Come, come! As he says, the CIA has been at this game for a long time! He brushes lightly over the CIA's role in trading drugs during the Vietnam war. What with all the money being spent in Afghanistan, heaven knows what kind of highjinks are occurring there with my tax dollars -- or should I say, the tax dollars we are borrowing from the Chinese?Iran-Contra was 22 years ago.
Give one good reason to believe that the leopard has changed its spots in this instance -- I can see none.
Well, for one thing, you are ignoring the point the author makes regarding this aid being diverted by corrupt Mexican military officials to the cartels.The other two incidents were support for the Mexican Government. How can that be viewed as interfering with the functions of the Mexican Government?
For another thing, I don't think that there can be much doubt that the Administration of President Calderon was legitimately elected. However, our past and present activities in Latin America and around the world of supporting repressive governments with military aid can and are referred to by people like Chavez of Venezuela, Castro in Cuba, and Morales in Bolivia as being more of the same. In this case, they are not correct, but our history isn't disregarded as easily by others as it is by ourselves. Furthermore, everyone in the world knows that the problem here is directly caused by the USA's willingness to buy these drugs. As I said, it is ultiimately our own dollars that cause the problems we are spending more to solve.
Of course you don't. The point is why you don't. Can such a view be supported by facts? You quoted this:I don't believe that the vast majority come from US arms dealers.
and when I read this, it sounds no different from two little kids arguing in the back seat of a car about who hit who first. The fact is, people are arguing about the point of origin of a minority of the guns confiscated, which are only a very small minority of the guns in circulation. The sources of information about this very small subset come from groups that have a vested interest in slanting the figures to say one thing, and the groups that dispute the figures have a vested interest in trying to advance a different cause.According to the Mexican Attorney General, in the last two years, they've recovered about thirty thousand, twenty-nine thousand weapons in Mexico. They have submitted about only one-third of those to the United States for tracing. And according to testimony that we have from the special agent in charge, in Phoenix, of the ATF, only about six thousand of those were successfully traced, and about ninety percent of those came from the U.S. But basically, the bottom line here is that according to our figures, which we got from them, eighty-three percent of the guns that have been recovered in Mexico at these crime scenes are not from the United States.
You, yourself, seem to have a vested interest in defending the positions of right wing news groups like Fox News and pro-gun lobbies.
I have every reason to back our pro-gun lobbies when they are defending my rights, but just because I also strongly believe in the RKBA, this does not mean that I am going to swallow the story that the moon is made of green cheese and spout the "party line" in this instance. The available data are far too inconclusive to be definative, and the government's track record is too well established for me to accept the fact that our citizens who break the law are not major players in this business.
Wonder where these came from originally? Have a guess? Does the name "Oliver North" ring a bell?They are brought overland from Central America (where weaponry galore is left over from the civil wars there).
If there is any proof that China is directly selling guns to drug cartels, there would be one big international blow up over it. That the stuff that isn't highjacked from our own military shipments comes from somewhere else is obvious. However, I made the point that this is not the equipment that a great majority of the traffickers are carrying. They are not going about like Rambo here. The majority of them are armed with whatever they can get, not with the latest and greatest military hardware. Furthermore, just because the AK-type weapon was made somewhere else does not mean that the nation of origin is responsible for its shipment to Mexico. Do you think that the Israeli government is shipping high tech stuff to Mexico? It is obvious that other entities are involved in arranging such sales. However, again, the bulk of the guns are coming from the USA and are whatever can be sent, since criminals in Mexico will use whatever is available to them.There are weapons in Mexico from South Korea (fragmentation grenades) and China (AK-47s). There are rocket launchers that came from Israel, Spain and the former Soviet Union.
So what does this prove? The CIA has been active there for ages, sending in all kinds of stuff to deal with unpalatable left-leaning regimes. Guatemala is one of the most violent nations on earth because of this. I personally know people who live here in my area who fled Guatemala because of the violence.A lot of weaponry comes up through Guatemala. A recent bust on that border, reported in the Guatemalan press in late March, confiscated grenades and AK-47s.
You seem to think that just because you can quote a source that says "AK 47," that this means the USA isn't involved. However, earlier I recounted how the CIA paid for a great deal of AK 47s, which were shipped from China to Pakistan for shipment to Afghanistan in the 80s, but that these AK 47s wound up in the Kashmir conflict during the 90s. Just because these were Chinese manufactured AK 47s, does this mean that the USA had no responsibility here? You are throwing all kinds of factoids about and here in the USA among the gun community, these factoids are always interpreted in the way you are interpreting them. The issue is more complex than this. If you want to cite these kinds of data to win an argument, that is one thing. However, if you want to get down to the root causes of Mexico's trouble, you're going to have to dig deeper than the propaganda that various interest groups use to advance their causes.
There is big big money sloshing around over here from this drug war. Just like the Mafia in the past, it is far more widespread than people realize. Even in the news, you can read of the Mexican cartels growing marijuana in the National Forests right here in the USA. Even here in Dallas, they uncovered a large field in some scrub lands within the city -- far too large an operation for small timers to mount. It is going on all over.
The solution proposed by racist congressmen like Tom Tancredo, who believe that Latinos are a sub-human element, is to build a wall between us and Mexico, like the Bolsheviks did in Berlin. How obscene! That money needed to be spent on increasing the law enforcement efforts in our National Forest and Bureau of Land Management lands, but since nobody sees this (especially the city people in New York), nobody feels it is important.
The money coming from these drug cartels buys our politicians, judges, and law enforcement, just as it did during the Mafia days. It is already permeating society. Various interest groups take advantage of the mayhem to advance their positions, and the NRA is guilty of that here. Go back to your statements: you use the term "AK 47," but what does this actually MEAN? In the sense you are using it, not much, I'm afraid, though I am certain that in a group of USA gun owners, you would get the interpretation that you are trying to foist on me.
I believe that if you could confiscate every gun held by every drug criminal in Mexico at this instant, you'd find that the majority of them came across the border. Of these, some would be obtain from robberies, but most would come from US dealers. This is quite different than what your question implies -- I would hope that we've not returned to trying to put words in my mouth!I'm sure that there are some that do break the law but do you honestly believe that most legal gun owners and gun dealers in America break the law?
I am not getting personal here. I am saying that a significant portion of the US population is too shortsighted and simple when it comes to dealing with these sorts of issues. I am saying that most Americans, whatever their political views, do not care enough to make sure their representatives actually solve their problems. For instance, the NRA suggested that we should vote for George Bush twice. They said he was friendly to the gun owner. Yet, it was the same congressmen you referred to earlier who refused to pass a renewal of the "Assault Weapons Ban," which George Bush wanted to renew as part of his silly "War on Terror." This demonstrated that George Bush was no friend of gun rights, yet the NRA twice recommended that we vote for him. And besides, even if he were a friend of the gun owner, what sense does it make to have a disaster like that man in office? What good are our gun rights if the nation is ruined due to his bungling.What has this got to do with our argument?
So I am suggesting that these entities will back policies that are short sighted and meant for their own gain, and that the public is too preoccupied with silly pursuits to hold their government to account. I am illustrating this by showing how a lot of these people who are now parading about as "conservatives" haven't the slightest notion of what they are talking about, because they haven't stopped to think about things that happened a month or two in the past that have shaped the public debate on the issues.
I am not singling you out for anything -- but I do put the majority of our public into this category to a greater or lesser extent. If you wish to derive more from this than what I've said, I will leave that to you.
No! I am not at all talking about British gun rights with this statement, though I see you are ready to twist my words to make this so. If the context is always going to be limited to gun rights, you are never going to come to grips with the fact that our own people are sending us down the drain because of foolish governmental policies, policies based on not being willing to admit our own bad behavior as a nation (destabilizing other governments for our own business advantage, refusing to curb our consumption of illegal drugs, and refusing to recognize our own illegal cross-border trade).Absolutely agree here. What has happened to gun owners in the UK could happen here. That is why it is more important to support organizations like the NRA, despite some of their obvious faults.
The USA is the richest and most powerful nation on earth. The game here is ours to loose. If it is lost, it will not be because of other nations who don't like us (though our politicians will try to demonize others, because it is what we want to hear and believe), it will be because we have squandered what we received from previous generations. And our gun rights will go right down the tubes with everything else.
Regarding our discussion, we can call it off or continue, as you please. However, you needn't worry about this devolving into some kind of name-calling contest. Ad hominem tactics are often used when arguing, but I am keen here to dig down to the root cause of the problem -- something that is not accomplished by mud-slinging. Whenever such tactics are used, you can be sure it is because someone is unable to advance their point on the merits of its logic.
Regarding our President, if he deserves a thrashing, give him one, and I will do the same. I see him acting much like FDR: He's not doing what needs to be done, rather, he's doing as much as he can, given the perceptions of the nation. For instance, when I hear this word "socialism" brought up (a favorite of Fox News, by the way) I often think of that line from George Orwell's The Animal Farm: "Now if it was one thing that the animals were all agreed upon, it was that they didn't want Jones back." However, one can be sure that most Americans do not even know what The Animal Farm is, much less read it.