[Dear President Barack Obama, Americans are
tired too. Tired of your false dictums,
false promises; tired of your outright lies.
Since before August 29, 2013, we were on to you. And, we will stop you, your billionaire
cronies, and your "chummer" buddies in NORML, DPA, MPP, ASA and other dope
addicts from turning America into a Narconation in the model of Mexico and the
corrupted Narconations of Latin America.
Long remember the date November 04, 2014 Mr. President, when the
Citizens all across America let you know without a doubt that you have failed
miserably as the leader of our great nation and now we celebrate as we begin the commission of taking America back!]
'Enough,
I'm tired' comment rallies Mexico protest
http://www.sfgate.com/news/crime/article/Mexico-Gang-likely-burned-pulverized-43-missing-5879798.php
By MARIA VERZA, Associated Press -
Updated 6:08 pm, Saturday, November 8, 2014
A group of
43 marchers, each representing one of the disappeared rural college students,
parade through the streets, calling for people to gather at the city's main
plaza, in Mexico City, Saturday, Nov. 8, 2014. Forty-three organizations
arrived from the southern state of Guerrreo to take part in a rally Sunday, on
what will be the 43rd day the young men of the Raul Isidro Burgos school went
missing. Suspects in the disappearance of the 43 college students have confessed
to loading the youths onto dump trucks, murdering them at a landfill, then
burning the bodies and dumping the ashen remains into a river, Mexican
authorities said Friday.
MEXICO CITY (AP) — An off-the-cuff
comment by the attorney general to cut off a news conference about the apparent
killing of 43 missing college students has been taken up by protesters as a
rallying cry against Mexico's
corruption and drug trade-fueled violence.
During the session that was
televised live Friday, Attorney General Jesus Murillo Karam announced that two
suspects had led authorities to trash bags believed to contain the incinerated
remains of the slain students, who haven't been seen since being led away by
police in the southwestern town of Iguala on Sept. 26.
After an hour of speaking, Murillo
Karam abruptly signaled for an end to questions by turning away from reporters
and saying, "Ya me canse" — a phrase meaning "Enough, I'm
tired."
Within hours, the phrase became a
hashtag linking messages on Twitter and other social networks.
It continued to trend globally
Saturday and began to emerge in graffiti, in political cartoons and in video
messages posted to YouTube.
Many turned the phrase on the
attorney general: "Enough, I'm tired of Murillo Karam," says one.
Another asks: "If you're
tired, why don't you resign?"
Other people used it to vent their
frustrations with messages such as "Enough, I'm tired of living in a narco state" or "Enough, I'm tired of
corrupt politicians."
Mexicans have reacted with outrage
to the disappearance of the students from a rural teachers college in Guerrero
state and a government response that has failed to fully explain what happened.
On Saturday, protesters burned
several cars and trucks outside the governor's offices in Chilpancingo, the
Guerrero capital where demonstrations over the students' disappearance have
escalated into violence several times.
Investigators say Iguala
Mayor Jose Luis Abarca and his wife, Maria de los Angeles
Pineda Villa, ordered police to confront the students, who had gone to Iguala
to raise money and had commandeered passenger buses for their use.
The couple reportedly feared the
students would disrupt an event being led by the wife.
Iguala police fired on the
students in two incidents, killing six people.
Officers then allegedly turned
over 43 arrested students to a local drug gang.
Murillo Karam said members of
the gang confessed to killing the students before burning their bodies and
tossing the ashes and bone fragments into a river.
At least 74 people have been
arrested, including Abarca and his wife, who were found Tuesday hiding in a
dilapidated home in a rough section of Mexico City.
Families of the missing students
insisted they will continue to believe their sons are alive until authorities
prove the recovered remains are theirs.
Murillo Karam said the bone
fragments would be sent to a lab in Austria for testing.
Manuel Martinez, a spokesman for the families, said the
"YaMeCanse" rallying cry was proof that their demand for answers is
gaining strength.
"The people are angered and I
hope that they continue support us," he said Saturday.
Filmmaker Natalia Beristain was among hundreds of people posting
YouTube videos tagged #YaMeCanse.
"Senor Murillo Karam, I, too, am tired," she said.
"I'm
tired of vanished Mexicans, of the killing of women, of the dead, of the
decapitated, of the bodies hanging from bridges, of broken families, of mothers
without children, of children without fathers."
"I
am tired of the political class that has kidnapped my country, and of the class
that corrupts, that lies, that kills," she added. "I, too, am
tired."
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