Your loss is our gain…
… or so argues Jay Bildstein in The (Mexico City) News:
It is said that 70 percent of the U.S. economy is consumer based. Rampant consumerism is a way of life in the United States. A powerful addiction to purchasing has provided nations like China with a seemingly limitless market for its goods. Cheap Chinese products and voracious U.S. consumption patterns have been wedded for some time now.
…
China has a comparative advantage over Mexico in terms of labor costs, yet rising transportation costs will cause the price of Chinese products to rise. This will make them less attractive.
Goods produced far from the world’s largest consumer market are most affected by upwardly arcing transportation costs. The forward progress of the Chinese economy – and the economy of India for that matter – is increasing petroleum demand. Ironically, this causes their goods to become less desirable since their growing economies demand more energy. This demand has the tendency to drive up oil prices and increase worldwide transportation costs.
Mexico, sitting next door to the world’s largest consumer market, has a tremendous window of opportunity due to its logistical advantage over Asia. Proximity means a significant competitive edge because of lower costs of transportation to market.
One we don’t think of, but maybe in the U.S. should be thought about (and Bildstein did notice) is that Mexico also has professional services (at least some in the U.S. now depend on Mexico for medical services) that can be performed by telecommuting or over the internet: architecture, engineering, programming, etc.
BLACKWATER already in Mexico… sorta
Boy, talk about coming under the radar.
The infamous mercenary supplier has diversified. David Eisenberg, a military affairs analyst for Asia Times and adjunct scholar for the conservative Cato Institute, calls Blackwater ” a sort of Wal-Mart for all the U.S. government’s military outsourcing needs.”
With its brand name in some disrepute, the “one stop shop” for all your mahem and slaughter needs, has a diversified corporate structure. Greystone Ltd., for example, is registered in the Barbados, and — in Eisenberg’s words — employs third-country nationals for offshore security work. Its Web site advertises its ability to maintain and train “a workforce drawn from a diverse base of former special operations, defense, intelligence, and law enforcement professionals ready on a moment’s notice for global deployment.”
Come to think of it, supposedly that’s what los Zetas are said to be — ex-Special Forces guys who make a living in the private sector based on their military expertise.
Through another holding company, Aviation Worldwide Services, which has several subsidiaries, Blackwater has it’s own air wing and air transport. For naval operations, there is Blackwater Maritime Security Services.
Training facilities? Raven Development Group. “Among other things, RDG offers general contracting, construction management, designing and building services to its clients,” Eisenberg writes.
Logistics and supply? That’s where Mexico comes in. Blackwater is an outgrowth of the Prince Manufacturing Corporation, founded by Blackwater’s CEO, Eric Prince’s father, in 1965. Prince Manufacturing, back in their original days in Michigan, provided die-cast machine parts and automotive trim. It still fabricates metal stuff. Though today the product line is “Automotive, Military and Industrial, Performance Specification Approved” stuff.
Think about it. Prince Manufacturing Corporation makes whatever the client wants them to make. Toolboxes or engine parts, it doesn’t much matter. Blackwater provides a bunch of guys with guns, who — like Prince Manufacturing Corp’s machine parts are “individual components meshing together precisely as planned. You aim to bring the complexity of your processes down to manageable levels, focusing on core capabilities while keeping costs to a minimum, reducing waste, and increasing flexibility.”
Bringing “the complexity of your processes down to manageable levels, focusing on core capabilities while keeping costs to a minimum, reducing waste, and increasing flexibility” sounds like the goal of every cocaine processor and meth lab too.
But this is metal fabricating. Done right here in Mexico, at the three Prince Manufacturing de Mexico S. de R.L. de C.V. facilities:
Plant #1
Ave Valle del Cedro No. 1680
Cd. Juarez, Chih., Mexico C.P.32574
Plant #2
Ave Valle del Cedro No. 1550
Cd. Juarez, Chih., Mexico C.P.32574
Plant #3
Av. La Silla Apodaca No. 101
Parque Industrial La Silla Apodaca, 66600
Monterrey, N.L., Mexico
Prince Manufacturing de Mexico gets stuff where it needs to be. They say they do a good job
… with shipping logistics, planning carefully to reduce freight and other costs, while ensuring that your materials arrive where they’re needed, when they’re needed. This helps you achieve significant cost reduction in freight and inventory. Quality doesn’t end with the manufacturing process. We ensure that your product arrives safely and undamaged. Shipping logistics involves a lot more than simply getting your product from point A to point B. It involves doing so in the most efficient manner possible.
Shipping cocaine and marijuana involves a lot more than simply getting your product from point A to point B. It involves doing so in the most efficient manner possible. Shipping inconvenient “enemy combatants also involves doing so in the most efficient manner possible. One might be tempted to refer to their “extraordinary renditions” of … what we hope are just toolboxes.
Blackwater Worldwide is in business to return a profit to the investors, even though the particular industrial process they employ involves killing and torturing people on behalf of whatever client pays them… There’s no reason to say they are involved with the narcos or are using the processing plants in Mexico as a “front,” but is there any reason to assume they’ll always be working on the side of “truth, justice and the American (or Mexican or Human) Way?”
“You fight like a girl!”… that’s a good thing

María del Rosario Espinoza, of Guasaves, Sinaloa, kicked the crap out of Norwegian Nina Solheim in only two rounds to take the Gold in Women’s Taekwondo.
With gold medals in both mens’ and womens’ taekwondo, martial arts will be even more popular in Mexico than they already are. And so much for the stereotype of the passive Mexican woman… don’t mess with the ladies of Guasaves … they can take care of themselves.
Anchor (babies) away
I’m almost willing to bet there are going to be “MEXICAN POLICE INVADE LAREDO” stories in your favorite right-wing wingnut sources about this.
An American citizen went into labor while on a park bench in Nuevo Laredo. Police officers, doing what police officers are supposed to do, transport the person in distress (soon to be two people) to the hospital. Where the American insisted she did not want the baby born in Mexico. So… the officers loaded her up and raced her across the International Bridge to a Laredo hospital. And were arrested for illegal entry and carrying firearms. And deported.
Geeze, I know Homeland Security has its bureaucratic quotas and all… but couldn’t they have asked these guys to “voluntarily depart” the country and maybe made the embarrassing stats on operation “Scheduled Departure” might not have been quite so ludicrous.
“Between us and the gringos… the desert!” (Porfirio Diaz)
These guys are probably a little more ambitious and energetic than most “Viagra Vigilantes” I’ve met, but to quote Hillary Clinton, “There are two ways to secure our borders: a smart way and a dumb way.” The geezers aren’t they only ones to “drive to the US-Mexico Border every weekend and sit in lawn chairs, determined to “do a little somethin’ for the country.”
They’ll get it when it’s pried from my cold dead … uh…
First they came for the porn on our computers and I did nothing….
Then they came for Viaga, and still I did nothing….
But when they came for cock-rings…
I don’t even want to think about what kind of training the Customs Inspectors apparachiks receive.
(sombrero tip to South Texas Chisme )
Iowa: the nightmare state
When I originally wrote this for a later posting — the one you’re reading now — I didn’t know about the overwhelming task taken on by Saint Bridget’s Catholic Church (with a congregation of 100, and a staff of four) to provide food, shelter, legal advice and counseling to their neighbors. In awarding the Church a “Wings of Justice” award, Buzzflash.com wrote:
“The women are effectively prisoners,” said Father Paul Ouderkirk. “The difference between them and anybody who is in jail is that in jail the government pays for them, but if they’re on the streets, we pay for them. What kind of a government makes prisoners of 43 mothers who all have children and then says, ‘You can’t work, you can’t leave, and can’t stay?’ That boggles the imagination.”
Sister Mary McCauley, the church’s pastoral administrator, told Time Magazine “it is a “privilege” to serve those affected by the raid.”
Donations are being accepted by:
St. Bridget’s Hispanic Fund
P.O. Box 369
Postville, IA 52162
We all know that Czech composer Antonin Dvorak benefited from his short stay in Spillsville, Iowa. But, it appears that the spirit of his countryman, Franz Kafka, haunts Postville:
(Marisa Treviño, LatinaLista):
… the U.S. government has created a virtual “open-air” prison in this town where 43 women who are mothers and accustomed to working to feed their children must wear ankle bracelets to monitor their movements and are reduced to begging for food because the federal government won’t allow them to work or otherwise provide for their children — and won’t allow them to leave.
In fact, when a federal immigration judge in Chicago issued a ruling last week allowing 10 women who had been detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement in the Postville raid to return to their home countries voluntarily, he went against what ICE officials had wanted, which was deportation.
As Treviño explains, as deportees (as opposed to voluntarily repatriating themselves — which they can’t do with small American children in their care), the women would be classified as “undesirable aliens” who cannot legally return to the country. And, ironically, by holding them for deportation, they become those mythical creatures, the “illegal aliens” who drain public welfare coffers.
In Washington there will be screams
I don’t think it’s quite sunk in yet, but there may be a huge change coming on the crime/justice/security front.
Somewhat true to form (and ghoulishly), Televisa and PAN political spokesmen seized on the recent kidnappping and murder of a milionaire’s teen-aged son to foment demonstrations and suggest that insecurity and kidnapping are somehow more serious a problem in Mexico City (run by the PRD) than in the rest of the country. And — somewhat true to form — the Mexico City administration is turning the tables.
Secretario de Gobernacion (Home Secretary in Britian, Canada, etc., Homeland Security Director in the United States) Juan Camilo Moureño and Jefe de Gobierno (Mayor, Governor of the Federal District) Marcelo Ebrard have been doing the usual political dance around a “National Security Pact”. Moureño originally met with his own party’s political leaders before finally agreeing to meet with Ebrard, who will be presenting a ten-point security plan:
Not all are specific “law enforcement” type recommendations. Tracking cell phone use (and cutting off cell phone signals in prisons), a new Federal High-Security Prison ( unremarkable, until you realize that dangerous prisoners being sent to the Capital for trial are being held in the District’s jail — and the district is blamed when they escape — which they seem to regularly do), video cameras on Federal highways, dedicated radio frequencies for law enforcement, intelligence sharing between local and Federal prosecutors, would pass muster with the conservatives with no problem.
Creating a new intelligence unit to investigate financial crimes is not going to sit easily with some, but there is no way a politician could come out in favor of money laundering. On-going evaluations of criminal justice organizations and citizen review boards are the types of things Ebrard (who was Mexico City’s police chief, but comes from a background in public administration) has been experimenting with locally, and show promise nationally.
Serious attention to financial crimes and gun-running are probably of more immediate impact outside the Capital, but the “radical” and — in the long run — probably most effective anti-crime weapon is the agenda item dealing with economic stimulus for high-crime areas.
And, not on the agenda, but probably in the long term the one thing that will destroy the at least the domestic narcotics market: the PRD will introduce legislation to decriminalize all drugs.
I can hear the screams in Washington now.
21 August 1940 Mexico’s most famous murder
Leon Trotsky had a more important role in Mexican history than just being the country’s most famous foreign murder victim.
People are apt to forget that the Mexican Revolution preceded the Russian one and the original Soviet Constitution was strongly influenced by the Mexican Constitution of 1917. This isn’t the place to get into the theories of Communism (if anyone is still following them for more than historical interest) but for those who claim the Mexican Revolution was a “failure” because it didn’t follow the prescriptions laid out for these events in European political theory, a good portion of at least one European’s theories (those of Leon Trotsky) were incorporated into the Mexican system, though in a less-than-doctrinaire fashion. Trotky’s idea of state control through a party of competing factions and unions; and that could, when necessary, co-opt, or cooperate with “class enemies” (famously, Trotsky suggested the Communists work with the Catholic Church to counter the Nazis) worked pretty well in Mexico. The Revolutionary (and later Institutional Revolutionary) Party ran the country longer than the Stalinists ran the Soviet Union (and outlasted the Soviet Union) and the Mexican Communist Party.
Not that Trotsky “influenced” Mexican thinking (Mexican politics has always been about building stategic alliances and achieving concensus), just that it fits more easily into Mexican political thinking. “If the Mexican left looks for foreign validation, they are more likely to describe themselves as “Trotkyites” than Stalinists… or even Communists.
There’s one theory that Trotsky lost out to Stalin in 1923 (after Lenin died) because Trotsky was attempting to neutralize the opposition politically and Stalin to permanently liquidate them. Or, as Trotky put it in his 1935 “Diary of Exile”:
Stalin conducts a struggle on a totally different plane. He seeks to strike not at the ideas of the opponent, but at his skull.
Was Leon psychic? Lynn Walsh’s “The Assassination of Trotsky” — with only a minimum of Socialist jargon (originally published in Socialism Today # 49, (July 2000 ) — tells the story of how Stalin managed to do just that… in Coyocan in August 1940:
Raymond Mercader, who was living under the pseudonym Jacques Mornard… had joined the Communist Party in Spain, and became active in its ranks in the period 1933-36 when it was already a Stalinised party. Probably through his mother, Caridad Mercader, who was already a GPU agent and associated with Eitingon, Mercader too entered the service of the GPU. After the defeat of the Spanish republic, aided by Stalin’s sabotage of the revolution in Spain, Mercader went to Moscow where he was prepared for his future role. After meeting Ageloff in Paris in 1938 he later accompanied her to Mexico in January 1940 and gradually ingratiated himself with members of Trotsky’s household.
After gaining the acceptance of Trotsky’s household, Mornard arranged to meet with Trotsky personally on the pretext of discussing an article that he had written – which Trotsky considered to an embarrassing degree banal and devoid of interest. The first meeting was clearly a ‘dress rehearsal’ for the actual assassination.
The next time he came was on the morning of 20 August. Despite the misgivings of Natalia and Trotsky’s guards, Mornard was again allowed to see Trotsky alone – “three or four minutes went by”, Natalia relates. “I was in the room next door. There was a terrible piercing cry… Lev Davidovich appeared, leaning against the door frame. His face was covered with blood, his blue eyes glistening without spectacles and his arms hung limply by his side…” Mornard had struck Trotsky a fatal blow in the back of the head with a cut-down ice axe concealed in his raincoat. But the blow was not immediately lethal; Trotsky “screamed very long, infinitely long”, as Mercader himself put it – and courageously grappled with his assassin, preventing further blows.
“The doctor declared that the injury was not very serious”, says Natalia. “Lev Davidovich listened to him without emotion, as one would a conventional message of comfort. Pointing to his heart, he said, ‘I feel… here… that this is the end… this time… they’ve succeeded'”. (Life and Death of Leon Trotsky, p268 )
Trotsky was taken to hospital, operated on, and survived for more than a day after that, dying at the age of 62 on 21 August 1940.
Mercader seems to have hoped that, after Siqueiros’ lenient treatment, he too might get a light sentence. But he was sentenced to 20 years im
prisonment, which he served. However, even after his identity had been firmly established by fingerprints and other evidence, he refused to admit who he was or who had ordered him to murder Trotsky. Although the crime was almost universally attributed to Stalin and the GPU, the Stalinists brazenly denied all responsibility. There is ample evidence, however, that Mercader’s mother, who escaped from Mexico with Eitingon, was presented to Stalin and decorated with a high bureaucratic honour for her son and herself. Mercader himself was honoured when he returned to Eastern Europe after his release. In spite of his silence, a chain of evidence, which can now be constructed from the elaborate testimony of Russian spies brought to trial in the USA, top GPU agents who defected to Western countries at various times, and the belated memoirs of the Stalinist leaders themselves, clearly link Mercader to Stalin’s secret terror machine based in Moscow.
And now, the REST OF THE STORY
Greg Gross (San Diego Union) missed one small detail in this story:
SAN DIEGO – Three days ago, it was a drug-smuggling attempt in the backcountry using a sedan disguised as a utility company car. This time, it was a pickup in San Ysidro, made to look like a construction-company truck in an attempt to smuggle immigrants into the United States from Mexico.
… The pickup had been made up to look like a truck from the Kiewit Corporation, a construction firm currently working on a large project near the border, a Border Patrol spokesman said.
That “large project near the border”? Write your own punchline.
Who will cast the first stone?
Don Henry Ford Jr., “The Unrepentant Cowboy“, in his own words, a “former dope smuggler, convict, bronc rider, dope-addict and general no-good,” pens a moving tribute to the forgotten man in the “drug war” (The Agonist):
Celerino was my protector while I was a fugitive in the desert mountains of Coahuila, Mexico. I was not the only one under his care; during that period, at least a hundred families depended on this quiet unassuming man for our daily bread and for protection from unsavory actors, both legal and otherwise.
Celerino became an unwitting participant in the drug business, largely due to the involvement of his own children and people like me. He never quite understood the attraction to marijuana, just as he never quite understood why Americans would pay so much for the candelilla wax he smuggled in his younger years. He just knew there was a market for the stuff and that it didn’t appear to make me go crazy when I smoked it in his presence. It certainly appeared no worse than the mescal the white men came looking for. And the money it generated fed a lot of hungry people.
It’s people like Don Celerino that make a militarized response to the narcotics trade not only counter-productive, but dangerous. They are no more “evil” than the small town mayor who pumps for a prison in his depressed Texas town, the kid who joins the Marines to support his family and goes to Iraq, the immigrant who crosses the border without papers to earn the money to bail out the family farm.
What is a farmer to do… not grow the crops that sell? I grew up in wine country. No one ever accused our local grape growers of causing alcoholism, or filling the jails and emergency rooms of the United States with the sweat of their brow.
Farmers everywhere are at the mercy of their buyers.
A military raid on a farmer like Don Celerino does very little except force the farmer to seek the protection of one or another of his buyers.
This is the second problem: good farmers are stewards of their land. THEIR land. A military action makes the Army — and the State — the enemy. If you read a headline like “ten killed at wedding in Sinaloa” you can almost guarantee it had to do with a dispute between buyers, or between the buyer and the grower. Or… had I read such a headline from Colombia… it might have been the Army or some paramilitary political force.
This is the biggest danger of all. That people, trying to survive will lose faith in the State, or the State lose faith in the people.
I have nothing against the soldiers, the Bell Helicopter workers in Fort Worth who will be earning money from the funding to support those soldiers ordered to attack small farmers like Don Celerino and his family, nor the farmers. IN the normal course of things, they would never interact. But they do… and more’s the pity.






