Videos Del Narco 2015
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Videos del narco 2015 Continue The blogger is now talking about the release of his book, Dying for Truth - which comes out in Spanish and English - and a summary of what lived and published in the first two years of the blog. The warning was direct and cruel: You go on. Someone painted it with a sharp, sharp object on the back of the unfortunate, took it off and then sent the video to two people who make a Narco blog. Anyone who lives in Mexico - starting with national and foreign journalists - know what Narco's blog is all about, first published on March 2, 2010 and reporting - sometimes in thorough and gruesome detail - the crimes committed by drug cartels. Since then it has spawned imitation, sour criticism and millions of followers. In an audio interview via Skype, Lucy sounds younger than her age. It's a cheerful, dry voice. Incompatible with any problem of the drug cartel and its menacing violence. But in Mexico sometimes everything that sounds remotely hilarious seems to be located light years away from drugs. According to Lucy, what caused her to give up her carefree and fun life and create a blog was the growing censorship, growing lack of professionalism (media), indifference, and how they began to disqualify the citizens themselves when they made complaints. The media and authorities said they had the stuff of imagination of people in northern Mexico, especially Tamaulipas and Nuevo Leon, saying it was psychosis and to attract attention that's why she and a computer expert friend decided to start a blog. The information we publish comes to us by email. There are many kinds of people who send us photos, videos, data. Over time, it became a network of contacts. They still work like this: it processes information. It's all about computing and cybersecurity. According to a study by the research group Microsoft, in Mexico more and more people are using social media - especially Twitter - to report (and learn) about the war on drug trafficking and to disseminate information about shootings, arrests and clashes between cartels and police. This is particularly true in that Mexico is known as a zone of silence where the media have refused - sometimes publicly - to cover the daily violent facts surrounding drug trafficking. By filling this gap, Facebook and Twitter bloggers and account managers have become not only the target of posters, but also of them ensure that they have been hit by cyberattacks and threats from the outset. There's a lot of news that the military sent us, but we found it. And more from the authorities, who sometimes tried to minimize a situation or divert attention, but when they did, they were very easy to detect. Tamaulipas' Facebook page will close for good. How uncertain can go was known this Sunday afternoon when the Facebook page of Valor Por Tamaulipas - where the war on drug trafficking was reported in this northern state - announced that it would finally close in eight days. At the height of the extensive communique, the main reason was absent: according to the administrator, at least one person he trusted and cooperated with was connected to both the Gulf cartel and the authorities. For this reason, he asked citizens to question the identity of those who claim to speak in the name of Valor Tamaulipas and other similar sites or accounts. This is what Lucy also stresses: beware of false accounts. Some stop at narco's blog on Twitter, but there is only one official: @InfoNarco. Just as there is only one blog address: www.blogdelnarco.com.However the game of counterintelligence and cross-information is not the worst of the problems. It's violence. In an interview she gave to international media in recent days for the release of her book Dying for Truth, the blogger confirmed that the two people killed in 2011 in Tamaulipas - a fact that at the time caused a stir because it was pointed out that they were tuiters - were actually his employees. They were frequent employees. Suddenly we didn't know anything else. They didn't send us anything... Then we heard from them, but through other people: they sent us a video where they were alive ... They were tortured... and then the images of them are made. After that they continued to send videos of people ... I think they used a knife ... On the back they have marked messages against us follow you BDN as the blog is known . All this cost them dearly in their personal lives. In Narco Blog they publish information with graphic details that other media omit . We don't live. He lives for a blog. Sometimes we will last only 15 days in the house, in the apartment or in the basement. It's: move and leave everything! For two years I don't buy new jeans, shoes or lipstick because I'm not going to wear them. I learned to live very strictly. Not before, it was very shallow, but life put me in it. I am a very social person, imagine the difficulties and frustration of not telling anything and stay as if you were in a spiritual retreat in front of family, friends. First of all. You can't With anyone. I'd like to go see a psychologist or talk to a friend, but I can't. And I'll never be able to. In the first two years, the hardest, several times they thought about leaving. But never both at the same time. Now they no longer hesitate. It was in the first place. Then we said, no, no matter what happens. That's why the title of the book Dying for The Truth. You reach a stage in your life when you say: Why didn't you get married, why didn't you have children, why didn't you walk like a beginner? ... Because I had something else to do and this thing did a lot of people have the freedom I didn't have. At this point Lucy's cheerful, dry voice breaks down and acquires the depth and nuance of sadness that make it sound many years older. I don't make plans for the future. Plans always tend to break in half... I hope I can be free and have a normal life. I want to live. But maybe for this I will have to leave Mexico. The blogger is now talking about the release of his book, Dying for Truth - which comes out in Spanish and English - and a summary of what lived and published in the first two years of the blog. The warning was direct and cruel: You go on. Someone painted it with a sharp, sharp object on the back of the unfortunate, took it off and then sent the video to two people who make a Narco blog. Anyone who lives in Mexico - starting with national and foreign journalists - know what Narco's blog is all about, first published on March 2, 2010 and reporting - sometimes in thorough and gruesome detail - the crimes committed by drug cartels. Since then it has spawned imitation, sour criticism and millions of followers. In an audio interview via Skype, Lucy sounds younger than her age. It's a cheerful, dry voice. Incompatible with any problem of the drug cartel and its menacing violence. But in Mexico sometimes everything that sounds remotely hilarious seems to be located light years away from drugs. According to Lucy, what caused her to give up her carefree and fun life and create a blog was the growing censorship, growing lack of professionalism (media), indifference, and how they began to disqualify the citizens themselves when they made complaints. The media and authorities said they had the stuff of imagination of people in northern Mexico, especially Tamaulipas and Nuevo Leon, saying it was psychosis and to attract attention that's why she and a computer expert friend decided to start a blog. The information we publish by email. There are many kinds of people who send us photos, videos, data. Over time, it became a network of contacts. They still work like this: it processes information. It's all about computing and cybersecurity. According to a study by the research group Microsoft, in Mexico more and more people are using social media - especially Twitter - to report (and learn) about the war on drug trafficking and to disseminate information about shootings, arrests and clashes between cartels and police. This is particularly true in that Mexico is known as a zone of silence where the media have refused - sometimes publicly - to cover the daily violent facts surrounding drug trafficking. By filling this gap, Facebook and Twitter bloggers and account managers have become the target not only of the posters, but also of the authorities themselves. Lucy claims that from the beginning they suffered from cyberattacks and threats. There's a lot of news that the military sent us, but we found it. And more from the authorities, who sometimes tried to minimize a situation or divert attention, but when they did, they were very easy to detect. Tamaulipas' Facebook page will close for good. How uncertain can go was known this Sunday afternoon when the Facebook page of Valor Por Tamaulipas - where the war on drug trafficking was reported in this northern state - announced that it would finally close in eight days. At the height of the extensive communique, the main reason was absent: according to the administrator, at least one person he trusted and cooperated with was connected to both the Gulf cartel and the authorities.