‘Invasion’: Texas GOP Struggles Over What Crisis To Manufacture At Border

One of the more insidious elements of Texas’ attempt to annex immigration enforcement away from the federal government comes down to its justification.


This is a companion discussion topic for the original entry at https://talkingpointsmemo.com/?p=1455169
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Joy Reid had Malcolm Turnbull (former PM of Australia) on her show a couple of days ago. He’s known Rupert Murdoch and his ways for something like 40-odd years. Joy brought up the “Fox is not news, it’s entertainment” and Turnbull said, well, actually, I call it anger-tainment.

That’s the best description of what Faux Noise and the GQP are delivering these days — angertainment. Wind people up, drive up their paranoia and fear, in order to empty their bank accounts and take away any means that they have of regaining control of their own lives once the fever (hopefully) breaks.

It’s vile and disgusting and medieval.

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It’s weird, but Hispanics are not immune to Republican Brain Fever. There’s probably a 27% wedge in that pie too.

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There are always self-loathing people who think that if they join the “mean girls club” they will magically receive the mean girls’ power and acceptance. This is not new — in the concentration camps the prisoners designated as Kapo to police fellow inmates were at least as feared as the Nazi guards. It’s a perversion of the power struggle that happens all too often.

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Call the bluff. Withdraw all federal personnel from the border and let TX bear the full cost and responsibility itself. They’ll be begging for the feds to return in a month.

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What will Texas do? Abbott and his ilk are a costly proposition. Whereto next?

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They will do to law enforcement what Gov. Costello N.Abbott did to their power(less) grid.

And what of that white, muddle aged, female police union chief who was a major supplier and source of Fentanyl through the USPS to over 25 states?

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One of the more insidious elements of Texas’ attempt to annex immigration enforcement away from the federal government comes down to its justification.

May I suggest,
George Soros is leading a caravan of cantaloupe calved Central American refugees, hauling bails of fentanyl, as they march towards a southern border left unprotected by Biden’s criminal coddling regime. Speculation suggests the column’s ranks are swollen with suicide vest wearing ISIS fighters fleeing Pres. Trump’s defeat of Daesh in Syria and Iraq and Chinese intelligence agents eager for a tete a tete with Rep. Swalwell who, with other Democrat lawmakers, is preparing a welcoming ceremony for these replacements for hard working ‘Muricans at a festive pavilion they’re planning to set up along the border. (ed.)

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Probably right. So we set up federal border control on TX’s northern border as a failsafe.

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Over on FB this past Friday, a friend posted the full text of Heather Cox Richardson’s newsletter for that day. It’s both an effective rebuttal of these people’s position that the Biden administration is doing nothing, and a good reminder of the scale of fentanyl trafficking–and that li’l’ ol’ Texas won’t be able to handle it if it goes it alone:

April 14, 2023 (Friday)

The Biden administration today announced a series of actions it has taken and will continue to take to disrupt the production and distribution of illegal street fentanyl around the world. The efforts involve the Department of Justice, including the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation; the State Department; the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), including U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP); the Office of National Drug Control Policy; and the Office of Foreign Assets Control in the Treasury Department.

On a press call today, various administration officials gave an overview of the crisis. Calling street fentanyl “the deadliest drug threat that our country has ever faced,” an official from the DEA explained that all of the street fentanyl in the U.S. comes from Mexico at the hands of two cartels: the Sinaloa and the Jalisco.

Most of the street fentanyl in the U.S. is distributed by the Sinaloa cartel, which operates in every U.S. state and in 47 countries. This cartel used to be led by Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, who began serving a life sentence in a U.S. prison in 2019 after Mexican authorities arrested him and extradited him to the U.S. Now four of his sons run it: Ovidio, Iván, Joaquín, and Alfredo, who are known as the “Chapitos.” DEA administrator Anne Milgram said they took their father’s “global drug trafficking empire” and “made it more ruthless, more violent, more deadly—and they used it to spread a new poison, fentanyl.”

According to the DEA official, the Chapitos started the manufacture and trafficking of street fentanyl and are behind the flood of it into the U.S. in the past 8 years. It is a global business. While illicit drugs used to be plant-based, newer ones like street fentanyl are made with synthetic chemicals. The cartels import the chemicals necessary to make fentanyl from China into Mexico and Guatemala. Then they manufacture the drug, distribute it in the U.S., and launder the money, much of it through cryptocurrency.

They have hundreds of employees and are equipped with military-grade weapons. The Department of Justice added that they “allegedly used cargo aircraft, private aircraft, submarines and other submersible and semi-submersible vessels, container ships, supply vessels, go-fast boats, fishing vessels, buses, rail cars, tractor trailers, automobiles, and private and commercial interstate and foreign carriers to transport their drugs and precursor chemicals. They allegedly maintained a network of couriers, tunnels, and stash houses throughout Mexico and the United States to further their drug-trafficking activities…to import the drugs into the United States,” where they kill as many as 200 people a day.

Rather than simply targeting individual traffickers, which would leave the operation intact, the DEA mapped the cartel’s networks in 10 countries and 28 U.S. cities. Its officers identified the cartel’s supply chain and all its leaders, including the people in China and Guatemala supplying them with chemicals to make the illegal fentanyl, the production managers, the enforcers around the world, the trafficker leaders who moved both drugs and guns, and the money launderers.

That information has enabled the Department of Justice to bring new charges against 28 of the cartel’s key figures (some were already facing charges) for fentanyl trafficking, narcotics, firearms, and money laundering. Seven of them were arrested in Colombia, Greece, and Guatemala several weeks ago and are in extradition proceedings. Mexican authorities arrested Ovidio even before that.

At the same time, the State Department increased the reward money offered for information that leads to the arrest or conviction of drug traffickers operating in other countries, and said it is working with partners to disrupt the supply chain for the drug’s manufacture, by which it appears to mean the precursor chemicals and manufacturing equipment coming from China. The White House also released a joint statement from Canada, Mexico, and the United States vowing to work together to stop the inflow of chemicals and manufacturing equipment to Mexico from China, a vow that somewhat gives Mexico a way to deflect blame for the crisis away from the factories in its own country to the supply chains based in China.

The Department of Homeland Security noted today that seizures of illegal fentanyl by U.S. Customs and Border Protection are up 400% since September 2019 and continue to increase. DHS has seized more fentanyl and arrested more traffickers in the past two years than it did in the previous five.This increased interception comes from new inspection equipment to find the drug in vehicles, and also from a focus on finding those incoming chemicals in plane and ship cargoes. It has also focused on catching equipment—pill presses, for example—whose loss stops production.

In March the Department of Homeland Security announced Operation Blue Lotus, which in its first month of operation seized more than 2,400 pounds of illegal fentanyl at U.S. ports of entry—as well as more than 3,500 pounds of methamphetamines and nearly 1,000 pounds of cocaine—and arrested 156 people. CBP has captured another 800 pounds of fentanyl. To build on these operations, the Department of Homeland Security has stationed labs at ports of entry to test substances instantly.

Notably, the Treasury Department added its own weight to this effort. It announced sanctions against two companies in China and five people in China and Guatemala who, they allege, provide the Mexican cartels with the chemicals to make fentanyl. Acknowledging that it’s been hard for U.S. officials to talk to their counterparts in China, administration officials say U.S. diplomats have been working with friends and partners to pressure China to stop the export of the chemicals that make drugs not only because it hurts the U.S., but because it is hurting the world.

Asking for support against drug trafficking on moral grounds is fair enough, but the sanctions against the chemical producers and the money launderers will bite. All properties the sanctioned companies and people have in the U.S. are blocked; their owners cannot do business with anyone in the U.S.

For all that the effort to neutralize the scourge of illegal fentanyl is vital to our country, what jumped out at me about this story was the power of the Treasury Department to disrupt what drug trafficking is really about: money. At the end of the day, for all their violence and deadliness, the Chapitos are businessmen, and the U.S. can cut them off at the knees through our financial power.

But that power is not guaranteed. Today, Sarah Ferris and Jordain Carney of Politico reported that House speaker Kevin McCarthy and House Republicans continue to insist they will refuse to lift the debt ceiling unless they get massive spending cuts and policy changes. These are not normal budget negotiations, which Biden and the Democrats welcome, but a threat to let the U.S. default on its debt. Their willingness to hold the Treasury hostage until they get their way threatens to rip the foundation out from our global financial power.

As I read about the U.S. Treasury sanctions on fentanyl supply chains today and then thought about how Treasury sanctions against Russia have hamstrung that nation without a single shot from U.S. military personnel, I wondered if people really understand how much is at stake in the Republicans’ attack on our financial system.

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You might as well add the eastern and western borders while you’re at it: Interstate 10 runs the length of the state, from Beaumont to El Paso.

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The hypocrisy of the same people who use these “invaders” to pick their crops ramping up the BS is too rich.

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Excellent definition, wish it had occurred to me as I have noticed it for years. Pretty much all right-wing outfits deal exclusively on angertainment, the only one I can think that doesn’t is The Economist and many wingnuts think it has gone lefty. Dealing with that crap is not exclusive to the reactionaries, the lefties do it too, that is the reason I stopped reading ThinkProgress and DailyKos. News are annoying as they are, no need to have someone working me up.

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Ah, so…
Credit for any success the U.S. has against drug trafficking will belong to Abbot.

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And mow their lawns and build their houses and bus their tables.

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Could it be otherwise?

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Actually the Fentanyl epidemic is caused by the relative success of law enforcement. Being much more powerful than heroine is profitable to smuggle it in smaller quantities using regular US citizens crossing casually through the border checkpoints.

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The whole effort of combating drug trafficking is going to fail, we need to figure out how to reduce the demand.

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It’s addictive. Which is why they’re so successful. They know exactly what they’re doing.

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Some folks just aren’t happy unless they’re miserable.

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