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Welcome To Harvest Season—Mexifornia Style!
Here in
Mexifornia, this year's end-of-summer blues has the
added downer of the budget crash from decades of open
borders. Many
state
parks are being closed
to save money, the legislature is currently negotiating
about how many
tens
of thousands of prison inmates to release
onto California streets etc. etc. (Some ammo prices have
doubled in a year, I heard the other day at the range.)
Mexicans know
what goes on here as well as anyone. Drug cartel honchos
have used the opportunity afforded by less law
enforcement to boost their marijuana cultivation
business—on American territory. A July 28
San Francisco
Chronicle headline proclaimed,
Mexican growers having big pot year in state.
"Mexican drug traffickers have expanded their
marijuana-growing operations in California parks as
state and local governments have tightened spending and
slashed jobs and services."
The park system—and the country, for that matter—was
designed by and for responsible, freedom-loving
Americans, who regard protected lands as special places
to be preserved for future generations. American hikers
who love exploring the unspoiled outdoors operate on the
honor system, carry out their trash and snap photos of
mountain flowers rather than pick them.
So when Mexican
cartels invade American parks, it's a case of vicious
wolves among sheep. Many of the pot patches are
discovered by hikers and hunters who are not prepared to
face foreign nationals
packing AK-47s.
The culture clash can be dangerous for unarmed campers,
like the ones who were
chased out of Los Padres National Forest
by hostile growers last spring.
Americans have
already been shot by Mexican gangsters for being in the
wrong patch at the wrong time:
"The immediate danger to California citizens from the
cartels has grown in the last decade. In 2000, a father
and his 8-year-old son were both shot after stumbling
onto a marijuana plantation in El Dorado County during a
hunting trip. Though wounded, they survived the
encounter. In February 2008, a Santa Rosa man was
murdered by cartel growers after entering a plantation
in the southern part of Lake County. June 2009 saw
growers in Lassen County open fire on law enforcement,
wounding two sheriff's deputies and leading to one grower being killed in the
exchange."
"'There have been
plenty of shootings related to these operations now,'
[Commander Jackie] Long said."There's no doubt they can be violent."
[Task
force hits drug cartel, largest bust in Amador history, Amador Ledger Dispatch,
August 14, 2009]
The cartels have become more entrenched in public lands because the
situation is a piece of cake for them. In some respects
it is easier for them to grow vast quantities of
marijuana on America's public lands (where
80 percent of seized pot has been found) than to
raise the stuff in Mexico and smuggle it across the
border, although they obviously do both.
Set-up is
relatively inexpensive. The cartel bosses just employ a
few of their countrymen to rip out the native plants
(which the parks are supposed to preserve) and install
the
plumbing
to pipe in water and poisonous chemicals required to
grow quality bud in what's usually a challenging growing
environment.
The Mexicans'
thoroughly toxic contamination of land and water means
that many sites will not go back to their natural state
for many years, if ever. And there's a danger beyond
gunfire and poison: fire. The
La
Brea fire that destroyed 90,000 acres
in Los Padres National Forest was started on August 8 by
a campfire of marijuana growers, according to local
authorities. The Mexicans were tending
30,000 plants
and escaped.
But lobbying for resources
to protect our treasured national parks from Mexican
marijuana mobsters is just too politically incorrect an
issue for Establishment environmentalist organizations
like the
Sierra Club.
Law enforcement
has not been completely asleep, however. The National
Guard has been brought in to help local police and park
personnel in this season's
Operation Save Our Sierra.
The effort coordinated more than 300 persons from 17
agencies to take out thousands of plants this season.
What they found
should alarm any conservationist:
"Operation S.O.S. removed more than 30 miles of
irrigation pipe, 17,000 pounds of
garbage
and 4,050 pounds of fertilizer from state and national forests in July.
Nonetheless, it will be years before the sites are
returned to their natural states, and the cost of
restoration can exceed $10,000 per acre.
"The operation
also removed more than 400,000 marijuana plants valued
at more than $1.1 billion, seized 32
weapons
and made 88
arrests."
[California
Guard Helps to Save Forests From Marijuana Growers, DefenseLink News, August 31, 2009]
It's laudable that agencies can mobilize human
resources to good use. But they are still operating on a
hiking bootstring. The National Park Service
received an additional $3.3 million
this year to combat growers at western parks, including
Yosemite, Sequoia and Redwood national parks. That's a
tiny amount for the existing problem.
By comparison,
between 2000 and 2005, Washington sent
60
helicopters and $4 billion to Colombia
to eradicate coca.
Plus of course we have almost 200,000 troops defending the territorial integrity of Iraq and Afghanistan—when we can't defend our own.
The increasing
invasion of Mexican mobsters this year was indicated by
a new boldness in their locating pot patches closer to
popular visitor spots, as indicated by cheerful
headline:
Tourists at Calif. park rerouted due to pot
garden.
[By Garance Burke, AP, August 27, 2009]
"Garden"?
Apparently, some MSM editor thought some gardening was
going on.
But in fact
part of
Sequoia National Park
had just been shut down as a pot SWAT operation was
going down just half a mile from the beautiful
Crystal Cave.
It was the
first
time
that Sequoia closed an exhibit because of a drug
bust—another troubling marker of
escalating aggression.
National parks
and other natural preserves used to be a safe escape
from the noise and everyday tensions of cities. But
that's no longer true, as a result of open borders.
Needless to
say, the reaction of
Treason Lobbyists
to the deteriorating conditions in the America's parks
has been to
wave
the PC flag.
When the Forest Service tried to warn the public of
possible danger, the agency was castigated as being
discriminatory:
"A federal warning to beware of campers in national
forests who eat tortillas, drink Tecate beer and play
Spanish music because they could be armed marijuana
growers is racial profiling, an advocate for Hispanic
rights said Friday.
"The warnings were
issued Wednesday by the U.S. Forest Service, which is
investigating how much marijuana is being illegally
cultivated in Colorado's national forests following the
recent discovery of more than 14,000 plants in Pike
National Forest.
"'That's
discriminatory, and it puts Hispanic campers in danger,
said
Polly Baca,
co-chairwoman of the
Colorado
Latino Forum.
The U.S. Forest
Service quickly retracted the warning."
Warning on possible pot growers called profiling
[AP, August 28, 2009].
In fact, of course, the idea that forests are filled
with nature-loving
"Hispanic
campers" is misleading, given what seem to be
deep-rooted cultural proclivities. Despite efforts of
groups like the
Sierra Club to diversify, camping remains a
largely white activity.
On September
27, PBS is rolling out its big new Ken Burns film,
The National Parks: America's Best Idea.
We already know that the documentary will be preachy and
will use trees as an excuse to
promote diversity.
But the film will also be filled with
breathtaking photography
of spectacular wild places, with the intent of informing
viewers about Americans' natural heritage.
Some viewers
may be inspired to visit dazzling iconic places like
Yosemite
and
Sequoia—both
of which have been plundered
by the foreign criminal invasion. New visitors should
rightly feel cheated when they are warned to be cautious
and report suspicious activity when exploring. The
promise of pristine nature—the
prime objective of the
national parks—has
been violated, and with the complicity of Washington.
Just another
day in America's ongoing immigration disaster.
Brenda Walker (email her) lives in Northern California and publishes two websites, LimitsToGrowth.org and ImmigrationsHumanCost.org. She wrote about the destruction of our natural heritage last year: Mexican Gangsters Converting America's National Parks Into Gigantic Marijuana Patches.