Posted on 09/12/2011 5:34:09 AM PDT by Kaslin
Out of sight is out of mind. Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano can give the impression shes doing her job and keeping Americans safe when Americans are unaware of the dangers lurking next door.
Napolitano cant stop natural oppressors like tropical storms, hurricanes or earthquakes but she can impede the drug cartel violence on the U.S.-Mexico border. Nevertheless, Napolitano refuses to publicly acknowledge the extent of border violence from drug cartels. She also refrains from pressuring the media to cover the preventable destruction and bloodshed on the border as much as it covers natural disasters.
Between 35,000 and 40,000 people were killed in Mexico since President Felipe Calderón launched his war against drugs in 2006, reports the Associated Press.
I think Americans deserve to know about the drug cartel violence spilling onto our border. It should be printed on the front page of every major newspaper and discussed nightly on prime time television. Were not talking about violence occurring across the ocean in Libya. Were talking about brutal gangs operating out of our next-door neighbor, Mexico.
Lets say you look outside and catch your next-door neighbor decapitating, scalping and removing the skin from the faces of a family that lives across town. Then, you watch him stuff the skin from the faces and scalps into a womans purse and showcase the purse as a bloody trophy (this happened last month outside a Sams Club store in Acapulco).
Assuming you cant move, what would you do? Close your blinds, grab a beer and turn on the football game? Or, would you build a 21-foot-high wall around your house?
On March 24, Commissioner of the Texas Department of Agriculture Todd Staples wrote a letter to Napolitano asking her to recognize the threat of Mexican drug cartels as being a clear and present danger to our citizens and to the safe production of the United States food supply.
Staples asked Napolitano to visit the site ProtectYourTexasBorder.com where Texas farmers and ranchers explain how drug cartels drive them to abandon their land, leaving it vulnerable to criminal occupation, while retreating from farming and ranching and jeopardizing the food supply upon which weve all come to rely.
Perhaps Napolitano was too busy fine-tuning her If You See Something, Say Something Walmart infomercials to bother replying. She delegated the Assistant Secretary for the Office of Intergovernmental Affairs, Betsy Markey, to respond to Staples on her behalf.
Markey wrote: Unfortunately, there is a widespread misperception that the Southwest border is overrun by violence spilling from Mexicos ongoing drug war. The reality is that some of Americas safest communities are in the Southwest border region Markeys note reveals Napolitanos brazen refusal to acknowledge the drug-induced violence on the border.
Napolitanos boss, President Obama, seems more concerned with sweet-talking Hispanic voters than acknowledging cartel violence. He told the city of El Paso on May 10 that the 700-mile border fence was basically complete when it was really only five percent complete, five years after approval.
Napolitanos partner in fighting the drug war, Attorney General Eric Holder, struggles to oversee the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF). The ATFs Fast and Furious program lost track of over 2,000 major weapons crossing the border. Drug cartels likely acquired hundreds of powerful firearms and a significant leg up thanks to Holders mismanagement.
This September, PBS launches a new series featuring Calderón. Time Magazine reports: "In an effort to boost Mexico's weakened tourism industry ... (Calderón) will bravely lead camera crews into caverns, up rivers and down sink-holes, often while wearing an Indiana Jones-style hat."
So Napolitano stands by as the American public subsidizes a PBS show enabling Calderón to lure wealthy American tourists into drug cartel country. Does Napolitano work for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security or Mexicos Secretaría de Turismo?
Ms. Napolitano and her partners should acknowledge the brutality on the border instead of ignoring or underestimating it. They should show Americans the border by asking their pals in the mainstream media to cover drug cartel border violence 24/7/365 (just like a hurricane) until it ceases.
If Americans fully understood the drug cartels on the border, they would be more open to decriminalizing drugs. A strategic, states rights approach to decriminalization is worth trying, but Americans wont approach the war on drugs differently if Napolitano keeps telling the public: some of Americas safest communities are in the Southwest border region.
A November 2010 UK medical study published by The Lancet shows that alcohol is more lethal than heroin and crack cocaine and drastically more harmful than marijuana, ecstasy and LSD. Meanwhile, Forbes reports that drug abuse dropped by 50 percent in Portugal just 10 years after decriminalizing all drugs.
Show us the border, Ms. Napolitano. Acknowledge the national security threat from drug cartels. Modify your approach and protect Americans.
Napolitano is another case of incompetence floating to the top.
Legalize drugs and start regulating them. Mexican drug lord rule will collapse overnight, and many criminal enterprises in America as well. Put crime and corruption in its place: the government.
Side benefit: it would probably balance the budget for a few years before government reasserted its profligacy.
Janet once said she had walked the border, ridden horseback on the border, and flown the border and claimed it was safe.
Ok, Janet let us see you walk the border from say, Naco to Nogalas alone and without a firearm.
There is an entire TV Program called BORDER WARS... it paints everything that nappytano says as the lies that they are.
LLS
Border Ping
Ping!
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