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Nobody in this country cares about watching bombs go off, but they are interested in the Mexican border, which I just visited for three days. Mexico is a cesspool of barbarism and criminality, and that's our existential threat, not China, Russia, or Iran. The cartels run everything in Mexico, and everyone knows the truth. My son was just in Mexico City, and people told him where not to go and what not to do to avoid the cartels. If you cross them, you're dead. The cartels also take care of their own, providing healthcare and other benefits. The weapons they have are serious, including RPGs and Javelin missile systems. Border patrolmen and Texas guard people have seen them just across the border. Some of these weapons may have come from Ukraine, where corruption is rampant and a lot of the aid we send ends up on the black market.

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I'm Frank Vaughn, and today we're examining money laundering and the illicit drug market in Canada. Finding accurate numbers is challenging, as official data is scarce. In 2007, drug seizures had a street value of over $2.6 billion, which, adjusted for inflation, is about $3.9 billion today. However, this figure is likely much lower than reality. Estimates suggest the drug market could be as high as $156 billion, considering the ratio of seized drugs to those that reach the market. Additionally, money laundering in Canada is estimated at $113 billion annually. Combining these figures, we arrive at a total of $269 billion, representing about 12% of Canada's GDP. This highlights a significant issue of organized crime and corruption within the country. Thank you for watching, and please consider supporting this work.

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An illegal immigrant, El Mano Negro, admitted to assassinating over 25 people in the county for a cartel that was dismantled. Members of the cartel admitted that moving human beings, drugs, guns, and fentanyl is easier now than ever before in the cartel's history. According to the speaker, law enforcement resources are quickly depleted because of the Biden and Harris administration. The speaker stated that law enforcement sees victim after victim, and these stories are not unfamiliar to law enforcement throughout California.

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Sam Cooper, a Canadian journalist, discusses Chinese transnational money laundering in Vancouver and Toronto real estate, estimating over a trillion dollars laundered through the "Vancouver model." He was motivated by the pricing out of young Canadians from the housing market. He believes Canada has "lost the plot" and is being infiltrated by Chinese organized crime and state actors, posing a threat to America. Vancouver's high property prices were supported by offshore money laundering and narcotics funds from China, laundered through Canadian casinos and real estate. Hong Kong tycoons, some allegedly working for the Chinese Communist Party and connected to triads, bought up large portions of Vancouver. Underground banking facilitates money leaving China, often drug money laundered through casinos and real estate. Chinese police stations in Canada are used to blackmail, extort, and surveil Chinese Canadians, with connections to organized crime. The Liberal Party of Canada is allegedly the favored party of Beijing, though other parties are also targeted. The US government is concerned about Chinese influence in Canada, including the fentanyl crisis, believing Beijing wants to harm North Americans.

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Canada is described as sweeping the fentanyl issue under the rug by sources in the show, despite public moves like appointing a fentanyl czar and increasing northern border patrols after pressure from Trump and Kash Patel. The guest says Canadian law enforcement acknowledge the issue but feel resources are insufficient to crack down on transnational crime, with a sense that “the root of the problem” is not being addressed. The guest reports that the planning and production of fentanyl have shifted to Canada, with cartel operatives setting up labs there. They describe how cartels, after crackdowns on the southern border, moved operations into Canada where a visa is not needed for a tourist entry, allowing quick setup and networking with preexisting Canadian gangs such as the Hells Angels, Brother’s Keepers, Red Scorpion, and United Nations gang. Precursors come through the Port of Vancouver, where less than 1% of cargo is inspected, enabling easy importation of chemicals. The guest asserts that the majority of fentanyl production now occurs in Canada, with a claim of 99% certainty, and cites an operative for the Sinaloa Cartel in Canada showing labs on West Coast resources. Labs are described as often in suburban areas on farmland or small residences, not just in large urban centers. The production is said to have started in 2016-2017 as cartel operations moved into Canada, with ongoing Canadian law enforcement aware since then but under-resourced to counter transnational crime groups. The RCMP head reportedly estimated thousands of organized crime groups, but CSA’s Canadian intelligence suggests 668, highlighting a disconnect between agencies. The main cartel presence in Canada is labeled as Sinaloa and CJNG, with CJNG now possibly dominant due to Sinaloa’s weakening position and alliance with New Generation Cartel. The Canadian fentanyl flow includes enforcers recruited from Canada, including Quebec and Ontario, who manage payments, protection, and border activities to facilitate drug movement and violence. Recruitment extends globally to the Balkans, Armenia, Australia, England, and other Commonwealth countries to leverage foreign nationals who can blend in and avoid detection. Group chats reveal Canadian area codes and explicit hits-for-hire offers, with examples of payments (e.g., 55,000 Canadian dollars for a hit) and weapon procurement requirements. The border dynamics are described as significant: the northern border remains underprotected, allowing cross-border trafficking. The guest mentions that, even with a U.S. military or law enforcement option, the cartel leadership central to the operation would resist intensely if confronted on Mexican soil, implying that a direct US-backed intervention could be costly and dangerous for the cartel. A notable case described is a “BC Superlab,” a large, sophisticated operation producing meth and fentanyl, recovered in rural BC and Surrey, BC. Authorities found 400 kilograms of meth, 54 kilograms of fentanyl, plus MDMA and cocaine, plus 46 handguns, 21 AR-15 style rifles, 14 submachine guns, two .50 cal rifles, explosives, body armor, and nearly $1 million in cash. The lab’s equipment included jacketed reactors and other specialized items, with large quantities of precursors (5,000 liters of liquid precursor and 10 tons of powder) and evidence they may have been producing P2P, a key meth precursor. The RCMP described the operation as extremely sophisticated, with a network of metal ducting to vent fumes and a setup suggesting an international cross-border network with potential ties to Mexican cartel operations and other global criminal networks. Health Canada is testing unusual equipment to see if it signals new production methods. Investigators emphasize that the drugs were destined for abroad and that Vancouver’s infrastructure could facilitate expansion into Asia-Pacific markets, including China, Japan, India, Indonesia, Australia, and New Zealand. Despite the scale of the operation, only one person had been arrested at the time of reporting, underscoring the magnitude of the challenge and the global reach of the drug networks. Overall, the conversation frames Canada as a critical, expanding node in an international fentanyl production and distribution network, with entrenched organizational complexity, cross-border logistics, and multilingual, multinational recruitment that complicates enforcement.

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The speaker claims the root of the fentanyl problem is the CCP, alleging that almost all fentanyl precursors originate from Mainland China, where hundreds of companies ship them globally. The CCP claims they don't make fentanyl, but instead provide all the necessary ingredients to Mexico. The speaker says that the CCP announced they would no longer sell one specific precursor, but there are 14 others that can be used to make fentanyl, and they are still shipping all of those. The speaker claims to have started an enterprise to target fentanyl precursor companies in Mainland China. The speaker states that these companies are now shipping precursors to places like India, and the Mexican cartels are manufacturing fentanyl in Mexico. Instead of going directly into America, the fentanyl is being flown into Vancouver, manufactured in Canada, and distributed globally from there.

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The discussion centers on British Columbia as a hub for cross-border drug trafficking and money laundering tied to Chinese organized crime and the CCP. They contend MDMA, meth, ketamine, fentanyl precursors from Chinese factories flood BC due to "effective no border controls, effectively no police, effectively no courts." A BC case involved a Chinese-trained scientist linked to the thousand talents plan who was caught red-handed picking up MDMA precursors; after ten court appearances the case was dropped. U.S. officials warn Canada cannot prosecute major Chinese drug trafficking and money laundering in BC. A DEA case in Arizona ties fentanyl precursors to a Vancouver-based network, with "100 kilograms of fentanyl precursors per month" arranged through Peter Peng to ship from China to LA, implicating CCP, United Front, and Sinaloa cartel. They criticize Premier David Eby and the BC ferries deal with a CCP-linked firm, and reference Willful Blindness, urging independent journalism.

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Every federal government from Mulroney to Trudeau has been compromised by agents of Communist China. Each administration was informed about this infiltration but chose to ignore the warnings due to negligence, self-interest, or partisanship. These governments were influenced by agents acting on behalf of the Chinese government, and we are aware of their identities.

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Americans are coming through Vancouver, with precursors from Guangdong province. The Chinese Communist Party is turning a blind eye to the RCMP's request for help during the Meng Wan Wangzhou incident. This allows the CCP to facilitate the reverse opium war, destabilizing and undermining democracies. The Chinese Communist Party could control and stop the 100,000 deaths from Fentanyl overdoses, but they choose not to. Vancouver is a major distribution point for these drugs, which are then sent back to Asia. The CCP's relationship with organized crime allows them to easily stop this flow, but they have no willingness to do so. This is part of their hybrid warfare strategy to destabilize democracies worldwide.

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Canada is losing thousands of young people to illicit fentanyl poisoning, which has become a mass murder weapon for Chinese communists and Mexican cartels. The biggest fentanyl lab in history was found in Vancouver, with ties to Chinese organized crime and biker gangs that have been hired to assassinate people in the United States. Canada needs to update its legal structures, as current laws hinder undercover police operations and contribute to low seizure statistics. Most of the drugs are going from Mexico to Canada and then being brought south into the Northwest United States on ships, but there is almost no port enforcement. The US needs Canada to update their legal structures and create a RICO act like in the United States and designate cartels as terrorists. We have to break the bank on fentanyl trafficking for these cartels and bring them down and take them out.

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Every federal government in Canada, from Mulroney to Trudeau, has been compromised by Chinese agents. Despite warnings from CSU, governments ignored the threat due to negligence, self-interest, or partisanship. Infiltration by Chinese agents led to questionable decisions benefiting China or self-interest. Municipal and provincial governments were also targeted. All governments were part of the problem, not the solution. It's not just China engaging in interference.

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The speaker asserts that every federal government from Mr. Mulroney to Mr. Trudeau has been compromised by agents of communist China. Every government were informed at one point or another. Every government chose to ignore ceases warning either by negligence, self interest or partnership partisanship, sorry. Every government were infiltrated by agent of influence acting on behalf of the Chinese government, and we knew who they were. The speaker states that every government took decisions about China that are questionable and can only be explained by interference exercised from within or motivated by self interest. Not only the sitting government have been compromised, but all federal political parties have been compromised at one point or another. The inaction of the federal government, all federal governments, were led to attacks on many municipal and provincial government. Ultimately, every government have been part of the problem, not the solution. And I and remember, not only China is practicing interference.

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Every federal government from Mulroney to Trudeau has been compromised by agents of Communist China. Each administration was informed at some point but chose to ignore the warnings due to negligence, self-interest, or partisanship. All governments have been infiltrated by agents acting on behalf of the Chinese government, and we are aware of their identities.

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I want to be very clear. We can prove that every federal government, from mister Mulroney to mister Trudeau, have been compromised by agent of the communist China. Every government were informed at one point or another. Every government chose to ignore CISO's warning either by negligence, self interest or partnership partisanship, sorry. Every government were infiltrated by agents of influence acting on behalf of the Chinese government, and we knew who they were.

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Speaker 0 says that 85% of the international narcotrafficking annually, "the 85 por 100 de los 1000 de 1000 de 1000000," is in the banks of the United States, and that the cartel should be investigated to uncover money laundering. They mention looking at fiscal permission data from the vice president, stating that there are more than $500,000,000,000 (five hundred billion) dollars annually in US banks, in legal banks. If they want to investigate a cartel, they should investigate the cartel of the north, because from the United States it directs all narcotrafficking of South America and of the world, and also directs the trafficking of opioids, etc. The speaker concludes that in the United States are the mafias, the true cartels.

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I discovered the United Front's connection to the Chinese mafia, known as the Triads, who are influential in New York. They engage in human trafficking, drug trafficking, and collaborate with government officials. They even control some police advisory boards. The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has infiltrated US law enforcement agencies, particularly in Chinese communities. When the NYPD investigates cases in Chinatown or Flushing, they often consult these advisory boards, which have Chinese agents who provide false information to protect their own operations. The CCP's influence is deeply concerning.

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Around 2016, during the Cash for Access scandal, a person linked to China's military intelligence and organized crime was seen sitting beside Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at a fundraiser. This person and his associates from Vancouver sent money to Trudeau's riding. This reveals the core of China's interference in Canada, involving the use of organized crime and the United Front Work Department. Government officials have expressed concerns about this interference, but little action has been taken. The Chinese government surrounds Canadian politicians, business leaders, and First Nations bands to exert influence. The RCMP is aware of the involvement of dishonest politicians in these interference operations.

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I'm hearing from high-level police officers that Canadians don't realize the extent of criminal money laundering in our cities. A "fentanyl czar" is needed, someone with credibility, to assure the U.S. government that the RCMP will cooperate with the DEA on wiretaps of Triad or cartel bosses in Canada. The U.S. Canada strike force on organized crime needs legal memorandums of understanding with Ottawa, not just language to avoid tariffs. This includes the FBI and DEA working with the fentanyl czar to bust Triad money laundering operations in Vancouver. Some of these bosses are connected to funding of the Trudeau Liberals, and the Trump administration knows it. Canada and the U.S. are now like Germany and Greece in the European Union; the U.S. doesn't trust our word anymore and needs to see concrete action.

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Canada is facing serious allegations of infiltration by international criminal organizations within its government. Whistleblower Lew Sabarin from the CBSA revealed a disturbing incident where armed men were caught smuggling illegal immigrants, only for the case to be covered up. He also reported that a senior CBSA manager ordered the destruction of passports belonging to serious criminals, hindering law enforcement efforts. After Sabarin planned to testify, his family was threatened by the Sinaloa cartel, leading him to believe a colleague leaked his address. His claims echo a 2019 CBSA report warning about transnational criminal organizations compromising government agencies. Despite raising these issues with various government officials, including the prime minister's office, no action has been taken. The situation highlights the presence of traitors in parliament and the infiltration of criminal organizations in government agencies.

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Multiple Canadian federal governments, from Mulroney to Trudeau, have been compromised by Chinese agents. Despite warnings, governments ignored the threat due to negligence, self-interest, or partisanship. Agents of influence acting for China infiltrated every government, known to authorities. Translation: Several Canadian federal governments, from Mulroney to Trudeau, have been infiltrated by Chinese agents. Despite warnings, governments ignored the threat due to negligence, self-interest, or partisanship. Agents acting on behalf of China infiltrated every government and were known to authorities.

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The RCMP mentioned a suspected connection to a Mexican cartel but didn't provide further details. A former head of the RCMP's transnational organized crime unit believes the operation involves significant contacts in cartel, Chinese, and Iranian networks, characterizing it as a corporation, not just gangs. Reports indicate increasing cooperation between international drug gangs, moving beyond the old narrative of them fighting each other. The RCMP stated the drugs were primarily destined for markets abroad. Vancouver possesses the logistical infrastructure, including ports, that cartels need to access the Asia Pacific market, which they haven't significantly tapped into in recent decades. Asia Pacific includes countries like China, Japan, India, Indonesia, Australia, and New Zealand.

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A former CBSA officer, Luke Sabrin, claims that transnational gangs have infiltrated Canadian government agencies, facilitating the entry of terrorists and spies into Canada. He asserts that CBSA databases and operations are compromised, posing a significant security risk due to systemic corruption and lack of accountability. Sabrin's allegations echo a 2019 CBSA threat brief highlighting the exploitation of CBSA systems by criminal organizations. He emphasizes the severity of the situation, noting that threats from groups like the Sinaloa Cartel have infiltrated government institutions, undermining trust in these agencies. Sabrin calls for action to restore faith in the system, expressing concern for the safety of CBSA officers and their families amidst this corruption.

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I want to be very clear: we can prove that every federal government, from Mulroney to Trudeau, has been compromised by agents of communist China. Every government was informed at some point, and every government chose to ignore warnings, whether through negligence, self-interest, or partisanship. Each government was infiltrated by agents of influence acting for the Chinese government, and we knew who they were.

Shawn Ryan Show

Katarina Szulc - Inside the Cartels' Secret Smuggling Operation in Port of Vancouver | SRS #212
Guests: Katarina Szulc
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Katarina Szulc, an investigative journalist, shares insights into her access to cartel members and the dynamics of organized crime in Mexico. She attributes her success to her genuine interest in the subject, a non-judgmental approach, and her ability to gain trust from those involved in organized crime. Szulc discusses the impact of Trump's designation of cartels as terrorist organizations, revealing that cartel members are largely unfazed, viewing it as a temporary issue tied to financial pipelines rather than a direct threat to their operations. She highlights a significant shift in cartel operations, indicating that much of the fentanyl production has moved from Mexico to Canada, where they exploit less stringent law enforcement and a vast, unmonitored border. Szulc details how the Sinaloa cartel has established labs in Canada, utilizing local organized crime networks to facilitate drug trafficking, while also emphasizing the challenges faced by Canadian law enforcement in addressing this issue. Szulc also discusses the cartels' diversification into other industries, such as agriculture and oil theft, noting that they have taken control of avocado orchards and are involved in stealing crude oil, generating billions in revenue. She explains how the cartels use propaganda, particularly through music and social media, to glamorize their lifestyle and recruit new members, often targeting impressionable youth. The conversation touches on the relationship between cartels and political figures, suggesting that corruption runs deep within the Mexican government, with cartels influencing policies that benefit their operations. Szulc expresses concern over the potential for violence if U.S. forces were to intervene in Mexico, as cartels would likely retaliate fiercely. She concludes by discussing the need for a multifaceted approach to combat cartels, emphasizing the importance of addressing the root causes of cartel influence, such as propaganda and financial pipelines, rather than merely targeting leadership figures. Szulc's work aims to shed light on the complexities of organized crime and its far-reaching implications on society.

The Joe Rogan Experience

Joe Rogan Experience #1408 - Ed Calderon
Guests: Ed Calderon
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Joe Rogan welcomes Ed Calderon back to discuss the ongoing violence in Mexico, particularly involving cartels. They talk about a recent incident in Tamaulipas where a family was shot after running a cartel roadblock, highlighting the dangers of traveling in cartel-controlled areas. Calderon advises avoiding these areas and shares that cartel members often steal vehicles, especially four-wheel drives, for their operations. Calderon explains that the violence is escalating, with the Mormon community in Mexico feeling the impact, leading many to leave due to safety concerns. He discusses the complex relationship between the U.S. and Mexican governments regarding cartel designations and military actions, noting that the current Mexican president has a leftist agenda that complicates U.S. intervention. The conversation shifts to the financial operations of cartels, revealing that they have diversified their investments into legitimate businesses, real estate, and cryptocurrency, making it difficult to track their finances. Calderon mentions that some banks have been implicated in money laundering for cartels, raising concerns about the implications of designating cartels as terrorist organizations. Calderon argues that the cartels do exert political influence in Mexico, engaging in acts that could be classified as terrorism, such as political assassinations. He emphasizes that the U.S. and Mexico share a mutual problem regarding drug trafficking and that solutions must be approached collaboratively. They discuss the historical context of the drug war in Mexico, with Calderon recounting his experiences working with the Mexican government during the early days of the drug war. He notes that the militarization of the drug war has led to increased violence and corruption, with cartels often outmaneuvering law enforcement. Calderon expresses concern about the future, suggesting that the U.S. may eventually need to intervene militarily in Mexico due to the escalating violence and instability. He highlights the need for a comprehensive approach to address the root causes of the drug problem, including economic inequality and corruption. The discussion touches on the cultural differences between Mexico and the U.S., with Calderon noting that mental health issues and the use of psychotropic drugs are less prevalent in Mexico compared to the U.S. He reflects on the challenges of immigration and the complexities of U.S.-Mexico relations, emphasizing the importance of understanding the realities on both sides of the border. Calderon concludes by stressing the interconnectedness of the U.S. and Mexico, suggesting that both nations will need to work together to address the challenges posed by cartels and drug trafficking. He encourages listeners to stay informed and engaged with the issues affecting both countries.
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