The Situation in Mexico

With the energy resources of Russia denied to the West, the Empire has taken on the task of seeking the resources of other countries "by hook or by crook", such is the case of Mexico whose energy policies of the government of President López Obrador are affecting to American businessmen.

Last January, Businessmen asked his officials for more aggression in their actions against the electrical reform that is being debated in Mexico.

In a letter sent to the Secretary of State (Anthony Blinken) and the Secretary of Energy (Jennifer Granholm), four Democratic senators who are members of the Foreign Relations Committee asked to put a stop to President Andrés Manuel López Obrador's electricity reform proposal, with which Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) will have more power in the national electricity market. Shortly after, the Mexican government highlighted that power groups in the United States were financing campaigns against the Fourth Mexican Transformation (4T)

There is a non-legal, non-legitimate power that stands as a pressure group to confront the transformation movements; They are the potentates who come together to attack, slander, destroy, denounced President Andrés Manuel López Obrador.

Once he finished his complaint, he announced that “if necessary, I am going to present it to President Joe Biden, because the entire campaign against us is being financed by influence peddlers from Mexico who sold medicines, businessmen who did not pay taxes and also by the United States government, which gives money to these associations, such as that of Claudio X. González. That is an interventionist attitude! No foreign government should intervene in the affairs of the country."

In the first days of the war between Russia and Ukraine, President Obrador expressed his desire that Mexico remain neutral, for which he mentioned that the country would not impose sanctions on Russia and criticized the censorship of the Russian media.

This action attracted the attention of the so-called European Parliament and began a campaign against the 4T using the murder of journalists as a pretext.


:rotfl:



"It is unfortunate that they join like sheep in the reactionary and coup strategy of the corrupt group that opposes the Fourth Transformation, promoted by millions of Mexicans to confront the monstrous inequality and violence inherited by the neoliberal economic policy that was imposed for 36 years in our country”, said the Mexican President in response to the resolution of the European Parliament.

It is to be expected that if the conflict between Russia and Ukraine intensifies, so will the interventionist policies of the Empire in countries with energy resources such as Mexico and Venezuela.
Despite who could be behind the force of López Obrador, it's about time to stop 🛑 the USA goverment to keep doing to México and all Central and south América ,..stealing natural resources, and also Tobi club (NATO)
 
One of the things to consider with this government is that Morena is a left-wing party with progressive discourse and policies, i.e. it is a "woke" party similar to the Democratic party in the US. It could be that this fact is often overshadowed by the figure of AMLO, Morena's leader and founder and whom to many is the embodiment of Morena. And because of this, the 2018 election was the election of AMLO as figure, not much Morena. And again, in 2024 the one that was elected was AMLO, through his political heir, Sheinbaum.

It is to none's surprise that Mexico City is the liberal capital of Mexico too. Sheinbaum was the Chief of Government there before her presidential run. And during her time (2018-2023) she proposed progressive policies, laws and programs that were approved by a favorable (to a degree) local Congress (as Morena also held majority there and in most of the mayor's offices of the City).

In 2019 she proposed "neutral gender" uniforms for schools, so that boys could wear skirts and girls pants in government-funded schools. This initiative was rejected by society and provoked pushback. But since then, this year, Mexico City's local Congress approved the idea and is now written into law. In 2020 the first Trans clinic was opened and she inaugurated the 2022 LGBT+ march (something no other government chief had done before). She also removed Christopher Columbus' statue in 2020 from Paseo de la Reforma and planned to replace it with the statue of an indigenous woman.

And then there is the discourse, she's no stranger to left-wing keywords like misogyny, classism, climate change or racism, or to activism in favor of women's and LGBT+ rights.

Also, her participation as one of the more than 600 scientists that collaborated with papers and reports in the IPCC's Nobel Peace Prize (along with Al Gore) of 2007 is well known. And she describes herself as a "Climate Change Expert."

Now, Morena held a massive influence in Congress (Chamber of Deputies) after the 2021 legislative election, and this influence has incresed this year and now have 2/3 of the seats. Also has great influence in the Senate. So Sheinbaum has a favorable political environment.

So, as AMLO's figure takes the backseat, at least publicly, these tendencies might be more exposed in the national arena, and may provoke a reaction from the Mexican society. All is left is to wait and see.
 
Despite who could be behind the force of López Obrador, it's about time to stop 🛑 the USA goverment to keep doing to México and all Central and south América ,..stealing natural resources, and also Tobi club (NATO)

Unfortunately and fortunately for Mexico, the U.S. will continue to be Mexico's main trading partner, there is no way out unless something very, very drastic happens. As the Cs have said in the past México is in Kahoots​

Q: (Fallen_735) Why does the US in recent years let Mexico get away with certain things/make compromises that strengthens Mexico's international position (water treaty in the rio grande, deer park oil refinery, attempts to include Cuba and Venezuela in international summits)?

A: Mexico is in kahoots!

As I mentioned, Mexico has limited leeway outwardly including how it manages natural resources and financial affairs and has permission inwardly to appease the herd. As for liberal policies as far as the common people are concerned there is a maxim that every Mexican knows: "Obey, but do not comply". It is giving the appearance that you are obeying when in fact you are not.

This is what happened with neutral school uniforms, with the prohibition of the use of disposable plastics, with masks in times of covid, with vaccination and so on. And as in any society, there are undoubtedly those who obey and comply.​
 
I think The Economics illustrates and “predicts” well the position at least at the international level of what is happening in Mexico. It will be very similar to this current German left-wing-semaphore in both form and substance which means an alignment to the 2030 agenda, sustainability policies (economic detriment), a trading partner of the US and on the side of the war in Ukraine.
In Latin America there is a strong level of resilience and people are becoming more and more “awake” to the political wheeling and dealing, the issue is that surviving and fighting is becoming a daily issue so there is a lack of common unity. The way the electoral campaigns have been conducted I would not be surprised if this person will not finish his term, I mean I don't think Mexican farmers will bring tractors to the government palace.


Economics 2024.jpegCaptura de pantalla 2024-06-04 a las 19.54.02.pngCaptura de pantalla 2024-06-06 a las 21.38.59.png
 
Analysis of the Mexican Election by Insight to Crime

4 Jun 2024
Political candidates in criminally strategic states like Chiapas, Guerrero, and Michoacán saw an outburst of violence this election cycle in Mexico, underscoring how organized crime groups and other power brokers try to influence voting to maintain control despite political reconfigurations.

By the time voters elected Claudia Sheinbaum as Mexico’s first female president, election observers recorded 129 political violence events targeting officials during local, state, and federal elections, for which more than 20,000 posts were up for grabs when campaigning started in early September 2023, according to data collected by the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project (ACLED

Screenshot 2024-06-06 at 23-10-11 Mexico’s Extreme Election Violence Explained.png
The scale of violence, which included 102 political assassinations, as well as kidnappings, forced disappearances, attempted murders, and attacks on family members, campaign staff, and official infrastructure like ballot boxes, made this election season particularly concerning, Tiziano Breda, ACLED’s Associate Analysis Coordinator for Latin America, told InSight Crime.

“The violence was due to two main reasons: the magnitude of the election, with it being the biggest in the country’s recent history, and it’s also the consequence of how Mexico’s criminal landscape has evolved into a growing number of fractured groups with diverse economic portfolios competing for influence, and therefore exacerbating violence,” he said.

Past elections have also been marked by extreme violence. The country logged 145 politically motivated murders of individuals directly linked to the electoral process during the 2018 presidential election and 88 during the 2021 gubernatorial elections, according to data compiled by the Mexican think tank Laboratorio Electoral.


Just five states — Chiapas, Guerrero, Michoacán, Oaxaca, and Veracruz — accounted for half of all election-related violence logged by ACLED this year, which overwhelmingly targeted those vying for local political office.

Each of the worst-affected states is home to multiple organized crime groups with varying degrees of firepower and sophistication, whose criminal interests coexist and overlap with local economic and political dynamics. That fosters violence that isn’t always related to organized crime.

From the blurred lines between criminal and political violence in the southern border state of Chiapas to the outsized role organized crime groups played in local elections in states long plagued by criminal groups — such as Guerrero and Michoacán — InSight Crime looks at criminal dynamics in three of the states impacted most by political violence this election cycle.

Widespread political violence clouds historic Mexico election

More than 129 instances of political violence against officials were recorded nationwide this election cycle, causing some experts to call it the country’s most violent political transition

Chiapas

Since around 2021, Mexico’s powerful organized crime groups have grown in strength in Chiapas, which sits on the Mexico-Guatemala border in what has long been a strategic corridor for drugs and migrants moving north toward the United States.

This election cycle, much of the violence in Chiapas has been linked in some way to the increasingly intense battle between factions of the Sinaloa Cartel and the Jalisco Cartel New Generation (Cartel Jalisco Nueva Generación – CJNG) over these drug and migrant smuggling routes.

Many local communities have found themselves caught in the crossfire. In May, armed assailants massacred 11 civilians from a single family who refused to work for either of the crime groups.


But the distinction between criminal and political violence is often hard to pinpoint, and sometimes non-existent.

“Both criminal groups and political groups can decide who competes and who does not, so it is very difficult to establish a clear line between what is criminal and what is political,” said Manuel Pérez Aguirre, a political scientist who coordinates electoral violence research for the Colegio de México’s Violence and Peace Seminar.

There is a long history of political and social unrest in Chiapas that predates the latest flare-ups in organized crime-related violence. Fighting between the Sinaloa Cartel and CJNG only adds to those pre-existing tensions, according to Breda, the ACLED analyst.

“A lot of it stems from intercommunal conflict centered around land, and in some cases, it is related to a deeply embedded political culture and leadership style,” he told InSight Crime.

The Sierra Madre region of Chiapas, for instance, is rich in minerals like silver, gold, iron, lead, and zinc, according to government data. This has spurred conflict, especially during times of political change, among community members who oppose exploiting those resources and the crime groups, politicians, and international companies that stand to benefit from their extraction.

Guerrero

In a state like Guerrero, in Mexico’s hot and humid south, the CJNG, Guerreros Unidos, Viagras, Rojos, Tlacos, Ardillos, Familia Michoacana, and Tequileros are among dozens of armed groups fighting it out. They may all use violence to co-opt local elections for a plethora of motives.

First and foremost is security. Controlling local politicians not only helps crime groups buy protection and influence, but it can also allow them to steer local law enforcement against their criminal rivals.


“Municipal authorities have a say in planning and implementing security strategies at the local level,” Breda told InSight Crime. “To control and co-opt who is elected at that level means more leniency for the group in charge.”

This aids their criminal activities, which extend far beyond controlling drug trafficking routes. In Guerrero, crime groups run lucrative local extortion markets, street-level drug sales, and siphon profits from infrastructure projects and the state’s agricultural and mining sectors.

“We’ve increasingly seen crime groups also aim to control or get a slice of those [state] resources,” said Breda.

Election violence is nothing new in Guerrero, especially in the major seaport of Acapulco, the southern state’s largest city and often one of the country’s most violent. It is directly connected to Mexico City via a federal highway and is an important target of control for both politicians and criminal groups.

Organized crime has long relied on the Pacific coast city to receive cocaine shipments sent from South America, while also exploiting the economic activity generated from tourism to run extortion rackets and launder money.

Michoacán

In recent years, the CJNG has expanded from the northern reaches of Michoacán into the so-called Tierra Caliente region, a strategic corridor for synthetic drug production and agricultural work. Former President Felipe Calderón dispatched thousands of soldiers across this state nearly two decades ago to mark the start of the Mexican government’s ill-fated “war on drugs,” which continues today.

Since then, the CJNG’s incursion has further complicated the dynamic alliances that exist between political powerbrokers, security forces, and crime groups like the New Familia Michoacana, the Viagras, and remnants of the Knights Templar, which have at times operated together alongside other independent groups as the Carteles Unidos.

Political transitions are a particularly violent time for these reconfigurations. At the end of February, two candidates vying to become the next mayor of Maravatío in northern Michoacán were shot and killed less than 12 hours apart. By the following month, more than a dozen aspiring municipal presidents had chosen to withdraw their candidacies due to death threats from organized crime groups.

This year, some locals told InSight Crime they felt like the electoral violence was non-stop.

“The criminal groups want to have absolute control over the populations and appoint candidates who are obedient to them,” said a local priest working in this contested area, who spoke to InSight Crime on condition of anonymity due to security concerns.

Co-opting local politicians has become one of their main criminal activities alongside extortion, he added, which not only affords them protection from security forces but also influence over how municipal resources are managed.

While municipal budgets may not be significant compared to state or federal funds, being able to dictate how they are spent can be important for local criminal actors.

“You have millions of pesos at your disposal with few controls and little accountability when it comes to enforcement,” said Pérez Aguirre, the political scientist.

Alongside drug trafficking and extortion, criminal groups have realized they can use their municipal leverage to establish their own type of “shadow government,” he added. This creates an even greater incentive to use targeted violence to sway the outcome of those elections.

Far from the state capitals and urban centers that are the focus of international attention, priests like the one InSight Crime spoke to in rural Michoacán are struggling to see a path forward.

“Almost every day there are murders, disappearances, and kidnappings,” he explained. “It’d be better for many people to just leave.”

The violence continued even after the polls closed on June 2. Yolanda Sánchez Figueroa, the municipal president of Cotija, was killed near the town’s main plaza just one day later, less than a year after CJNG operatives had kidnapped her in neighboring Jalisco.

The elections might be over, but the transition of political power later this year when newly elected officials, as well as President Claudia Sheinbaum, take up their posts, suggests the violence might not be.

And from Borderland Beat, the article's comments reflect some of the many comments above.


Meanwhile, the border closure by the Biden administration has not resulted in the limitation of illegal entries.

 

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The way the electoral campaigns have been conducted I would not be surprised if this person will not finish his term, I mean I don't think Mexican farmers will bring tractors to the government palace.
That´s because you don't know how resilient the politicians around here can be :lol: like cockroaches, they are very difficult to eliminate and some ones can fly.

Mexican farmers had been in that road, the movement is called "El Barzón" (in English, the barge: refers to a ring of iron, wood or leather through which the rudder of the plow passes in the yoke)

I do remember seeing tractors and bales of grass, tractors and a lot of manure in the vicinity of the National Palace in Guadalajara back then.

El Barzón
El Barzón was born in 1993 in the Mexican countryside, due to the dissatisfaction with the foreclosures, auctions and evictions that rural producers were suffering on a daily basis because they could not pay the high interest rates charged for their loans; by 1994, with the financial crisis, the Barzón movement was already present throughout the country, reflecting the crisis of an economic system that was affecting the productive sectors of the countryside and the city.
Who formed El Barzón?

The union and organization of farmers, workers, professionals, small and medium-sized businessmen whose economy was affected and who were uncertain about losing their land, their machinery, their homes, their businesses, gave life to this great movement.

What has been the struggle of El Barzón?

Thus, Mexican men and women who fell into arrears as a result of the economic crisis, gave a strong and important fight, managing to save the family patrimony, with the negotiation of the overdue portfolio.

They were always characterized by denouncing the abuse of financial institutions and the lack of direct support to debtors by the authorities that regulate the Financial System in Mexico. The energetic rejection of the creation of FOBAPROA (the government financially rescued the banks, they were the poor ones and the people had to scratch with their own fingernails) and the approval of ANATOCISMO ( is to charge interest on interest) are just some examples of their struggle.

And while El Barzón also directed its objectives and actions towards the reactivation of the countryside, the strengthening of small and medium-sized producers and the benefit of Mexican consumers. The defense of the patrimony of Mexican families continues to be an essential axis of its actions.
I know people who lost their homes because they could not pay the debt. Those were turbulent times, the official candidate was assassinated a la JFK, there was a change of government, mega-crisis and strong devaluation followed later. In 1993 the president in office took away 3 zeros from the Mexican currency in order to simplify transactions because the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) was going to be implemented.

The dollar is now at 17.8 Mexican pesos, plus three zeros ... 17,800 pesos would cost the dollar
 
The green energy/climate change stance is one thing but I think to truly see how much she is apart of the system is her actions against the cartels and crime. If she isn’t willing to fight the #1 issue in Mexico then she seems like yet another puppet leader to me.

While it is true that cartels have a presence throughout Mexico, it is also true that conservative groups through the media and social networks have actively promoted the idea that cartels rule and that Mexico is extremely violent. This narrative seems to be supported by the United States, which since last year has wanted to declare the cartels as terrorist groups, which would give Washington the opportunity to intervene militarily in Mexico, as Dr. Alfredo Jalife would say, they want to Palestinianize Mexico.

So far there is no evidence but dubious investigations of cartel involvement in the 4T, however, the damage is done, many foreigners have the image of Mexico as a place where bandits and sheriffs of the old west exist.​
 
While it is true that cartels have a presence throughout Mexico, it is also true that conservative groups through the media and social networks have actively promoted the idea that cartels rule and that Mexico is extremely violent. This narrative seems to be supported by the United States, which since last year has wanted to declare the cartels as terrorist groups, which would give Washington the opportunity to intervene militarily in Mexico, as Dr. Alfredo Jalife would say, they want to Palestinianize Mexico.

So far there is no evidence but dubious investigations of cartel involvement in the 4T, however, the damage is done, many foreigners have the image of Mexico as a place where bandits and sheriffs of the old west exist.​
I agree, it has been exaggerated to think Mexico is a lawless nation but I don’t think it excuses the issue at hand. If only certain areas are dangerous or heavily corrupted by the cartels, as I’ve heard, I would think it would still be something important that Mexicans would want a solution for from their leaders. And if it’s just ignored, what does it show about said leaders? Of course, I’m from the outside looking in, I’m just interested to see what happens.
 
So, as AMLO's figure takes the backseat, at least publicly, these tendencies might be more exposed in the national arena, and may provoke a reaction from the Mexican society. All is left is to wait and see.
I've been thinking about this, and I must say that I was concerned about Petro in Colombia who followed very similar ideological tendencies as the ones you describe. And I will allow that his tendencies are probably to a large degree simply ideological, but south of the border that tends to mean a good thing, specially in relation to the US. But there's also the possibility that some of these compassionate words for minorities and the like, could be a sign of a conscience.. but like you said, time will tell.

With Petro in Colombia, the left discourse has indeed solidified in society, but he has surprised me in very positive ways standing against the war in Ukraine and refusing to supply them with weapons, and standing against Israel, so... perhaps something similar will happen with her? Petro was also the mayor for the capital city in Colombia, so they're following very similar paths, although Petro did have a guerrilla past... so who knows.

It is indeed as you said, we'll have to wait and see, but it pays to be cautious with over identifying or quick condemnation. She could be a normal human being, or the anti-Milei.. and simply be an influencer in power.
 
the damage is done, many foreigners have the image of Mexico as a place where bandits and sheriffs of the old west exist.
We were looking to move to Mexico because my partner is Mexican. So we started asking questions to his family who lives in Queretaro and a friend of mine who lives in Veracruz. I must say, what they said is a big warning.

Both spoke the same: the "safest" state is Yuccatan. They know a lot of Mexicans (friends and family members) who moved there because there is less violence in that state. My partner's family said they saw violence rise a lot and Mexico has changed in the last 20 years. Two of his cousins got kidnapped in exchange for money. His brother got stopped on the road while driving his truck with things of value in it. He had to pay a "tax".
And some more stories...

Lately, I know of a woman who had become a Mexican citizen but now wants to move to another country. Well, Mexican banks are holding her assets/money. She had to hire a lawyer.
Another testimony: I was talking to another parent at the park while playing with my kids. The man said his wife is Mexican and they were living there not long ago (before covid). They had opened a nonprofit organization for orphans and had to shut it down and come back to Canada because of the harassment/taxing from criminals. He said: "can you believe that? We don't have any money! We are nonprofit. We help their poor children, and they come to tax us. And if we don't pay, they uttered some passive-aggressive threats".

My partner traveled for 3 weeks last December and I asked him to go for 4 days to Puerto Vallarta where I was looking to move, since it's apparently the 2nd safest city in the country after Merida. He spotted many "falcons" perched everywhere, doing their sign language. He asked the locals about them, and apparently, they are cartel members, but they also "protect" the locals from other cartels and other criminals... And of course, there are those armed officials patroling for our safety.

I spent 6 months in Mexico in 1999 (I was 19 yrs old). I crossed the border to Guatemala from San Cristobal with a friend, and back to Mexico alone. I would walk at night in Veracruz with my girlfriend. Today, I would never dare to do that.

The bottom line is that there is a lot of "crime of opportunity" in Mexico, so if one is careful, one should be fine. But, even then, the country is corrupted at all levels. And it would seem that as soon as you have assets, you become a target.

And I'm not even getting into the whole paranormal activity going on down there because I could write 3 pages more on all the stuff my partner and his family have witnessed (near the mountain of Bernal). Witches fire jumping on top of trees, invisible witches snatching/killing babies, window fallers of all sorts, one of them looking like the mothman, a doll that started dancing on its own, etc. Some stuff is enough to scare you out of your skin. We also think one of his uncles got abducted, because one day he woke up naked in the middle of nowhere in some woods.
 
Unfortunately and fortunately for Mexico, the U.S. will continue to be Mexico's main trading partner, there is no way out unless something very, very drastic happens. As the Cs have said in the past México is in Kahoots



As I mentioned, Mexico has limited leeway outwardly including how it manages natural resources and financial affairs and has permission inwardly to appease the herd. As for liberal policies as far as the common people are concerned there is a maxim that every Mexican knows: "Obey, but do not comply". It is giving the appearance that you are obeying when in fact you are not.

This is what happened with neutral school uniforms, with the prohibition of the use of disposable plastics, with masks in times of covid, with vaccination and so on. And as in any society, there are undoubtedly those who obey and comply.​
Of course México and USA are in Kahoots!! It's like a Bad marriage, ....but at least it's not kissing the ass . All this happening in spanish we Say "DICIDENCIA Controlada" y Pan y Circo "for the people. ..
 
We were looking to move to Mexico because my partner is Mexican. So we started asking questions to his family who lives in Queretaro and a friend of mine who lives in Veracruz. I must say, what they said is a big warning.

Both spoke the same: the "safest" state is Yuccatan. They know a lot of Mexicans (friends and family members) who moved there because there is less violence in that state. My partner's family said they saw violence rise a lot and Mexico has changed in the last 20 years. Two of his cousins got kidnapped in exchange for money. His brother got stopped on the road while driving his truck with things of value in it. He had to pay a "tax".
And some more stories...

Lately, I know of a woman who had become a Mexican citizen but now wants to move to another country. Well, Mexican banks are holding her assets/money. She had to hire a lawyer.
Another testimony: I was talking to another parent at the park while playing with my kids. The man said his wife is Mexican and they were living there not long ago (before covid). They had opened a nonprofit organization for orphans and had to shut it down and come back to Canada because of the harassment/taxing from criminals. He said: "can you believe that? We don't have any money! We are nonprofit. We help their poor children, and they come to tax us. And if we don't pay, they uttered some passive-aggressive threats".

My partner traveled for 3 weeks last December and I asked him to go for 4 days to Puerto Vallarta where I was looking to move, since it's apparently the 2nd safest city in the country after Merida. He spotted many "falcons" perched everywhere, doing their sign language. He asked the locals about them, and apparently, they are cartel members, but they also "protect" the locals from other cartels and other criminals... And of course, there are those armed officials patroling for our safety.

I spent 6 months in Mexico in 1999 (I was 19 yrs old). I crossed the border to Guatemala from San Cristobal with a friend, and back to Mexico alone. I would walk at night in Veracruz with my girlfriend. Today, I would never dare to do that.

The bottom line is that there is a lot of "crime of opportunity" in Mexico, so if one is careful, one should be fine. But, even then, the country is corrupted at all levels. And it would seem that as soon as you have assets, you become a target.

And I'm not even getting into the whole paranormal activity going on down there because I could write 3 pages more on all the stuff my partner and his family have witnessed (near the mountain of Bernal). Witches fire jumping on top of trees, invisible witches snatching/killing babies, window fallers of all sorts, one of them looking like the mothman, a doll that started dancing on its own, etc. Some stuff is enough to scare you out of your skin. We also think one of his uncles got abducted, because one day he woke up naked in the middle of nowhere in some woods.
Yeap ...that is México ...that's why I don't understand Americans are moving to mexican citys ..instead of staying in their country and work and fight for their rights, united states it's a beautiful country ..that deserves changes for the better , in this times where ever You move, You are going to find trouble...
 
that's why I don't understand Americans are moving to mexican citys
I'll give you a few reasons and I'll speak in past tense because some are no longer valid:

1- Food was way better, way tastier, way fresher (things have changed because many Globalist Agro businesses came in). Everything tasted better than the food in Canada. When I came back home, I found everything tasted like cardboard.
2- Much cheaper cost of life (not true anymore)
3- Beaches, waves, ocean 🌊
4- No winter/no snow, unless you live North or in the mountains
5- Cheaper Health/Dental Care (most likely still valid)
6- There used to be a lot of cheap real estate in quiet rural areas. (Now it's overpopulated and/or overcrowded with Gringos buying all the real estate and deforesting everything. One example: San Agustinillo in Oaxaca).
 
My partner's family said they saw violence rise a lot and Mexico has changed in the last 20 years.
Thanks, meadow_wind, for the great detail. It’s sad but it’s also probably what they have planned for north of the border.

Mexico has always had its share of horror stories but it sounds like now they are more true. Mordida was one of the first words I learned. If it is the Cartels collecting “protection and taxes” instead of (or along with!) the Federales, that’s truly a bummer. It’s always been a fact of life down there. “Officer, I don’t have time to go to jail, can I just pay the fine to you?” I’ve been lucky but it has been 24 years since traveling extensively in Mex. I would love to go one more time to take my wife to MxDF since she’s an ardent Catholic and I’d love to see the natl Cathedral. A quick 3 day in-and-out.

Sounds like it would be a true test of “knowledge protects”! So does knowledge say “don’t go” (honor your fear) or, “go but keep your eyes open and your wits about you” (and you’ll be ok)? To be determined.
 
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