Anonymous Kills Websites, Cartels Kill Bloggers
An anonymous reader writes "While drug cartels in Mexico are disemboweling people they accuse of blogging about drug violence, Anonymous busies itself taking down Mexican government websites. With all the problems facing people in Mexico right now, including drug cartels extorting teachers for 50% of their pay and killing schoolchildren (thus shutting down the school system), Mexico's biggest oil field in terminal decline and drug cartels kidnapping busloads of people and forcing them into gladiator-style contests to the death, Anonymous' actions appear particularly petty."
We need to increase spending on the war on drugs, thus increasing scarcity and profit margins.
Anonymous' actions appear particularly petty? Anyone's actions pale in comparison to the drug cartel's.
Well, so do the US Government's.
Deaths from blogging accidents are about to go way up.
The war on drugs is going just great. The good guys are winning! And some idiots said there would be social repercussions.
Thanks for giving sadistic drug cartels power, DEA and DHS.
Mexico needs some ruthless right-wing pro-government paramilitaries like in some other Latin American countries in the past. Most realistically, now only a brutal dictator can save Mexico from this malaise.
It should be cartel members hanging from the bridges, not the other way around.
Liberals, when will you learn?
I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
There is a rapidly growing Middle Eastern population in Mexico. We're about to have "other side of the world" problems at our doorstep. We'd be a lot better off if all that nation building money had gone to Mexico.
... like Michael Vick.
Legal trade causes far less trouble, clearly the best way forward is to legalise the trade and use the extra tax income to police and jail those who still engage in crime.
You're talking about a world-wide network of script kiddies vs an organized cadre of bloodthirsty monsters. What in the world do you expect them to do?
has the moron who has submitted this, asked himself, how the hell drug cartels become able to do those things that you dont even see in civil wars ? do you think it could be possible without assistance from within government ? note that government in mexico is extremely corrupt.
and what relevance does anonymous's actions have to this ? this seems like moronic bashing just because you want to bash.
quality of accepted submissions have been declining lately.
Read radical news here
Wow, the criminals get more and more creative these days, I hope that "the good guys" will catch up and do not let them torture the people!
Common wheres Taco bell going to get its ingredients from ? .... talking of mexican try hard cartels with no substance .... I though food was a drug these days ? .... anonymous to what ?
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I remember when the online community castigated Yahoo for cooperating with the Chinese, a couple of years ago. People talked about it like it was a choice between giving the Chinese the information they wanted, or not giving it to them; nobody considered that the Chinese could get the information by threatening the Chinese employees of Yahoo who had access to the information, or by alternate (and even less friendly) methods. What nobody seemed to realize is that when you're dealing with certain kinds of things (like criminal organizations and repressive governments), things don't stay in online. There are kinetic repurcussions to actions, and if the 'bad people' are more comfortable in the real world than the online one, they're going to show up on your doorstep, not in your inbox.
For your security, this post has been encrypted with ROT-13, twice.
script kiddies
I love how you morons still fall for that whole thing.
How retarded are you to think that average morons from random imageboards are the ones behind all these actual high-profile attacks?
Those people are simple drones that get recruited in to attacking by people who actually know their shit.
Seriously, get with the times already, Anonymous aren't a group of script kiddies. They recruit script kiddies to do their bidding.
Mexico's form of population controll in the works... 30k people in two years is a lot...
I think the point is that taking down the government web sites serve no purpose and might even be beneficial to the drug cartels, it just doesn't make any real sense to me.
RIAA Label Used In Massive Cocaine Trafficking Ring
http://torrentfreak.com/riaa-label-used-in-massive-cocaine-trafficking-ring-110916/
Earlier this year record label boss Jimmy Rosemond was arrested on the suspicion of leading a massive cocaine trafficking ring.
The founder of Czar Entertainment used shipments of music equipment to transfer cocaine across the United States.
These shipments went to several music studios, and according to a recent court filing uncovered by The Smoking Gun, Interscope Records is one of them.
This suggests that people at the RIAA label were in on the game.
Previously entertainment industry representatives have suggested that piracy can be linked to organized crime, and the above suggests that the same can be said for the music industry.
How many people in the music industry were part of the drug ring remains unknown at this point, but we would advise the RIAA to carefully investigate its members to avoid the practices from escalating.
Laters Sol "Have you found the secrets of the universe? Asked Zebade "I'm sure I left them here somewhere"
"More stories about the latest X Factor series and how BigMacs make you fat, thanks. This is a little too depressing for me." says the rest of the world.
Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
Common wheres Taco bell going to get its ingredients from ? .... talking of mexican try hard cartels with no substance .... I though food was a drug these days ? .... anonymous to what ?
LOL WUT
"Tell me doctor, with all of your defenses, are there any provisions for an attack by killer bees?"
Or "petty" could have been used in the sense of "trivial", as in "petty larceny", as opposed to the sense of "narrow-minded and stingy".
That link about school children has an image with a bunch of kids with Indian flags. In a story about Mexican children. I'm thinking these "examiner.com" people are idiots.
Of course those actions appear petty. Petty is 99% of what Anonymous gets its kicks from. From abusing 12 year old girls (even if they kind of asked for it) to posting insulting comments about physically disabled people. The stuff like Project Chanology (the attacks on Scientology) was an aberration and really involved more non-Chan New Friends then it did Chan Old Friends, even though it started on the Chans. Anonymous originally got media attention for Habo Hotel/Second Life raids and harassing people on MySpace/Facebook.
Anonymous isn't your friend. Anonymous aren't moral crusaders. Anonymous are in it for the lulz.
========
CINC, 4th Penguin Legion
pull all the troops out of afghanistan and iraq and send them in to mexico to hunt down and kill these drug smuggler cartels before this sort thing becomes common in the USA
Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
What in the world do you expect them to do?
Wear a Guy Fawkes mask and take down the cartels ninja-style.
I can smell the plot for the next hollywood blockbuster already. All it needs is some kickass explosions, and women.
their claim to fame; seeking & telling the truth. right or wrong, they fail to lie about anything.
does it get any whackier? yes it does, even today on finding ourselves friday.
lonesome al's still touting conservation (which now includes avoiding; starving, drowning, burning up etc....); http://climaterealityproject.org/video/hour-24-new-york/
jesse: he's everywhere exposing uncle sam's fatal (to us) illnesses, which include neogod-like greed fear & egos, & fake religious mandates (buybull passages).
the hymenology council advises that there's more flappage contentions, causing the need for the neogods to attempt to re-write fake history, & science, yet again. the whore of babylon remains under the care of the council's counsel, as do the papers of challenge she carries.
can anyone guess the carbon footprint of just 8 simultaneous wars? you'd have to, because the mess we make is never included in the holycosters assessments of the glorious victories (for who?) always just within our grasp. see you on the other side of it?
disarm. read the teepeeleaks etchings, or watch the movie (unrepentant). be more careful of/for one another. for each of the creators' innocents harmed in any way....
always look for the real motives of the presenter, whomever it may be..... thanks again.
Anonymous is anyone; after all, they're anonymous. The drug cartels don't like the Mexican government. Since anyone can claim to be part of Anonymous, what better way to shift the blame AND send a message at the same time?
It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
- E. Debs
They aren't interested in a fight, they want head lines.
If they had balls they would shut down every cartel in the world, but you know, that would require a gut check they can never meet.
It is one thing to go after groups who have the power to jail you but another to go after groups that WILL kill you.
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
IF "Anonymous" want to regain even the tiniest sliver of support, they'll try to stop the hack and release of petty information such as celebrity cell phones, and start taking down the EVIL guys, such as the drug cartels.
Fighting a war in a country that is no where near us... while Mexico has so many problems that rolling in the tanks and bombing the hell out of cartel compounds would be a far better thing to do?
Honestly, why don't we clean up our own back yard before trying to make everyone else clean theirs up first? Is the United states armed forces that afraid of the drug cartels?
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
But government and drug cartels are in bed with each other. Yeah, the government has to be opposed to them publicly, but in reality you'll find government is involved in the drug trade.
Cocaine and heroine were outlawed before the prohibition on alcohol...
Palm trees and 8
I somehow think that if the Mexicans weren't so OTT nationalistic, then certain options are on the table.
There are certain similarities between ultra-violent, cultureless narcos, and ultra-violent, cultureless Islamists. And the two problems probably have similar solutions, namely, reducing their life expectancy by drone attacks. If a few hundred truckloads of narcos get blown away by silent, invisible drones, then that surely must have some kind of impact on their current sense of invulnerability.
I think Mobama should send them a couple of pissed off Marines there for a little R&R (tequila, women and fire), or just hire a merc wing from the US DOD and do a cleanup... Mexico shouldnt be that difficult to overtake... a couple of M1A1 HA Abrams Main Battle Tank should do the trick... Mexico Urban layout is like afghanistan ultra light...
Nom de dieu de putain de bordel de merde de saloperie de connard d encule de ta mere.
and drug cartels kidnapping busloads of people and forcing them into gladiator-style contests to the death
Links to The Daily Mail, which is nearly as bad as a Goatse link.
Summation 2
Or we could stop militarizing law enforcement, and try a new, less violent approach to drug policy (like, say, legalization).
Palm trees and 8
"Too harsh and unjust"?
LOL. There's a reason why the white class shut the fuck up over those laws after the hot white woman got busted for being a russian spy: it meant that they could be fingered as an illegal at any time too and had to be ready to prove their citizenship every second of the day in case a cop decided they looked illegal.
Now that everyone's forgotten the hot russian spy, the white class is back with the "everyone who looks illegal should have to carry their papers".
This successes this group claim have relied on sloppy system admin and equally sloppy security patching. Their SQL injection attacks, which are old news, are mostly caused by lazy developers. These guys use tools built by others and exploit weaknesses that have been public for a while. The initial Sony hack exploited an Apache flaw that had been patched for more than a year. These guys are not script kiddies but they are not far from it. O-day exploits, self modifying bot-nets, and attacks like Stuxnext are on a whole different level.
They have leaders too.
There is some anarchy amongst the mindless minions due to the whole "Anonymous has no leaders" bullshit but most of their ddos attacks are coordinated by a core group. I don't think their command structure is as well organised as conventional organised crime but there are certainly people pulling the strings.
An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
I remember that Google want you to use your "real name" on Internet, sure it may help them earn more money but as one can see here it's not always a good idea!
It would be a good idea to shame them about their dumb policy during public manifestations..
Taco Bell to gets its ingredients from the midle east or not? From oil barons and robber multinationals of usa?
What if a drug were to be worse? Schoolchildrn having to fend for themself?
Question authority, do no ttrust the ppls in power for they are not the best interest of the common man. Extrordinary rendition is only the means to an end. What end? You think and you will realize it.
As I always said, Anonymous are only spoiled school children themselves, that have access to PC and Internet resources.
They need to have their collars felt by the FBI.
I believe in the case of anonymous, women may not be needed.
Already been done: Machete
Sorry that my country is strangely concerned about the idea of people smoking weed. All I can say is that, if marijuana was grown in Scotland, made in small batches, and aged for several years prior to sale, maybe things would change. Unfortunately, marijuana is associated with brown people in a way that is unacceptable to the WASPS in Congress. Also, making strange things illegal and arresting people for having, using, or asking for them is a job creator, and things are a little tight over here right now.
Sorry about the disembowelings, beheadings, and assassinations. Oh, and all the guns we keep selling your bloodthirsty cartel hitmen. Our bad.
Love,
America
PS. Thanks for keeping Cancun safe. It'd be really tough for us to have spring breaks and honeymoons if we all had to go to the Jersey Shore.
This unbiased moderation brought to you by the Porcine Aviation Group!
I'm really ashamed to be the same species as these 'people'. Really. It's just disgusting. WTF has the world come to. The worse part is there is no easy fix.
Anonymous would get my respect if they used their hacking skills to infiltrate the murderous thugs instead of defacing government websites.
Don't forget the catchy alliteration!
How are Anonymous meant to shut down a cartel? They might be able to stop them from checking their emails, but that's about it...
This Slashdot post is Tabloid quality journalism. What is this post except an invitation for readers to cluck in dismay like chickens.
This post consists of headlines from separate uncoordinated news sources describing physically and chronologically separate events. The entire post is a twisted criticism of yet further unrelated Internet punks with an opinion.
Part of the problem with the post is the underlying events in Mexico are serious but the subject matter and invitation of the post are a distraction from the substance of the post.
We were not saying there were too harsh and unjust. We were saying that they were completely stupid and unjust. We are still here, and we are still saying it.
AccountKiller
People drinking booze isn't that big a deal. People on the harder drugs leads to all sorts of problems - crime included. The problem in Mexico is that the US appears to be complicit in the trade. Witness the scenario a few years ago when phentinol was getting into the heroin supply and killing our addicts - they went down there and stopped the tainting of the drugs but did nothing to stop the actual drugs - we like our shit clean. Then there's the catch-and-release policy for people illegally crossing the border in some states - hand over those drugs and git yer self back home.
Even if we legalized every drug so we can stop importing from Mexico, the government there has clearly lost control to thugs who would continue to grow in power until they become the official government. Is that something you want right over that leaky border? On right you won't care because you'll be stoned out of your mind.
Has the internet become so stupid that a comment like this can score 3? How is anonymous supposed to combat drug cartels? DOS them?
I don't think they've taken a principled stand on anything. And they don't claim to either. They are in it for the lulz. That's it. The tendency to see them as somehow "sticking it to the man" through acts of civil disobedience is totally misplaced.
You could wipe out the cartels today and they'd just spring back up because of all the drug money waiting to be made. It takes an obscene amount of effort, money and human rights abuses overall to overcome the laws of economics.
You need to legalize drugs, cutting off their main source of income. That will weaken them a bit, then you can go after them with hit squads and drone attacks, wipe them out in a major series of military actions. After that, there won't be an incentive for them to spring up again, except for the lucrative kidnapping business.
Seriously. If they truly want to help people, they wuld be helping the government fight the drug cartel nightmare that is happening right now.
Douchbags.
Hell, whose to say a anonymous isn't being manipulated by a drug cartel?
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
A Guatamalan schoolchild grows up to be a drug dealer? Or a senator? Are one worse than others?
Look, see, face the world! Attune the celebration of what lies around you.
I think I'm going to have a heart attack and die from that surprise.
Not only a tax, but a graduated income tax. Ever notice that the bigger a criminal gang becomes, the more indistinguishable from "government" it becomes?
Liberty in your lifetime
There's an awful lot of teenage libertarian basement-dweller logic here. It's an American disease, but particularly bad on Slashdot.
If you libertarian dumbasses could see yourselves in the mirror, you'd soon STFU.
As the saying goes though, a dog cannot smell his own bad breath.
The article about the Anonymous hacking says nothing about their motives. It doesn't say or even imply this is in support of the gangs, or even in opposition to the government for some gang-related actions in which the government is engaged. There may be a connection, but there's no information out there (yet) stating this. So why, just like in this story yesterday, is some sort of spurious link being drawn between two unrelated events?
Liberty in your lifetime
For fear of retribution on both fronts... No comment.
You saw this posted on Wired:
September 15, 2011 | 12:07 pm
http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/09/mexican-cartels-hang-disembowel-internet-snitches/
Friday September 16, @08:45AM
http://yro.slashdot.org/story/11/09/16/1211253/Anonymous-Kills-Websites-Cartels-Kill-Bloggers
The violence won't decrease unless the stakes of the game (price of drugs, and punishment for being caught) decrease. If the regulations and quality controls keep the current suppliers (the cartels) out of the new market, or if the price of meeting those controls added to the cost of the taxes, still creates a large incentive to smuggle, there will still be smuggling and violence. Great care would need to be taken to make sure that the effects of legalization include a dramatic price drop of the drugs in question so that no one will be willing to risk a murder charge for the profit involved in smuggling it.
As to those who stand to lose by legalization, we should look at what opium did to China's society and make sure we have a plan by which our whole society doesn't lose. Some drugs became illegal for a good reason.
refactor the law, its bloated, confusing and unmaintainable.
Yeah, well, Mexico's government complains that the drug violence would be nil if the U.S. would control the drug demand up north. Point taken.
Then they claim actually closing the border would just be unacceptable. So preventing most of the drugs from crossing the border in Arizona is not a solution, apparently. I know, the cartels will just make more submarines, but raising their expenses might, just might, distract them from killing each other and innocent citizens in Mexico. Maybe.
Of course, our government isn't helping much with programs like Fast 'n Furious.
deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
Anonymous (Mexico) - OpIndependencia:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S-HzFclysQM&feature=related ...now, are Anonymous Mexico even actually affiliated? How loose is 'loose-knit'? Loose enough that any old Tom, Dick and Pedro can hijack the name perhaps?
While everyone is still lamenting the "legalize mary jane and the problems go away", let's not forget the other choice activities that generate about half the cartel's income:
https://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/19/opinion/19longmire.html
Sure the cartels will take hit initially, but those intervening months between legalizing and having RJ Reynolds start churning out cig packs of pot (or even for local growers to have enough to deal with the increased demand) the cartels would be shifting. Already the cartels operate near slave farm operations in the US national forests - what makes you think they would stop? The price might be a bit less but what's the cost to people who do not care for human life? Labor is cheap at the end of a gun barrel.
Per the OP's article these guys are no joke. They are not just some street thug but freaking trained troops. They have gone far, far up the Nung River, and I doubt they will go away any time soon.
So how long will we Americans be able to insulate ourselves from the violence across the border? I bet is that we will eventually have to invade Mexico and fight a "dirty war" against the cartels (we will call them terrorists and treat them as such). It will be a bloody and expensive war of at least a decade or longer. At this point I'm not sure making MJ legal would stop this situation, which seems to be as bad or worse in Mexico than the Colombia in the 1980's.
Stroke-like typing detected... Dude, it's time for a CAT scan.
They're all headed HERE! (USA)
The major drug problem between the US and Mexico is Marijuana. Our culture is very "meh" on having it outlawed, so there is a higher market for it, unlike drugs like heroin and meth with scares the crap out of most people, including the pot smokers among us. So it's not as though all those weed sales will transfer to cocaine or heroin if marijuana is legalized. They'll simply go out of business, or become legitimate, like beer producers did. Beer producers didn't say, "Shit, we can't dodge taxes and shoot at the federal lawmen anymore... so screw beer, we're going to start selling heroin!"
No, they went legit, and the guns went away. The gangs and mafias changed to do other illegal things, but they lost a huge portion of income. The same would happen with marijuana.
By the way, all those liquor taxes are paying for local community services, like schools. This is taxable, just like liquor, cigarettes, or any other luxury item.
I8-D
Ok you have me. I'm to blame
A) Not help them
B) Attack the system the murders and rapists use to gather information.
Of course that takes hard work and dedication.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
You're talking about a world-wide network of script kiddies vs an organized cadre of bloodthirsty monsters. What in the world do you expect them to do?
I expect them to die Miss ilsaloving, I expect them to die.
Just have someone blog under the name Pedro Nadie or whatever. Identify him as living just outside a small town in Northern Mexico and have him really piss off the cartels. When they come to get him, the little cabin is surrounded by the army. Game over.
Have gnu, will travel.
I was attacked while descend from a public bus in Mexico. Two guys beat me and lost my four upper front teeth... I'm really piss off. I'm not Rambo nor Terminator, only a regular guy with an Internet connection and a PC, but I want to find those bastards who do this to me.
I told the authorities of my city about the attack, and they don't have called me or request more info. Be a vigilante is a bad option, my body is nerd type, no combat type, so how you people, if you were on the same situation and country that I, can fight or help fight crime, Slashdot style?
/. to descend, since the exit of CmdrTaco, and I think this is about the closest I've seen to that. (Up to now, it hasn't been too bad.) This seems pretty pulpy, what with all the commenters chanting "descend on Mexican drug cartels NOW".
Bukowski said it. I believe it. That settles it.
Everybody thinks legalizing drugs solves the drug problems. Let's put that to the test in Mexico and see the results.
This is not only about drug traffic anymore. These cartels are expanding into 23 different delictive activities (search for Eduardo Buscaglia's conferences and interviews in Youtube), and are now trying to control and enslave the whole population. At the Mexican/American border on the affected areas. city authorities live and work on the American side. In the big cities of the Northeast there is a stampede of rich people moving to the USA in what is called the "golden migration". This is the class of northern entrepreneurs that helped defeat the leftist candidate in 2006 presidential elections claiming his "little strange ideas were a danger to Mexico" with help from Spanish and American PR advisors. Under the new conservative government the economy imploded, hordes of young people have become part of organized crime, and the people that started the problem are running away from it leaving the underclasses to deal with it any way they can, as long as it doesn't mean electing a leftist government.
What's to stop an OPEC-like organization from being created to ensure the price of drugs stay high?
OPEC is [relatively] successful due to the small number of suppliers in the marker and the scarcity of the product.
The inherit cost of producing most drugs is relatively low and the majority of the cost is a reflection of the risk factor in bringing it to market combined with the artificial scarcity. If you legalize drugs -- perhaps going so far as creating stores along the lines of "state liquor stores" -- the almost immediate bump in supply will drive the prices down.
There are problems that will have to be worked out. Such as:
There will be problems in legalizing drugs -- but they should be less insurmountable than the amount of drug cartel violence going on now.
Smoking is legal and can kill you.
Drinking is legal and can kill you.
Myriad other things are legal and can kill you.
So why not legalize all drugs, tax the sh*t out of 'em like cigarettes. The self-destructive will be able to do so, the curious ones will be able to try and the recreational users will be able to do so too. I'd be curious to see what would happen.
~Syberz
Explain to me how the US government makes money by enforcing these laws?
Overall, you're correct. The war on drugs is costing the American Taxpayer a fortune. But frankly, no one really cares about the American Taxpayer.
On the personal level, there are jobs to be had based on the war on drugs. Between prison guards, cops, judges, law clerks, lawyers, ... there are plenty of people with a personal financial stake in maintaining the status quo. Throw in Mrs. Grundy's fear of drug crazed maniacs and politicians would just as soon cut social security as appear soft on drugs.
Remember, the goal of politicians is not to solve problem but to buy votes by spending money. And what would we do with all of those unemployed lawyers?
Getting rid of prohibition absolutely did not stop the smuggling of alcohol. In 1960 high value alcohol products were about 5% in the Bahamas of what they sold for in the states. There were so many ways of smuggling alcohol that it never stopped and remained profitable. Also moonshine was and probably still is a lucrative business. People who had used 190 proof white lightening tend to want to have it from time to time and it gets made and sold to this day. It was a big money business and probably still is but I'm not about to run the ridges and hollers to get an accurate survey. Some states still take running a still as a very serious crime and will tend to throw away the key so think before you act.
opfullerton.tumblr.com
It's the Mexican government being petty by insisting on maintaining the ridiculous drug war.
I didn't read the latest round of mainstream 'headlines', but I hope everyone knows there is an Anon that matters. The Mexi Guv despises him/he,r as do the cartels, for publicizing what is not in the mainstream b/c of cover-ups and outright fear of retribution. Post is to Google page, pick your translator if no habla español...
Most is NSFW & NSFL but, nevertheless, a stunning and violent reality for Mexico...
Talk to Blog Del Narco
Imagination drew in bold strokes, instantly serving hopes and fears, while knowledge advanced by slow increments...
it would have to be 51st through 5Nth state (N is somewhere around 7 i think) and mostly the problem would just get pushed south.
Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
As an individual with no experience dealing with Anonymous, I cannot speak to their intentions, nor would I associate myself with them, however, I have lived on the border for most of my natural life, and I was born in central Mexico, so I maintain a dual citizenship between the two countries. That being said, I have spent a fair amount of time on either side of the border and I can safely tell you that the cartels influence reaches far beyond Mexican government. Mexican government officials are easy to buy, most are bought with the threat of torture and murder of either them, their families, or both. Poor militaristic structure allows for both clandestine and brute-force operations of fear-mongering and widespread violence that reinforces the threats issued at a high level to the Mexican government and subsequently the police force and army. The smart ones do as they are told, and hope for the best. The entire governmental structure of Mexico is corrupt and has been for the past half-century due to these practices.
Now, if you are keen enough to look at the situation from the other side of the border, you can safely assume that if these organizations are working this furtively to get a foothold into the United States and beyond, do you think a simple thing like a border would stop them? It's estimated that seven BILLION dollars a year is generated by the cartel, and that is just from Colombia alone. Where does the money go? It certainly doesn't stay sitting in piles in a drug mansion in the middle of the Colombian jungle, does it? What if that money is going into the United States, into real estate, funding fronts, buying off politicians, and paying lobbyists, to gain a foothold INSIDE the country? What if it has been doing that for the past twenty years? People would find out, wouldn't they?
They would, unless the political corruption that is crippling Mexico has already reached the higher levels of American government, and the US mainstream news media outlets. It would make sense, considering that cartels have been ruthlessly murdering people by the hundreds of thousands a year, for as long as they have been a power in the southern Americas, but nobody seems to hear about it, unless an American is taken out, or something equally as atrocious occurs to our people. Yet reports of mass genocides in countries with no political or direct impact on us as a nation are reported every day. Curious? If you're not, then you probably shouldn't keep reading.
If I were desperate to change a nation, to find the corruption whose tendrils I believe are strangling this once-great US of A, I would look everywhere EXCEPT the US government for answers. I would look to corporate agendas, I would look to cartel influence, and I would hit every single point of interest in between each and every one of those. If I thought knocking out the Mexican government network would cripple cartel operations for a day, I would do it in a heartbeat. If I thought petty attacks such as packet-bombing credit card sites would stop corporate favoritism and political alignment, I would do it in a heartbeat.
So yes, while an attack such as this may be petty, one must ask the question, where is the pattern in their actions? There certainly must be one, if they've gone from simple group of script kiddies to full blown national security threats in the eyes of the US government.
If anonymous wants to help, why not put their mad skillz to work tracking down the cartels websites and communications and either shut them down or mirror them to the Mexican government.
And send Guy Fawkes masks to everyone via overnight delivery, of course.
I find it extremely telling that the majority of posts in this thread relate to whether the war on drugs is on tracks or not (I believe it is not mind you), but almost no posts exists highlighting the pettiness of Anonymous in this matter in the midst of the atrocities committed by the drug cartels (as if defacing the sites of an incompetent government outgunned by the drug cartels would amount to some gesture of actual moral value.)
I can just tell you are very wrong. Yes, the government is quite corrupt (although I doubt it is as corrupt as you think), but here we are not talking (at least, we are no _longer_ talking) about govt. people being bribed not to mess with them. The cartels have become militarily stronger than the State in many regions, and although the government does not want to admit it, the talks about a "failed state" and about an effective civil war are correct... In some areas of the country.
Please note the "some areas" part. Of course, our country is going through a critical point, and the current short-sighted government is mostly to blame for it, for devising the worst possible strategy when it needed to legitimize after what many of us still think that was an electoral fraud. Most of the country is still quite safe. I have never seen (and hope never to see) any cartel-related violence, and I travel quite frequently throughout the country. Even including the North, although I am avoiding it now.
Of course, we have the micro-scale drug dealers, and they are not Sisters of Mercy either. But our main problem is drug traffic, where the amounts are high. High enough to fund your own army.
Because nobody in my country would like to see US troops in. If you want something that unites drug cartels and government fighting for a common target, you have the answer there.
Want to stop this bloodshed in Mexico? Do something about drug rings in the US. Because here we have, yes, the chaos about territorial disputes, routes control... But it's all about getting the drugs to the other side. How come no note-worthy news ever reach us about the US capturing a drug lord in your country? Don't tell me it's because they don't exist.
Gun posession is not a God-given right anywhere in the world. I am a Mexican, I don't have a gun, I don't have a gun license, nobody I know has one, and I'd never be interested in one.
And even if I got one, it would "only" be useful for smaller weapons, never for what I have seen in seemingly minor shops across the border.
Personally I would like Anonymous better if they mapped out the cartels and posted their own wanted posters.
Daily mail the uk version of the inquirer tabloid here in the states? the one that has articles about hillbilly chicks giving birth to half alien(e.t. not non-american human) hybrids after being raped by them? why should i take their word for it? as for the oil fields they are in decline more due to being past their production peak then any lack of money or government stability.
Still Mexico is a failed state like Somalia, but it's mainly due to our policies(the united state's policies) then anything else. Nafta + our prohibition on drug use not only created the profit incentive for these cartel's, but also rigged the game there that the only way to make money is to farm drugs. no family farmer there can make a living farming corn or the like at the prices allowed by nafta that the multi national company Monsanto dumps on the market there.
Didn't the British try this in the 1800s ... with China?
One solution would be for Mexico to legalize drugs and let USA deal with their addiction problem and how drugs come in.
And how, exactly, do you expect a bunch of script kiddies to shut down every cartel in the world?
Do you think drug cartels have any type of relevant critical IT infrastructure? You think it's as easy as DDoSing www.drugs.mx?
Let me guess... you're American. I can tell.
"With all the problems facing people in Mexico right now, including drug cartels extorting teachers for 50% of their pay and killing schoolchildren (thus shutting down the school system), Mexico's biggest oil field in terminal decline and drug cartels kidnapping busloads of people and forcing them into gladiator-style contests to the death,
...Anonymous' actions appear particularly petty."
With all these problems, why add to the load by harassing the government?
Why defend Anonymous' actions just because they are occurring in a country filled with strife by calling them petty?
Of course they do that. They go after people who will only slap their hands. The cartels and muslim extremists will actually just murder them.
The only way to solve this problem and also solve the imergration problem is to make Mexico part of the United States and send down the DEA and FBI and the National Gaurd to kill all in the cartels.
oh wait.. Karzai's government is practically run by corrupt drug lords who assassinate each other all the time.
but hey. whats the difference? nobody you know will be sent to fight.
"I support the annexing of Mexico!"
We already did that with a big part of Mexico in the 1840s.
They're annexing it right back, and then some. Spanish will be the language of the lower half of California within our lifetimes. The US is rapidly heading to a Canadian-style situation where a very large chunk of the country is essentially a different nation, with a different language and culture.
Life is hard, and the world is cruel
the only thing that would happen if we did take over most of central america is
1 we would waste several trillion dollars
2 piss off just about the rest of the planet
3 possibly start World War 3
but yes we would also need to address the SUPPLY side of the equation
just taking over Mexico would not even put a dent in the drug cartels area
Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
The choice here isn't between the status quo and legalized drugs taxed to the point they cost the same is illegal drugs. The choice is between the status quo and legalized drugs that are taxed heavily, but still a lot cheaper than smuggled drugs. You could raise a TON of revenue on, say, weed, and still have it be a lot cheaper than it is now (as has been shown in states where weed is quasi-legal - prices have dropped enormously). That would pull an enormous amount of money out of the hands of cartels, and put it in government coffers, where it could be used for both better drug treatment AND more border enforcement. Sure, you'd likely have some black market - cigarettes and alcohol both are both traded this way to some extent. But when was the last time a black market cigarette dealer disemboweled someone over a bad trade?
If the narcotics black market evolved into something like the cigarette black market, that would actually be a giant step forward.
So protesting against the government, for their lack of action in the faux WAR ON DRUGS mind you, is considered petty? Do you expect Anonymous to DDoS the drug cartel's website? Oh yeah, they don't have any. Come on. Everyone in Mexico (and many in the US) know that the governments, local and federal, are bought and paid for by the cartels. In fact, the Los Zetas cartel was formed by Special Forces deserters.
Your analysis of the drug war in Mexico is not only simple, it is offensive. The governments ARE PART of the "murderous thugs" of the drug cartels. They turn a blind eye to the violence they perpetuate and in many cases are in partner with it. Our own American government is under fire for letting drug traffickers of one cartel get a free pass in exchange for information on another cartel.
Unless you're going to present this ludicrous argument in the form of a debate, get this trash analysis off of Slashdot. You are doing a service to no one, especially the citizens of Mexico who live daily under the tyranny of their Governments and Drug Cartels alike.
Repealing prohibition has weakened the mafia a lot by cutting off a huge source of profit. When's the last time you heard of something on the scale of the Saint Valentines Day Massacre?
There are many points about your message that need correcting.
First, Mexico is not a poor country - It is a country full of social inequities. That might help you understand the problem a bit better. We have very wealthy people. The world's richest person, Carlos Slim (who made most of his fortune as the leading telecommunications provider in Latin America), is Mexican and has always lived here. I grew up among a very wealthy group, and I often felt I was quite poor - Yes, until I found out that even that way I (son of an University teacher and an artist) was still in the most fortunate economic group. In my office there are people who get 1/10th of my salary, and 10 times as much - And I work in the public sector (just imagine how deeper the differences might be in a private business).
Second, we cannot just go out and bomb a house because there's a druglord living there. That's clearly illegal. Yes, it might be what you expect in occupied countries, but that's completely unacceptable in a place where there is (or there is supposed to be) a law. Criminals must be aprehended, tried, and only after that, punished.
Third, and I think this is the main point: The problem is structural. The problem is not the five or six (or twenty or whatever) top people of the largest cartels. The thing is that, if the country does not give a viable way to survive with dignity to a large amount of its population... This will happen again and again. Kill a druglord, two will fight each other to death. With their armies, of course, and recruiting more people along the way. Yes, that's part of the (clearly failed) strategy of our (illegitimate!) president Calderón: Go fight them, go kill them. The results? In the previous presidency (2000-2006), we had around 2000 people dead because of drug-related violence. In the five years since then... 50,000. How long can they keep thinking it's the way out?
Legalize drugs, *independently*, without any signoff from the Mexican government (corrupt), infiltrate cartels and then do what needs to be done, one-by-one, group-by-group. Terror works both ways.
That and the cartels don't have public websites.
They take down university and schools that have (gov.mx). Someone bring them a dictionary please.
to what was going on in Mexico. Sure, I knew about the rampant drug killings but without this current Anonymous attack, I would have never hear about the school system extortion in Acapulco. I go to the BBC and major new sites daily and this was new to me, 2 weeks after the fact. Perhaps their efforts were based upon publicity to the issue in general, not personal gain. Just saying...
the actions of anonymous are relevant
SAME
While we're legalizing all drugs, let's go ahead and make it legal for people to build nuclear bombs in their basements or how about legalizing murder too. Or robbing banks. I mean, if it's legal then people won't do it right? Unbelievable. I feel we do need to step in and start a full on war with the cartels so Mexico can have their country back. There's just no good way to do it. In my eyes though, the cartels are as bad or almost worse than Al Queda because they're targeting just about anybody and everybody to make a buck or to prove a point or hell, just because. Only problem is, we have no real assets we need from there so why would we step in? And the cartel violence has already spread into the US. You just can't hear it over the Snookies, Winning!, and Kardashians.
No. Legalizing means falling to the threats and violence which is not a part of democratic system or is it? Why can't stepped up police and military force can take action. This is terrorism and America has declared war on terrorism/Terrorism. Argument that smoking and drinking are taxed commodities, so should be drugs is not a valid one. Consider the possibilities of other morally degrading options that may follow suit. Consider some other feasible course(s) of actions other than legalization.
http://xkcd.com/123/
... and posting a response.
Except I'm not sure how to respond.
God is real. No mortal is going to get his or her mind around God, but God is real. That's one of the problems with commercial programs that attempt to use AA principles, is that they are trying to "harness faith" to make themselves money. (There may be exceptions, but it would be a difficult tightwire to walk.)
The best way for an atheist or agnostic to understand God is to consider that acceptance of God is equivalent to the acceptance that there is something that matters outside of oneself.
Unfortunately, those who use faith to make themselves money (power, influence, agenda, etc.) are working directly against the thing outside themselves that matters. Which causes no small confusion.
What this has to do with drug cartels and bloggers, well, ...
We all make mistakes. Trying to punish the other guy for his minor mistakes is a bad idea, but trying to encourage him to make more is not a good idea either. And the definition of "minor" is always going to be a problem.
Computer memory is just fancy paper, CPUs just fancy pens with fancy erasers; the 'net is just a fancy backyard fence.