Pages:
1
..
5
6
7
8 |
Bob53
Senior Nomad
 
Posts: 661
Registered: 2-24-2014
Location: Fallbrook, CA & Bahia de los Angeles
Member Is Offline
|
|
I can't find any coverage on the news. Did this happen?
The bitterness of poor quality remains long after the sweetness of low price is forgotten.
|
|
bajagrouper
Senior Nomad
 
Posts: 964
Registered: 8-28-2003
Location: Rincon de Guayabitos, Nayarit, Mexico
Member Is Offline
Mood: happy and retired
|
|
Well it is 9AM and looking at the TJ border camera all traffic seems to be moving right along in both directions.......
I hear the whales song
|
|
Bruce R Leech
Elite Nomad
    
Posts: 6796
Registered: 9-20-2004
Location: Ensenada formerly Mulege
Member Is Offline
Mood: A lot cooler than Mulege
|
|
Big talk no action.
Bruce R Leech
Ensenada

|
|
Ateo
Elite Nomad
    
Posts: 5914
Registered: 7-18-2011
Member Is Offline
|
|
They're only gonna make it worse for that marine....
|
|
Bajaboy
Ultra Nomad
   
Posts: 4375
Registered: 10-9-2003
Location: Bahia Asuncion, BCS, Mexico
Member Is Offline
|
|
Quote: | Originally posted by Bruce R Leech
Big talk no action. |
Now they are qualified to run for the House of Representatives.
[Edited on 9-20-2014 by Bajaboy]
|
|
bajalearner
Senior Nomad
 
Posts: 670
Registered: 8-24-2010
Location: Tijuana
Member Is Offline
Mood: in search of more
|
|
Quote: | Originally posted by Bruce R Leech
Big talk no action. |
Or, big mouth, no brain.
[Edited on 9-20-2014 by bajalearner]
|
|
DanO
Super Nomad
  
Posts: 1923
Registered: 8-26-2003
Location: Not far from the Pacific
Member Is Offline
|
|
Quote: | Originally posted by bajalearner
Quote: | Originally posted by Bruce R Leech
Big talk no action. |
Or, big mouth, no brain.
[Edited on 9-20-2014 by bajalearner] |
Both.
\"Without deviation from the norm, progress is not possible.\" -- Frank Zappa
|
|
DENNIS
Platinum Nomad
      
Posts: 29510
Registered: 9-2-2006
Location: Punta Banda
Member Is Offline
|
|
Well...they got the attention of a lot of people. Their mission is accomplished.
"YOU CAN'T LITTER ALUMINUM"
|
|
Bruce R Leech
Elite Nomad
    
Posts: 6796
Registered: 9-20-2004
Location: Ensenada formerly Mulege
Member Is Offline
Mood: A lot cooler than Mulege
|
|
Quote: | Originally posted by DENNIS
Well...they got the attention of a lot of people. Their mission is accomplished. |
yes but who will listen next time
Bruce R Leech
Ensenada

|
|
bajalearner
Senior Nomad
 
Posts: 670
Registered: 8-24-2010
Location: Tijuana
Member Is Offline
Mood: in search of more
|
|
Quote: | Originally posted by Bruce R Leech
Quote: | Originally posted by DENNIS
Well...they got the attention of a lot of people. Their mission is accomplished. |
yes but who will listen next time |
Next time??? Just a flash in the pan. Since wait times have been so small lately, they would have had to block nearly all lanes to cause a
disruption.
Maybe that's what happened to their plan. The blocking vehicles were passed through so fast, they didn't get to block anything.  
|
|
chippy
Super Nomad
  
Posts: 1739
Registered: 2-2-2010
Member Is Offline
|
|
They cancelled due to supposed threats of violence.
[Edited on 9-20-2014 by chippy]
|
|
BajaNomad
Super Administrator
       
Posts: 5006
Registered: 8-1-2002
Location: San Diego, CA
Member Is Offline
Mood: INTP-A
|
|
Robin Abcarian is with the Los Angeles Times:
http://www.latimes.com/local/la-bio-robin-abcarian-staff.htm...
When I was young, I admired clever people. Now that I am old, I admire kind people.
– Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel
We know we must go back if we live, and we don`t know why.
– John Steinbeck, Log from the Sea of Cortez
https://www.regionalinternet.com
Affordable Domain Name Registration/Management & cPanel Web Hosting - since 1999
|
|
DENNIS
Platinum Nomad
      
Posts: 29510
Registered: 9-2-2006
Location: Punta Banda
Member Is Offline
|
|
Quote: | Originally posted by Bruce R Leech
Quote: | Originally posted by DENNIS
Well...they got the attention of a lot of people. Their mission is accomplished. |
yes but who will listen next time |
Everybody pays attention to the unknown.
"YOU CAN'T LITTER ALUMINUM"
|
|
bajabuddha
Banned
Posts: 4024
Registered: 4-12-2013
Location: Baja New Mexico
Member Is Offline
Mood: Always cranky unless medicated
|
|
Yep, fart in a hurricane, just like the fat-boy-biker rally. PPfffftttt...
...pero mucho a pestan.
I don't have a BUCKET LIST, but I do have a F***- IT LIST a mile long!
86 - 45*
|
|
DanO
Super Nomad
  
Posts: 1923
Registered: 8-26-2003
Location: Not far from the Pacific
Member Is Offline
|
|
Threat of mass violence? Excuse me for a moment.
BWAAAAAAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! HAHAHAHAHA.! Hahaha. Heh.
There. I feel better now.
\"Without deviation from the norm, progress is not possible.\" -- Frank Zappa
|
|
elgatoloco
Ultra Nomad
   
Posts: 4342
Registered: 11-19-2002
Location: Yes
Member Is Offline
|
|
Robin Abcarian crossed southbound at 8:02 and was back across the border at 8:15.
#fizzle
MAGA
Making Attorneys Get Attorneys
|
|
brewer
Nomad

Posts: 419
Registered: 1-4-2011
Location: BCS
Member Is Offline
Mood: Grateful
|
|
Crossed Mexicali east today around 11:30 am. The agent said a couple of protesters showed up earlier and kind of kicked the ground a little. No else
showed up, so they left. I think CBP had a plan and were watching activity. I think they wouldld have winched, towed, or rammed their a$$es right
out. Boarder wait was 10 minutes.
|
|
DENNIS
Platinum Nomad
      
Posts: 29510
Registered: 9-2-2006
Location: Punta Banda
Member Is Offline
|
|
I doubt they're going to vanish without another sideshow of empty promises. They know they have the ear of a curious audience so it might get
entertaining before it ends.
"YOU CAN'T LITTER ALUMINUM"
|
|
BajaNews
Super Moderator
     
Posts: 1439
Registered: 12-11-2005
Member Is Offline
|
|
Did cartel threats really preempt protest for Marine jailed in Mexico?
http://www.latimes.com/local/abcarian/la-me-ra-cartel-threat...
By Robin Abcarian
https://twitter.com/robinabcarian
Sept 22, 2014
It was the blockade that couldn't drive straight.
On Saturday, unknown numbers of Americans angry about the Mexican incarceration of former Marine Sgt. Andrew Tahmooressi, illegal immigration and a
bunch of other stuff, were supposed to drive to ports of entry between Mexico and the United States, turn off their engines and form a blockade.
Stasyi Barth, the 41-year-old Lake Elsinore housewife who dreamed up the protest pictured patriots stepping from their cars, waving American flags and
forcing officials on both sides of the border to act. Nevermind the Mexican judicial system! Nevermind the intense debate about illegal immigration!
Nevermind the billions already spent securing the border!
"We still have a country to defend and protect. This protest will go on!" - Protest organizer Stasyi Barth, who pulled the plug on the demonstration a
day and a half later.
This would show Washington, for once and for all that ... well, that some people are so darn mad they are willing to engage in acts of civil
disobedience to make their point.
On her Facebook page, Shut Down All Ports, Barth demanded Tahmooressi’s immediate release, and the permanent sealing of the U.S./Mexico border “by
means of a military grade fence with razor wire (or similar equivalent) and by adding any and all additional Border Patrol Agents and militarized
National Guard members needed to further deter any unauthorized entry.”
Yeah, it was kind of a silly plan. For starters, Tahmooressi is on trial in Mexico, and it's inconceivable that the judge in the case would order his
release mid-proceeding because some Americans decided to block traffic.
The protest began to fall apart for real on Thursday.
Barth had been deeply disappointed when Tahmooressi’s mother, Jill, disavowed the action, first on Facebook, where she said the planned demonstration
was “not legal, not effective and needlessly inconveniences and endangers others,” and then in a private phone call. Barth had understood, from
previous contact with Jill Tahmooressi that the former Marine’s mother was on board.
But Barth rallied: “We still have a country to defend and protect. This protest will go on!” she emailed supporters. Friday, she posted meeting places
for each of 17 ports of entry that were to be blocked. The idea was to meet up in parking lots, and caravan to the border.
But Saturday at 2 a.m., in an urgent message, Barth called the whole thing off.
There had been, she said, “an unsubstantiated threat of mass violence to attendees, along with very suspicious activity on the Facebook site … Your
lives, and the lives of our law enforcement, are more important than any protest.”
When I spoke to Barth at 6:50 a.m. Saturday, she told me she’d been up all night, and that her partner in the event, a militia goofball named Rob
Chupp, who has been “patrolling” the border in Texas, had received threats from “the cartel.” (Chupp is part of the "Patriots" militia group that was
in the news recently when one of its members, who was holding a rifle, was shot at by a border patrol officer who mistook him for an armed migrant
here illegally.)
I had to suppress a chuckle.
The cartel? I don’t personally know any Mexican drug lords, but I find it hard to believe that anyone engaged in high-stakes smuggling would give a
fig about some bumbling American political protesters. Like, wouldn’t a drug lord just wait till Sunday or Monday to resume smuggling operations?
As one commenter on Barth’s Facebook page put it: “I can’t believe you chickened out. You got scared by the drug cartels? This operation was in the
US, not in Mexico! Using your logic, the Border Patrol and militias on the border should all pack up and go home!”
I drove to the border Saturday morning before the appointed 8 a.m. protest time. I was curious whether anyone would show up.
The only ones who did, as far as I could tell, were eight cars of California Highway Patrol officers, who had parked along the freeway exit closest to
the border, positioned to break up the jam, which never materialized. The officers were standing around their cars, looking relaxed and chatting.
In Arizona, the Nogales International newspaper reported that cops were out in force at the DeConcini Port of Entry in Nogales, but protesters were
nowhere to be seen.
I drove into Mexico at 8:02 a.m., turned around, and drove right back out. My cross-border adventure took about 15 minutes. Traffic flowed freely.
Because I was curious, I also retraced the steps of Tahmooressi on the night he was arrested after crossing into Mexico with three loaded guns.
Tahmooressi, 25, has always claimed he accidentally crossed the border and that he never meant to bring his weapons into that country, which has
strict antigun laws. In his attorney’s view, this is perhaps his strongest line of defense.
Tahmooressi’s error is easy to spot. On the day he was arrested, Tahmooressi had parked his truck near the border on the U.S. side, and walked or
taken a cab into Mexico earlier in the day. In Tijuana, he checked into Hotel Nelson, near the famous Tijuana arch, but checked out a few hours later
because the hotel was dingy. “And I didn’t really like what I seen in Tijuana that much anyway with all the authorities and things,” he told Fox News’
Greta Van Sustern on May 30, two months after his arrest. “I didn’t feel very safe or comfortable there.”
So he crossed back into the U.S., got back to his truck around 10 p.m., and drove out of the parking lot onto a street called Camino de la Plaza, just
north of the border. He turned left out of the lot, and when he came to a traffic signal, he was facing east, toward Interstate 5, just in front of
him. San Diego was on his left, to the north; Mexico was on his right, to the south.
He made a left turn onto what he thought was the northbound Interstate 5 onramp. Unfortunately, that ramp then curved around to the right, and put him
on Interstate 5 going south, directly into Mexico, with no exit possible.
It was dark, and who knows what kind of emotional shape he was in. He suffers from PTSD, he may have had a girlfriend on the other side of the border,
the day had clearly not gone well for him.
But he missed two prominent road signs warning that his left turn would take him to “Mexico ONLY”—one on the right side of the road, and one hanging
from the light signal right in front of him.
His avid supporters, outraged that he is on trial in the first place, like to characterize him as having been "forgotten" by the media. But since
shortly after his arrest, Tahmooressi has been the subject of an avalanche of publicity, and appeals for his legal fund. His case is being closely
monitored by the State Department, and he has been the subject of numerous letters to the Mexican government by American legislators. On Oct. 1, two
Republican congressmen, California's Ed Royce and Arizona's Matt Salmon have scheduled a hearing on Tahmooressi in Washington. Tahmooressi's mother
and the talk show host Montel Williams, a former Marine who has devoted his Twitter feed to spreading the word about Tahmooressi (and tamping down
some of the sillier rhetoric, like calls for a jail break), are scheduled to testify.
Meanwhile, I wanted to press Barth a bit more about why she decided to cancel the protest. I think she made the right decision, but I had a hard time
swallowing the cartel excuse.
She was not available to chat with me at 8:20 a.m. Saturday when I called her from the border to set up a time to meet. “I’ve just taken three
Xanaxes,” she told me, sounding very tired and very down.
Six hours later, when I knocked on the door of her handsome Lake Elsinore home, she was still zonked out asleep. Her husband, Byron, invited me in for
a few minutes.
“It’s amazing what you can do in your pajamas with a computer and social media,” he said.
I guess that’s one way of looking at it.
By Monday, Barth had taken down her Facebook page and was no longer answering my calls.
|
|
DanO
Super Nomad
  
Posts: 1923
Registered: 8-26-2003
Location: Not far from the Pacific
Member Is Offline
|
|
Quote: | Originally posted by BajaNews
“It’s amazing what you can do in your pajamas with a computer and social media,” he said.
|
This says it all. It's easy for these armchair warriors to sit behind their keyboards, howl about the unfairness of it all and make ridiculous
threats. But when their stupid plans (which are likely to result in their arrest and the impounding of their vehicles) inevitably fall through, they
make idiotic excuses for their failure, pop a few pills, and take a nap. Actual law enforcement resources got diverted to deal with these clowns, and
this burro thinks it's "amazing."
\"Without deviation from the norm, progress is not possible.\" -- Frank Zappa
|
|
Pages:
1
..
5
6
7
8 |