 years and eight months in
federal prison without parole.
fox4kc | "No where is immune," said Erik Smith with the Drug Enforcement
Administration. "There are people who become dependent on controlled
substances and have need to satisfy that addiction, and any place there
is a consumer, an addict or user, somebody will supply that drug for
that."
The DEA special agent in charge said feeding the demand for drugs in Johnson County goes well beyond teenage drug dealers.
Smith said Mexican cartels really are living here in Johnson County.
"Historically, a decade ago, two decades ago, a lot of cartels would
limit themselves to the inner city," he said. "But as they become more
established and they become more wealthy, it's quite common to see them
branching out into suburban areas including Johnson County."
thehill | Conservative commentator Bill Kristol rips Fox News's Tucker Carlson
in a new interview, saying his show could be "close now to racism" or
"ethnonationalism."
"I mean, it is close now to racism, white — I
mean, I don't know if it's racism exactly — but ethnonationalism of
some kind, let's call it. A combination of dumbing down, as you said
earlier, and stirring people's emotions in a very unhealthy way,"
Kristol told CNBC's John Harwood in the interview published on Thursday.
Back from Israel, where you see "that inner freedom, that simple dignity" of "people who remember their heritage & are loyal to their fate."
Carlson recently questioned the
widespread outrage over Trump's reported comments referring to Haiti,
El Salvador and African nations as "shithole countries."
"So, if
you say Norway is a better place to live and Haiti is kind of a hole,
well anyone who’s been to those countries or has lived in them would
agree. But we’re jumping up and down, ‘Oh, you can’t say that.’ Why
can’t you say that?" Carlson asked.
thefederalist | There is a misconception that political correctness was responsible
for the breakdown of the racial détente. This is incorrect. Political
correctness, as loose a term as it is, was the means by which we
continually renegotiated the terms of the deal. After all, the primary
rules for whites had exactly to do with what was acceptable to say.
Privilege
theory and the concept of systemic racism dealt the death blow to the
détente. In embracing these theories, minorities and progressives broke
their essential rule, which was to not run around calling everyone a
racist. As these theories took hold, every white person became a racist
who must confess that racism and actively make amends. Yet if the white
woman who teaches gender studies at Barnard with the Ben Shahn drawings
in her office is a racist, what chance do the rest of have?
Within
the past few years, as privilege theory took hold, many whites began to
think that no matter what they did they would be called racist,
because, in fact, that was happening. Previously there were rules. They
shifted at times, but if adhered to they largely protected one from the
charge of racism. It’s like the Morrissey lyric: “is evil just something
you are, or something you do.” Under the détente, racism was something
you did; under privilege theory it is something you are.
That
shift, from carefully directed accusations of racism for direct actions
to more general charges of unconscious racism, took away the carrot for
whites. Worse, it led to a defensiveness and feeling of victimization
that make today’s whites in many ways much more tribal than they were 30
years ago. White people are constantly told to examine their whiteness,
not to think of themselves as racially neutral. That they did, but the
result was not introspection that led to reconciliation, it was a
decision that white people have just as much right to think of
themselves as a special interest group as anyone else.
Blame and Destroy Whitey
The
unfortunate place where we now find ourselves is one in which blatant
attacks on white people, often from white people, are driving them
further into a tribal cocoon. Samantha Bee’s awful and irresponsible berating of white women
as the evil force behind Trump’s victory, while condescendingly
describing magical people of color as the only ones who can save us, is a
clear example of where white defensiveness and victimization are coming
from.
Furthermore, the ever-present drumbeat from the Left that
every conservative victory is the death throes of bad, old white people
who are about to be swept away by waves of brown immigration is making
many whites dig in. On a certain level, how can you blame them? They are
explicitly being told that their values and way of life are under the
sword. How do we expect them to react?
The détente was far from
perfect. It often allowed quieter racism to lurk unchallenged. In some
ways, it was a Band-Aid on a bullet wound. But Band-Aids have a role to
play in treating bullet wounds—the body heals itself better when the
wound is clean and free from infection. This is true of discourse’s
ability to heal our body politic, as well. Under the détente, there was
still racism, but Steve Bannon, whose publication Breitbart has traded
in vile explicit racism, could never have been considered for White
House chief of staff.
unz | According to the mainstream media, in a recent speech in West Palm
Beach, Donald Trump finally completely lost it. Sawing the air with his
tiny hands in a unmistakeably Hitlerian manner, he spat out a series of
undeniably hateful anti-Semitic code words … like “political
establishment,” “global elites” and, yes, “international banks.” He even
went so far as to claim that “corporations” and their (ahem)
“lobbyists” have millions of dollars at stake in this election, and are
trying to pass the TTP, not to benefit the American people, but simply
to enrich themselves. He then went on to accuse the media of
collaborating with “the Clinton machine,” presumably to benefit these
“global elites” and “international banks” and “lobbyists.”
Now, a lot of folks didn’t immediately recognize the secret meanings
of these fascistic code words, and so mistakenly assumed that “global
elites” referred to the transnational capitalist ruling classes, and
that “lobbyists” referred to actual lobbyists, and that “banks” meant …
well … you know, banks. As it turned out, this was completely wrong.
None of these words actually meant what they meant, not in anti-Semitic
CodeSpeak. So the mainstream media translated for us. “Political
establishment” meant “the Jews.” “Global elites” also meant “the Jews.”
“Banks” meant “Jews.” “Lobbyists” meant “Jews.” Even “corporate media,”
meant “Jews.” Apparently, Trump’s entire speech was a series of secret
dog-whistle signals to his legions of neo-Nazi goons, who, immediately
following Clinton’s victory, are going to storm out of their hidey
holes, frontally attack the US military, overthrow the US government,
and, yes, you guessed it … “kill the Jews.”
OK, maybe I’m exaggerating the mainstream media’s reaction just a
little bit. Or maybe Trump’s speech really was that fascistic. Judge for
yourself. Read the transcript. (NPR offers a complete version of it here.) Then compare the reactions of The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Washington Post, The Inquirer, The Guardian, and other leading broadsheets, and magazines and blogs like Mother Jones, Forward, Slate, Salon, Vox, Alternet,
and a host of others, most of which rely on Jonathan Greenblatt, CEO of
the Anti-Defamation League and former Special Assistant to the
President, as their authoritative source on Trumpian cryptology. (Mr.
Greenblatt, incidentally, should know better, given the treatment he has
received from hard-line Zionist publications for refusing to demonize
Black Lives Matter, and for “taking sides against” the State of Israel.)
Look, I’m not defending Donald Trump, who I consider a
self-aggrandizing idiot and a soulless huckster of the lowest order, and
whose supporters include a lot of real anti-Semites, and racists, and
misogynists, and other such creeps. I’m simply trying to point out how
the corporate media have, for months, been playing the same hysterical
tune like an enormous Goebbelsian keyboard instrument, and how millions
of Americans are singing along (as they were before the invasion of
Iraq, which posed no threat to the USA , but which according to the
media had WMDs), and how terribly fucking disturbing that is. In case
you didn’t instantly recognize it, the name of the tune is “This guy is
Hitler!” and it isn’t the short vulgarian fingers of Donald Trump that
are tickling the ivories. And no, it isn’t “the Jews” either. It’s the
corporate media, and the corporations that own them, and the rest of the
global capitalist ruling classes … in other words, those “global
elites.”
The thing I find particularly disturbing is how these rather mundane
observations — i.e., (a) that a global ruling class exists, (b) that
it’s primarily corporate in character, (c) that this class is pursuing itsinterests and not
the interests of sovereign states — how such observations are being
stigmatized as the ravings of unhinged anti-Semites. This stigmatization
is not limited to Trumpists. Anyone to the left of Clinton is now,
apparently, an anti-Semite. For example, Roger Cohen, in The New York Times, riding the tsunami of condemnation of the insidious verbiage of Trump’s West Palm speech,executed an extended smear-job
on Jeremy Corbyn and his “Corbynistas” (they’re fond of coining these
epithets, the media), denouncing their virulent “anti-Americanism,”
“anti-Capitalism,” “anti-globalism,” and “anti-Semitic anti-Zionism.”
Which, let me hasten to add, and stress, and underscore, and
repeatedly emphasize, is not to imply that the Labour Party, or the
British Left, or the American Left, or any other Left, is
anti-Semitism-free. Of course not. There are anti-Semites everywhere.
That isn’t the point. Or it isn’t my point.
My point is that this stigmatization campaign is part of a much
larger ideological project, one that has little to do with Trump, or
Jeremy Corbyn, or their respective parties. Smearing one’s political
opponents is nothing new, of course, it’s as old as the hills. But what
we’re witnessing is more than smears. As I proposed in these pages back in July,
political dissent is being gradually pathologized (i.e., stigmatized as
aberrant or “abnormal” behavior, as opposed to a position meriting
discussion). Consider the abnormalization of Sanders, back when he was
talking about “banks,” “global elites,” and other things that matter, or
the media’s portrayal of British voters as racists in the wake of the
Brexit referendum. And, yes, the charges being leveled against Trump,
much as we might despise the man. Anti-Semitism, inciting violence,
paranoid conspiracy theorizing, insurrection, treason, et cetera — these
are not legitimate arguments one needs to counter with superior
arguments; they are symptoms of deviations from a norm, signs of
criminality or pathology, which is increasingly how the corporate ruling
classes are dismissing anyone who attempts to challenge them.
This is it. This is the big one. Obama is about to make his move. Martial law, you betcha, FEMA death camps and secret tunnels under Wal-Mart. Oh they warned us, they did, the powdered wig wearing Patriots of the Tea Party, they warned us. Grab the wimen’ folk, load yer guns, hoist the Confederate Battle Flag! To the bunkers! To the bunkers!
"Just because you're paranoid," said Ted Cruz, "doesn't mean they're not out to get you."
Just because you're paranoid, doesn't mean they're not out to get you.
Right.
And just because you have the word "Senator" in front of your name doesn't mean you're sane, rational, qualified to run the country, or have an IQ higher than that of a sea cucumber.
Seriously, somebody help me out here: what the fuck happened to Texas?
What the fuck happened to Texas?
There’s just no polite, no non-profane way to ask. What. The. Fuck. Happened to Texas?
theatlantic | Why does this matter? Because the U.S. government has
finite resources. If you assume, as conservatives tend to, that the only
significant terrorist threat America faces comes from people with names
like Mohammed and Ibrahim, then that’s where you’ll devote your time
and money. If, on the other hand, you recognize that environmental
lunatics and right-wing militia types kill Americans for political
reasons too, you’ll spread the money around.
We’ve already seen the consequences of a disproportionate focus on jihadist terrorism. After 9/11, the Bush administration so dramatically shifted
homeland-security resources toward stopping al-Qaeda that it left FEMA
hideously unprepared to deal with an attack from Mother Nature, in the
form of Hurricane Katrina. The Obama administration is wise to avoid
that kind of overly narrow focus today. Of course it’s important to stop
the next Nidal Malik Hasan or Dzhokhar
Tsarnaev. But it’s also important to stop the next Timothy McVeigh or
Wade Michael Page. And by calling the threat “violent extremism” rather
than “radical Islam,” Obama tells the bureaucracy to work on that too.
Obama, after all, faces two overlapping but distinct
challenges. One is an ideology: the totalitarian, even genocidal, vision
espoused by ISIS. The second is a tactic: terrorism, which is available
to people of all ideological stripes and which grows more dangerous as
technology empowers individuals or groups to kill far more people far
more quickly than they could have in ages past.
Instead of assuming that these threats are the same,
we should be debating the relative danger of each. By using “violent
extremism” rather than “radical Islam,” Obama is staking out a position
in that argument. It’s a position with which reasonable people can
disagree. But cowardice has nothing to do with it.
WaPo | Like every world leader and, for that matter,
nearly everybody else, Netanyahu is fully aware that the fault lines in
U.S. politics between Republicans and Democrats have widened to a chasm.
Unlike every other world leader, the bumptious Bibi has decided to take
a side in America’s internal conflict by addressing a joint meeting of
the Republican-controlled Congress (responding to an invitation from
House Speaker John Boehner) without even informing President Obama that
he was Washington-bound. One of Netanyahu’s goals is to undercut the
administration’s efforts to negotiate a pact with Iran that will impede
that nation’s nuclear program. His other goal is clearly to stick it to
Obama and thus appear to the Israeli electorate — which will go to the polls on March 17 — as one tough dude. If Netanyahu’s talk, the idea for which was at least partly cooked up by Ron Dermer,
a former GOP operative who moved to Israel and is now its ambassador to
the United States, also has the effect of boosting the Republican Party
at the expense of Obama and the Democrats, so much the better. During
the 2012 election, Netanyahu did everything he could to make apparent
that he preferred Mitt Romney to Obama, with no perceptible effect on
the outcome or even on the voting preferences of American Jews, who backed Obama, 69 percent to 30 percent.
Of
all the reasons that American Jews remain firmly Democratic, and
liberal as well, the most fundamental is their commitment, both
particular and universal, to minority rights. For Jews in a
majority-Christian country, the enshrinement of minority rights and its
institutional guarantees — nondiscrimination in hiring and voting, say,
or a judiciary independent of the elected branches of government — has
always been paramount. It’s why American Jews have embraced not only the
battles for their own liberties but those of every other minority
group.
NYTimes | President Obama stands accused of political correctness for his unwillingness to accuse groups such as the Islamic State of “Islamic extremism,” choosing a more generic term, “violent extremism.”
His critics say that you cannot fight an enemy you will not name. Even
his supporters feel that his approach is too “professorial.”
But far from being a scholar concerned with describing the phenomenon accurately, the president is deliberately choosing not to emphasize the Islamic State’s religious dimension for political and strategic reasons.
After all, what would be the practical consequence of describing the
group, also known as ISIS, as Islamic? Would the West drop more bombs on
it? Send in more soldiers to fight it? No, but it would make many
Muslims feel that their religion had been unfairly maligned. And it
would dishearten Muslim leaders who have continually denounced the
Islamic State as a group that does not represent Islam.
But “the Islamic State is Islamic. Very Islamic,” Graeme Wood writes in a much-discussed cover essay for the Atlantic this month.Wood is much taken by the Princeton academic Bernard Haykel,
who says that people want to turn a blind eye to the Islamic State’s
ideology for political reasons. “People want to absolve Islam,” he
quotes Haykel as saying. “It’s this ‘Islam is a religion of peace’
mantra. As if there is such a thing as ‘Islam’! It’s what Muslims do.”
Right. There are 1.6 billion Muslims in the world and perhaps 30,000 members of the Islamic State.
And yet Haykel feels that it is what the 0.0019 percent of Muslims do
that defines the religion. Who is being political, I wonder?
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