Mexico Is the New Venezuela — And We’re Pretending Not to See It

MEXICO-WELFARE-SYSTEM

The Neighbor That Acts Like An Enemy.

For years, Americans have been told to think of Mexico as a “partner,” a “friend,” a “vital ally.” That comforting fiction collapses the moment you look at reality. Mexico today behaves less like a sovereign nation aligned with U.S. interests and more like a narco-state with diplomatic cover — closer in spirit to Venezuela than a democratic neighbor. The difference is scale, proximity, and the fact that its chaos is already spilling across our border in plain sight.

A Government That Sides With Dictators And Cartels

When the United States moved decisively against Nicolás Maduro, a cartel-backed autocrat who turned Venezuela into a criminal enterprise, Mexico didn’t cheer the removal of a tyrant. It condemned it. Loudly. Repeatedly. Mexico’s ruling political class rushed to defend a dictator whose regime trafficked drugs, crushed dissent, and exported misery.

That reaction wasn’t a misunderstanding. It was a confession. Mexico’s current leadership has a long, documented habit of providing political oxygen to left-wing autocracies, from Venezuela to Cuba to Nicaragua. This isn’t neutrality. It’s ideological alignment — and it places Mexico firmly on the wrong side of the Western Hemisphere’s struggle between criminal authoritarianism and fragile democracy.

Cartels Are The Real Power In Mexico

Let’s dispense with polite euphemisms. The Mexican state does not control large portions of its territory. The cartels do. They tax, they recruit, they arm, they govern. They run logistics networks more sophisticated than some national militaries, with intelligence, financing, and enforcement arms that operate openly.

These organizations are not street gangs. They are paramilitary forces — military-age men trained, armed, and disciplined — and they are already on American soil. Not hypothetically. Not someday. Now. They move fentanyl, weapons, cash, and people across a border that exists mostly on paper. To deny this is willful blindness.

The Myth Of Mexican Cooperation

American officials love to point to “historic security cooperation.” What does that cooperation look like in practice? Low-level arrests, selective extraditions, and just enough activity to preserve trade privileges and diplomatic goodwill. What never seems to happen is accountability for cartel-linked politicians, generals, or bureaucrats. The heads remain intact while the foot soldiers are offered up as proof of progress.

This mirrors Venezuela’s descent almost perfectly. A captured state, a politicized military, criminal enterprises fused with government authority, and an elite that uses anti-American rhetoric as cover for corruption. The only difference is that Mexico is next door — and deeply embedded in U.S. supply chains.

The Drug Army In Plain Sight

The most dangerous lie is that this is merely a crime problem. It isn’t. It’s a national security problem. Cartel networks operate with the discipline of armies and the reach of multinational corporations. They exploit mass migration routes, embed operatives among civilians, and treat the U.S. border as a strategic seam to be exploited, not respected.

Every overdose statistic, every border town overwhelmed, every community hollowed out by synthetic opioids is evidence of a hostile force achieving its objectives without firing a shot.

Denial As Policy

Mexico’s leadership condemns American action against narco-dictators while insisting it cannot confront its own cartels. That contradiction tells you everything. A government that cannot or will not dismantle criminal armies within its borders — yet lectures the U.S. for doing so elsewhere — is not a partner. It’s a liability.

Bottom Line

Mexico today is not “as bad as Venezuela” because of ideology alone. It’s worse in one crucial respect: proximity. A cartel-infested state aligned with autocrats, hostile to U.S. action, and incapable of controlling its territory is already projecting power northward. The drug army is here. The damage is done daily. Pretending otherwise doesn’t make us diplomatic — it makes us delusional.

We are so screwed.

— Steve

Thank you for visiting with us today. — Steve 

 

“The object in life is not to be on the side of the majority, but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane.” — Marcus Aurelius

“Nullius in verba”– take nobody’s word for it!
“Acta non verba” — actions not words

A smiling man wearing sunglasses, a cap, and casual outdoor clothing outdoors in front of trees, representing citizen journalism and free speech advocacy.

About Me

I have over 40 years of experience in management consulting, spanning finance, technology, media, education, and political data processing. 

From sole proprietorships to Fortune 500 companies, I have turned around companies and managed their decline. All of which gives me a unique perspective on screwing and getting screwed.

Feel free to e-mail me at steve@onecitizenspeaking.com

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