Friday, September 25, 2009

Mexican Mayhem

I don't know what else to call it all.

Jew Jacker



Can you SEE WHY I SAY THAT?

See: Mexico's Jewish Priest Hijacks Airliner

Fake Mexico Hijacking by Bolivian Jew

And we all know why (date, remind) it was done:

"Religious fanatic hijacks jet in Mexico" by Mark Stevenson, Associated Press | September 10, 2009

MEXICO CITY - A Bolivian religious fanatic briefly hijacked a jetliner from the beach resort of Cancun as it prepared to land in Mexico City yesterday, police said. All passengers and the crew were released unharmed.

The Bible-carrying hijacker used a juice can he said was a bomb to hold 103 passengers and crew on the tarmac more than an hour.

Very strange seeing as he is wearing a Star of David around his neck.


Masked police stormed the aircraft with guns drawn and escorted several handcuffed men away without firing a shot. Police said there was only one hijacker.

I keep thinking Jessica Lynch lie, then cover-up the asset/agent accomplices.

Jose Flores, 44, told investigators he hijacked Aeromexico Flight 576 after a divine revelation, according to Public Safety Secretary Genaro Garcia Luna. Flores said yesterday’s date - 9-9-09 - is the satanic number 666 turned upside down.

Pfffft!


Flores, speaking to reporters after he was detained, said he used “a juice can with some little lights I attached. Christ is coming soon,’’ he added, smiling. As the plane was landing, Flores stood and showed his contraption to a flight attendant, saying he and three others were hijacking the plane, Garcia Luna said. Flores later told police his companions were “the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost.’’

He ordered the pilot to circle over Mexico City seven times and asked to speak with President Felipe Calderon, saying he wanted to warn him of an impending earthquake, Garcia Luna said. US, French, and Mexican citizens were among the passengers.

--more--"

No Water to Drink

Even if you wanted to, there is none....


"Amid drought, water shortage is crisis in Mexico" by Ken Ellingwood, Los Angeles Times | September 13, 2009

MEXICO CITY - In the parched Mexican countryside, the corn is wilting, the wheat stunted. And here in this vast and thirsty capital, officials are rationing water and threatening worse cuts as Mexico endures one of the driest spells in more than half a century.

A monthslong drought has affected broad swaths of the country, from the US border to the Yucatan Peninsula, leaving crop fields parched and many reservoirs low. The need for rain is so dire that water officials have been rooting openly for a hurricane or two to provide a good drenching....

They didn't get any.

This is supposed to be Mexico’s wet season, when daily rains bathe farmland and top off rivers and reservoirs. But rainfall has been sporadic and unusually light - the result, officials say, of an El Nino effect this summer that has warmed Pacific Ocean waters and influenced distant weather patterns.

Related: One Last Dip in the Ocean

Mexico’s hurricane season has been mild, with no major hits this summer, although a weak Hurricane Jimena dropped plenty of rain on parts of Baja California and the northwestern state of Sonora last week. The sparse rainfall nationwide has made 2009 the driest in 69 years of government record-keeping, Felipe Arreguin Cortes, deputy technical director for Mexico’s National Water Commission, said.

Although nearly two months remain before the rainy season ends in October, the drought is an unwelcome blow to an economy laboring under a recession that has crimped exports and cost hundreds of thousands of jobs. Mexican growers report more than $1 billion in losses from crops planted during spring, in anticipation of seasonal rain. Hard hit have been corn, beans, barley, and sorghum, plus livestock.

I see RISING FOOD PRICES in the NEAR FUTURE!

Farmers and officials say the effect, including lost earnings, unpaid debts, and shortages of staple foods, could be felt well into next year. “Although no one wants to recognize it, there is a food crisis,’’ said Cruz Lopez Aguilar, president of a national federation representing rural dwellers. He and others say increasing imports to make up for lost crops could raise food costs.

Mexican officials play down the severity, saying lost production can be offset during the fall growing cycle, when crops are irrigated and rely less on direct rainfall. A federal government insurance program is meant to cover farmers affected by drought.

IRRIGATE THEM with WHAT? Hot fart mist?

The dry period has also lent new urgency to longtime water worries in metropolitan Mexico City, home to 20 million residents. Officials for several months have been rationing water from a network of outlying reservoirs, known as the Cutzamala system, which provides at least a fifth of Mexico City’s water. Cutbacks recently have been doubled, to 30 percent of supplies. Rationing means lower flows in many neighborhoods for days at a time, but no citywide cutoffs.

--more--"

Yeah, thirsty Mexicans worthy of a one-day mention and that's it.

So are
Texans, actually.

Subway Shootings

"Mexico City boosts subway security after shootings" by Julie Watson, Associated Press | September 19, 2009

MEXICO CITY – Police started randomly checking people for guns in the capital's 175 subway stations Saturday after a man opened fire inside a crowded station, killing two people and causing eight injuries.

Mexico City Attorney General Miguel Angel Mancera said the gunman, Luis Felipe Hernandez, 38, who was wounded by police, was undergoing psychological exams to determine if he is mentally unstable. Authorities have 48 hours to decide whether to send him to a psychiatric ward or have him stand trial....

Hernandez was writing an anti-government statement on a wall at the packed Balderas subway station when a police officer confronted him. He fatally shot the officer and then continued firing as people got on and off a train during rush hour. Video from a security camera shows Hernandez shooting as the crowd runs for cover....

Related(?): Operation Bluebird

MK Ultra

More than 1,600 city police officers and 3,000 security guards were assigned to permanently patrol subway stations starting Saturday, using 500 hand-held metal detectors, the city government said in a news release. More than 5 million people a day use the Metro system, one of the world's busiest.

Mancera said the gunman was a farmer from western Jalisco state who after being captured rambled on about being against world politics. "He talked about global warming and then gave a message from the Bible and all of a sudden he started focusing on some government," Mancera told the government news agency, Notimex....

Oh, SOME GOVERNMENT, huh? ANOTHER RELIGIOUS WHACKO?!!!!!!

Oh, STINKOLA!!!!!!!

Mancera told Notimex that Hernandez did not test positive for drugs or alcohol. He said Hernandez had been staying at a hotel in the city since Wednesday....

Related: "Al-CIA-Duh" Near and Far

The attack came about a week after a Bolivian preacher hijacked an Aeromexico jetliner as it was landing in Mexico City after a flight from the Caribbean resort of Cancun.

The hijacker, Jose Flores, said he was acting on a divine revelation.... an earthquake that would occur in 2012. That year has been widely mentioned on the Internet as the date for potentially catastrophic events, based on astronomical alignments and purported ancient prophecies.

I've heard and seen something of them. Way these guys are running the planet doesn't make me feel too good about it.

--more--"

My local had to tell me that one, and they chopped the last three paragraphs.

The Globe thinks this is more important:
In Mexico, where state is vital to arts, museums struggling

And what the Globe and local never told us:

"Former U.S. anti-drug official's arrest 'a complete shock'

As a high-ranking U.S. anti-drug official, Richard Padilla Cramer held front-line posts in the war on Mexico's murderous cartels. He led an office of two dozen agents in Arizona and was the attache for Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Guadalajara.

While in Mexico, however, Cramer also served as a secret ally of drug lords, according to federal investigators. Cramer allegedly advised traffickers on law enforcement tactics and pulled secret files to help them identify turncoats. He charged $2,000 for a Drug Enforcement Administration document that was sent to a suspect in Miami by e-mail in August, authorities said."

Yeah, I guess the AmeriKan MSM wouldn't want you know that.