México es muy amable con otros países, pero si escuchan con atención nuestro himno, se trata de que si te metes con nosotros, te partimos tu madre. Porque aquí somos el amigo de todos, pero el pendejo de nadie. 😌
esta cosa si da miedo...
la idea de algo tan jodido que tu cerebro te obligo a no recordarlo para intentar protegerte
a veces el miedo esta en lo que conocimos, pero decidimos olvidar
@BowTiedPassport Yeah, yeah, we get it. However, nowadays it’s part of being polite, so if you omit it, you’ll sound like a disrespectful son of a bitch—so just say it.
A haze machine fills the cave with fog while a single green laser spirals through it, creating a portal-like vortex. No screens. Just light, fog, and a brain fooled into seeing another dimension.
[📹 leo.xi25]
"El Mencho" was, in fact, a US agent, and the Jalisco Cartel operates as a disruptive force that is functional to the interests of the United States on Mexican soil.
That is to say, they are not simply drug traffickers; they are paramilitaries and mercenaries in the service of the United States.
It is impossible for drug traffickers to travel to Ukraine, train with neo-Nazi groups under the protection and surveillance of NATO, or receive weaponry distributed directly—and not through intermediaries or gun stores in the United States—to cartels in Mexico without some kind of structural backing or tolerance.
Even more so when there is talk of links to training provided by Kaibiles [Guatemalan special forces], Colombian special forces, or even at facilities like Fort Bragg or Fort Benning.
Can the idea really be sustained that drug trafficking is completely autonomous, that it arises spontaneously and operates outside the dynamics of global power?
Obviously not. Everything is maintained by the US. Drug trafficking, just like terrorism, is functional to the empire.
—Words of the great @ExoSapiens Mexican Historian Christian Nader.