[IsraelTimes] The traditionally neutral European nation joins small group of countries that implemented a comprehensive ban on the Palestinian terror group after its October 7 onslaught
A new Swiss law banning Hamas ..one of the armed feet of the Moslem Brüderbund millipede,... and affiliated organizations will come into force on May 15, the government said on Wednesday, aiming to prevent the Paleostinian terror group from using Switzerland
Continued on Page 49
#3
As jaded as I am about decades of demokrat corruption-I still find this utterly shocking! The brazen levels of graft the Lightbringer put in place in government service are beyond anything in American history.
#6
And speaking of outrage over toxic herbicides (didn't want to seem disrespectful over on the Vietnam thread)...
For a second, Jones thought he heard singing -- O Canada! -- over the pinging,
The great Tsarsky Bell
Of Canuckistan's knell,
Hubble-bubbling, and Herbie's hands' wringing!
[FoxNews] Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier earlier sent memo to local police saying judge was legally
A federal judge in Florida said an order that blocks local police from enforcing a new state immigration law applied to all local agencies despite the state’s attorney general stating otherwise in a recent memo.
U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams told attorneys for the state during a hearing in Miami on Tuesday that she planned to issue a preliminary injunction against a statute that makes it a misdemeanor for undocumented migrants to enter Florida by eluding immigration officials.
Williams said she was "surprised and shocked" that Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier told local police in a letter last week that they didn't need to follow her order.
"What I am offended by is someone suggesting you don’t have to follow my order, that it’s not legitimate," Williams said.
Earlier this month, Williams issued a temporary restraining order against the statute. Gov. Ron DeSantis signed the legislation into law in February as part of President Donald Trump’s push to crack down on illegal immigration.
Williams extended the order another 11 days after learning authorities had arrested 15 people, including a U.S. citizen born in Georgia.
After the extension, Uthmeier sent a memo to state and local law enforcement officers telling them to stop enforcing the law, even though he disagreed with the judge’s order.
Five days later, however, Uthmeier sent another memo saying that the judge was legally wrong and that he couldn't prevent local police officers and deputies from enforcing the law.
No additional arrests have been reported since Uthmeier's second memo.
[FoxNews] Border Patrol argues it changed its procedures, making ruling irrelevant
A California judge on Tuesday demanded Border Patrol agents allow people they think are living in the U.S. illegally to stay in the country, unless authorities have a warrant or reason to believe the person may flee before they can get a warrant.
U.S. District Judge Jennifer L. Thurston ruled on Tuesday that Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agents in the Eastern District of California cannot stop illegal immigrants without reasonable suspicion, or deport them via "voluntary departure," unless that person is explained their rights and agrees to leave, according to a report from The Associated Press.
Continued on Page 49
[Daily Mail, where America gete its news] Pakistan claims it has 'credible intelligence' that India is preparing to launch a military operation within two days, raising fears of a war between the nuclear-armed neighbours amid escalating tensions in Kashmir.
The statement by Information Minister Attaullah Tarar came after Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi met yesterday with army and security chiefs, giving the military 'complete operational freedom' to respond to the attack, a senior government source said.
Fresh fighting erupted last week in Kashmir - a territory that has been disputed between India and Pakistan since the British partition of India in 1947 - after gunmen killed 26 people.
The shooting, which Indian authorities say was perpetrated by three terrorists, including two Pakistani nationals, targeted Hindu tourists relaxing in the meadows near the town of Pahalgam in Indian controlled Jammu and Kashmir.
In a statement early on Wednesday, Islamabad again denied any involvement in the attack, adding that it condemned terrorism in all forms and would respond 'assuredly and decisively' to any Indian military manoeuvres launched 'on the pretext of baseless and concocted allegations of involvement in the Pahalgam incident'.
'Any act of aggression will be met with a decisive response,' said Tarar. 'India will be fully responsible for any serious consequences in the region!' "Look what you made us do!"
The warning comes after Pakistani Defence Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif told Reuters in an interview earlier this week: 'We have reinforced our forces because (an incursion) is something which is imminent now.'
He added that India's rhetoric was ramping up and that Pakistan's military had briefed the government on the possibility of an Indian attack, though he gave no details as to why he thought an incursion by India's forces was in the offing.
The April 22 assault prompted a flurry of military and diplomatic action as both sides moved to militarise along the 'Line of Control' (LoC) that separates Indian- and Pakistani-administered Kashmir.
India launched naval drills, test-fired several long-range missile systems and suspended a key treaty that ensures India supplies Pakistan with water from the Indus River, a provision that is crucial for Pakistan's water supply and agricultural economy.
The unprecedented abeyance of the treaty on India's part is seen by some analysts as a key factor that could hasten a major conflict.
Dr Manali Kumar – an Indian foreign policy expert and lecturer at the University of St. Gallen, said: 'India's response, moving beyond conventional diplomatic and past kinetic military actions to include the unprecedented suspension of participation in the foundational Indus Waters Treaty... carries immense risks.
'It is perceived by Pakistan as an existential threat – an act of war if water flows are curtailed - drastically increasing the likelihood of military confrontation between two nuclear-armed states.
'This also sets a dangerous precedent for the weaponisation of shared resources, raising alarms among India's other neighbours who will be watching how this develops very carefully.'
Pakistan in turn deployed its air force to close its airspace to Indian airlines and has mobilised its army with footage appearing to show artillery batteries and armoured vehicles on their way to the LoC in anticipation of a major conflict.
India's army today said it had repeatedly traded gunfire with Pakistani troops for a sixth night in a row across the LoC - a heavily fortified zone of high-altitude Himalayan outposts - but with no reported casualties.
Pakistan's military did not confirm the shooting, but state radio in Islamabad reported on Tuesday it had shot down an Indian drone, calling it a violation of its airspace.
In the meantime, several politicians have ramped up threatening rhetoric.
Pakistan's railway minister, Hanif Abbasi, dramatically declared at the weekend that his nation's nuclear arsenal of more than 130 missiles were 'not kept as models' and were reserved 'only for India'.
'These ballistic missiles, all of them are targeted at you,' he concluded in a chilling warning.
The brutal attack that stoked tensions in Kashmir unfolded on a stunning day in the rolling hills a short walk from the town of Pahalgam in Jammu and Kashmir.
The majority of the dead were Hindu tourists from India, with reports from witnesses and survivors claiming the gunmen, who remain at large, were ordering civilians to recite Islamic prayers and shooting those who were unable to do so.
A Pakistani militant group known as The Resistance Front (TRF) claimed responsibility in the wake of the attack, only to rescind the statement days later and blame the initial claim on a communications breach.
India accused Pakistan of supporting 'cross-border terrorism' as authorities concluded the gunmen were Islamic militants and identified two of the three suspected shooters as Pakistani.
Indian foreign policy and defence experts also claimed that the TRF is closely linked with Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency.
But authorities in Islamabad called attempts to link Pakistan to the attack 'frivolous'.
Posted by: Skidmark ||
05/01/2025 01:10 ||
Comments ||
Link ||
[323 views]
Top|| File under: Govt of Pakistan
Speculation: Pakistan lobs a missile into its most useless and problematic city creating a casus belli and it is Game On!
Or maybe the Pakis decide to go first since if you have 'credible intellignce' that the other guy is going to attack, it is silly not to launch a pre-emptive strike. Who could blame you?
#15
^ Good point, although Pakistain has done their best to deserve that enmity: Backstabbing, terror-supporting, Taliban and Al-Qaeda homing, Pipsqueak mouthy Islamist Military...
Posted by: Frank G ||
05/01/2025 16:29 Comments ||
Top||
[IsraelTimes] Legal adviser to administration argues international law gives Israel the right to decide which organizations run relief operations in Strip
Israel cannot be forced to allow the United Nations ...an idea whose time has gone... Paleostinian refugee agency, UNRWA, to operate in Gazoo
...Hellhole adjunct to Israel and Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, inhabited by Gazooks. The place was acquired in the wake of the 1967 War and then presented to Paleostinian control in 2006 by Ariel Sharon, who had entered his dotage. It is currently ruled with a rusty iron fist by Hamas with about the living conditions you'd expect. It periodically attacks the Hated Zionist Entity whenever Iran needs a ruckus created or the hard boyz get bored, getting thumped by the IDF in return. The ruling turbans then wave the bloody shirt and holler loudly about oppression and disproportionate response... , the United States argued Wednesday at an International Court of Justice (ICJ) hearing in The Hague.
Israel last year passed a law that banned UNRWA from operating in the country, as it said the organization had employed members of Hamas ..always the voice of sweet reason... who took part in the October 7, 2023, onslaught, among a series of other accusations including that the organization runs schools that incite to terrorism and perpetuates Paleostinians’ refugee status by passing it by generation unlike the rest of the world’s refugees.
The ban officially came into effect in late January, prohibiting the agency from operating on Israeli soil and forbidding contact between it and Israeli officials.
Despite the ban, The Times of Israel reported in early April that, according to Paleostinian sources and UNRWA itself, the agency was still operating in East Jerusalem almost entirely uninterrupted. Additionally, the legislation was seen as having had little effect on UNRWA operations in other areas where Israeli cooperation was required.
The UN said in August 2024 that nine UNRWA staff members may have been involved in the devastating Hamas assault and had been fired. Another Hamas commander, confirmed by UNRWA as one of its employees, was killed in Gaza last October, according to Israel.
The UN General Assembly in December 2024 asked the agency’s top court to give an advisory opinion on Israel’s obligations to facilitate aid to Paleostinians that is delivered by states and international groups, including the UN.
The ICJ, also known as the World Court, on Monday opened a week of hearings on Israel’s humanitarian obligations toward the Paleostinians, more than 50 days into its blockade on aid entering war-ravaged Gaza, which is aimed at pressuring Hamas to release the 59 hostages it is holding, 24 of whom are believed alive.
On the third day of hearings on the matter, the US said Israel had the right to determine which organizations could provide basic needs to the population of Gaza and the West Bank.
"An occupational power retains a margin of appreciation concerning which relief schemes to permit," US State Department legal adviser Joshua Simmons said.
"Even if an organization offering relief is an impartial humanitarian organization, and even if it is a major actor, occupation law does not compel an occupational power to allow and facilitate that specific actor’s relief operations."
Simmons also stressed the "serious concerns" Israel has about UNRWA’s impartiality.
UN and Paleostinian representatives at the opening of hearings on Monday had accused Israel of breaking international law by refusing to let aid into Gaza.
Since March 2, Israel has completely cut off all supplies to the 2.3 million residents of the Gaza Strip, and food stockpiled during a ceasefire at the start of the year has all but run out.
Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar said in Jerusalem on Monday that Israel had submitted its position in writing to the hearings, which he described as a "circus."
Israel was absent from the hearing, which included scheduled participation from 40 countries and four international organizations.
The court will likely take months to rule. Experts say the decision, though not legally binding, could profoundly impact international jurisprudence and public opinion.
[GEO.TV] Hamas says Netanyahu's comments on a ''decisive victory'' and dismantling Rafah were a ''desperate attempt to cover up his army's failure in Gaza and convince his audience of an illusion'', Al Jazeera reported, citing a statement from the Palestinian group.
''We affirm that our people's resistance will continue until the occupation is defeated, and that Rafah will remain a symbol of steadfastness and a nightmare that haunts the invaders,'' Hamas said.
Posted by: Fred ||
05/01/2025 00:00 ||
Comments ||
Link ||
[88 views]
Top|| File under: Hamas
[IsraelTimes] Um Hassan says she was forced to surrender Damascus home within 24 hours after brother arrested; rights group says thousands of such cases have taken place
Early one evening in late January, 12 masked men stormed the Damascus home of Um Hassan’s family, pointed AK-47 assault rifles in their faces and ordered them to leave.
When they presented ownership documents, the men arrested Um Hassan’s oldest brother and said they could only have him back once they had moved out. The family surrendered the house 24 hours later and picked him up, battered and bruised, from the local General Security Service headquarters, said Um Hassan, giving only her nickname for fear of reprisals.
Her family is part of Syria’s minority Alawite community, an offshoot of the Shiite faith and the sect of former strongman Bashir Pencilneck al-Assad Supressor of the Damascenes... . Their story is not unique.
Since Syria’s President Ahmed al-Sharaa seized power in December, hundreds of Alawites have been forced from their private homes in Damascus by the security forces, according to Syrian officials, Alawite leaders, human rights One man's rights are another man's existential threat. groups, and 12 people with similar accounts who spoke to Rooters.
"We’re definitely not talking about independent incidents. We are talking about hundreds, if not thousands, of cases of evictions," said Bassam Alahmad, executive director of human rights group Syrians for Truth and Justice (STJ).
The mass evictions of Alawites from privately owned homes have not been previously reported.
For more than 50 years, Assad and his father before him crushed any opposition from Syria’s Sunni Moslems, who make up more than 70 percent of the population. Alawites took many of the top positions in government and the military and ran big businesses.
They now accuse supporters of Sharaa, who once ran an al-Qaeda affiliate, of systematically abusing them as payback.
In March, hundreds of Alawites were killed in Syria’s western coastal region, and sectarian violence spread to Damascus in apparent retribution for a bushwhack on Syria’s new security forces by armed Assad loyalists.
Two government officials said thousands of people had been kicked out of homes in Damascus since Assad was toppled by Sharaa’s rebel force, with the majority being Alawites.
The officials said most resided in government housing associated with their jobs in state institutions, and, since they were no longer employed, they had lost their right to stay.
But hundreds more, like Um Hassan, were evicted from their privately owned homes simply because they are Alawites, Rooters interviews with multiple officials and victims show.
Syria’s Interior Ministry, which oversees the GSS, and Sharaa’s office did not respond to requests for comment.
’WAR SPOILS COMMITTEE’
Sharaa has vowed to pursue inclusive policies to unite a country shattered by a 14-year sectarian civil war and attract foreign investment and aid.
But Alawites fear the evictions are part of systematic sectarian score settling by Syria’s new rulers.
An official who declined to be named at the Damascus Countryside Directorate, which is responsible for managing public services, said they had received hundreds of complaints from people who had been violent mostly peacefully evicted.
An Alawite mayor in a Damascus suburb, who also asked not to be named due to the sensitivity of the matter, said in March that 250 families out of 2,000 there had been evicted.
The mayor shared with Rooters a call recorded in March with someone claiming to be a member of the General Security Service (GSS), a new agency made up of rebel fighters who ousted Assad.
The GSS official demanded that the mayor find an empty house for a family relocating from the north. When the mayor said there were no apartments for rent, the official told him to "empty one of those houses that belong to one of those pigs," referring to Alawites.
Moslems consider pigs unclean and impure, and calling someone a pig is highly offensive.
According to three senior GSS officials, the new authorities have established two committees to manage properties belonging to individuals perceived to be connected to the previous regime. One committee is responsible for confiscations, the other addresses complaints, the people said.
Rooters was unable to determine to what extent Sharaa was aware of how homeowners were being evicted, or whether his office had oversight of the committees.
They were created as Sharaa’s forces closed in on Damascus in December and were modelled on a similar entity known as the "War Spoils Committee" in his former stronghold, Idlib, the GSS sources said.
"These evictions will certainly change the demographics of the city, similar to the changes that Assad implemented against his opponents in Sunni areas. We are talking about the same practice, but with different victims," said Alahmad at STJ.
On April 16, STJ filed a complaint with the Damascus Suburbs Directorate, calling for an end to "sectarian-motivated" property violations and the return of looted properties.
TWO MINUTES TO LEAVE
Assad’s father Hafez al-Assad moved Alawites from coastal areas to urban centers to help cement his power base.
Assad set up military installations and housing units for troops and their families around Damascus, where Alawites, who were over-represented in the army, made up a significant portion of the population, according to Fabrice Balanche, a Syria expert and an associate professor at the University of Lyon 2.
Balanche estimated that half a million Alawites have moved to coastal areas after being evicted from the capital, Homs, Aleppo, and other parts of Syria following Assad’s fall.
In the Alawite neighbourhood of Dahyet al-Assad, civil servant and mother of four Um Hussein said two armed masked men came to her privately owned home on January 16 and identified themselves as GSS members.
The newly created GSS deployed by Sharaa seems to be an extension of the security force that ruled Idlib province, said Syria expert Joshua Landis, head of the Center for Middle East Studies at the University of Oklahoma.
The GSS now seems to be the police, FBI, CIA, and national guard, all rolled into one, he said.
Um Hussein said the men gave her 24 hours’ grace to leave, because of her son’s dependence on a wheelchair. She appealed to numerous government bodies to keep her home, and received some assurances.
The next day at about 10 a.m., the men returned and gave her two minutes to leave. Um Hussein said they also confiscated a shop her family owned in the neighbourhood and were renting out.
"We have been living in this house for more than 22 years. All our money and savings have been invested in it. We cannot afford to rent elsewhere," said Um Hussein.
Rooters spoke with two members of the security forces at the private homes they had occupied. One had seized two houses — including Um Hussein’s — after evicting the owners.
Hamid Mohammed, meanwhile, said his unit had taken over four empty homes belonging to Shabiha, a notorious pro-Assad militia.
He said the security forces had not seized anything that wasn’t theirs and recalled angrily that his home in a Damascus suburb was destroyed during the civil war. Mohammed said he moved to the capital after Assad’s fall and had nowhere else to stay.
’TRANSITIONAL INJUSTICE’
On February 12, the Damascus governor called on citizens who say property has been unjustly confiscated to submit complaints at directorates.
bottom-color:gray;' title='Reuters'>Rooters visited one in March, where the official, who declined to be named, confirmed a pattern: armed individuals evicted people without a court order, prevented them from taking their belongings, and then moved in.
The majority of confiscations targeted low- to middle-income Syrians who had lost their jobs and lacked the resources to pay their way out of the situation, the sources said.
Another official in another Damascus directorate said the evictions happened overnight without due process.
"It’s chaotic, but there is a method to the madness, which is to terrify people and to let the whole world know that Alawites are no longer (in power)," said Landis. "There is no transitional justice. There’s only transitional injustice."
Seven gunnies came to Rafaa Mahmoud’s apartment on February 20 and threatened to kill her and her Alawite family unless she handed over the keys to the property they had bought 15 years earlier, she said.
Mahmoud shared a 2-minute 27-second video with Rooters showing her standing behind her door, desperately arguing with the men, who warned the family to leave by nightfall.
The men, who identified themselves as state security agents, called Mahmoud and her family "infidels and pigs."
When Mahmoud asked for a court order, the men replied: "We only do things verbally here."
Posted by: Whiskey Mike ||
05/01/2025 4:47 Comments ||
Top||
#3
History shows, ethnic cleansing is OK when its done to the group that is on the 'outside' of power. Just a variation on an old rule - do on to others as they have done upon you.
[FoxNews] Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth sent a message to Iran on Wednesday night, warning the country that, because of its "LETHAL" support of the Houthis terrorist organization, they will pay the consequences.
"We see your LETHAL support to The Houthis. We know exactly what you are doing," Hegseth said in a post on X. "You know very well what the U.S. Military is capable of — and you were warned. You will pay the CONSEQUENCE at the time and place of our choosing."
Earlier this week, a Houthi drone forced the USS Harry S. Truman aircraft carrier to make an evasive maneuver, which some believe caused an F-18 fighter jet worth $67 million to fall off the carrier and into the Red Sea.
The move came after 47 straight days of U.S. airstrikes against Houthi targets.
Hegseth then retweeted a Truth Social post by President Donald Trump from March 17.
"Let nobody be fooled! The hundreds of attacks being made by Houthi, the sinister mobsters and thugs based in Yemen, who are hated by the Yemeni people, all emanate from, and are created by, IRAN," Trump posted. "Any further attack or retaliation by the ‘Houthis’ will be met with great force, and there is no guarantee that the force will stop there.
"Iran has played the ‘innocent victim’ of rogue terrorists from which they’ve lost control, but they haven’t lost control," the president continued. "They’re dictating every move, giving them the weapons, supplying them with money and highly sophisticated Military equipment, and even, so-called, ‘Intelligence.’ Every shot fired by the Houthis will be looked upon, from this point forward, as being a shot fired from the weapons and leadership of IRAN, and IRAN will be held responsible, and suffer the consequences, and those consequences will be dire!"
[IsraelTimes] Iran-backed terror group has withdrawn north of the Litani River without fight, security official claims, as President Aoun says full deployment hindered by IDF control of 5 posts
The Lebanese army has dismantled "over 90 percent" of Hezbollah’s infrastructure near the border with Israel since a November ceasefire, a security official said Wednesday.
"We have dismantled over 90% of the infrastructure in the area south of the Litani," the official, who requested anonymity as the matter is sensitive, told AFP.
In accordance with the truce deal brokered between Israel and Leb ...home of the original Hezbollah, which periodically starts a war with the Zionist Entity, gets Beirut pounded to rubble, and then declares victory and has a parade.... in November, the Lebanese army is required to dismantle all unauthorized military facilities and confiscate all arms, starting in areas south of the Litani River, located some 20 kilometers (12 miles) north of the Israeli border.
To that end, the official said much of the Iran-backed terror group’s robust underground infrastructure in the south had been "filled and closed" by the army.
They added that soldiers had also reinforced their control of crossing points into the area south of the Litani "to prevent the transfer of weapons from the north of the river to the south."
Lebanese President Joseph Aoun, meanwhile, said in an interview with Sky News Arabia that the army was now in control of over 85% of the country’s south.
Aoun, on a visit to the United Arab Emirates, said the Lebanese army was "fulfilling its role without any problems or opposition," and charged that the single obstacle to the full deployment of soldiers across the border area was "Israel’s occupation of five border positions."
While Israeli forces withdrew from almost all areas in southern Lebanon following the start of the ceasefire, troops have remained deployed at five key points.
Defense Minister Israel Katz confirmed last month that the troops would remain stationed at these locations, deemed strategically important for Israel’s safety, "indefinitely."
With regard to Hezbollah, which was also required to withdraw from southern Lebanon under the terms of the deal, the security official told AFP that the terror group had been cooperating with the army.
"Hezbollah withdrew and said ’do whatever you want’... there is no longer a military [infrastructure] for Hezbollah south of the Litani," the official said.
The official added that most of the munitions found by the army were either "damaged" by Israeli bombing or "in such bad shape that it is impossible to stock them," prompting the army to detonate them.
The US-brokered ceasefire has largely halted more than a year of hostilities along the Israel-Lebanon border, and some two months of all-out war in southern Lebanon.
Hostilities were initiated by Hezbollah on October 8, 2023, in support of Paleostinian ally Hamas ..one of the armed feet of the Moslem Brüderbund millipede,... , which invaded southern Israel from Gazoo
...Hellhole adjunct to Israel and Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, inhabited by Gazooks. The place was acquired in the wake of the 1967 War and then presented to Paleostinian control in 2006 by Ariel Sharon, who had entered his dotage. It is currently ruled with a rusty iron fist by Hamas with about the living conditions you'd expect. It periodically attacks the Hated Zionist Entity whenever Iran needs a ruckus created or the hard boyz get bored, getting thumped by the IDF in return. The ruling turbans then wave the bloody shirt and holler loudly about oppression and disproportionate response... a day earlier and committed massacres, killing some 1,200 and abducting 251 to Gaza. Persistent rocket fire from Lebanon displaced some 60,000 Israeli civilians.
“We’re in agreement with Speaker (Nabih) Berri over the issue of Hezbollah’s arms,” Aoun added, in an interview with Sky News Arabia broadcast as he departed to the UAE on an official visit.
“The decision has been taken as to limiting weapons (to the hands of the state) and only implementation on the ground remains,” the president said, adding that “what’s important is the handover of heavy- and medium-caliber weapons, whereas light-caliber weapons are a culture for the Lebanese.”
Noting that the army is “performing its duties without any objections or problems,” Aoun dismissed as baseless the reports that claimed that Hezbollah had refused the army’s entry into a Dahieh site to search it.
Calling for opening “the file of arms inside Palestinian camps,” the president stressed that “it is necessary to build the army’s capabilities,” adding that “the most important weapon is the unified stance behind the army.”
The Kfarshima Municipality meanwhile denied an Al-Jadeed TV report that quoted U.S. sources as saying that the army had entered into Hezbollah depots in Kfarshima, which lies near Beirut’s southern suburbs.
Hezbollah “has no depots in Kfarshima for the Lebanese Army to enter into them,” the Municipality added.
A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.
Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.
Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has
dominated Mexico for six years.
Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.