Like Grand Theft Auto, Only Real
Jeepers:
I'm a tad taken aback, considering that I was in Tijuana about three years ago. Looking at this, I'm glad I made it back to the states without someone trying to chop off my ring finger. Then again, I'm not in the drug trade.
MEXICO CITY -- The death squads of the drug cartels are killing in spectacularly gruesome ways, using the violence as a language to deliver a message to society.
Increasingly, bodies show unmistakable signs of torture. Videos of executions are posted on the Internet, as taunts, as warnings. Corpses are dumped on playgrounds, with neatly printed notes beside them. And very often, the heads have been removed.
When someone rolled five heads onto the dance floor in a cantina in Michoacan state two years ago, even the most hardened Mexicans were shocked. Now ritual mutilations are routine. In the border city of Tijuana, 37 people were slain over the weekend, including four children. Nine of the adults were decapitated, including three police officers whose badges were stuffed in their mouths.
"There is a new and different violence in this war," said Victor Clark Alfaro, the founder of the Binational Center for Human Rights, who moves around Tijuana accompanied by bodyguards.
"Each method is now more brutal, more extreme than the last. To cut off the heads? That is now what they like. They are going to the edge of what is possible for a human being to do."
I'm a tad taken aback, considering that I was in Tijuana about three years ago. Looking at this, I'm glad I made it back to the states without someone trying to chop off my ring finger. Then again, I'm not in the drug trade.
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