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<p>&nbsp;&nbsp; <strong> I read in your book that Mexico is due for a revolution about every 100 years or so. The last one was in the first part of the Twentieth Century and you said they are about ready for another one. Do you think the drug war presently being fought between the cartels and the Mexican government is actually just a revolution being funded by drug money? Some of the other analysts I work with think it is, and others think it’s not. Since you seem frank about all things Mexican, what do you think?</strong></p>

<p><strong>New America Media</strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The contents of Maria Teresa Fuentes’ immigration file take up an entire table. Legal appeals, government letters carrying bad news, attorney advertisements clipped from newspapers, technical explanations of cryptic immigration laws, a Spanish prayer printed on blue paper… Collectively, they tell the story of a fight that’s been going on for years; one that Fuentes doesn’t want to see come to an end. At least, not like this.</p>

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<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; El aire en el salón es húmedo y enrarecido, bajo las lozas color durazno se levanta una jaula cuadrada subida por un motor hidráulico que rechina un poco.</p>
<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; EL General Gilberto Landeros, jefe de la Segunda Zona Militar, cree que el elevador se trababa seguido en el trasiego de droga hasta la frontera. Para operarlo, ahora son tres soldados los que lo guían por medio de una gruesa cuerda roja para ayudar al motor.</p>