rockyptjoe
Guest
They may be businessmen...but are they type of businessmen you would "trust" (with your life) once they accepted your "offer"?
Your inquiry seems to be a non sequitur. Has no connection to my comments that I can discern. The topic you do bring up requires a lot of discussion and speculation from people much better informed than I. Think of the three blind men and the elephant.As for Roberto's critique of my earlier posts, I'd like to know what the Mexican government could have done to protect the locals in Tubatama unless they had prior knowledge of when and where the shootout would take place. What should they have done upon learning there wa a shootout in progress at this location? My question now is whether there are still narcos in the immediate area and, if so, why the army isn't moving in to protect the locals.
Again not condoning or excusing or justifying in any way, you don't have to look very far in history to find violence on a much greater scale and with equal brutality directed at completely innocent people. Just the tip of the iceberg: The Russian Revolution, The Rape of Nanking, the Pogroms against the Jews, Goodman Chaney and Schwerner, Africa Today.Just like the Russian mob or the Italian Mafia.....they were all "family" men.....but the Mexican cartel appear to have even outdone those in terms of pure brutality!
Roberto...I cannot fathom how the can justify or rationalize what they do.....absolutely no conscience....
Read the story and am in awe with that reporter. What a guy! Those poor people of that area. When you think things can't get worse for people, they can.http://www.nogalesinternational.com/articles/2010/07/09/news/doc4c374177dbca2519680139.txt the best reporter on the Border gets the story.
This is Michel Marizco's, the author's site..http://borderreporter.com/Hope the reporter can stay in one piece.
www.lanetanews.netFROM Michael at The Borderreporter.com
" the Sinaloa Federation finally moved in on El Gilo in the hills between Sáric and Tubutama last night, about 7 p.m. The Mexican military has seized ten armored vehicles. There are reports of 30 to 40 people dead, with Guzmán’s people having the upper hand. The Mexican Army is currently in the area. Apparently, there was an accident involving Mexican Army soldiers unrelated to the firefight, who were enroute to the Sáric/Tubutama area"