Mexico,CiudadJuares,PlazaDeArms1, 2007y,02m,19d(Sun),14h27
In the Plaza-de-arms, to North, Ciudad Juares, Chihuahua, Mexico,
19(Sunday)/02/2007,14h27~
メキシコ、チワワ州、シウダーフアレス市、 Plaza-de-arms内、北へ
2007年02月19日(日)14時27分~
people in Ciudad Juares(Mexico), Plaza de armas
in the Plaza-de-arms, to North, Ciudad Juares, Mexico
19(Sunday)/Feburuary/2007 14:27~
メキシコ シウダーフアレス Plaza-de-arms内 北へ向けて
2007年2月19日(日)14:27~
???????? America's Guns: Arming Mexico's Cartels | People and Power
The United states's constitutionally enshrined love-affair with firearms has given it the highest levels of private gun ownership in the world, a truly staggering rate of gun related deaths (from high profile mass killings to more routine daily homicides) and a hugely powerful and wealthy arms industry dedicated to preserving the status quo.
Following the latest appalling calamity last month, when 17 people were slaughtered at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida, the pro and anti-gun lobbies have been engaging in a now familiar debate about the extent to which US gun laws should be tightened up - with the notoriously pro-gun President Donald Trump pledging, somewhat unconvincingly, to stop such carnage happening in the future.
But it isn't just the US that's felt the effects of this gun epidemic.
South of the border in Mexico, American-sourced weapons have been playing a deadly role in that country's drug cartel wars for well over a decade.
The violence and chaos fuelled by these smuggled firearms is so widespread and devastating that it's been a significant motivating factor in the desire of many in that country to flee to the north.
Of course, it won't be lost on anyone with an appreciation of painful ironies that this kind of desperate migration is precisely why President Trump wants to build a wall along the frontier between the two nations. It seems that it's ok for deadly munitions to travel one way but not for the prospective victims of those munitions to go the other.
So how exactly do these weapons get trafficked across the border and why is the US government doing so little to stop the flow? For the second of our two special reports on America's guns, we sent correspondent Juliana Ruhfus and filmmaker Karim Shah to investigate.
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Getting a Massage in Mexico (Americans Living in Guadalajara Vlog)
In today's Mexico vlog, we talk about what to expect at a massage in Mexico, how much it costs, and what our Mexico spa experience was like.
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After hitting our big 1k subscriber goal, we decided to treat ourselves to a relaxing massage in Mexico! Right now, we are in Guadalajara, Mexico to be exact. If you're asking, Are massages good in Mexico? or What's a massage like in Mexico? or Are massages in Mexico cheap? hopefully this video gives you a better idea of what you might experience when going to a spa in Mexico. Before this, we had gotten two massages while in Mazatlán, so we compare the experiences between the two cities and also the similarities and differences between US and Mexico massages.
ABOUT US (MADDIE & JORDAN)
In January 2018, we sold everything we owned in the US (except our husky Laska & what fit in our tiny, tangerine Prius C3) to travel the world—starting with Mexico. Since then, we've been making travel videos about our life in Mexico and the new experiences we encounter while traveling the world. If you'd like to join our shenanigans, subscribe to our YouTube channel. You can also poke around our social media to find out what we’re up to each week.
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Musical map of Mexico - midi art [drawing]
???? Musical map of Mexico - midi art [drawing][impossible piano remix][black midi] by MIDI ART ???? Subscribe for more crazy and funny midi art videos! ►
????????????Listen to the sound of your country!
???? ????????Learn geography with music!
???? Regions of Mexico:
Mexico City
Around Mexico City
Acapulco and the Pacific beaches
Inland Jalisco and Michoacán
The Bajío
Veracruz
The north
The northwest and Copper Canyon
Baja California
Oaxaca
Chiapas and Tabasco
The Yucatán
???? ► Mexico
FAST FACTS:
OFFICIAL NAME: United Mexican States
FORM OF GOVERNMENT: Republic of federated states
CAPITAL: Mexico City
POPULATION: 120,286,655
OFFICIAL LANGUAGE: Spanish
MONEY: Peso
AREA: 758,449 square miles (1,964,375 square kilometers)
MAJOR MOUNTAIN RANGES: Sierra Madre
MAJOR RIVERS: Rio Grande, Yaqui
???? 10 interesting facts about Mexico:
1. The official name of Mexico is Estados Unidos Mexicanos (United Mexican States) - The country, Mexico, was initially named after its capital city (Mexico City). During the 14 - 16th centuries, when the Aztec people dominated large parts of the country, the capital city was called Mexico-Tenochtitlan. After the Spanish conquered the city in the 16th century, they ruined it and build Mexico City on top of the Aztec capital. Mexico city was built to resemble a Spanish city.
2. Mexico introduced chocolate, chillies and corn to the world - Chocolate was discovered in Mexico and was made by the Meso-American people into a sweet beverage using natural sweeteners. The word ‘chocolate’ derives from the language of the Aztecs, Náhuatl (xocolatl : xoco, bitter + atl, water). Ixcacao is the Mayan Goddess of chocolate. Corn (Zea maiz) was first cultivated in central Mexico. Most chillies come from Mexico, the word derived from the Náhuatl word chilli.
3. Mexico is home to the volcano rabbit - This is a very rare rabbit which lives near Mexican volcanoes. It is the world's second smallest rabbit (the smallest is the Pygmy rabbit). It has short, thick fur, short legs and small rounded ears.
4. The National University of Mexico is the oldest university in North America - The university, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM), was founded in 1551 by Charles V, a holy Roman Emperor. The university stands out as as the educational institute that produces the highest number of professionals in Mexico.
5. Mexican children do not get presents on Christmas Day - In Mexico, as in much of the Catholic world, children get their presents only on January 6th. This is the day on which Mexicans celebrate El Dia De Reyes (Kings Day), the arrival of the three wise men to Bethlehem after seeing a star above the city. The meaning behind the star was the birth of the savior Jesus.
6. Mexico is located in the “Ring of Fire” - This area is one of the world’s most violent earthquake and volcano zones. The Ring of Fire, contains more than 450 volcanoes and has approximately 75% of the world's active volcanoes. Popocatépetl is considered to be the most dangerous volcano in Mexico, located only 70 km southeast of Mexico City, from where it can be seen with the right weather conditions.
7. Mexico City is slowly sinking - Due to the fact that the Mexican capital was built on a lake, it is sinking 15-20cm a year. During the 20th century, Mexico City sunk between 9 - 11m. The city’s infrastructure, water supplies and its irreplaceable architecture are under a constant threat. If it continues sinking the city will face serious problems.
8. The Mexican flag is made up of three vertical stripes - Every stripe of the flag has different meaning. The left green stripe stands for hope, the middle white stripe represents purity and unity, and the right red stripe represents the blood of the nation’s heroes. The picture of an eagle eating a snake in the middle of the flag, called the Coat of Arms, is based on an Aztec legend.
9. The chihuahua, the smallest breed of dog in the world, is named after a Mexican state - There are several theories regarding the origin of the breed, both archaeological and folkloric. However, all theories confirm the origination of the dog breed from Chihuahua, Mexico. The most common theory is that chihuahuas are descended from the techichi, a companion dog that was favored by the Toltec civilization.
10. Spanish conquerors introduced bullfighting to Mexico - Nowadays, bullfighting in Mexico is a popular national sport. Plaza Mexico, which is situated in Mexico City, is the largest bullring in the world with over 41,000 seats. Bullfighting takes place every year, from November to April.
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Mexico's Zetas Drug Cartel
Mexico's Zetas drug cartel has raised the level of violence to new levels.
Juarez - El Paso Border Drug Cartel Gun Battle
The most violent evidence of the drug wars failure is taking place right on America's border with Mexico. Unless you count the hourly violence taking place on US streets every day between gangs fighting over drug trade turf. Tonight we've got Mexican authorities and drug cartel traffickers waging a gun battle at the El Paso border crossing. Yep. it sure looks like they're afraid of law enforcement. I'm sure getting tougher on them will stop the drug trade and end addiction - not!
End the drug war now!
Mexico drug violence gets bloodier
Mexico opened the New Year with what could be its most dubious distinction yet in the 3-year-old battle against drug trafficking -- 69 murders in one day. The country resembled a grim, statistical dartboard Saturday as law enforcement and media reported the deaths from various regions, including 26 in the border city of Ciudad Juarez, 13 in Mexico City and 10 in the northern city of Chihuahua. As Mexico tries to develop both politically and economically, the killings jeopardize its international reputation. ''The figures in Mexico are so scary that it has produced a subliminal sense that Mexico is a dangerous place and it is best to keep away. Calderon said last week he would shift focus to job creation and reducing poverty and move the fight against drug cartels that dominated the first half of his presidency to No. 3.
No No No Mexican Drug War
STOP THE WAR ON DRUGS.
MEXICO - WikiVidi Documentary
Mexico , officially the United Mexican States , is a federal republic in the southern portion of North America. It is bordered to the north by the United States; to the south and west by the Pacific Ocean; to the southeast by Guatemala, Belize, and the Caribbean Sea; and to the east by the Gulf of Mexico. Covering almost two million square kilometers , Mexico is the sixth largest country in the Americas by total area and the 13th largest independent nation in the world. With an estimated population of over 120 million, Mexico is the eleventh most populous country and the most populous Spanish-speaking country in the world while being the second most populous country in Latin America. Mexico is a federation comprising 31 states and a special federal entity that is also its capital and most populous city. Other metropolises include Guadalajara, León, Monterrey, Puebla, Toluca, and Tijuana. Pre-Columbian Mexico was home to many advanced Mesoamerican civilizations, such as the Olmec, To...
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Shortcuts to chapters:
00:04:06: Etymology
00:08:09: Pre-Columbian Mexico
00:13:55: Conquest of the Aztec Triple Alliance (1519–1521)
00:17:33: Viceroyalty of New Spain (1521–1821)
00:23:50: War of Independence (1810–1821)
00:26:28: First Empire and First Republic (1821–1846)
00:29:45: Second Republic and Second Empire (1846–1867)
00:32:11: Porfiriato (1876–1911)
00:33:48: Mexican Revolution and one-party rule (1910–2000)
00:37:17: One-party rule (1929–2000)
00:40:48: Contemporary Mexico
00:41:49: Geography
00:44:51: Climate
00:47:32: Biodiversity
00:50:26: Government
00:53:30: Law enforcement
00:56:02: Crime
00:57:52: Foreign relations
01:00:31: Military
01:03:00: Administrative divisions
01:04:03: Economy
01:12:40: Communications
01:15:13: Energy
01:17:55: Science and technology
01:19:40: Tourism
01:23:13: Transportation
01:25:24: Water supply and sanitation
01:26:39: Demographics
01:28:44: Ethnicity and race
01:38:18: Official censuses
01:43:45: Languages
01:45:24: Religion
01:47:53: Women
01:50:26: Culture
01:51:39: Literature
01:52:37: Visual arts
01:53:53: Cinema
01:55:48: Media
01:56:46: Music
01:59:03: Cuisine
02:01:48: Sports
02:04:52: Health
____________________________________
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Licensed under Creative Commons.
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Mexico's drug gangs hang men
A man with a gunshot wound has been rescued after he was found hanging over a busy highway in Monterrey. Like us on Facebook at and follow us on Twitter at
20 Year Old Female Police Chief in the Middle of Mexico's Drug War!
20 year old Marisol Valles has become the focus of international attention after her acceptance of the Chief of Police job in violent Práxedis Guadalupe Guerrero in the Northern State of Chihuahua... To top it all off, she's a mother!
From the New York Times:
It just sounds like the plot of a Hollywood movie: a small Mexican town on the Texas border, terrorized by drug cartels battling for control of smuggling routes, names a 20-year-old mother, still working on her criminology degree, its police chief.
That, however, is exactly the step taken last week by the town of Práxedis Guadalupe Guerrero, close to the epicenter of Mexico's bloody drug war, which formally put Marisol Valles in charge of its force of 13 agents, one working patrol car, three automatic rifles and a single pistol, Reuters reported.
At least Ms. Valles is well-informed about the challenges she will face. When she is not caring for her infant son, she studies crime in the border city of Ciudad Juárez, opposite El Paso, Tex., where thousands of people have been killed each year during Mexico's war on the drug cartels. Despite the occasional triumphant photo-op, that war has claimed more than 28,000 lives in the country so far.
On Wednesday, as Ms. Valles was being introduced to the media, Mexican soldiers fought gun battles in the streets of Ciudad Juárez and another city on the U.S. border, Nuevo Laredo. As NBC reported, authorities said one of the two people killed in Ciudad Juárez was a member of the Texas National Guard and the U.S. consulate in Nuevo Laredo warned American citizens to stay indoors.
Ms. Valles will also oversee policing in the nearby town of El Porvenir. Just days ago, that town's leader, Rito Grado Serrano, who worked with officials in Práxedis, was gunned down along with his son, in Ciudad Juárez.
Rory Carroll, the Guardian's Latin America correspondent, reports that Ms. Valles — called The Bravest Woman in Mexico by Spain's El País on Wednesday — has been hailed locally for taking such a post in Juarez valley, a strip of about a dozen towns and villages where shadowy groups slaughter and mutilate police and civilians with impunity.
Ms. Valles told reporters at a news conference on Wednesday that she would leave fighting the drug cartels to the federal government and plans to focus on crime-prevention and community policing.
She told the BBC, All jobs carry an element of risk, and I am conscious of that, but I also know that I have to do something to combat the problems we face. She added:
The primary engine for a society to change is to have security. We need to do this for ourselves and our citizens. There has been a crisis of credibility in the authorities. But now the citizens are joining with the municipality and are putting their trust in them to resolve these problems.
In an interview with CNN's Spanish-language channel, the new chief said that the nine members of her force who are also women will not be carrying guns, but visiting local families in Práxedis, which is located in the Mexican state of Chihuahua. Her officers, she said, would aim to find ways of giving residents confidence so they will quit being afraid, so they can leave their houses.
CNN also noted that a blog post on the Periodista Digital Web site about Ms. Valles carried the headline, Are there no men in Chihuahua? That site also carried this Spanish-language video report showing Ms. Valles, notebook in hand, at work this week:
(FULL HD)Monster truck Crashes Into Crowd At Mexican Air Show In Chihuahua, Mexico!`
Monster truck Crashes Into Crowd At Mexican Air Show In Chihuahua, Mexico! (ORIGINAL FOOTAGE)` Monster truck Crashes Into Crowd At Mexican Air Show In Chihuahua, Mexico! (ORIGINAL FOOTAGE)` Monster truck Crashes Into Crowd At Mexican Air Show In Chihuahua, Mexico! (ORIGINAL FOOTAGE)` Monster truck Crashes Into Crowd At Mexican Air Show In Chihuahua, Mexico! (ORIGINAL FOOTAGE)` Monster truck Crashes Into Crowd At Mexican Air Show In Chihuahua, Mexico! (ORIGINAL FOOTAGE)` Monster truck Crashes Into Crowd At Mexican Air Show In Chihuahua, Mexico! (ORIGINAL FOOTAGE)` Monster truck Crashes Into Crowd At Mexican Air Show In Chihuahua, Mexico! (ORIGINAL FOOTAGE)` Monster truck Crashes Into Crowd At Mexican Air Show In Chihuahua, Mexico! (ORIGINAL FOOTAGE)`
Caballo Dorado, Mexico Day. ETHS
Around the World Spirit Week starts off Mexico Day great with some mexican line dancing. How El Toro DOES!
Released singer at mass, fans reax
APTN
1. Exterior of church pan to crowd outside
2. Wide shot of Gloria Trevi arriving amid reporters, cameramen and fans
POOL
3. Wide shot inside church
4. Medium shot of Trevi hugging fan
5. Medium shot of Trevi sitting in pew with family
6. Wide shot inside church
7. Close-up of Gloria Trevi
8. Medium shot of priest
9. Wide shot Trevi greeting fans
10. Wide shot inside church
11. Various shots of Trevi receiving communion
12. Close-up of Trevi wiping away tears
13. Wide shot of Trevi going up to altar
APTN
14. Wide shot outside church, fans around car
15. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Voxpop:
We are all very pleased she is free, we awaited her with open arms, Monterrey awaited her return. She had been a victim, she was a victim like the others.
16. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Voxpop:
This is great. We were all waiting for her, all Monterrey supports her.
17. Wide shot of fountain
MEXICAN SUPERSTAR RELEASED FROM PRISON
Newly freed from prison, Mexican superstar Gloria Trevi on Thursday returned to her northern hometown of Monterrey city, Nuevo Leon state, to a hero's welcome as dozens of fans gathered outside her hotel and an army of reporters followed her every step.
More than one thousand fans packed a church where she attended an evening Mass to give thanks for her freedom.
Carrying her two-year-old son and with her lawyer and boyfriend in-tow, Trevi entered to thunderous applause and screams.
Prosecutors accused the 36-year-old pop star, two of her backup singers and her manager, Sergio Andrade, of luring young girls into their musical entourage and then sexually abusing them.
After a Latin America-wide manhunt, Trevi, Andrade and a backup singer were arrested in Brazil.
The pop sensation was extradited to Mexico in December 2002 and was placed behind bars in Chihuahua state's prison.
On Tuesday, Judge Javier Pineda ruled there wasn't sufficient evidence to convict Trevi and backup singer Maria Raquenel Portillo, and both were released.
Trevi says she'll release a new record before the end of the year and return to show business as soon as possible.
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TheyLiedAgain.com DOJ Lied about Southlake Townsquare Cartel Murder
Visit TheyLiedAgain.com for details and audios/images that summarize how the DOJ Lied to cover up what really happened. LEARN THE TRUTH, Jesus Ledesma told Federal Agents so many details that the DOJ didnt want the public to know. So the DOJ after 15 months using the son, Jesus Campano under his desperation they made him LIE as their STAR WITNESS to say what the DOJ wanted him to say, to distance the public from knowing about a failed POLICY that DOJ had going on in SOUTHLAKE. DOJ didnt want the public to know how these 2 mexican private investigators were tricked to be working in southlake, they ended up taking the fall. Since Ledesma wasnt aware that a Assaniation plot was going to happen , he was tricking americans along the way and especially his cousin (our father) at his computer shop, saying that the reason he is coming to america more often and flying in airports, etc is because he was hired on a huge white collar embezzlement case. Our father was never in a conspiracy of murder like the way the DOJ wants you to believe. THE DOJ IS EMBARRASSED THAT their failed operation is now blowing up in their face so they had to change the agenda and say that they caught 3 men who were helping with a revenge killing.. ALL LIES!!!!
Thousands of Mexican Soldiers Pour Into Juarez!
Thousands of Mexican soldiers pour into the country's most violent city in crackdown on drug gangs!
Link to story ..
Traditional Mexican Dance Moves : Traditional Mexican Dance Steps
Learn the basic steps for traditional Mexican dancing in this free instructional video dance lesson.
Expert: Aleli Montano
Bio: Aleli Montano is from Mexico City and won the National Cheerleading Championship in 1998 and the Modern Dance State Choreographers Contest in 1999 in Mexico.
Gun Battle Erupts In Sinaloa Killing at Least Five People
A shootout between military and an alleged drugs gang left at least five dead on Thursday in Sinaloa located in Northern Mexico. The gunfire took place as military pursued armed men travelling in adapted police vans. As the battle escalated, some of the criminals fled the scene on foot leaving behind one of the two trucks. The second vehicle then caught on fire, with the suspected drugs and criminals still inside. Guns, bullets, communication devices and protective helmets were found inside. There were also signs that the truck has been customized so guns could be fired from the inside. Sinaloa state is home to a cartel run by Joaquin El Chapo Guzman, one of the government's most wanted criminals.
Drug Wars Azteca Prison Gang ** Gangs War Inside prison ** Crime, Gangs, and Prison Documentary
This show features the Barrio Azteca, a Mexican prison gang that was formed in 1986. The episode details how the gang has become the largest in the El Paso region and its subsequent infiltration into the Mexican prison system. It also discusses how local law enforcement, including the El Paso County Sheriffs Office, has tried to curb the gangs activity.
The Barrio Azteca (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈbarjo asˈteka]), or Los Aztecas (pronounced: [los asˈtekas]), is a Mexican-American gang originally based in El Paso, Texas. The gang was formed in the jails of El Paso in 1986 and expanded into a transnational criminal organization. They are currently one of the most violent gangs in the United States and are said to have over 3,000 members in the U.S. in locations such as New Mexico, Texas, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania and at least 5,000 members in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.
In 2008, Barrio Azteca formed an alliance with La Línea, the armed wing of the Juárez Cartel, to fight off the forces of the Sinaloa Cartel, who were attempting to take over the drug smuggling routes in the area. The control of the routes in Ciudad Juárez, known as the Juárez plaza, are vital for the drug trafficking organizations since they are the major illicit conduit into the United States. The DEA estimates that about 70% of the cocaine that enters the United States flows through the area. The gangs main source of income derives from smuggling drugs across the border from Mexico into the United States. They are also responsible for the distribution and sale of narcotics in and outside of prisons. Aside from drug trafficking, they have been charged with a number of different crimes.
The gang, which operates in the U.S. and Mexico, has morphed into a prime example of the cross-border nature of Mexicos drug war. Members of the Barrio Azteca gang usually have U.S. citizenship, making them ideal cross-border killers that move back and forth across the U.S.-Mexico border.
Background
The Barrio Azteca gang was formed in the jails of El Paso in 1986 and gained an image of being a tough and loyal gang willing to commit murder of civilians in order to keep fear in the minds of its members and ensure their loyalty/obedience.
Some believe that the growth of Barrio Azteca in Mexico is due to the areas distinctive cross-border nature. The area of El Paso and Ciudad Juárez is in many ways one community, with families, friends, businesses -- and even gangs -- joined in the same urban sprawl. Some illegal Mexicans arrested in the United States are imprisoned in Texan prisons and consequently join Barrio Azteca. When they are absolved from their sentences, they are sent back across the border into Mexico, where they quickly join the gangs ranks and carry out a number of crimes. The Barrio Azteca has long sold drugs moved by the Juárez Cartel. As Barrio Azteca grew in power, it began to work directly with the Juarez Cartel and their alliance grew stronger. The gang began to directly buy large sums of cocaine from the cartel at cheaper rates, and in return the gang would buy weapons in so called straw purchases from Texan gun shops and then smuggle them across the border. Furthermore, if the cartel needed to intimidate or carry out an assassination in the United States, they would simply call on the Barrio Azteca. When the Sinaloa Cartel made its first incursion into Ciudad Juárez in 2008, Barrio Azteca was called to defend the plaza. They are alleged by the Mexican authorities to have committed numerous brutal assassinations in the city, although the exact numbers are unknown. In addition, Barrio Azteca controls most of the drug sales for the Juárez Cartel in Ciudad Juárezs streets and prisons, although other gangs and independent operators abound.
Barrio Azteca is also reported to have kidnapped people in El Paso and drive them south into Ciudad Juárez to kill them. A murder in Texas drives a huge investigation which often leads to an arrest. But in Ciudad Juárez, it is one of the more than ten corpses found dead on a daily basis. The gang also tortures and murders its victims in front of a large and cheering gang audience. According to the testimony of an alleged Barrio Azteca member, gang members torture and kill their victims by digging up holes in the ground, throwing a bunch of mesquite, and then pouring in some gasoline. The gang members then beat up their victims and throw them in the hole. Then they light the whole thing on fire.
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