I'm not sure how this has been ignored by the media so much, but I've been following it for the past few months. The administration is trying to keep this under the radar, although I think it has the potential to blow up pretty soon here.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Fast_and_Furious
9/29/2011 5:25:19 PM
The Mexican Drug War, as a whole, has been ignored by the media.
9/29/2011 5:32:05 PM
The entire Drug War has been an unmitigated fiasco.But it's ok to waste money and lives as long as people believe the government is hard on drug users!!!![Edited on September 29, 2011 at 6:02 PM. Reason : .]
9/29/2011 6:01:35 PM
I can't remember if I dreamt this or saw it in a fictional TV show...But didn't they actually put trackers on a lot of guns, but there wasn't enough range and the tracker batteries died quickly anyway...?It was something extra, extra stupid if I recall.
9/29/2011 6:11:45 PM
http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/tue-june-21-2011/the-fast-and-the-furious---mexico-grift
9/29/2011 7:08:29 PM
This was government that became comfortable with the bureaucracy and felt comfortable that they wouldn't be caught. To fix this, the issue we should focus on is how our legislation of the illegality of certain substances drives an entire economy, a country, based on violence, infiltration, and dominance.
9/29/2011 11:46:07 PM
if you're a member of the NRA you'd be getting emails about it at least once a week for a while now....sigh.
9/30/2011 7:58:22 AM
I've been wanting to start this thread... but was too lazy. Thank you.
9/30/2011 8:36:19 AM
9/30/2011 10:09:20 AM
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2011/10/03/documents-suggest-holder-knew-about-fast-and-furious-earlier-than-claimed/%22%20+%20dotomiDmm%20+%20%22/%22%20+%20dotomiDmm%20+%20%22/%22%20+%20dotomiDmm%20+%20%22/?intcmp=obinsitehttp://www.foxnews.com/politics/2011/10/04/house-republicans-to-request-special-counsel-to-probe-holder-on-fast-and/[Edited on October 4, 2011 at 2:26 PM. Reason : .]
10/4/2011 2:26:15 PM
New documents show Attorney General Eric Holder was briefed in July 2010
10/5/2011 2:20:45 PM
Now CBS is squashing the reporter investigating F&F.http://www.weeklystandard.com/blogs/cbs-news-silencing-fast-and-furious-reporter-due-white-house-pressure_595068.htmlI'm sure there's no pressure from the WH.Are we living in the Soviet Union?
10/6/2011 7:38:18 AM
Well this admin has a lot of practice at getting and/or hushing people themselves. ATF agents were threatened, fired, etc. for even speaking ill about this program. Obama == Saddam
10/6/2011 8:40:18 AM
Fast and Furious weapons were found in Mexico cartel enforcer's home
10/10/2011 12:17:05 PM
Anybody see the AG's presser today?It reminds me of December 1998.
10/11/2011 5:59:40 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T5I5Z0deBsM&feature=youtu.beDAT SCANDAL
10/11/2011 6:02:16 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p58KzMMpILY&feature=youtube_gdata_playerhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4GgPo2cHFq0&feature=youtube_gdata_player
10/11/2011 6:11:18 PM
Enough of that Bill Clinton crap, Holder just got subpoenaed.http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2011/10/12/congressional-investigators-issue-subpoena-for-holder-others-i-fast-and-furious-probe/?hpt=hp_t2
10/12/2011 11:14:48 AM
Guns don't kill people, people kill people.
10/12/2011 11:25:34 AM
Especially when they're given guns by the government.We'll get more details in time, I'm sure, but this is my current theory. Obama gave a speech in Mexico shortly before the operation began, basically talking about how they needed to crack down on drug cartels/weapons, and how the majority of guns that the cartels have come from north of the border.What better way to justify new gun control laws than to suddenly have an explosion in the number of weapons available to drug cartels? It would also increase drug-related violence. All around, it'd be great for the administration, since they'd be able to seem to like they were cracking down on something, even though it was something that they themselves orchestrated.Now, maybe our leaders aren't actually evil. Maybe they're just stupid. We've given weapons to bad guys many times before. I don't know why this time is any different.
10/12/2011 11:35:46 AM
^
10/12/2011 11:40:45 AM
10/12/2011 2:20:45 PM
I'd say this scandal could the biggest example of government incompetence in the last 25 years (since Iran Contra) but it's probably not and I just can't think of all the more incompetent ones. Still, it's stupid. It's gotta be somewhere in the top 10.I mean, how the hell did a program like this get all the way through the planning stages without someone yelling very loudly "What do you mean we're selling them REAL guns and NOT going to be putting any kind of tracking device on them?" They got overconfident and it's rightly coming back to bite them in the ass.[Edited on October 12, 2011 at 2:31 PM. Reason : /]
10/12/2011 2:30:41 PM
Call me a tin hatter, but this operation has too many coincidences to NOT be a fabrication of left-wingers attempting to create a problem to enact gun controls that otherwise wouldn't be passed.though they're still trying that, but bypassing the congress (sort of) via the U.N. ATT
10/12/2011 2:33:12 PM
You're a tin hatter.The problem with this scandal isn't the guns themselves, it's the stupidity and arrogance that it took to sell them to drug dealers and not expect things to end badly.And I'm not sure things can really play out the way you'd expect them to even if nobody had found out that the guns were coming from our government. People expect drug dealers to be able to get their hands on high powered weaponry, their use of those weapons wouldn't cause any more substantial outrage against the guns themselves.Also, there have been better opportunities in the last 3 years to enact stricter gun control laws. Gilford's shooting was a prime chance that was waved off, or when the Tea Partiers were doing their open carry demonstrations.I haven't even seen a spike in the leftist blogs calling for more gun restrictions, just complaints about the utter stupidity and annoying arrogance of this program.[Edited on October 12, 2011 at 2:37 PM. Reason : .]
10/12/2011 2:36:18 PM
Fair enough, but can explain why the federal government would purposefully engage in an operation to deliberately allow illegal sales of firearms to straw buyers/cartels and NOT track them? What would have been the operational purpose? What was the end goal?You haven't seen that because this plan was foiled... why would leftists use this to promote their agenda now? It has been poisoned. And, if you were actually paying attention to this issue, you would have seen that the Washington Post did call for stricter laws, directly based on ATF's initial and fabricated reports of the operation.]
10/12/2011 2:40:57 PM
They were tracking them, with people. Which was wholly inadequate. If you really want to buy into a conspiracy, tell me what's a more likely scenario. Drug runners along the border are suddenly armed with higher powered weapons than they might have usually had. Civilians and Cops die.Will people blame the guns, or the drug cartels. The latter seems far more likely. If you want to believe a conspiracy, then the more realistic scenario is that they were trying to drum up support for stricter drug enforcement laws (which are being challenged nationally) by reestablishing the cartels as a boogeyman.
10/12/2011 2:44:39 PM
Whoa. The guns were not tracked. Well, they were for short durations/distances, then allowed to go free. They certainly weren't tracked across the border, and Mexican officials and ATF agents in Mexico weren't even informed of the operation. These two groups would have been required to be part of the operation, if the guns were actually being tracked. Further, agents and sources have already stated that agents were told to stop tracking after certain durations, even those not crossing the border. Part of this operation's tactics was NOT fully tracking the firearms, that has been well determined.How can you say they were really tracked, when the whole scandal is about the lack of tracking these firearms?[Edited on October 12, 2011 at 3:02 PM. Reason : .]
10/12/2011 3:00:18 PM
They were tracked and you just admitted they were tracked, they just weren't tracked in a way which was in any sense adequate to what they were supposed to be attempting. They were poorly tracked.Whether that was by intent or by incompetence I don't know. It could simply be that whoever decided on how they were going to track the weapons was too stupid to realize that once they hit Mexico all attempts to track them would be pointless.And as for not informing the Mexican government, well if you had come up with a harebrained scheme like this would you want to admit to your allies that you're about to arm their enemies?Unfortunately for you, if you want to convince people that there's a conspiracy here you're going to need more than "well I just don't understand how they could be so stupid."[Edited on October 12, 2011 at 3:09 PM. Reason : /]
10/12/2011 3:07:27 PM
When an agent tracks illegally purchased firearms for just two hours (and away from Mexico) and then is instructed to stop tracking, there is an operational problem, much more than "poor" tracking. These firearms were purposefully not fully tracked, allowed to go out of sight, and not one purchaser was arrested for their actions. Not one.And yes, I think the U.S./Mexico could reach an agreement on how to track firearms in mexico. But you can't say with a straight face that U.S. officials didn't consider the fact that they couldn't track these in Mexico without that government's support, especially when the "purpose" of this operation was to track illegal firearms to mexican drug cartels in mexico.And I never said or alluded to "well I just don't understand how they could be so stupid.". I have laid out some of what the ATF did and asked what your opinion is on the issue.[Edited on October 12, 2011 at 3:15 PM. Reason : .]
10/12/2011 3:12:31 PM
My dad worked for the DoD for 15 years, and my wife just got done with contracting stints at the DoJ and the OCC.I can easily see how something that stupid could have happened.[Edited on October 12, 2011 at 3:15 PM. Reason : .]
10/12/2011 3:15:22 PM
While I agree that there is a lot of stupid within the DOJ, DOD, and ATF, that simply isn't the cause of this scandal. You said that I was going with "how are they so stupid" when I didn't, but that's exactly what you just said for your argument. It simply isn't plausible that NO ONE in the government never thought about how to track firearms within mexico when that was the entire "purpose" of the operation.I am mistaken. People within the gov't did speak out about this. Several agents at the very beginning of this operation questioned the tactics and planning. They were threatened by superiors and told to fall in line or face certain consequences.[Edited on October 12, 2011 at 3:23 PM. Reason : .]
10/12/2011 3:18:04 PM
You're right in that I'm conflating "isn't plausible" and "how could they be so stupid", and I apologize for putting words in your mouth.I'm sure SOMEONE in the government thought of it at some point. There were probably a few meetings scheduled about it in which at best half of the people involved in the decision were able to attend due to conflicts (that's sorta how the DoJ works). Ultimately I'd be surprised if they ever got all the decision makers in one room long enough to explain the obvious gaping holes in the plan.
10/12/2011 3:27:30 PM
10/12/2011 3:53:31 PM
It's the "this is our guy" mentality. Unfortunately it's a mentality so pervasive in politics that it's become almost impossible for them to get anything done.Issa has don't some stupid things with his committee, and is generally a prat, but this isn't one of those stupid things.Someone should go to jail over this. If it was part of some bigger plan then they should be jailed for conspiracy, and if it was just rampant stupidity then they should be jailed for gross negligence.
10/12/2011 4:07:55 PM
Someone should go to jail over this? Really? The righteous indignation from people over this is so fucking laughable when contrasted with the relative silence from those same people over Iraq. Where was all the fire and brim stone when we found out that nearly 5000 American troops and 1 million Iraqis died due to a bunch of lies from the previous administration?http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OgfzqulvhlQIt's an old one, but it puts things in perspective just a wee bit. This doesn't even register on the scale when compared to what the Bush administration did. Get the fuck out of here with this petty bullshit.
10/12/2011 4:18:39 PM
People should go to jail over Iraq too. The whole fiasco there was pointless and thousands died as a result.Never said anybody shouldn't go to jail over Iraq. Unfortunately, this administration is absolutely unwilling to prosecute the previous administration over that disaster.Somehow, I doubt that if Obama loses the next election whoever is in charge will be as willing to forgive. They'll take any chance they can get to have people from this administration sitting in jail.
10/12/2011 4:33:12 PM
^^gg comparing incomparable situations[Edited on October 12, 2011 at 4:35 PM. Reason : ^^]
10/12/2011 4:35:45 PM
You can compare apples to oranges if your basis is "which fruit would you rather have in the morning." Likewise, you can compare this with Iraq if all you're concerned about is one detail like whether or not someone should go to jail over either mess.
10/12/2011 4:44:13 PM
You want to throw Eric Holder in jail over this? Fine, go for it. But first lets throw George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, Karl Rove, Jon Ashcroft, Donald Rumsfeld, Condoleezza Rice, Paul Wolfowitz, William Kristol, and Richard Perle in jail first. Someone lied, people died, someone should pay, that's the basic argument right?. The only thing "incomparable" here is the scale.
10/12/2011 4:54:21 PM
I really hate to be pragmatic about this, but the likelihood of getting Holder up in front of Congress about this is much higher than getting someone from the Bush Administration back in front of Congress.A: Obama's administration doesn't have the political will to prosecute those crimes, but the Republicans in the House have been chomping at the bit for a real reason to bring down a portion of Obama's government.B: Not that it matters, the higher ups will get pardoned in the interest of "national security." Some middle-manager might see some time behind bars, but they'll probably get their sentence commuted like Scooter.
10/12/2011 5:11:41 PM
11/2/2011 1:34:10 AM
round'em up. time for the dominoes to start falling
11/2/2011 7:42:54 AM