
THEY DON'T WANT YOU TO KNOW WHAT'S REALLY HAPPENING IN MEXICO TODAY
You see the headlines. You hear the talking heads on the evening news. They tell you it’s just “cartel violence.” They tell you it’s “Mexico’s problem.” They tell you the border is about “migration.” But if you’ve been paying attention—really paying attention—you know that what’s happening south of the Rio Grande right now is something far more sinister, far more coordinated, and far more connected to the powers-that-be in Washington D.C. than any mainstream outlet will ever admit.
Let’s connect the dots. Because the truth about Mexico today isn’t just about crime. It’s about control. It’s about a deliberate strategy to destabilize a sovereign nation, reshape its political landscape, and ultimately, to weaken the American people in the process.
Wake up. The chessboard is bigger than you think.
First, let’s talk about the narrative they’re selling you. You hear “Mexico is collapsing.” You see images of burned-out trucks, armed convoys, and mass graves. And you’re supposed to believe this is just the result of a drug war that’s been raging for decades. But ask yourself: Why now? Why, in the last six months, has the violence in states like Sinaloa, Michoacán, and Chiapas reached a fever pitch that even seasoned Mexican citizens are calling “unprecedented”? Why are we seeing coordinated attacks on police stations, military convoys, and even entire towns being “cleansed” by unknown forces?
The mainstream answer is easy: the Sinaloa Cartel is splintering. The arrest of Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada and Joaquín Guzmán López (El Chapo’s son) in July 2024 supposedly triggered a civil war between the old guard and the new generation. But that’s a convenient story for the sheeple. The deeper truth is that this “splintering” was engineered. It was a controlled demolition of the cartel’s hierarchy, designed to create chaos that serves a much larger agenda.
Think about it. Who benefits from a destabilized Mexico? Not the Mexican people. Not the cartels, who actually prefer stability for their business. No, the biggest winners are the globalist financiers and the U.S. deep state apparatus that has been pushing for a North American “integration” agenda for years. A Mexico in chaos is a Mexico that is ripe for external intervention. A Mexico in chaos is a Mexico that cannot resist the economic and political demands of its northern neighbor. And a Mexico in chaos is a Mexico that will see its sovereignty eroded, piece by piece, until it becomes nothing more than a subordinate province of a greater continental empire.
Look at the timing. Coincidence? I think not. In early 2025, the U.S. government quietly ramped up demands for Mexico to adopt “security reforms” that essentially give American intelligence agencies on-the-ground operational control in Mexican law enforcement. They’re calling it “joint task forces,” but anyone with a brain knows that’s just a euphemism for occupation by another name. Meanwhile, the Biden-Harris administration (and now, the Trump administration’s renewed focus on “border security”) has been pushing Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum to accept more U.S. military advisors, more surveillance drones, and more “technical assistance” that conveniently places American boots on Mexican soil.
And Sheinbaum? She’s in a trap. She was elected on a wave of hope, promising to continue the legacy of AMLO (Andrés Manuel López Obrador) and prioritize the Mexican people. But the deep state doesn’t care about elections. They care about control. So they’ve made it impossible for her to succeed. Every time she tries to assert Mexican sovereignty, a new “cartel massacre” erupts. Every time she tries to negotiate with the cartels (as AMLO famously did, reducing violence for years), a new wave of attacks is unleashed that makes her look weak. It’s a classic pressure campaign: “Agree to our terms, or we’ll make sure the violence gets so bad that your own people demand you step down.”
But the real smoking gun isn’t just the violence. It’s the money.
Let’s talk about the fentanyl crisis. The media screams that Mexico is the main source of fentanyl killing Americans. And yes, precursor chemicals flow south, and finished product flows north. But who is really behind the production? The cartels are just local distributors. The real chemical know-how, the precursor supplies, and the global financing comes from… well, you can guess. The same banking institutions that were caught laundering drug money in the 90s. The same intelligence agencies that were caught arming the Contras with drug profits in the 80s. The same CIA-adjacent networks that have been running the global narcotics trade as a way to fund off-the-books operations for decades.
The fentanyl crisis is a weapon. It’s being used to push a narrative that Mexico is a “failed state” that needs to be “managed” by international forces. It’s being used to justify the militarization of the border, which, by the way, has nothing to do with stopping drugs (they come through ports of entry) and everything to do with controlling the movement of people. It’s being used to create a state of emergency that allows the federal government to seize more power, both at home and abroad.
And don’t even get me started on the “migration” angle. The caravans from Central America that are suddenly flooding into Mexico? They’re not just desperate people. They’re a geopolitical battering ram. They are being used to overwhelm Mexico’s social services, to create humanitarian crises that require international “aid” (read: control), and to put pressure on the Mexican government to crack down on its own citizens. The goal is to turn Mexico into a buffer zone—a wall of poverty and violence that separates the American elite from the rest of the hemisphere.
So, what is the real situation in Mexico today? It’s a
Final Thoughts
After reading the deep dive into "Mexico Hoy," it’s clear that the country is caught in a familiar paradox: the daily headlines scream of cartel violence and political fractures, but the streets still hum with an unbreakable cultural rhythm. Any veteran journalist knows that the real story here isn't just the crisis, but the resilience of a society that refuses to let the chaos define its identity. The takeaway is sobering yet hopeful—Mexico is not a failed state, but a nation perpetually fighting for its own soul, and that fight is what makes it endlessly compelling to cover.