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Thursday, June 20 2013 @ 04:42 AM CDT

The War in Mexico

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The anti-war movement in the United States has totally ignored the war in Mexico. The mainstream media also has ignored this war. Most Americans don't know there is a major war happening right now in Mexico. Cuidad Juarez, the city with the most deaths from the war, is only 1,250 miles from Chicago. War broke out in Mexico in December 2006 when the newly elected president Felipe Calderon sent 6,500 troops to Michoacan state to fight the drug cartels.

The War in Mexico

The anti-war movement in the United States has totally ignored the war in Mexico. The mainstream media also has ignored this war. Most Americans don't know there is a major war happening right now in Mexico. Cuidad Juarez, the city with the most deaths from the war, is only 1,250 miles from Chicago. War broke out in Mexico in December 2006 when the newly elected president Felipe Calderon sent 6,500 troops to Michoacan state to fight the drug cartels. Few people outside Mexico even noticed the war and no protests against the war, outside of Mexico, have taken place.

Currently 45,000 Mexican troops are battling drug cartels whose combined force is estimated at 100,000 fighters. Most of the violence is concentrated in northern Mexico. The US government has played a huge role in the Mexican Drug War. Bush and Obama have been strong supporters of Calderon's war. The US government has supplied the Mexican military with millions of dollars worth of weapons, training and intelligence. The death toll in the Mexican Drug War is 2,477 killed during 2007 and 6,290 killed during 2008 and 7,598 killed during 2009. The war in Mexico is the deadliest armed conflict occurring right now in the world except of course for the other US-led wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia and Yemen. One big reason the US government supports the war is so American corporations can maintain their control over Mexican workers. US corporations like Reebok and Nike operate a lot of sweatshops in Mexico. If many people in Mexico get their income from the drug trade then they are less likely to work for the sweatshops. One more drug cartel member is one less sweatshop worker.

Another reason the US government supports the war is that they do not want the drug cartels to overthrow the Calderon regime which is friendly to US interests. Mexico also has large quantities of oil in the ground and Mexico is the third largest supplier of oil to the United States. In Mexico all healthy males are required to join the military at the age of 18 and serve for at least 12 months. Human life is more important than oil and corporate profits. The people of Mexico have a right to self-determination, indeed, people everywhere have a right to control their own lives. This includes being free of oppressive sweatshops, factories, corporations, governments, military conscription and warfare. War for oil, money and other resources is always wrong. Calderon's war must end. The war in Mexico is a crime against humanity. It is a war for US domination of Mexico. There is no need for this war.

Written anonymously in December 2009. This article can be copied, altered and distributed freely without permission from the author. A translation to Spanish is also appropriate.

sources:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mexican_Drug_War
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2009/mar/03/100000-foot-soldiers-in-cartels/
http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2009/03/mexicos_drug_war.html
http://projects.latimes.com/mexico-drug-war/#/its-a-war
http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2009/08/18/human-rights-mexicos-drug-war
http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=10&categ_id=5&article_id=109982
http://www.talonmarks.com/news/sweatshops-on-a-rampage-1.2116519
http://www.globalexchange.org/campaigns/sweatshops/sweatshopsfaq.html
http://www.nationmaster.com/country/mx-mexico/mil-military

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The War in Mexico | 2 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
The War in Mexico
Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, December 28 2009 @ 01:46 PM CST

Earlier this month I went to a meeting of the anti-war coalition in Chicago and it really sucked. I mean it sucked so bad that I've decided not to go to their meetings in the future. I'm embarassed to even call myself anti-war. Most of the other people at the meeting were either liberals or marxists.For 2010 the Chicago anti-war coalition has decided to keep doing the same minimalist program they have been doing since the 2003 invasion of Iraq which is to have one big protest around March 20th and not do anything else. Having one mass protest a year isn't going to stop the war. My proposal for weekly mass protests against the war combined with militant direct action was laughed at. These people aren't even serious about stopping the war. Fuck em.

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The War in Mexico
Authored by: communitycntrl on Monday, December 28 2009 @ 08:47 PM CST

Been through shit like that enough myself to be able to say:

Activism is a dead end. Fight where you stand. Form communes, fight/cooperate so as to not ever have to engage in capitalist social relations, an just continue doing that until you get to the point of keeping cops off your block, having networks of people who provide each other with shit in a gift-economy, and you can begin taking over buildings, workplaces, space, etc... that provides you all with more of what you want/need.

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