CloseTheSOA
19-12-2005, 21:28
here's some real Clinton dirt.
Maybe you're right there is a "liberal press". they liberally ignore
stories that go too deep, no matter which wing of the ruling republi-crat
party is in power.
Clinton's Mexican Narco-Pals
----------------------------------------------------------
The untold story behind February's Yucatan summit redefines the enemy in the war on drugs
By Al Giordano
MAY 17, 1999: If the facts of the story were made of cocaine powder, the entire White House press corps would have sneezed; the news was right under their noses. Any one of them could have written:
MÉRIDA, MEXICO, FEBRUARY 15, 1999: U.S. President William Clinton met today with Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo to negotiate better cooperation between their nations in the fight against drugs. Incredibly, the anti-narcotics summit was hosted by powerful Mexican banker Roberto Hernández Ramírez, a man publicly accused of trafficking cocaine and laundering illicit drug money....
But that story wasn't reported in the States, despite a controversy over Hernández's alleged involvement in the drug trade that's raged on the Yucatán peninsula for two years.
http://www.weeklywire.com/ww/05-17-99/boston_feature_1.html
linked from
http://www.narconews.com
Maybe you're right there is a "liberal press". they liberally ignore
stories that go too deep, no matter which wing of the ruling republi-crat
party is in power.
Clinton's Mexican Narco-Pals
----------------------------------------------------------
The untold story behind February's Yucatan summit redefines the enemy in the war on drugs
By Al Giordano
MAY 17, 1999: If the facts of the story were made of cocaine powder, the entire White House press corps would have sneezed; the news was right under their noses. Any one of them could have written:
MÉRIDA, MEXICO, FEBRUARY 15, 1999: U.S. President William Clinton met today with Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo to negotiate better cooperation between their nations in the fight against drugs. Incredibly, the anti-narcotics summit was hosted by powerful Mexican banker Roberto Hernández Ramírez, a man publicly accused of trafficking cocaine and laundering illicit drug money....
But that story wasn't reported in the States, despite a controversy over Hernández's alleged involvement in the drug trade that's raged on the Yucatán peninsula for two years.
http://www.weeklywire.com/ww/05-17-99/boston_feature_1.html
linked from
http://www.narconews.com