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To: robowombat

ref post 46, You talk of the crime in Mexico, well, just for fun, go to the National Park Service website, The American NPS. Click on over to the Big Bend. What is this? Our Government telling us not to be on certain parts of Federally controlled land after dark, watch your campsite, sleep with one eye open? Can you say Bandido? NPS apparently can't. Click on any campsite along the Rio Grande and the warning pops up.


80 posted on 06/02/2006 7:06:20 AM PDT by welfareisslavery (yeah, I'm a Bushbot.....)
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To: welfareisslavery
Yes another classic example of how the US is being Mexicanized. The problem with violent attacks on campers in the Big bend National Park began back in the 80's, around 1983 I think. Even before that there were occasional incidents in which campers and hikers were robbed and woman sexually assaulted by muchachos who were probably pretty much locals from either side of the border. However, in the 80's drug traffickers started using the Big Bend country as a corridor for moving product. Freepers with far better knowledge of West Texas than I can explain in detail why this region became favored as a drug smuggling corridor. I suspect it is the combination of thin settlement combined with small Mexican towns on the north shore to provide pickup crews of thugs and the numerous long deep canyons that run from the river inland so that large stashes of drugs can be easily hidden until transportation is arranged. That is the other part of the equation is the availability of good highways (US 385 runs directly into the park and Texas 118 is a good well graded hard surface road connecting to the end of US 385. From there it is an easy ride either to I-10 or US 90 the contraband highway.)

When these reports first started appearing I mentioned to a number of individuals that this was a very bad omen as Mex bandits always started operating in the Big Bend when the State and Federal government in Mexico became really rotten and dysfunctional. I stated it was only a precursor of much worse to come both with throngs of alien criminal trespassers entering the country almost at will and the decay of basic public safety in the border zones. I was considered pretty eccentric at best and evilly racist at worse for saying such things. Today, as you point out, the US government basically tells Americans that they are taking their own risks to use a US National Park. Effectively the US government has abdicated to bands of drug smugglers and other criminal gangs and the Big Bend country has been 'reconquestaed' already with the muchachos from Ruidosa and Castolon and Terlingua knowing who really rules the roost in the Big Bend.

Interestingly back in the 1920's, during Prohibition,this area was favored as a smuggling route for rum runners. Texas authorities know where such unchecked contraband smuggling could lead and sent a part of Rangers led by the redoubtable Frank Hamer to make the rum runners life less easy. Hamer captured a large mule train loaded with liquor. I presume he inflicted some rough and ready curbstone justice on the armed goons with the convoy and then had the mules shot and the liquor bottles unloaded and smashed. For many years thereafter the whitening bones of the mules and the broken shards of the whiskey bottles were a visible monument to discourage contraband smuggling. This is covered in a rather sanitized way in the chapter on Hamer in Walter P Webb's classic history of the Rangers. Where is Frank Hamer now that we really need him?
82 posted on 06/02/2006 7:45:48 AM PDT by robowombat
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To: welfareisslavery
You mean the part where it says: To minimize confrontations between boaters, vehicle campers, ranchers, Mexican military, fisherman, smugglers, and day use visitors, river trips are advised against camping in areas that are accessible by vehicle on either side of the river. Camping at these sites on the Texas side is prohibited, and is strongly discouraged on the Mexican side of the river.?

http://www.nps.gov/bibe/backcountry/river-camping.htm

89 posted on 06/03/2006 7:51:25 PM PDT by SuzyQue
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