Mutilated Tortured Corpes Found Near Popular Mexican Resort
65 replies, posted
okay, that is just horrible.
[QUOTE=Ultra Violence;31900538][url]http://www.documentingreality.com/forum/attachments/f166/142504d1269475197-11-beheaded-bodies-zetas-gang-murderers-narcotrafico-mexican-1249673034020.jpg[/url][/QUOTE]
Where the hell did they get all those knives?
[QUOTE=Van-man;31901460]Where the hell did they get all those knives?[/QUOTE]
They keep them handy in case they have to cut off a few faces.
Reminds me of lipstick murders.
Those fucking Cartels.
mexico is a fucked up place
Things like this are why I get worried when my friends say they want to visit mexico. Sure it doesn't happen to every person who ever goes there, but still
they cut up someone, removed their face, skin, and scalp and put it in a womans purse?
what the fuck
[QUOTE=NorthernGate;31901679]Things like this are why I get worried when my friends say they want to visit mexico. Sure it doesn't happen to every person who ever goes there, but still[/QUOTE]
As long as they don't become drug runners they should be fine.
Almost 100% of deaths like this are because that person was involved in the drugs/gangs.
[QUOTE=Ultra Violence;31900538]I might accept that if I thought they did it because it was easy. Instead, I'm pretty convinced they do it just to torture people.
I mean, they don't do shit like this because it's easy: [url]http://www.documentingreality.com/forum/attachments/f166/142504d1269475197-11-beheaded-bodies-zetas-gang-murderers-narcotrafico-mexican-1249673034020.jpg[/url]
They do it because pain = information. I could be wrong, but people don't do shit like that because it's easier.
(and if you have a weak stomach, don't click that link)[/QUOTE]
holy dick cheese
[QUOTE=NorthernGate;31901679]Things like this are why I get worried when my friends say they want to visit mexico. Sure it doesn't happen to every person who ever goes there, but still[/QUOTE]
Same. My suburbian college friends think its a fucking sick thing to go to Mexico to "party." I feel really bad that they're mostly women too. D:
EDIT: What the hell Ultra Violence, warn people first shit! It didn't phaze me but it's not something I like to see early in my day. Plus that forum is totally fucked, the posters are insane
[QUOTE=SpaceGhost;31902436]holy dick cheese[/QUOTE]
Maybe I am crazy, but these shock images don't even bother me.
What the fuck kind of news is this to read the day after my mom takes a trip to Mexico?
[QUOTE=TehDoctorz;31902197]Almost 100% of deaths like this are because that person was involved in the drugs/gangs.[/QUOTE]
Not anymore. The Zetas kill anyone they get their hands on. It's like taking candy from a baby for them.
[QUOTE='[sluggo];31903040']Maybe I am crazy, but these shock images don't even bother me.[/QUOTE]
Like most of us, You've become desensitized to this kind of stuff.
If I was a cannibalist or some psycho murderer I would move to Mexico and start killing people for sport and get away with it as it would be blamed on gangs and drug cartels.
[QUOTE=TehDoctorz;31902197]Almost 100% of deaths like this are because that person was involved in the drugs/gangs.[/QUOTE]
Not exactly, they pretty much hurt everyone who isn't one of them now. I had a friend who was walking to the store one day and got attacked out of nowhere by some Mexican gang. She had nothing to even do with them at all, and she ended up being put in the hospital for like a whole week because of the attack. Mexican gangs are barbarians.
[editline]23rd August 2011[/editline]
But they're probably only barbaric like this because most Mexican gangs are prison gangs after all.
[QUOTE=Sanius;31899665]God Bless America[/QUOTE]
What does this have to do with America?
[QUOTE=Miskav;31899611]And to think that the american "war on drugs" only makes these kind of things way more severe.[/QUOTE]
Yes, because the Mexican Government can not be blamed for problems within their country. Yeah, let's blame everything on the U.S. because we don't like them.
[QUOTE='[sluggo];31909101']What does this have to do with America?[/QUOTE]
because it's america's war on drugs and them forcing mexico into it which made all these cartels so powerful & fucked.
I used to have a membership with Sam's Club. There were a lot of Mexicans there.
I'm never. Going. Back.
[QUOTE=ewitwins;31899714]Yes, blame the United States on trying to fight an epidemic of drugs on the fact that things are getting nastier in Mexico.
I mean, it's not like the Mexican Government is at fault for letting this thing fester for so long, right?[/QUOTE]
but the US isn't actually doing in their so called "war on drugs"
[QUOTE=ewitwins;31899714]Yes, blame the United States on trying to fight an epidemic of drugs on the fact that things are getting nastier in Mexico.
I mean, it's not like the Mexican Government is at fault for letting this thing fester for so long, right?[/QUOTE]
US-backed, CIA-funded, armed, and trained military that swayed, corrupted, and bribed politicians and rigged votes to keep the same authoritarian party in power for decades.
This party, the PRI, not only influenced things the way of the US, but also heavily that of US corporations from 1994 onward, with the passing of NAFTA. Through this, the nation has been handled and bribed and corrupted using violence, money, and vote fraud to pass laws that destroyed workers' rights, land rights, immigration ease, social programs, and voluntarily dismantle any sort of support for the poor and working class. Part of this was done via volunteerism. In the 90s, Mexico finally shook off the strength of the PRI, and introduced more democratic, open, free methods, however, the economy was in shambles, destroyed, unfixable. With NAFTA, the promise of moving in industry and jobs to Mexico was a seemingly great opportunity, but to go there, the corporations demanded many of the things I listed above.
Upon setting up a major industry base in Mexico, US corporations provided the Mexican government with wealth through trade and tax, but the middle and lower classes suffered under extreme work hours, crappy conditions, and a government whose primary goal is to bring the country on its feet by any means.
In the late 90s/early 2000s, most American corporations quickly removed their industry from Mexico to China and southern Asia, leaving the major money-maker for Mexico, and only source for jobs, gone. This opened a power vacuum that we now see as a drug war. When jobs and money are scarce, people turned towards drug trafficking and cartel violence to make money. This quickly put the cartels into power and influence, and at a level that competes with the government.
The US responded to this by increasing border security, more harsh drug restrictions, and stricter immigration processes. This only aided cartels, in that now the only way for a normal Mexican citizen to go over or under the border is via cartels willing to smuggle and transport for money. They, by trying to keep Mexicans and cartels away, have effectively provided business for them.
So in all actuality, this is a problem that is mostly due to the US being over involved in Latin America, controlling Mexican politics, shoving private industry into the country, encouraging poverty, removing any source of income, creating poverty, and then condemning the problem to Mexico via border quarantine, giving money and power to the cartels.
So while you may think it was the Mexican government letting it "fester for too long", you can really blame US corporate interests for ruining the middle class and the economy of Mexico, and the US for pushing our international business and politics on them.
[QUOTE=s0beit;31900344]When the government has to grow exponentially to combat a crime the government caused in the first place, that is one fucking stupid policy.
I don't know, how in the face of all of this, people STILL defend the war on drugs. You are either completely devoid of morals or the state has twisted your moral belief system to such a degree you consider it the Mexican government's fault that they're not killing drug dealers fast enough.
I suppose it was Chicago's fault mobsters took over? Columbia's fault cartels ran and still run the cocaine trade?
We ended prohibition and the mobs in Chicago were neutered, I know, I live there. The lesson could not be more clear if i wrote it on a board with magic marker and smacked you in the face with it.[/QUOTE]
It is clear that the prohibition needs to end, but I think it's more of the Mexican government's fault considering it is the main participant in the "War on Drugs" in Mexico.
[QUOTE='[Seed Eater];31910533']US-backed, CIA-funded, armed, and trained military that swayed, corrupted, and bribed politicians and rigged votes to keep the same authoritarian party in power for decades.
This party, the PRI, not only influenced things the way of the US, but also heavily that of US corporations from 1994 onward, with the passing of NAFTA. Through this, the nation has been handled and bribed and corrupted using violence, money, and vote fraud to pass laws that destroyed workers' rights, land rights, immigration ease, social programs, and voluntarily dismantle any sort of support for the poor and working class. Part of this was done via volunteerism. In the 90s, Mexico finally shook off the strength of the PRI, and introduced more democratic, open, free methods, however, the economy was in shambles, destroyed, unfixable. With NAFTA, the promise of moving in industry and jobs to Mexico was a seemingly great opportunity, but to go there, the corporations demanded many of the things I listed above.
Upon setting up a major industry base in Mexico, US corporations provided the Mexican government with wealth through trade and tax, but the middle and lower classes suffered under extreme work hours, crappy conditions, and a government whose primary goal is to bring the country on its feet by any means.
In the late 90s/early 2000s, most American corporations quickly removed their industry from Mexico to China and southern Asia, leaving the major money-maker for Mexico, and only source for jobs, gone. This opened a power vacuum that we now see as a drug war. When jobs and money are scarce, people turned towards drug trafficking and cartel violence to make money. This quickly put the cartels into power and influence, and at a level that competes with the government.
The US responded to this by increasing border security, more harsh drug restrictions, and stricter immigration processes. This only aided cartels, in that now the only way for a normal Mexican citizen to go over or under the border is via cartels willing to smuggle and transport for money. They, by trying to keep Mexicans and cartels away, have effectively provided business for them.
So in all actuality, this is a problem that is mostly due to the US being over involved in Latin America, controlling Mexican politics, shoving private industry into the country, encouraging poverty, removing any source of income, creating poverty, and then condemning the problem to Mexico via border quarantine, giving money and power to the cartels.
So while you may think it was the Mexican government letting it "fester for too long", you can really blame US corporate interests for ruining the middle class and the economy of Mexico, and the US for pushing our international business and politics on them.[/QUOTE]
I'm so glad I'm not the only one who knows this. Thanks for explaining it.
Damn, I hope they atleast got a fast decapitation.
[QUOTE=Sgt-NiallR;31899392]I would just never go to Mexico. I do not see how people still think it is a good idea.[/QUOTE]
Mexico has nice places to visit
Fuck, imaging opening your purse and seeing human flesh inside
In Mexico, 90% of crimes go unpunished, in Mexico dozens die of cartel ciolence every day, in Mexico gangs control half the country. But according to all of you people, the US caused all of this? Most of you scramble to blame the US for everything, because you dislike it's more conservative political scene. Or, atleast thats what it seems like to me.
Sorry, you need to Log In to post a reply to this thread.