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Title: More victims in Mexican massacre found across border
Source: WTOP FM
URL Source: http://www.wtop.com/215/2852855/Tor ... odies-found-just-across-border
Published: May 5, 2012
Author: JJ Green
Post Date: 2012-05-05 07:34:57 by noone222
Keywords: None
Views: 179
Comments: 8

More victims in Mexican massacre found across border

Friday - 5/4/2012, 5:36pm ET

J.J. Green, wtop.com

WASHINGTON - A wave of violence in Mexico has led to a string of gruesome discoveries.

The bodies of nine people were found hanging from a bridge in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, just 6 miles from the U.S. border. Five were men and four women.

Pictures showed the nine bound, gagged and hanged.

A message left with the bodies identified them as members of the Gulf cartel. A rivaling cartel, Los Zetas, is believed to be responsible for the deaths.

All of the victims showed signs of torture. Their hands were tied and their eyes covered, sources tell WTOP.

Mexican authorities say they also discovered 14 headless bodies stuffed into black bags and left inside a van. Fourteen heads were later found outside the mayor's office, preserved in ice boxes.

Mexican military and police authorities are investigating the 23 deaths. U.S. Homeland Security officials are watching the situation carefully because of its proximity to the U.S. and the encroaching violence growing out of the cartel drug wars.

The bodies of three Mexican journalists were discovered Thursday afternoon in the state of Veracruz. They had been dismembered and stuffed into black plastic bags dumped into a waste canal.

At least seven current and former reporters and photographers have been slain in Veracruz over the last 18 months.

More than 50,000 people have died in drug-related violence in Mexico since President Felipe Calderon launched a war on cartels, according to the Los Angeles Times. Former Mexican President Vicente Fox recently told the newspaper that the global war on drugs "useless" and an "absolute failure."

Follow J.J. and WTOP on Twitter.

(Copyright 2012 by WTOP. All Rights Reserved.)


Poster Comment:

This activity IS IN A TOWN NEAR YOU - Let's import some more of this bullshit !

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#1. To: noone222, 4um (#0)

A wave of violence in Mexico has led to a string of gruesome discoveries.

Let's continue to embrace diversity until it sinks it's fangs into our well fed necks. To the gaping 'holes who can't see that an open border means the end of our nation, and that both wings of our National Political Party embrace the agenda, may they meet the same fate as these poor souls.

Jethro Tull  posted on  2012-05-05   8:50:22 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: noone222 (#0)

Mexico has always been a cesspool of humanity.

It is their nature, their character, their culture.

White Americans try to explain it all away as a result of their peonage for centuries. That is pure unadulterated horse feathers.

Cynicom  posted on  2012-05-05   8:56:15 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Cynicom (#2)

As goofy Whites grow more accustom to celebrating Cinco de Mayo, entire swaths of our South West have become more Hispanic than White. I can think of no other historic *willing* national demographic change.

Jethro Tull  posted on  2012-05-05   9:46:05 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Jethro Tull, Cyni, noone222, 4 (#3)

a little history of this day -

Note: Ignacio Zaragoza was born near Goliad, TX in 1829. The short story is that his troops kicked a huge French force at the Battle of Puebla. Here's more of the story -

In 1829, Ignacio Seguín Zaragoza was born outside the walls of the presidio. Ignacio Seguín Zaragoza would eventually become a general in the Mexican army. During the 1850s Zaragoza sided with the liberal forces favoring the Plan de Ayutla, Mexico's first serious effort to establish a democratic and constitutional government. He took part in the battles of Saltillo and Monterey against the armies of Antonio López de Santa Anna. On January 21, 1857, while on an important army assignment in San Luis Potosí, Zaragoza was unable to attend his own

marriage to Rafaela Padilla in Monterey, so his brother, Miguel, served as his proxy. Zaragoza and his wife had four children, three of whom died in infancy. During the years of the War of the Reform (1857-60), the struggle between conservative powers and liberal forces led by Benito Juárez, Zaragoza took part in a number of military engagements. During Comonfort's rebellion in 1857 he led forces in defense of the reformist principles of the constitution. He fought in the battle of Guadalajara, and in 1860 he participated in the battle of Calpulalpan, which ended the war.

In April 1861 Juárez appointed Zaragoza minister of war and navy in the parliamentary ministry. Three months later Juárez declared a two-year moratorium on Mexico's European debts, and in December a fleet of Spanish ships forced the surrender of Veracruz; soon thereafter the forces of France and England joined the Spanish. Zaragoza resigned from the ministry to lead the Army of the East, and in February 1862, a month after his wife's death in Mexico City, he began work on the defenses of Puebla.

Early in 1862 the English and Spanish withdrew; French forces attacked Puebla in a battle that lasted the entire day of May 5, 1862, the now-famed Cinco de Mayo. Zaragoza's well-armed, well-trained men forced the withdrawal of the French troops from Puebla to Orizaba.

Statue Of General Ignacio Zaragoza. In the background is Presidio La Bahia and Gen. Zaragoza's birthplace (white building).

The number of French reported killed ranged from 476 to 1,000, although many of the troops were already ill from their stay in the coastal lowlands. Mexican losses were reported to be approximately eighty-six. Although the French captured Mexico City the next summer, the costly delay at Puebla is believed to have shortened the French intervention in Mexico and changed its outcome, since the French were planning to aid Confederate forces in Texas during the Civil War. In addition, the battle rekindled the spirit of the Mexican people to win and preserve their independence. In mid-August Zaragoza went to Mexico City, where he was feted as a hero.

When he returned to his troops in Puebla he became ill with typhoid fever and died there on September 8, 1862. A state funeral was held in Mexico City with interment at the Panteón de San Fernando. On September 11, 1862, President Juárez issued a decree changing the name of the city of Puebla de los Angeles to Puebla de Zaragoza and making Cinco de Mayo a national holiday.

Zaragoza became one of the great national heroes of Mexico. Songs have been written in his honor, and schools, plazas, and streets have been named either Zaragoza or Cinco de Mayo. Each year on May 5, Zaragoza societies meet

throughout Mexico and in a number of Texas towns, including La Bahia and Goliad. In the 1960s General Zaragoza State Historic Site was established near Goliad to commemorate Zaragoza's birthplace. In 1980 dignitaries from the United States, Texas, and Mexico participated in the dedication of a ten-foot bronze statue honoring Zaragoza, commissioned by Alfredo Toxqui Fernández de Lara, governor of Puebla, as a gift to the people of Goliad and Texas.

Footnote: Zaragoza is as much Mexican as Willard is American.

Break the Conventions - Keep the Commandments - G.K.Chesterson

Lod  posted on  2012-05-05   10:18:13 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: Lod, Cynicom, noone222, 4 (#4)

Thanks Lod, I knew the generalities of the meaning of the day but not in this detail. I remain repulsed that American culture is being erased as we embrace a more ethnic friendly one. I wouldn't drink a Corona if you paid me.

Jethro Tull  posted on  2012-05-05   10:27:44 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: All (#5)

Happy Cinco de Mayo!!!!

Jethro Tull  posted on  2012-05-05   10:30:33 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: Jethro Tull (#3)

I can think of no other historic *willing* national demographic change.

It is called "racial suicide".

Cynicom  posted on  2012-05-05   11:07:42 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: Lod (#4)

Sir Lod...

Thanks for history lesson.

My first foray into Mexico was many long years ago and it was a lesson not to be forgotten. My last trip was just that, a vow to never return.

Cynicom  posted on  2012-05-05   11:13:58 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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