THE ARMY IS PREPPING FOR BATTLES IN MEGACITIES

According to Army Times, our Army is now concentrating on fighting in ‘megacities’ of 20 million or more people against “criminal and extremist groups” who can “influence the lives of the population while undermining the authority of the state.”

“It is inevitable that at some point the United States Army will be asked to operate in a megacity and currently the Army is ill-prepared to do so,” reported Army Chief of Staff Gen. Ray Odierno’s Strategic Studies Group.

The military isn’t allowed to serve as police on American soil, but once the jihadists Obama has been bringing into the U.S. via our open border commits serious acts of terror, expect that to be thrown out the window as America has already been declared a ‘battlefield’ per S.1867, or the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA).

There are the largest cities as of 2015.

Rank Megacity Country Continent Population
1 Tokyo Japan Japan Asia 37,900,000
2 Delhi India India Asia 26,580,000
3 Seoul South Korea South Korea Asia 26,100,000
4 Shanghai China China Asia 25,400,000
5 Mumbai India India Asia 23,920,000
6 Mexico City Mexico Mexico North America 22,200,000
7 Beijing China China Asia 21,650,000
8 Sao Paulo Brazil Brazil South America 21,390,000
9 Jakarta Indonesia Indonesia Asia 20,500,000
10 New York City United States United States North America 20,300,000
11 Karachi Pakistan Pakistan Asia 20,290,000
12 Osaka Japan Japan Asia 20,260,000
13 Manila Philippines Philippines Asia 20,040,000
14 Cairo Egypt Egypt Africa 18,810,000
15 Dhaka Bangladesh Bangladesh Asia 18,250,000
16 Los Angeles United States United States North America 17,900,000
17 Moscow Russia Russia Europe 16,900,000
18 Buenos Aires Argentina Argentina South America 16,500,000
19 Kolkata India India Asia 16,240,000
20 London United Kingdom United Kingdom Europe 15,800,000
21 Bangkok Thailand Thailand Asia 15,350,000
22 Lagos Nigeria Nigeria Africa 15,210,000
23 Istanbul Turkey Turkey Europe/Asia 14,800,000
24 Rio de Janeiro Brazil Brazil South America 14,500,000
25 Tehran Iran Iran Asia 13,700,000
26 Guangzhou China China Asia 12,700,000
27 Kinshasa Democratic Republic of the Congo Democratic Republic of Congo Africa 12,500,000
28 Shenzhen China China Asia 12,250,000
29 Lahore Pakistan Pakistan Asia 11,580,000
30 Rhine-Ruhr Germany Germany Europe 11,350,000
31 Tianjin China China Asia 11,000,000
32 Bengaluru India India Asia 10,820,000
33 Paris France France Europe 10,770,000
34 Chennai India India Asia 10,350,000
35 Hyderabad India India Asia 10,100,000

History

25 Of The Most Polluted Places In The World

Mexico protests Texas National Guard troops on US border

Mexico City (AFP) – Mexico’s foreign ministry late Friday protested Texas Governor Rick Perry’s deployment of National Guard troops to the southern US border to halt the surge of child migrants.

Correction: Immigration-National Guard story Associated Press
Texas’ Davis against troops at border but backs U.S. funding for security Reuters
Correction: Perry-National Guard story Associated Press
Perry To Spend Millions On Texas’ Border CBS Dallas Fort Worth (RSS)
Dozens arrested in Ferguson after night of violence AFP
Mexico “reiterates, in a firm and categorical way, its rejection of this measure,” read a statement from the foreign ministry.

“No circumstance at all or change in border security exists that justifies this measure taken by the state.”

The troop deployment “does not contribute in any way to solving the immigration problem,” and is inconsistent with US-Mexico talks aimed at “building a modern, prosperous and safe border,” the statement read.

On Thursday Perry deployed some 1,000 National Guard troops to the border with Mexico.

National Guard troops are soldiers under the authority of the state governor. They cannot detain undocumented migrants, which is a federal responsibility, but they can take over some duties that allows more US Border Patrol agents to monitor the borderline.

View galleryFile photo shows Texas Governor Rick Perry waiting …
File photo shows Texas Governor Rick Perry waiting to greet US President Barack Obama in Dallas, Tex …
Perry, a Republican and a likely candidate for the 2016 presidential race, has taken a hard line against immigrant children seeking to enter the United States from Central America.

At least 57,000 unaccompanied children, most from Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador, have crossed the border into the United States illegally since October, triggering a migration crisis that has sent US border and immigration authorities into a frenzy.

Perry said the decision to deploy troops was taken after repeated requests to the federal government to secure the US border.

REPORT: GUNMEN STEAL RADIOACTIVE DEVICE FROM MEXICAN RESEARCH LAB

Report: Gunmen Steal Radioactive Device From Mexican Research Lab

Image Credits: EFE

by MAC SLAVO | SHTFPLAN.COM | JUNE 15, 2014


Amid the tense security situation created by thousands of illegal immigrants compromising the southern border of the United States, Mexican officials say that a radioactive device has been stolen from a government research facility.

The device containing cesium-37 and americium-beryllium was housed at the National Construction Laboratory located in Tultitlan just north of Mexico City, reports Fox News Latino.

The theft, which involved an unknown number of armed gunmen storming the research building, has left the Mexican government scrambling. “We have the report regarding the theft of this material and the alerts and protocol we follow in these cases have already been implemented,” said Government Secretary Miguel Angel Osorio Chong in an address to law enforcement officials.

Mexico’s federal government has distributed alerts to law enforcement officials in Mexico City and surrounding regions.

“Handling the material without proper safeguards or spending an extended period in close proximity to the radioactive substances could result in temporary health problems, according to the bulletin.”

The theft of the device highlights growing concerns that rogue terror organizations or extremists may attempt to cross into the United States via the porous southern border, which has been overrun in recent weeks by a flood of people taking advantage of lax border security policies.

“The ones we are losing are convicted felons, aliens from special interest countries, and other high risk individuals,” reports one Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent speaking with Infowars.

Though it’s not clear who is responsible for the armed robbery, there is a distinct possibility that the device could be modified into a ‘dirty bomb’ and smuggled into the United States by drug cartels or another organization.

In 2010, Atlanta’s WSB-TV2 ran a special report about what officials call the “Other Than Mexican” border security threat, citing federal detention center records that show individuals from Iran, Iraq, and Afghanistan have previously attempted to enter the U.S. from Mexico. Though the Department of Homeland Security is aware of the OTM threat, the border is now as exposed as it has ever been, giving smugglers and foreign enemies a perfect opportunity to bypass the heavy security often found at international airports or the northern border with Canada.

Further concerns about the possibility of a serious, and perhaps coordinated, border breach have been highlighted by Youtube channel DAHBOO7 which followed up on aDrudge Report story from earlier this week that a Nogales, Arizona power station located just miles from the border was sabotaged with a crude explosives device. The bomb which targeted the station’s diesel generators failed to ignite, but had it achieved its goal experts suggest it could have taken down electrical power to the entire border region, further hampering efforts to secure the influx of migrants.

“It would have pretty much blown a hole in our defenses, and anyone and everyone gets through.”

The FBI and the Department of Homeland Security are investigating the attempted attack but have not released any information regarding suspects or motive.

Mexican officials continue to search for those responsible for the theft of the radioactive device but have provided no additional information about their progress.

There’s A Bloody ‘Water War’ Happening Near Mexico’s Capital

mexico water

REUTERS/Henry Romero

Residents stand near a burning barricade following clashes with riot police in San Bartolo Ameyalco, outside Mexico City May 21, 2014.

 

Filling a glass from his garden faucet, Juan Ramírez held the swirling water up to the intense Mexican sun. Satisfied with its purity, he touched his glass gently against my own. “Your health,” he toasted, before drinking it down in one gulp. 

Mexico City’s reservoirs consistently rank amongst the most contaminated supplies to any world capital. Drinking from the tap here is simply not recommended. Ramírez’s water, however, comes directly from a volcanic spring in San Bartolo Ameyalco, an otherwise impoverished town on the hilly southwestern outskirts of Mexico City, in the borough called Alvaro Obregon.

“My grandfather drank from our town’s spring, and his grandfather before him,” Ramírez told me when I visited the town this weekend. “Now the government wants to pipe our town’s water directly into rich households and leave us with its contaminated filth. We are not going to let that happen.”

Ramírez is leader of a group in San Bartolo Ameyalco intent on keeping their water supply local. Last Wednesday, Ramírez along with approximately two thousand other residents of Ameyalco attacked a police force of fifteen hundred riot officers who were guarding the final construction stage of a pipeline that will connect the town’s volcanic spring to Santa Fe, one of the most affluent districts of the Mexican capital.

In videos posted online, San Bartolo residents are seen violently pummeling an officer in riot gear who had fallen to the ground.

The residents beat back both police and pipeline engineers, leaving at least 100 police officers injured, 20 seriously. Residents said dozens were injured on their side, and authorities arrested five people. Mexico City’s government warned that more arrests would come.

While the battle of the morning of May 21 was won by the residents of San Bartolo Ameyalco, what the locals now popularly call the ‘Water War’ is sure to be long and tense.

“The people are united,” said María Chávez, one of the leaders of the town’s resistance, which has based itself in the public library. The municipal building is papered with messages of support from other towns in the region. A banner proclaimed: “Our water is not for sale.”

 

 

“When the local government’s plans to extend our pipelines further afield were drawn up last year, the authorities refused to negotiate with us. Leonel Luna [the borough delegate] told us the water would be going to help other communities in the region,” she told VICE News. “It’s only now that we have put up a fight that they want to talk things over.”

Mexico City’s government sees the international business-aimed satellite city of Santa Fe, a high-end urbanization zone rapidly built upon a dumping ground with no prior water infrastructure, as a pillar of the local and even national economy. Although the details of the plan remain murky, San Bartolo Ameyalco residents are rightly suspicious of any scheme to divert their pure water to the international corporate offices nearby.

Ameyalco, meaning “place where the water spouts” in Nahuatl, was engulfed by Mexico City’s urban sprawl in the 1950s. Its spring produces 60 liters of pure water every second, an amount which runs thin for the 35,000 people who depend on it.

The narrow streets still channel the smells of pine sap and cooking tortillas on the cold mountain air. Neighbors chat in the marketplace about past victories and future strategies and children kick soccer balls against the main square’s murals of the village’s prized spring.

“When I was a child the water was endless,” said Alejandra Espinosa, another town resident. Espinosa has lived her entire 54 years in San Bartolo. “Now, due to the larger population, parts of the town can go a week at a time without running water.”

Mexico City has serious problems with water shortages. One in three homes has no access to running water, forcing them to depend heavily upon water trucks called pipas, which refill homes’ water tanks at exorbitant prices. Seventy-four per cent of the capital’s water is pumped from underground, causing the city itself to sink.

Leonel Luna, delegate of the Alvaro Obregon borough, has stated the spring is to be redirected to serve other towns in the area. Luna claims opposition to the project has been funded by the same businessmen who sell water from pipas, and who don’t want to lose their customer base if more running water is made available to other towns.

Since the government’s announcement in April 2013 that the spring would be connected to a wider network covering the borough, residents of San Bartolo set up camp beside their main supply tank to defend their precious resource. The project to tap the San Bartolo spring for wider use has been in the works for almost two decades, though, authorities note.

On May 21, the town’s church bells sounded out across the hillside to announce the authorities’ arrival. The residents responded to the signal by hurling rocks in the narrow streets, launching fireworks at the police line from windows and destroying plumbing equipment.

“This water belongs to us,” says Manuel Rueda, another activist I met at the public library the movement is using as a base of operations. “We can’t end up paying for the city’s poor planning.”

In the town’s last functioning public laundry, where a communal pool is flanked by washbasins, Laura Hernández wrung the last of the soap from her son’s soccer jersey. She had managed to wash her entire family’s clothes using the single bucket of water she had rationed herself.

“Only half of the houses on my street have running water these days, and I live at the top of town,” she said. “People at the bottom of the hill can go weeks without water. How can we sell our water elsewhere when we have so little?”

 

 

Others say San Bartolo is being selfish with its resource.

“These people don’t understand that other people in the region need their help,” said Rodrigo Pérez García, an event photographer and regular visitor to the town. “They have a free source of water yet they refuse to share it.”

“It’s pure selfishness,” Pérez continued. “At the very least there’s an opportunity to sell it by undercutting the water trucks.”

Leaders of the movement, however, said they are not budging. A series of marches are planned for the coming weeks. In recent days, members of various related or completely unrelated social movements in the Mexico City metropolitan region have sent messages of support to San Bartolo, signaling a wider fight in the public political sphere in Mexico related to the spring.

“We’re willing to negotiate,” said Juan Ramírez, the man who served me a glass of fresh spring water from his garden faucet. “We just don’t want to be treated like brutes. We know our rights like everybody else.”

Read more: https://news.vice.com/article/a-bloody-war-for-water-in-mexico#ixzz33XXkEIm9

25 Of The Strangest And Most Unusual Buildings On Earth