Wednesday, June 20, 2012

THREE FRIGHTENING REVELATION About the BORDER in Glenn Beck‘s NEW BOOK ’ COWARDS ’ ..

Hezbollah in our Backyard
In a confidential memo issued in the September 2010, the Tucson Police Department in Arizona reported on Hezbollah’s presence in Mexico and possible ties to Mexican drug cartels operating on the U.S.-Mexico border. The only reason we know about it today is because the document was later leaked by the hacker group LulzSec.

Mexican Drug Cartels are Here in America
Despite the fact that Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano says “the border is better now than it ever has been,” Beck argues that drug cartels are currently operating inside the United States and regardless of what the feds say, spillover violence is dripping across our southern border. And he has the evidence to back up his claim.
“According to the Justice Department’s National Drug Intelligence Center, Mexican drug cartels have a presence–either direct or by proxy, in over one-thousand U.S. cities. Ninety percent of the illegal drugs consumed in this country come from our neighbor to the south,” Beck writes.
But even more disturbing than the fact that drug cartels own homes and operate front businesses in the U.S. is the reality of the brutal violence they bring with them.

When it Comes to Drug Smuggling, Cartels Are Innovators
According to Beck, drug cartels specialize in four drugs: marijuana, cocaine, heroin and methamphetamine. The United Nations estimates the cartels make as much as $30 billion each year from drug sales.
As mentioned earlier, the U.S. gets 90 percent of its drug supply from Mexico, which would make us sort of a preferred customer of the cartels. And while a lot of the drugs come across the border hidden in secret trunk compartments or carried by “drug mules,” cartels have had to get creative in order to keep up with the demand. And right now, their business is booming.
The use of border tunnels, drug submarines and ultralight planes is becoming increasingly more common for drug traffickers who want to minimize the risk of being caught and get their drugs into the U.S.

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