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fuagf

04/18/22 6:14 PM

#410064 RE: stockmule #410016

stockmule, Why didn't you check your reply before saying something which is patently not true.

"They don't buy our guns here too exspensive they can do better from other countries
Now, stockmule, give us a link to all your posts decrying the flow of American guns from the U.S.A. to Mexican drug cartels.
"

(and in your post how is a reader supposed to differentiate between your words, and mine you c/p from the post you replied to}

You guys are repugnant for saying stuff which is obviously untrue without checking it. It only happens here with conservative trolls like you.

We make mistakes, sure, still we make the effort to post factual stuff.
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fuagf

04/18/22 7:04 PM

#410070 RE: stockmule #410016

stockmule, Mexican cartels kill Mexicans with American guns. They get most of their guns from the U.S.

"They don't buy our guns here too exspensive they can do better from other countries
Now, stockmule, give us a link to all your posts decrying the flow of American guns from the U.S.A. to Mexican drug cartels.
"

Where do Mexican drug cartels get their guns? Often, the United States
[....]
The Mexican government estimates that more than half a million guns are smuggled from the U.S. each year, arming Mexico's deadly cartel wars. Officials in Mexico — which has just one gun store and issues fewer than 50 gun permits a year — blame lax U.S. gun laws and the prevalence of gun shops in America for the bulk of weapons that allow cartels to flourish. Earlier this month, the Mexican government sued U.S. gun manufacturers in federal court, accusing them of fueling the violence.
[...]
The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration blames CJNG and the Sinaloa Cartel for the bulk of America's illicit fentanyl .. https://www.dea.gov/documents/2021/03/02/2020-national-drug-threat-assessment , the top killer during the deadliest drug epidemic in U.S. history.
[...]
Meanwhile, the Mexican government blames prominent U.S. gun manufacturers for the influx of cartel weapons in its lawsuit against them in federal court in Boston.
"Almost all guns recovered at crime scenes in Mexico — 70% to 90% of them — were trafficked from the U.S.," the Mexican government claims in its complaint.
P - An estimated 20 attorneys, many based in Texas, are expected to unite to represent Mexico, including six companies they blame for the bulk of recovered crime guns there: Smith & Wesson, Beretta, Century Arms, Colt, Glock and Ruger.
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