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Baby Steps in Baja
I hope you don't get anybody killed by having them think that Baja is just business as usual. There are still a lot of narcotics problems, made worse by deportations of violent criminals to Tijuana, and the closing or cutbacks of Mexican prisons. I did Travel Agent work on the Baja, and I always notified clients of every scam, pothole, and other potential problem, and how to avoid it. Yes, Chicago is worse.— September 7, 2013 12:38 p.m.
Twitter – tool for the people in Mexican narco war
FREEACUNA says it all, and a good quote worth repeating: "Since TELEVISA and TV Azteca are in bed with the PRI and the PRI in bed with the narcos, we will never get the truth from television or print media." We have that same problem in the United States, but people do not know about it, unlike Mexico where everyone knows that the political parties both sell the dope AND run the major news media. The PRI, of course, is the United States Republican Party, Washington, DC, and if you donate to a PRI candidate, your check comes back from the bank with that endorsement. I did just that, years ago.— September 7, 2013 12:28 p.m.
Developers chasing city deals cashing in heavily for Faulconer
David Alvarez is a Conservative Republican, masquerading as a Democrat, same as Fletcher.— September 7, 2013 12:21 p.m.
Developers chasing city deals cashing in heavily for Faulconer
The race will be between Aguirre, Marty Block, and Lori Saldala, or other Liberals. The voters mandated a Very Liberal Democrat. Anyway, any new Mayor in a field of 50 or 100 candidates will win with 10% of the vote and be recalled immediately.— September 7, 2013 12:19 p.m.
Two county lawyers disbarred
Criminal Lawyers are criminals who have not been caught yet, defending other criminals who have, right? A retainer fee is a bribe that your lawyer pays to the judge so that you get a fair trial. See www.NZ9F.com/Me for some of what I went through.— September 4, 2013 11:33 a.m.
Exec's race for mayor casts light on Qualcomm bribery charges
Obviously, Nathan Fletcher, a Conservative Republican who keeps changing his label, is far too corrupt to become Mayor and stay one for very long. This begs another election, when the poop hits the air circulation device regarding all of the illegal Mafia activity of Qualcomm. He would be a sweet and complaint part of the San Diego MOB Real Estate Machine, tearing down neighborhoods and making people homeless who cannot afford higher rents, and not do anything long-term except further embarrass San Diego, already dubbed "America's Finest and Stupidest City" for the way it continues to mis-handle everything.— September 4, 2013 11:30 a.m.
Days of hope for El Cajon’s Second Street
Homelessness causes alcoholism, mental illness, drug abuse, and suicide.— September 2, 2013 1:31 p.m.
Days of hope for El Cajon’s Second Street
Not mentioned is the disdain and hate most have for the homeless of El Cajon, as if it is their fault that they are homeless. Dr. John Kitchin, former El Cajon homeless, publisher of the San Diego Homeless News.— September 2, 2013 1:29 p.m.
Homeless move to Tijuana’s beach
Something like a thousand deportees arrive in Tijuana every month, and the City has no jobs, housing, or even food for them. When the money was available, people were deported by aircraft directly to Southern Mexico where they came from. They get stranded in TJ, have no way to even call home, cannot get a job, if they do get work it pays fifty cents US per hour, and most cannot even buy food. So, they get jobs in the dope business.— September 2, 2013 1:23 p.m.
Poets cause trouble at U.S.-Mexican border fence
Your idea of poetic and artistic exchange is excellent, but the location was huge problems for police for very many years (30 or more). Anywhere that is several blocks away from the Border would do better, and since the US is afraid that Mexicans will steal US jobs if they let them into the country, it should be held in Mexico. You no longer need any passport to cross, nor any passport nor tourist visa to visit Mexico. Both nations have laws to the contrary, and the Court Systems of both nations threw all those laws out. In Mexico, the law requiring tourists to have visas and passports has been thrown out 11 times.— September 2, 2013 1:18 p.m.