Tuesday, December 03, 2013

A valiant bishop fights back in lawless Michoacan

(My new American Thinker post)

One of my good friends in Mexico is a Texas A&M graduate who called on Sunday to talk about the future of Johnny Manziel, or "Juanito futbol" as he likes to call him.   

We spoke a lot about the Texas A&M-Missouri game, the bizarre ending in Alabama and the Rangers acquiring Prince Fielder to play first base.  However, we soon found ourselves reviewing the deteriorating situation in Michoacan, Mexico.  

As I mentioned in a previous post, most Americans don't know where Michoacan is.  Most Mexicans know too well that there's Port Lazaro Cardenas and a huge petrochemical facility is in that region.   

President Pena-Nieto of Mexico faces a growing problem in Michoacan, or ground zero in the Mexican drug war.   

As my friend said, Mexicans are really starting to worry about Michoacan.  My friend, a businessman south of the border, believes that Michoacan will explode and get a lot worse.   The terrain is suitable for guerillas.  The rural citizens of Michoacan hate what they call "los corruptos politicos del DF," or loosely translated to "the corrupt politicians of Mexico City."    

Like his predecessor, the federal government can not trust the underpaid police to fight crime. They are overwhelmed by the cartel's fire power and cash.  

Therefore, President Pena-Nieto ordered more troops into Lazaro Cardenas port in the Pacific.  He has no choice because of the heavy trade and growing influence of cartels in port operations.  

My favorite human story in lawless Michoacan is about a local bishop who has decided to tackle the cartels directly.  He is risking his life everyday that he delivers a sermon or puts the name of another victim on the church wall.  He is publicly calling them out:   

"This is the bloodiest year since 1998 when it comes to drug violence here in the state of Michoacan.   

For Miguel Patiño Velazquez, a 75-year-old bishop with a white frock and dark circles under his eyes, it is time to speak out.   

The bishop has criticized drug gangs by name, supported village vigilantes and demanded that the government restore order. Where other church fathers have spoken in generic terms about the violence, the bishop has been bold, leading the Catholic Church into the heart of the public debate.  

"Now is the moment to be one voice for our poor people, for our society," he said."

There are no easy answers for the crisis in Michoacan.  More troops will only extend tours for an exhausted Mexican army.  Mexicans generally admire their military but are also conscious that there were charges of human rights violations in Ciudad Juarez and other US-Mexico border cities.  

Frankly, there is not much that we can do except to curb our consumption of illegal drugs.   It would help if Americans understood that even recreational use of illegal drugs translates into a dead Mexican.  So far, there are 80,000 of such dead Mexicans.  
P. S. You can hear CANTO TALK here & follow me on Twitter @ scantojr.



Tags: Michoacan, Mexico  To share or post to your site, click on "Post Link". Please mention / link to the My View by Silvio Canto, Jr. Thanks!

A Cuban wife tells the world about her dissident husband

(My new American Thinker post)

For years, we've admired the work of Dr Oscar Elias Biscet. His story is good reading for who those who do not understand how lucky we are to live in a free country.

Dr Biscet has been in prison several times and is not allowed to leave the island.

Like Dr. Biscet, there are hundreds of Cubans harassed by a dictatorship that survives by imposing a repressive state and boasting about its economic reforms.

Elsa Morejon is Dr Biscet's wife and a human rights activist. It was great to see  her article in The Washington Post:
"A few weeks ago, President Obama invited my husband, Oscar Elías Biscet, and me to a dinner to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the creation of the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
Many thought that in light of Obama's efforts to improve relations between the United States and Cuba, Gen. Raúl Castro, Cuba's president, would approve a passport for Oscar so that he could attend. Such was not the case.
Oscar is a physician, but he is not allowed to practice medicine. Amnesty International has named him a prisoner of conscience for his years in jail for defending human rights.
He is a follower of the philosophy of Gandhi and King. In 2007, President George W. Bush awarded Oscar the Medal of Freedom.
But he could not receive the award in person because he was in prison, where he had been sentenced to a term of 25 years.
Oscar was released in 2011, but in many ways he's still a prisoner because he can't leave the island."
Elsa speaks for so many and it was good to see a major US newspaper give her the space to tell the world the truth about Cuba.

Remember Dr Biscet the next time that you hear of all of those "bargains" about traveling to Cuba!    

Show your support for Dr Biscet and other dissidents by taking "your vacation dollars" elsewhere!   

P.S. You can hear CANTO TALK here & follow me on Twitter @ scantojr.


Tags: Cuba and dissidents  To share or post to your site, click on "Post Link". Please mention / link to the My View by Silvio Canto, Jr. Thanks!

(BABALU) Venezuela and “se fue la luz” again


(My new Babalu post)
We can predict two things about life in Caracas:
1) President Maduro will blame everything on the merchants; and.
2) the lights will go out somewhere in the country.   
The lights went out again yesterday:
 "A power outage briefly darkened Venezuela’s capital and other parts of the country Monday night in what President Nicolas Maduro said appeared to have been an act of sabotage against his socialist government.  
The blackout began shortly after 8 p.m. as Maduro was addressing the nation about his plan to reduce inflation battering the automotive industry. Within minutes, people in downtown Caracas could be heard banging on pots in an act of protest.  
Maduro, deprived of the airwaves, then took to Twitter to say that he and his aides were monitoring the “strange blackout that occurred in the same place as the last act of sabotage.”  
Later, when power was restored, he ordered the armed forces on maximum alert to prevent attacks that he said were being planned by his opponents against the electric grid and the nation’s oil installations."
Such is life in Venezuela!  Maybe Maduro needs to have another private chat with the ghost of Chavez!

Tags: Venezuela  To share or post to your site, click on "Post Link". Please mention / link to the My View by Silvio Canto, Jr. Thanks!

A little DFW sports talk



We spoke with Carlos Torres & David Busby.





Tags: Dallas-Ft Woirth sports  To share or post to your site, click on "Post Link". Please mention / link to the My View by Silvio Canto, Jr. Thanks!

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