The Narco News Bulletin
"The name
of our country is América"
-- Simón
Bolívar
Hackers
Progressing, Expose One Political Trick Already
Passwords Published
Below
The announcement
last week by Mexican
federal deputy Dolores Padierna that hackers are working round-the-clock to open the secret FOBAPROA bank
bailout files caused a firestorm of reaction within the Mexican
Republic.
The opening of the information
in the compact disk would mean, for the first time, that the
Mexican public will have the true facts about who ripped off
their nation for $80 billion US dollars.
It will also document,
meticulously, the interdependent web of drug trafficking, money
laundering, banking and political corruption.
It is thus comprehendable
that the forces behind the single-greatest fraud in the nation's
history have worked all costs to prevent this information from
coming to light.
With the July 2nd elections
in Mexico fast approaching, the hackers still have not cracked
the code.
But did find out two facts
that were not known before:
1. That
there are not five passwords, as claimed by the Canadian auditor
Michael Mackey when he gave one apiece to each political party
in the Mexican legislature. There are six.
Mackey reserved the sixth
for himself.
2. That the password supplied by presidential candidate
Vicente Fox on behalf of his PAN party was false.
These two facts would
not be known, except for the hackers.
Only two of the five political
parties have fought consistently to open the FOBAPROA facts to
the nation: the Labor Party (PT) and the Democratic Revolution
Party (PRD).
Their passwords are:
PRD: Tmofapit
PT: lawwi859
During the May 26th presidential
debate, candidate Vicente Fox of the National Action Party (PAN)
and the Green Ecologist Party (PVEM), was already under fire
on the FOBAPROA matter. His parties had voted, last year, to
keep the facts hidden from the public and that the same public
would pay the $80 billion dollar bailout (about $15 billion dollars
a year, as interest compounds, for years to come).
Thus Fox, on national
TV, made a big show of handing over the envelope to journalist
Ricardo Rocha, who was moderating the debate. The two passwords
in his envelope were:
PVEM: Tccsta965
PAN: Saskatoon
The ruling PRI continued
to refuse to make its password public.
Had the federal deputy
Padierna not moved forward with the talents of computer hackers,
Fox's cynical gambit would have remained unexposed until after
the July 2nd elections.
The PAN "password"
was false.
And the existence of a
sixth password, that of the Canadian auditor, would have also
remained a secret to the public.
In recent days in Mexico
two currents have collided. Those who want the public to know
have now succeeded, with the information unearthed by the hackers,
in forcing the PAN deputy Fauzi Handam Amad -- one of the most
obstinate legislators in favor of keeping the files closed to
the public eye -- to admit: the password given by Fox in the
debate was false.
Fauzi Handam Amad revealed,
under intense election season pressure, that the real PAN password
is (he says):
New PAN password:
aarotbc168
He claims it was an honest
mistake. "If there is any fault," he said, "it
is imputable to Fauzi Handam, but no way to the candidate Vicente
Fox."
And yet this revelation
came during the same days that documents of foreign money laundering by the Fox campaign flew out in public. The Fox campaign
has clearly stumbled. He made an 11th hour ultimatum to opposition
candidate Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas last Saturday: "Wednesday
is your last day" to join the Fox campaign. Cárdenas
replied on Sunday that he would never ally himself to a traitor
to the country that answers to foreign financial interests.
Thus, Fox continues to
sink in the final hours of the contest.
A caucus of PRI legislators
known as "The Reflection Group" has urged, so far to
no avail, that their party make their password known so that
all may finally know the truth about the FOBAPROA scandal.
Meanwhile, the great chambers
of industry and banking, hysterical over the possibility that
the file will be opened, have exerted extreme pressures upon
the legislature to sanction Deputy Dolores Padierna for attempting
to open the disk.
It is important to note
the brief history of this matter, since the May 26th debate.
Just a few days after,
La Jornada columnist Julio Hernández López
suggested that Fox had offered a false password, based on the
fact that the word Saskatoon, without a combination of numbers
and letters as the other party passwords were constructed, seemed
cartoon-like to him:
"The cold Canadian
auditor of FOBAPROA, Michael Mackey, turned out to be a nostalgic
poet at the hour to assign a cybernetic password to the PAN.
While he apportioned to the rest of the parties a series of letters
and numbers that don't appear to have any sense, to the blue-and-white
party he distinguished them by giving them the name of Saskatoon,
the lonely city of Canada, that is the best in air and water
quality, capital of agricultrual biotechnology for that country,
and deposit of two-thirds of the world's recuperable potash (that
is, potassium-hydrade, used in medicines, detergents, soaps,
paint cleaning and it is not known if it is also good for the
laundering of Fobaproas.)"
At the time, the columnist's
hunch that Fox had given a false password went largely unnoticed.
Some accused him of wild-eyed conspiracy theory. But he based
his hunch on his long knowledge of the players and the political
terrain. And it resulted that Julio Hernández López
was correct.
And the public owes this
important revelation to the anonymous computer hackers, still
clicking away, somewhere in a country named América.
Mutant
Times Call for Mutant Tools