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(Conspiracy Nation, 5/25/03) -- Mexico's rebel leader, Pancho
Villa (image left, smoking marijuana with friends), and his army invaded
the United States in 1916. Called up for homeland security duty was General
"Black Jack" Pershing, who pursued Villa for 11 months with a force of 10,000
U.S. soldiers.
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Another almost immediate effect of the revolution was that the new
Mexican government increasingly became the main source of business for
private companies. Loyal supporters of the ruling party were rewarded
with fat government contracts.
Another major upheaval came in the late 1960s. Hundreds of thousands
of Mexican students and workers began agitating against the Mexican government.
They marched, gave speeches, and published small newspapers, demanding
reform and economic justice. Alarmed, the government at last unleashed
the military; thousands were murdered, imprisoned, and tortured in
what is known as Mexico City's Tlatelolco Square Massacre. After the massacre,
those elements of the movement not dead or in prison were driven underground.
They formed small political "cells" and continued to nurture their
1960s rhetoric and ideals. Out of the government repression, the National
Liberation Forces (NLF) was born. It grew and was one of several Mexican
guerrilla groups having a pro-Cuban, Marxist ideology. For funding,
the NLF began to rob banks, starting in the 1970s. It also developed peasant
support groups in Chiapas, the southernmost Mexican state. By 1980,
the organization of the NLF had become four-tiered: a national directorate,
a politburo, an urban front, and a rural front -- the Zapatista (Zapata)
National Liberation Front (EZLN). The NLF strategy had evolved by this
time into a Maoist strategy of "prolonged popular war." In the
early 1980s, several Marxist philosophy and sociology students from
Mexico City's Autonomous Metropolitan University moved to Chiapas to
help organize NLF's rural guerrilla front. Helping them was Msgr.
Samuel Ruiz, "the Red Bishop," who organized 4,000 lay workers to
preach "liberation theology" to the Chiapas Indians. Besides having lay
workers preaching to the peasant groups, the waters were further muddied:
NLF's people begin to infiltrate Roman Catholic peasant groups.
In 1988, Harvard trained Carlos Salinas de Gotari became President
of Mexico. During his term of office (1988-1994) the big push for the
so-called North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) gathered steam.
In the United States, the Salinas government spent $11 million per
year on what is politely called "public relations" -- propaganda --
designed to persuade Americans that Mexico would make an excellent
NAFTA partner. But, among other things, Yale trained Bill Clinton's and
Harvard trained Carlos Salinas' NAFTA wound up sending a flood of cheap
corn and wheat into Mexico. This hurt Mexican farmers badly. They,
in turn, could no longer afford to hire the Chiapas Indians as field hands.
Carlos Salinas was so often referred to as "the Harvard trained Salinas" that he is nicknamed "Harvard Trained Salinas." The Mexican state of Chiapas is so impoverished that it is nicknamed "Mexico's basement" -- in other words it is kept hidden how backward it is. The majority of its people are poor, Indian peasants. The women must walk for hours every day, just so their families can have water and firewood. Their shacks are lucky to have a tin roof. So what did Harvard Trained and his government do? Help them get electricity and running water? No, Harvard Trained and upper crust chums decided to get them 3700 basketball courts! The Chiapas Indians, thanks to Harvard Trained, then put together 12,000 basketball teams. They still don't have shoes and their average height is about 5 feet 3 inches tall -- but hey: at least after a hard day of toting firewood they can relax and shoot some hoops! Harvard Trained also caused an $11 million, world class opera house to be built in Chiapas.
On February 23rd, 1993, a private dinner party was held at the sumptuous
home of former Mexican finance minister Don Antonio Ortiz Mena. The
party was attended by President Salinas and several Mexican billionaires.
The meeting was supposed to have been top secret, but news of its
having occurred leaked out. Reportedly, each of the attendees agreed to
give $25 million to the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI). The "revolutionary"
PRI is in fact what amounts to the political party in Mexico. It
is the political party that was born out of the early 20th century Mexican
Revolution, way back in the late 1910s. PRI is akin to the Democratic
Party in Chicago in the sense that, sure there are other political parties,
but everyone knows that really only that one party has the power. So just
why would it be that several Mexican billionaires would secretly give $25
million apiece to the PRI? Had they suddenly become extremely "patriotic"
yet, being humble about it, did not wish to fanfare what noble fellows
they are?
On May 22nd, 1993, the Mexican army entered the now-abandoned Zapatista
camp near San Miguel, in the Mexican state of Chiapas. It was seen that
this "spontaneous," "populist," Chiapas insurgent army is suprisingly
well-funded: the Zapatista camp was huge, and included a volleyball
court; it was equipped with electricity, televisions, and kitchens. By
1994 it was becoming clearer that the Zapatista rebel army is not autonomous.
It is actually being run by white, middle-class intellectuals in Mexico
City. The "Sub-commander Marcos" is not native to Chiapas; he is white-skinned,
well-educated, and from Mexico City.
1994 saw the imminent expiration of Harvard trained Salinas' term of office.
On March 23rd, 1994, PRI's presidential candidate Luis Donaldo Colosio
was assassinated in Tijuana. The confessed assassin of Colosio, Mario
Aburto Martinez, was at first perceived as a "lone nut." But this
view quickly changed as the government-appointed special prosecutor went
on record stating that there had been what he called a "concerted action"
(in other words, "a conspiracy") behind Colosio's murder. Speculation
grew that the killing had been done at the behest of powerful persons
in Mexico. The growing apprehension threatened to crash the Mexican
stock market, the Bolsa, and precipitate flight of capital from Mexico.
Meanwhile, subsequent to the death of PRI nominee Colosio, Ernesto
Zedillo was unveiled as the Mexican Establishment's new candidate for
the post of el presidente. Government workers were bused to PRI
headquarters in downtown Mexico City to serve as cheering background for
the new candidate. On television they could be seen -- to the naive
they appeared as spontaneous, enthusiastic supporters of Zedillo. The
new candidate, Zedillo, was reportedly the puppet of PRI hard-liners, who
favor toughness, intolerance, and repression toward dissent.
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In this time frame, Mexico's ruling class had been experiencing increasing internal tensions. The government was undergoing a process of what is code-named "privatization," thought by some to really mean the selling off of publicly-owned assets to private corporations for benefit of greedy stockholders. By the summer of 1994, the "enthusiastic" push for candidate Zedillo was in high gear. The PRI secretly paid millions of dollars to Mexican newspapers in return for their publishing campaign propaganda disguised as news. About 10 percent of these monies went to reporters themselves, to keep them quiet about what they knew. Televisa, the Mexican television monopoly -- really an octopus that smothers all other news -- gave the vast majority of its air time to the Zedillo campaign. The opposition Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) candidate, Cuauhtemoc Cardenas, got only miniscule coverage by Televisa. To confuse voters, the Establishment's Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) even created small, fake opposition parties which were secretly funded by PRI. |
...the Mexican government was undergoing
a process of "privatization", which really means the selling off of publicly-owned
assets to private corporations for benefit of greedy stockholders. |
Meanwhile, the Mexican common people have struggled for whatever influence
they can wield over how their lives are being affected. The "El
Barzon" movement, one million strong, fights the banksters. Crushed
under usurious debt, they demand renegotiation of past loans. Activist
groups launch an "adopt a public official" campaign: the "adopted"
official comes under close scrutiny by the adopter; he is put "under
the microscope" and, if he is corrupt, pressure is brought to bear.
Thanks to NAFTA (North American "Free Trade" Agreement), the Mexican-U.S.
border is more wide open than ever to "free trade." That border
is becoming the number 1 drug smuggling route for illicit narcotics. 75
percent of cocaine entering the U.S. comes in via Mexico. Yearly profits
of about $20 billion further corrupt politics via bribery and terror.
The drug money is laundered through Mexican banks and through investments
in resorts and shopping centers. The city of Guadalajara has become
the "Wall Street" for Mexican money laundering. Is that why Cardinal
Posadas Ocampo of that city was assassinated? Supposedly it was a case of
"mistaken identity" -- but was it rather that Posadas Ocampo had become a
thorn in the side of Dope, Incorporated?
Then, on September 28th, 1994, in downtown Mexico City, Jose Francisco
"Pepe" Ruiz Massieu, PRI general secretary, was gunned down. Could this
tragedy have happened because his brother, Mario Ruiz Massieu, was
a senior government prosecutor who had publicly sworn to defeat Mexico's
massive Gulf drug cartel? To stave off such suspicions, hours after
the slaying of Jose Francisco brother Mario was made chief investigator
into the case. Daniel Aguilar, gunman in the assassination of "Pepe" Ruiz
Massieu, had fortuitously been captured at the site of the killing.
His full confession led ultimately to PRI congressman Manuel Munoz
Rocha. But Congressman Munoz Rocha then disappeared!
The initial public excitement and outrage regarding the assassination
of "Pepe" Ruiz Massieu died down with time. With the heat off, the
investigation by Mario Ruiz Massieu into his brother's death began to bog
down. On November 15, 1994, Mario Ruiz Massieu charged that the PRI was
blocking his investigation. Later that month, he resigned as special investigator
into his brother's murder. In early December, Mario Ruiz Massieu fled
Mexico. He was arrested in Newark, New Jersey, carrying $7 million.
Mexico demanded he be extradited; they charged that Mario had covered
up involvement of Raul Salinas -- Carlos Salinas' brother -- as mastermind
behind the killing of "Pepe" Ruiz Massieu!
By late December of 1994, both the Colosio and Ruiz Massieu assassinations
had made foreign investors nervous; their Mexican deposits began a stampede
for the exits. A Zapatista uprising in Chiapas lessened investor confidence
still further. There was a financial crisis. It was decided to "float"
the Mexican peso -- allow the market to fix its price. In the next
few months, American investors lost more than 30 percent of their money.
The Mexican financial troubles threatened a worldwide chain reaction that
could have crashed stock markets throughout the world. In early 1995 U.S.
President Bill Clinton used his executive powers to release $20
billion from the U.S. Treasury Exchange Stabilization Fund -- money originally
meant to stabilize the U.S. dollar -- to help save Mexico from bankruptcy.
The New York investment bank Goldman-Sachs reportedly had huge investments
down in the land of our NAFTA neighbor. The just-appointed U.S. Treasury
Secretary Robert Rubin had until quite recently been head of Goldman-Sachs.
Hmmm.... Was there a conflict of interest?
Also in early 1995 the so-called "Chase Bank memo" surfaced in the
Washington Post. This Chase Manhattan Bank memo urged the Mexican government
to get moving and crush the Zapatista resistance. Furthermore,
Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo was aware that the Chase Bank memo
represented the secret views of most banksters.
| In early March of 1995, Raul Salinas was arrested,
charged with being the mastermind behind the murder of "Pepe" Ruiz Massieu.
Now ex-President Carlos Salinas, saying he was convinced Raul is innocent,
began a hunger strike. But, after a day or two to think it over, he
went back to eating. By November 24th, 1995, those with access to Associated
Press were reading about Raul Salinas being on trial for murder. |
"...drug traffickers and others had been
buying up -- 'privatizing' -- the banks, and now the Mexican government
was forced to bail out these same banks to keep them from collapsing." |
The plot thickens: the murdered "Pepe" Ruiz Massieu was Raul
Salinas' brother-in-law. Around this time also, Paulina Castanon,
sister-in-law of Harvard-trained ex-President Carlos Salinas, got arrested;
she allegedly used false documents to try to withdraw nearly $84 million
from a Swiss bank account. (Associated Press, 11/24/95) At about this
time too, Reuters reported that Swiss authorities had blocked several
bank accounts in a probe "into a drugs and money-laundering scheme alleged
to be linked to the brother of Mexican ex-President Carlos Salinas."
But, said Carlos Salinas, compadre of dashing Bill Clinton,
U.S. President, "I know nothing." Yet, strangely, Carlos Salinas himself
next seemed to vanish! Where was Carlos Salinas? (Reuters, 11/30/95) Carlos
Salinas, circa November 30, 1995, was formally "accused of treason and fraud
in connection with the 1990 sell-off of state phone company Telmex."
(Reuters, 11/30/95) (You see, they were privatizing the state phone company.)
But hold the phone! Reuters reported on December 1, 1995 that another
$20 million had been found stashed away for Raul Salinas, this time in a
London account. And where was Carlos Salinas, the ex-President? He had
fled Mexico and was said to be laying low in Cuba. December 2, 1995: Probes
were launched by both Canada and Mexico into possible financial wrongdoing
by Carlos Salinas. And, according to El Financiero newspaper, "Mexican
police have found some $300 million in bank accounts belonging
to the ex-president's brother in Switzerland, Germany, England,
Luxembourg, and the Cayman Islands." (See also Reuters, 12/02/95)
Reuters ("Mexico Bails Out Top Bank In Growing Crisis," 12/15/95) next
reported "a de-facto renationalization of the bank system that was privatized
during the previous government of Carlos Salinas." It seems that
drug traffickers and others had been buying up -- "privatizing" -- the
banks, and now the Mexican government was forced to bail out these same
banks to keep them from collapsing. And, noted New Federalist ("Four
Nations Investigating Salinas Money, Dope Ties," 12/11/95), "According to
an expose in the New York Times last July, former Bush administration
officials charged that they had been ordered by other senior Bush officials
to hush up reports of drug activity under the Salinas team -- such
as how drug-traffickers were buying up Mexican state companies that were
being privatized."
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Did Raul Salinas consult with witches regarding
the Colosio slaying? Reuters ("Mexico Police Probe Witches In Colosio
Case," 12/16/95) reported that investigators had travelled to the Canary
Islands to interview two "witches" who might have information. But why
would Raul Salinas consult them on the Colosio slaying when he is supposedly
only involved in the death of "Pepe" Ruiz Massieu? Or is there a link
between the two deaths? Meanwhile, Mario Ruiz Massieu, as of December 15, 1995, was still fighting extradition back to Mexico. He had been held without bail since his March 3rd arrest at Newark International Airport. |
In 1996, news surfaced regarding Citibank and Carlos Salinas
being involved in "a multimillion-dollar international
drug-money-laundering scheme." You may have seen a watered-down version
of this story on the CBS program "60 Minutes." Apparently, when sister-in-law
of Carlos Salinas, Paulina Castanon, had tried withdrawing the $84
million from the Swiss bank (see above), it opened up a real can of
worms. Castanon, wife of the imprisoned Raul Salinas, was nabbed at
a high-class bank, Pictet & Cie, in Geneva. The account at Pictet
was set up for Raul Salinas, under a phony name, by Amelia Grovas Elliot
of Citibank. She had been, since 1981, in charge of the Mexico branch
of Citibank's Private Bank, a bank within Citibank handling an
ultra-exclusive clientele. Citibank itself went bankrupt in 1992 and
was secretly placed into receivership by the New York Federal Reserve. This
means that the New York Fed has since 1992, supposedly, been "micro-managing"
any Citibank transactions of $1 million or more. So it becomes increasingly
clear that Raul Salinas was washing a lot of money -- be it from illicit
drug dealings, bribes, or whatever -- with the help of Citibank and under
the watchful eyes of the Federal Reserve! (See: "Fed, Citibank,
Salinas In Dope-$-Laundering," New Federalist, 06/17/96; Wall Street
Journal, 06/07/96.)
Last week, the corporate media amplified a sad story about illegal Mexican
immigrants who died in a too-hot trailer. They were being smuggled into
the U.S., hoping to find work here. But how could they have found work
in the U.S., since they would have needed to provide a Social Security card
to any potential employer?
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The corporate media, as noted, played-up the story, which is a red
flag to the conspiracy minded. (Ditto is there a red flag to the played-up
story of New York Times reporter Jayson Blair who -- shock! -- is accused
of being a liar.) Why was the mass media hyping the immigrants in a trailer
story? A clue to why is given in a report dated May 21, 2003, in Eat
The State! ("It's About (Mexico's) Oil", by Troy Skeels). "Mexico, from
left to right, is up in arms over the increasing belligerence [i.e., immigration
restrictions, to be played up as a "human rights" issue] emanating from
the empire across its northern border. On May 8, the committee [U.S. Congress'
Committee on International Relations], controlled by Republicans, voted
along party lines to tie reform of US immigration laws with a requirement
that Mexico open up its state oil company, Petroleos Mexicanos (Pemex)
to US corporate investors." [Emphasis added] |
Here's the deal, as it now appears. Mexico's state-owned Pemex oil company
is tantalizing to greedy corporate types who want to "privatize" (steal)
a publicly-owned oil company. But Mexico is angling for something in return:
make it easier for poor Mexicans to get across the border and look for
work in the U.S. For that reason, as it now appears, the U.S. corporate
media intensely focused its attention upon the tragic story of the dead
immigrants in a trailer. It's about to become a "human rights" issue.
Here comes Pancho Villa! Bienvenidos.
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(Except where otherwise noted, main source for the preceding has been Bordering on Chaos by Andres
Oppenheimer. Boston: Little, Brown & Company, 1996.)
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Conspiracy Nation. Think outside the box.
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