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The ‘America Is Arming Mexico’s Drug Gangs’ Lie Posted By Dan Gifford On March 31, 2009 @ 1:41 pm In Media Criticism,
“There is an iron river of guns that
flows South into Mexico [from the United States] to
supply criminal organizations on the border,” says Tom
Mangan, senior special agent with Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco and Firearms (ATF) in Phoenix. “They are in the
market for machine guns, hand grenades, rocket-propelled
grenade launchers and Stinger anti-aircraft missiles,”
he continues. That’s right. The drug gangs can’t buy
that and other military stuff like the 40MM grenades
(the silver things in the upper left) and the rifles
with launchers shown in the photo below in Mexico, so
they drive to the United States and purchase them from
American gun dealers at retail. Isn’t that the story
you’ve been told? Well, congratulations. America’s
First Amendment protected propaganda ministry has punked
you on another important issue — this time on behalf of
dissembling officials and gun confiscation advocates.
For the benefit of those who may not know, machine guns (not the same thing as the demonized “semi-automatic”), hand grenades, rocket-propelled grenade launchers, Stinger anti-aircraft missiles and other such military items are illegal to possess by US civilians, which means they are not for sale in gun stores. OK, in the interest of extreme accuracy for anyone in need, there are some civilian owned machine-guns in America, but they all have to have been registered with the ATF by 1986 as evidence that a special Treasury tax has been paid and the owner’s residence state has to approve the possession. What’s more, none of these arms has ever been involved in a crime, to my knowledge, and all are considered very pricey collectors items. That means they are not for sale to or in the hands of Mexican drug goons. That raises some questions: If Mexican gangsters are not buying military weapons in the United States, why do people like ATF officials, Attorney General Holder, Secretary of State Clinton, gun prohibitionists like Sarah Brady and multitudes of media talking heads claim they are while calling for an American “assault weapon” ban they say will to keep the Mexican drug gangs from buying what they really aren’t buying here because they can’t? And if Mexican gangsters are not buying their military weapons in America from gun dealers as claimed, where are they buying them? Confused? Well, as Fox News’ pundit Charles Krauthammer explained in one of his 1996 Washington Post columns, the answer to question one is quite simple:
Krauthammer is able to so clearly state the obvious that most government officials, politicians, gun banners and reporters keep denying because he does not have to lie to voters in order to stay in office or keep donations coming in, as Sarah Brady does. Neither do I. So please note that all the public safety blather about “plastic guns” that can evade metal screener detection, “cop killer bullets” that are specifically made to murder police officers, “Saturday Night Specials” which are unsafe for anyone to possess (except for police — there’s always a police exception) and the other oft repeated gun control paradigms are simply bogus media ready scare phrases that have zero to do with public safety and everything to do with eventually outlawing the private ownership of firearms. Maybe you agree with that goal and maybe you don’t, but that’s the object of “reasonable gun control” advocacy. The answer to the second question is equally obvious. Gun running from the United States into Mexico has been going on since the 1800s. But the stuff bought or stolen here is not the military weaponry we are continually told is arming the gangs there. This paragraph from a [2] Los Angeles Times story managed to get the story right even if nobody else in the media will report it:
[3] Stratfor, a private intelligence agency, noted more:
So let’s recap. Attorney General Holder, Secretary of State Clinton, ATF officials and a host of others claim that an “assault weapon ban” against American civilians will keep Mexican drug cartels with gazillions of dollars in their jeans from buying military weapons on the international black market. Hey, makes sense to me. Latte anyone?
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