FAA halts all flights at El Paso airport for 10 days
273 points
11 hours ago
| 62 comments
| nytimes.com
| HN
heythere22
10 hours ago
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sva_
6 hours ago
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> Airline sources told Reuters the grounding of flights was believed to be tied to the Pentagon's use of counterdrone technology to address Mexican drug cartels' use of drones of the U.S.-Mexico border.

https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-halts-all-flights-texass...

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boringg
5 hours ago
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>. "The FAA and DOW acted swiftly to address a cartel drone incursion.

The threat has been neutralized, and there is no danger to commercial travel in the region.

The restrictions have been lifted and normal flights are resuming."

https://x.com/SecDuffy

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noelsusman
3 hours ago
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Doesn't really pass the sniff test. Why would you need a 10 day closure to deal with a drone incursion?

I'm guessing DoD and the FAA were squabbling over a test the military wanted to run, and it didn't go up the chain fast enough to get resolved before testing was scheduled to begin.

Edit: Here's the actual notice from the FAA[1]. Note that it was issued at 0332 UTC, but the restrictions weren't scheduled to go into place until 0630 UTC. Either the FAA is clairvoyant, or Sean Duffy is lying.

[1]https://tfr.faa.gov/tfr3/?page=detail_6_2233

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HillRat
2 hours ago
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Recent updates say this was a unilateral call by FAA because DOD was refusing to coordinate with them for creating safety corridors for DOD drones and/or HEW usage. Issues came to a head after DOD shot down a highly threatening mylar party balloon, which FAA evidently considered to be a somewhat reckless use of military weaponry in a US city's airspace.
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mrandish
10 minutes ago
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> Recent updates say this was a unilateral call by FAA because DOD was refusing to coordinate with them for creating safety corridors for DOD drones and/or HEW usage.

This is the first explanation I've seen that fits the odd facts perfectly. This is the kind of thing that happens when two regional bureaucracies collide. The FAA has long-standing mechanisms for coordinating military use of airspace with commercial and civilian flight operations.

But instead of the usual DEA border interdiction, the administration is now tasking the military to drive this. Military commanders on a new high-priority mission to intercept drones which can attempt to cross the border anytime and anywhere realized coordinating with the FAA would require committing to active corridors and time windows in advance, limiting their mission success and resisted. The FAA realized that could lead to lots of last minute airspace restrictions, flight cancellations and increased risk of a mistake resulting in downing a civilian flight.

The regional FAA administrators responsible for flight safety around El Paso decided to escalate the dispute by simply shutting down all civilian flights, knowing that would get immediate national attention. It was an extreme action but one that's within their purview if they can't guarantee the safety of the airspace. I'm sure they expected it would put political pressure on the military to limit operations and it worked. In a sense, it also helps the military commanders because being ordered to accept FAA operational limitations gives them cover if it reduces their mission effectiveness below what they'd promised. That's probably why the military wouldn't agree on their own without it being ordered from above. They're the ones responsible for deploying expensive new anti-drone tech in field ops for the first time. Future budgets and careers are on the line.

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prpl
43 minutes ago
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Additionally, that airport would be used to coordinating with the military due to proximity of both Fort Bliss and White Sands.

It sounds like the DOD was being unusually indifferent to the concerns, and after deadly prior mishaps, the FAA has to be particularly careful here.

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cornellwright
1 hour ago
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Can you share a source for this? It's not in the updates to the NYT article.
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CGMthrowaway
57 minutes ago
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learingsci
7 minutes ago
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CBS is no longer a credible news source.
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downrightmike
1 hour ago
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reckless use of military weaponry in a US city's airspace.
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Hikikomori
1 hour ago
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Balloon looked brown?
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nkrisc
3 hours ago
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Charitably guessing that if they don't know how long they'll need to keep airspace closed then you give yourself plenty of time and rescind early if necessary, as opposed to continually issuing extensions which could cause confusion.
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hshdhdhj4444
2 hours ago
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Or you say “until further notice”.

Indeterminate end dates are not a new problem.

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zthrowaway
2 hours ago
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FAA restrictions aren’t applied in a hand wavy fashion.
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afavour
2 hours ago
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This story would suggest otherwise.
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zthrowaway
2 hours ago
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In what way?
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indoordin0saur
3 hours ago
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Was it meant to be "up to 10 days" rather than 10 days? If the drones are no longer flying over the airport it makes sense they'd open it back up.
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noelsusman
3 hours ago
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The closure was for 10 days full stop. I can't think of a reason to do that in response to an active threat.
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brynnbee
1 hour ago
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I think the point was to get headlines and attention, as someone else said it sounds like the FAA is frustrated that the DoD isn't cooperating, and this seems like a possible attempt to make this frustration public to pressure DoD into playing more nicely.
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schiffern
3 hours ago
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This is OpSec 101. Making the public closure too "tight" around the operational timeline could (negligently) leak operational details. You can always cancel a closure later.
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SketchySeaBeast
50 minutes ago
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Is Opsec 101 to increase the estimate by two orders of magnitude? "We think this operation will take about 10 weeks, so we're estimating 10 years."
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schiffern
16 minutes ago
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The answer is "long enough to avoid giving away operational details," not some robotically applied constant multiplier like 10x.

We also don't know whether they expected this to take 1 day or more. Just because it worked out quickly doesn't mean that's the "worst case" operational timeline.

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iAMkenough
2 hours ago
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Is saying "indefinitely" or "until further notice" any worse than "10 days?" The specificity of the timeline was what caught my eye.
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vachina
2 hours ago
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Indefinitely infers permanence. You’ll scare everyone off with that language.
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stefan_
2 hours ago
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Ding ding. Always assume weaponized incompetence in this administration:

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/airspace-closure-followed-spat-...

> FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford on Tuesday night decided to close the airspace — without alerting White House, Pentagon or Homeland Security officials, sources said.

In the meantime, the politician responsible of course made up a quick lie and yall ran with it, fantasizing about cartel MANPADs:

> Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said in a statement, "The FAA and DOW acted swiftly to address a cartel drone incursion."

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ndiddy
3 hours ago
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Looks like they shot the drone down with a laser:

> UPDATE (CNN): Source briefed by FAA tells me that military activity behind the El Paso flight ban included unmanned aircraft operations and laser countermeasure testing in airspace directly adjacent to civilian routes into El Paso International. Airspace restriction just lifted.

https://x.com/petemuntean/status/2021586247827828812

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lysace
2 hours ago
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Good thing they allocated 10 days of airspace shutdown for taking out a single (edit: or a few) drone(s).

I get the feeling this was a case of really wanting to test a new weapon combined with general organizational dysfunction for something unusual like this.

On CNN, they talked about how a shutdown like this would be the first time something like this has happened since 9/11. Is that really correct?

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SoftTalker
1 hour ago
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How do we know it was a "single" drone, or that they knew for sure that it was?
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ssl-3
35 minutes ago
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Indeed.

So with this lack of information: Why 10 days? Why not 3, or 12, or some other number instead?

Or: Why must there be a number?

Is the officious equivalent of "We've got some shit to deal with, so El Paso's airspace is closed for now" insufficient?

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tclancy
2 hours ago
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guerrilla
6 hours ago
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I personally don't think that's the whole story. They're likely going to act against the cartels to take out cross-border drone capabilities and are preparing for S-A retaliation as well.
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morpheuskafka
4 hours ago
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A cartel using a SAM against a US civilian aircraft would massively solidify public opinion against them just like 9/11 or the Iran hostage crisis. The US has been trying to extent the "foreign terrorist" label and casus belli to drug activities forever to justify military operations (ex. the "arrest" of Maduro was for drugs, not oil/Cuba/political stuff). That would be a massive self-own on the cartels part. (And if it did happen, just like 9/11, it would be used as justification for anything even remotely immigration or drug related at every level.)
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trenning
4 hours ago
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My understanding over the US/MX cartel relations is performing an invasion and “act of war” would solidify asylum status claims by Mexican residents and throw a wrench into the whole immigration scheme every administration plays.

But then again this time seems different, laws aren’t followed or upheld. Human rights are a fleeting staple.

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pjc50
3 hours ago
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Starting a war with Mexico would be a pretext for interning everyone of "Mexican" ethnicity, citizen or otherwise, as was done to Japanese nationals.
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_heimdall
3 hours ago
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Its mincing words a bit, but an attack targeting drug cartel assets wouldn't necessarily be viewed as a war with Mexico. It could lead to that for sure, and the Mexican government could declare it an act of war, but we did just see the US literally invade a foreign country and arrest their sitting leader without war being declared on either side.
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eesmith
47 minutes ago
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The US hasn't declared war since World War II.

I suspect Mexicans would view it as another Pancho Villa Expedition, another event where neither side declared war.

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guerrilla
3 hours ago
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> A cartel using a SAM against a US civilian aircraft would massively solidify public opinion against them

In what world is public opinion not universally against the cartels? It's hard to take you seriously after that.

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RupertSalt
19 minutes ago
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> In what world is public opinion not universally against the cartels?

Minnesota, Los Angeles, Portland, Cuidad de Juárez, and any community where narcocorridos music emanates from lowriders all night.

USA isn’t invading Mexico (or Canada or Greenland). Latin America is recolonizing us. It is called “Reconquista” and it’s an open secret since before César Chavéz began complaining about it.

US Democratic leadership were practicing appeasement and non-resistance because they knew how damn violent it would get on the ground.

Check back in the archives for Presidente Sheinbaum announcing thousands of Mexican ground troops marching north. The tariffs. The campaign slogan. Cartel incursions are counterattacks and retribution for deportations. Y’all so worried about Mengele on your doorstep while Santa Anna was driving your taco trucks.

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staticassertion
3 hours ago
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It is, of course. What they mean, I assume, is that it would reach a tipping point where intervention would be more broadly supported. Virtually everyone is willing to say "that's bad" with regards to something happening somewhere, it is far less agreed upon that the US should intervene in that bad thing. An effective tipping point is probably something on the order of "we feel attacked".
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starkparker
3 hours ago
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Much of the world was against Saddam Hussein, but it took the wholesale invention of an Iraqi nuclear program to justify and get authorization for deposing him through international military action. Iraq didn't attack us, though in attacking an oil partner they might as well have, but the public certainly didn't feel attacked until someone dreamed up the prospect of Iraq nuking Israel, Europe, and/or us.

In that case, the justification was a prerequisite to Congress authorizing a war without losing elections, and then selling it to the US's allies so we wouldn't have to send quite as many troops and thus lose elections. This administration demonstrably doesn't care about justification, authorization, alliances, or elections. So why bother? If they're going to stage an arbitrary Venezuela-like military operation in Mexico because of "cartels", they wouldn't wait for a civilian mass-death event, or for Congress, or regional allies, or public opinion. They didn't wait for any of that in Venezuela.

TBQH this just felt like a cheap and easy way for them to perpetuate the idea that we're always at war with terrorists. Now they're "narcoterrorists", but they're still "terrorists". And this administration might not like obstacles like authorization and due process, but it loves cheap, easy terrorists.

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dylan604
2 hours ago
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There were plenty of people that were not against Pablo Escobar as he spent a lot of money back in his home town. Once the violence escalated, like when they took down a civilian flight, even that support waned. So I can see where GP is saying similar that by the time cartels get to the point of shooting down civilian aircraft even those that did support them would consider that the final straw.
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downrightmike
1 hour ago
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The world where Americans buy billions in illegal drugs every year and turn a blind eye to cartels. "My dealer is nice"
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djcapelis
3 hours ago
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> In what world is public opinion not universally against the cartels? It's hard to take you seriously after that.

I think you’re getting tripped up by some specific wording and managing to miss the point the poster was making. The point should be taken seriously even if imprecisely articulated. While most folks are against the cartels, there’s a much wider range of belief on how much they warrant government or military intervention and to what degree we should be spending various resources on them. The historical state of play was(is?) that cartels are criminal organizations which are generally a policing matter that has escalated to specialized policing agencies and multinational networks of policing agencies. The marked escalation of the military into this is a more recent piece that is somewhat more controversial. One doesn’t have to be “in favor of the cartel” to ask questions about whether our military should be bombing boats or invading countries to ostensibly neutralize organizations that historically have been subject to policing operations.

To go back to the parallel… the public wasn’t in favor of Al Qaeda before 9/11 either, but there was a huge difference in the level of response the public was in favor of after. It turned from an intelligence monitoring level of response into an active military invasion of multiple countries.

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vkou
2 hours ago
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The best part about bombing the boats is that the second strikes on them were war crimes, while the few survivors that were picked up... All ended up repatriated.

If they were all drug runners, why weren't they put on trial? Why was so much effort made to sink all the evidence? Why did an admiral resign, when told to do this?

Everybody involved, starting from the people pulling the trigger, to the people giving the orders should be getting a fair trial and a swift punishment for that little stint of piracy and murder.

But these people all act like there is no such thing as consequences.

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ribosometronome
59 minutes ago
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>But these people all act like there is no such thing as consequences.

Are there?

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anigbrowl
37 minutes ago
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What cross-border drone capabilities, drug deliveries? People are talking like the cartels are conducting Ukraine-style drone warfare and blowing up Americans on the regular. Let's stick to a factual baseline here.
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TitaRusell
2 hours ago
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What does that even mean? Cartels can buy those DJI drones from China by the container load.

Russia and Ukraine can't stop drones. Does the US have a secret weapon?

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dylan604
2 hours ago
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> Does the US have a secret weapon?

It sounds like that's what was being tested requiring the NOTAM. We just don't know if it did or didn't work. It could have failed so badly they decided to just shut it down, or it could have worked so successfully they decided no more testing was needed.

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guerrilla
2 hours ago
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> Russia and Ukraine can't stop drones. Does the US have a secret weapon?

That does actually seem to be what they are saying now, yes.

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outside1234
1 hour ago
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The only confirmed thing they have shot down was a child's birthday balloon
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datsci_est_2015
6 hours ago
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This admin is focused on the message of stopping the inflow of drugs to the US. There are probably some true believers, and there are probably some reactionary accelerationists. There’s also significant evidence of amateurism, misinformation, and incompetence.

All of that coming together, I see this action coming out of meeting where

  - one party was convinced that this would solve the fentanyl epidemic
  - one party was hoping this would escalate military action in Mexico
  - one party was convinced that America had lost its masculine bravado and taking swift and unprecedented action like this would make their wife respect them again
  - one party was busy making “bets” on Kalshi
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morpheuskafka
4 hours ago
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> one party was busy making “bets” on Kalshi

This would arguably be much more severe -- and quite likely already happening -- than the whole "congress trading stocks" thing because most of those (besides the sports ones) tie very directly to government actions in a way that the economy or a large company in generally doesn't as predictably.

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mikeyouse
3 hours ago
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It's definitely already happening and should lead to a congressional inquiry if we had a functioning congress: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cx2gn93292do
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usefulcat
30 minutes ago
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Yes and no. AIUI there's generally a lot less liquidity available in prediction markets, which limits the profitability.

Even if you have perfect clairvoyance, you still need someone to take the other side of the bet.

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nemomarx
3 hours ago
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Isn't the whole idea of prediction markets to let insiders bet on things so that you'll get insider info leaked?
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datsci_est_2015
58 minutes ago
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Maybe this is fine until it incentivizes easily-achieved but adverse actions that would greatly harm the public.

For a silly example, I would imagine the streaker from this year’s Super Bowl is either (a) a complete idiot, or (b) put a significant amount of money on a “prediction market” of there being a streaker at the Super Bowl - more than enough to cover his ticket, legal, and medical costs.

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RiverCrochet
5 hours ago
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matthews3
4 hours ago
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> bets

Investments on Kalshi!

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delaminator
5 hours ago
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> reactionary

they want to overthrow the Jacobites

> accelerationists

how's that going to work ?

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pjc50
4 hours ago
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Reactionary accelerationists want a local war of some sort so they can grab war powers and then roll back all the US's post-WW2 social progress (and most of the New Deal too).
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delaminator
3 hours ago
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My understanding is accelerationists or liberals to go full hog so that they can go "see".
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dylan604
2 hours ago
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--one party was hoping we'd stop talking about Epstein
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sowbug
3 hours ago
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If the US wanted to end the fentanyl and xylazine and nitazene epidemic, it would legalize the controlled manufacture, sale, and usage of the drugs being adulterated. This won't happen, because the 50-year-old War on Drugs is a load-bearing pillar of the US government.
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projektfu
3 hours ago
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Xylazine and fentanyl are already legally distributed in the US. I believe Xylazine is still unscheduled.

https://www.dechra-us.com/our-products/us/equine/horse/presc...

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sowbug
3 hours ago
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Those are the adulterants, not the drugs being adulterated such as heroin, meth, and MDMA.

For the most part, no customer wants fentanyl. The dealers like it because it's a cheap booster for cutting the drugs that their customers actually do want to buy. It just has this unfortunate side effect of making small overdoses lethal.

That's why "ending the fentanyl crisis" is a curious goal. We had a perfectly good War on Drugs going on, but fentanyl is making the illicit drug industry too dangerous. You'd think that if we wanted to stop drugs, and we knew how to do that, we'd stop drugs. Instead we're stopping fentanyl, so we can get back to the regularly scheduled version of the War on Drugs that was always intended to last forever.

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influx
3 hours ago
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I live in Seattle, decriminalizing drugs didn't turn out that way here.
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sowbug
3 hours ago
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"controlled" is key. Seattle decriminalized drug use. That's a tiny part of a larger solution rooted in harm reduction.
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mikkupikku
2 hours ago
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Singapore kills drug dealers. That works much better.
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RiverCrochet
2 hours ago
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Idk, if the number of people executed increases over time, maybe it doesn't.

https://www.afr.com/world/asia/singapore-executions-touch-22...

This article cites Singapore saying the existing laws mostly get low-level users and not kingpins because kingpins operate outside of the country.

https://www.vice.com/en/article/singapore-drug-executions/

Decriminalization of drug use doesn't have to mean decriminalization of anything else. Thieves and murderers should be prosecuted regardless of any state induced by the voluntary ingestion chemicals.

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mikkupikku
1 hour ago
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Decriminalization without legalization is something I can't support. If it's not illegal for me to have and use a drug, them why should I be forced to buy it from criminals? Either legalize it, or go whole hog on criminalizing it. Execute the dealers and put users into mandatory rehab, or let people buy it in shops. Any of these half measures are intolerable, they exist to make sure the situation is in a constant state of tension, to nobody's benefit but the governments.

Ideally we would pick one or the other on a drug by drug basis. Executing people for selling weed isn't something I actually want, but neither do I want them simply imprisoned or fined either. But with shit like fent? Trying to find a single policy to fit both drugs is inane.

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datsci_est_2015
52 minutes ago
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I can’t tell if this is sarcastic or not.

Anyway: Capital punishment is an elegant solution.

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drstewart
1 hour ago
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It's like if Canada wanted to end gun smuggling and school shootings, it would legalize the controlled manufacture, sale, and usage of the guns being banned. But they won't.
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belter
5 hours ago
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"FAA abruptly lifts order halting El Paso airport flights for 10 days" - https://www.cnbc.com/2026/02/11/faa-el-paso-airport.html

don't attribute to security concerns...what can be explained by incompetence...

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jmatthiass
7 hours ago
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As someone else mentioned, there’s some speculation in aviation subreddits that the bounds of the altitude restriction map to the MANPAD capabilities that some cartels are purported to have.

https://www.reddit.com/r/aviation/comments/1r1s4zt/comment/o...

My read is that the admin is planning forceful strikes on the cartels within Mexico and is worried about their ability to retaliate by taking down US aircraft across the border.

Edit: The closure has now been kiboshed. The wording seems a little “don’t panic-y” to me, but better that than the alternative! https://x.com/FAANews/status/2021583720465969421

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omgJustTest
6 hours ago
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Knowing the restriction goes to 18k certainly says that either S-A or A-S reach must be limited but the as your post points out no buffer between MANPAD actual range and the limit imposed. I think unlikely to say MANPAD, specifically.

There's a small private airfield to the west with only a single victor airway connecting to el-paso. the victors end at 17999 ft, effectively cutting traffic for non-commercial or non-business jet operators.

Closure of the victor airway there seems, again limiting airborne craft due to airborne hazards.

Hazards in the air, near the surface that are, seemingly, unplanned with a cone pointing at mexico.

That's kind of the most anyone will get until more info, could be some urgent testing of some capability or response to small craft (drones) coming over the boarder. Emergency timing could be to garner interest or emphasize importance, which works well politically.

Las Cruces International Airport and Dana Jetport are unaffected.

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timbre1234
3 hours ago
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The restriction goes to 18k because that's the top of VFR space. Anyone operating above 18k has to be on an IFR clearance and under positive ATC control. That makes it easy for the feds to make a call and say "Hey, center, get everyone out of this airspace" wheras in the VFR altitudes it's very difficult for them to legally clear the space since a VFR plane could be flying around not talking to anyone.
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ErroneousBosh
2 hours ago
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I only know about Las Cruces from the Organ Mountain Outfitters training material in the DaVinci Resolve sample footage. Sadly they closed a few months ago, which is a shame because I never got my arse in gear to order a shirt from them.
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Eddy_Viscosity2
7 hours ago
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Even Cartels know that shooting down civilian aircraft in US airspace would be an escalation that would lead to heavy retaliation. Doesn't seem likely to me.
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reactordev
6 hours ago
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Coming from groups that just pickup busses of people to murder, I wouldn’t be so sure that firing back at the US would be out of the question.
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nessbot
6 hours ago
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Murdering buses of people doesn't bring the full force of the US military on them. The difference is the risk not the depravity.
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p-e-w
6 hours ago
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This is the answer. The cartels would have to be insane to poke that particular bear. They would get crushed like a bug. IIRC they murdered a single US undercover officer in the 90s and the retaliation was so bad that they themselves handed over the perpetrators.
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ChrisMarshallNY
3 hours ago
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> They would get crushed like a bug.

Much as I despise them, I'm not so sure that would be the case. I seem to remember folks saying the same about the Taliban, and the cartels have a lot more money and high-tech kit, than the Taliban.

Asymmetric warfare is a tough gig, on all sides.

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janalsncm
3 hours ago
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I don’t think the technology matters nearly as much as the asymmetry. Iraq had better technology than the Taliban and their military didn’t last a week.
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ChrisMarshallNY
3 hours ago
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True enough, but the cartels are also experts at running what is basically guerrilla warfare, against each other. Not sure if the Mexican Army has ever tried to take them on. A lot of cartel soldiers come from the army.
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mmooss
22 minutes ago
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That conflates two very different things:

* A conventional military war, on a battlefield: Neither Saddam Hussein's military nor the cartels nor the Taliban would last long against the US.

* An unconventional insurgency: The Iraqis quickly turned to this approach and it worked very well for them, as it did for the Taliban. The Taliban won, and the Iraqi insurgency almost drove the US out of Iraq and was eventually co-opted.

The cartels of course would choose the latter. They, the Taliban, etc. are not suicidal.

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BoredPositron
5 hours ago
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You are right rationality is their strongest character trait.
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542354234235
4 hours ago
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How are they not rational? Violence is a tool. They operate an illegal business so they can’t sue other parties for breach of contract. They can't call the police if they are robbed or file an insurance claim for what was taken. Even the over-the-top violence has a rationale. They aren't punishing the victims as much as they are attempting to broadcast that there is a higher price to be paid than any gain from giving information, to reduce their future losses and enforcement efforts. It isn’t moral or ethical, but I wouldn’t say it is irrational.
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mikkupikku
4 hours ago
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Lots of organized crime around the world manages to operate without cutting all the limbs off somebody then arranging them like flowers in a "vase" made out of the poor soul's ribcage. The cartels take violence far beyond what is pragmatically necessary. Their system of crime breeds excessive violence and insanity.
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xkcd-sucks
2 hours ago
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Marketing, if you don't know the answer it's always marketing
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AlotOfReading
2 hours ago
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This stuff mostly followed after the zetas. It was a very deliberate strategy to compete in a hostile landscape that others eventually copied to survive.
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anigbrowl
29 minutes ago
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It's notable that a lot of the Zetas came from a military special forces background, making it seem as if their extreme brutality was a strategic choice inculcated during their training.

https://ctc.westpoint.edu/a-profile-of-los-zetas-mexicos-sec...

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coolhand2120
3 hours ago
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> How are they not rational?

It's the meth.

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the_sleaze_
5 hours ago
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The cartels are incredibly rational - what they lack are morals and ethics
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colechristensen
4 hours ago
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It's a business not an ideology.
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KPGv2
5 hours ago
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Do you have much evidence of them behaving irrationally?
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mmh0000
5 hours ago
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I would recommend reading the Freakinomics book or listen to their podcasts on drugs.

TL;DR: drug cartels are run like businesses. They are very rational. But, unlike your boss, their boss can also shoot you in the face if you annoy them too much

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Noaidi
6 hours ago
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How did that full force of the US military work out in Vietnam?
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antonymoose
6 hours ago
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Millions of dead Vietnamese.

In any case that was a war against a hardened, experienced, determined enemy fighting for its freedom from any form of colonial occupation, both as a formal military and as an insurgent force in South Vietnam.

I scarcely think the Mexican population would rise up in defense of the cartels here.

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boringg
5 hours ago
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I think a lot of people would be cheering on the destruction of the cartels.
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anigbrowl
28 minutes ago
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We were briefly greeted as liberators in Iraq too.
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ryandrake
3 hours ago
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They'd probably quickly stop cheering as their own homes and families were destroyed as collateral damage, which is what would happen if the "full force of the US military" were deployed against the cartels.
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TitaRusell
2 hours ago
[-]
The last time America invaded Mexico City it created martyrs. It's a fascinating story that they do not teach at US highschools lol.
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colechristensen
4 hours ago
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The destruction of cartels would involve careful policing and corruption controls, the best American administrations have been bad at this. The worst... can barely put its pants on much less dismantle foreign organized crime. You can't shoot a missile at a cartel and poof it's just gone.
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adolph
4 hours ago
[-]
A non-aligned population will look out for their own interests and are aware that the attention of the US is temporary but the cuadillismo that lead to cartels are a durable cultural artifact.

  The Battle of Culiacán, also known locally as the Culiacanazo and Black 
  Thursday, was a failed attempt to capture Ovidio Guzmán López, son of Sinaloa 
  Cartel kingpin Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán, who was wanted in the United States 
  for drug trafficking.
  
  Around 700 cartel gunmen began to attack civilian, government and military 
  targets around the city, despite orders from Ovidio sent at security forces' 
  request. Massive towers of smoke could be seen rising from burning cars and 
  vehicles. The cartels were well-equipped, with improvised armored vehicles, 
  bulletproof vests, .50 caliber (12.7 mm) rifles, rocket launchers, grenade 
  launchers and heavy machine guns.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Culiac%C3%A1n
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randallsquared
6 hours ago
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It was never used, there.
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kgermino
6 hours ago
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Pretty badly for both sides
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boringg
5 hours ago
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I don't really think you thought through that one. It sounds like what your saying is that the Vietnamese won and thats the outcome that matters. It does matter but that isn't the issue - it is the cost that everyone is talking about: the amount of destruction that was brought upon the country and people was terrible.
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infecto
6 hours ago
[-]
The distinction is those are cases where they are murdering Mexican citizens. If a cartel murdered a bus of people in America I suspect most any administration would retaliate in some form.
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reactordev
6 hours ago
[-]
Dude, Americans are getting kidnapped and murdered in Mexico all the time. The cartels don’t care your nationality.

If the administration strikes cartels first, they may find it egregious enough to do what they refused to do in the past…

I don’t rule out any options when it comes to murderous organizations.

*EDIT* This isn’t me saying don’t go to Mexico or that Mexico is unsafe either. Out of the tourists that visit from America, 0.001% see violence or are kidnapped or anything negative. If anything it would be petty theft near cruise ports and resort towns that would be the biggest culprit of crime for Americans.

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infecto
6 hours ago
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“Dude”, murdering a us citizen in Mexico is different than murdering an entire bus of people on US soil.

You say it’s happening all the time but then say it’s .01%.

Looked it up myself, maybe 40 to 300 people annually. Hard to discern how many of those are pure tourism vs visiting family. I suspect you have a greater risk visiting family, especially if it’s a border town.

13.5mm US citizens visit d Mexico in 2024 so .00002% got kidnapped. I bet that number is even lower when you separate pure tourism vs dual nationals or similar going back home to visit.

The point is any action taken on US soil in a large capacity would be seen as an attack by any administration.

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reactordev
5 hours ago
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I never said “In the US” guy
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infecto
34 minutes ago
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Why are you being so rude, dude?

Your right anything can happen but any large attack on US grounds or equally blowing up a plane on either side of the border is going to bring the full weight of the US on the cartels. It makes little sense. Cartels have for decades ingrained that into their organizations no matter how violent that may be.

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matwood
5 hours ago
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Of course things happen sometimes. But, the cartels typically do not want to mess with Americans, particularly in tourist areas, because that brings heat they don't want. It's literally bad for business.
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_heimdall
6 hours ago
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I think the GP was referring to buses on US soil rather than Americans on buses in Mexico.
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reactordev
6 hours ago
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Cartels only strike their own on US soil…
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infecto
6 hours ago
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You’re missing the point. Absolutely cartel violence impacts all types of people in the US and Mexico but large scale brutal violence that is usually saved for Mexico since unfortunately the Mexican federal government does not have control in most of the regions.

There is a huge difference between a one off gang killing in the US and someone taking a whole grey hound bus and burying the bodies in the desert.

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reactordev
5 hours ago
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Which is why I bring up their affinity for going after busses of people, because they have, in Mexico…

The world does not stop at the Us border.

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jghn
6 hours ago
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> Dude, Americans are getting kidnapped and murdered in Mexico all the time

Dude, can you put some numbers with a citation behind that? Then we can extrapolate a risk ratio and see if it really merits the "all the time" claim.

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resters
4 hours ago
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who are we (the US)? People who wantonly murder people on fishing boats, etc.
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reactordev
3 hours ago
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I’m not saying our cartel is any better…
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ultrarunner
1 hour ago
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Your use of "our" makes me wonder if the people of Mexico see the drug cartels as "theirs".
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reactordev
1 hour ago
[-]
Merely pointing out that the US administration is operating like a cartel now a days.

I doubt Mexicans see the Mexican cartels as “theirs” in the same way. Cartels have only been interested in paying off politicians and (as far as I’m aware) weren’t interested in being politicians. However, our politicians here… would LOVE to be Cartel members and make millions it seems. Because they definitely don’t give a shit about law and order.

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xtracto
5 hours ago
[-]
This is different.

See, Drug cartels over here operate with the blessing and favor of our president. They are tightly connected.

If a cartel dared to ground a US flight. The US government would have a "free pass" to break all hell loose in Mexico, and Sheinbaum wouldn't have a way to stop it.

She doesn't want that in any way, so the message to the cartel bosses would be to be very careful in that respect.

Sure, there have been US citizens killed within Mexico here and there, but those can easily be attributed to local violence. And as retribution, Mexican government sends a couple of wanted criminals to the US.

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ekidd
5 hours ago
[-]
Yeah, if a cartel actually used anti-aircraft weapons on a US passenger plane in US airspace? It wouldn't even matter if MAGA or the Democrats were in charge. The US would collectively lose its shit and spend the next 10 years and several trillion dollars retaliating against the cartels. The media would be ecstatic, because it would give them a decade of story arcs, starting with "our brave troops in uniform" all the way through to covering the eventual quagmire and anti-war protests. By year 6-8, editorial columnists would be writing columns reconsidering their initial support for the war.

Please, let's not do this.

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jmatthiass
7 hours ago
[-]
Good point. I guess it depends on the force, size, and especially effectiveness of any potential strikes. (i.e. How cornered a cartel might feel and how much flexing an outsized response might stand to gain them.)
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bpodgursky
4 hours ago
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Yes that might be the high-level logic, but if you give a MANPAD to a 19 year old sicario on meth, accidents do happen.
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jacquesm
2 hours ago
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I think you misunderstood that movie.
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philistine
5 hours ago
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If that aircraft held a person they wanted dead, I would not put it past them.
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mattmaroon
6 hours ago
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Unless we start bombing them first. That’s not hard to imagine these days.
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ibejoeb
6 hours ago
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Not hard to imagine these days? Wouldn't you hope for an intervention if it were known that a hostile, state-level military planned to down civilian aircraft?
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_joel
6 hours ago
[-]
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ibejoeb
5 hours ago
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I can't read your mind.
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KPGv2
5 hours ago
[-]
I had a quick check, and there were zero Americans on board this Malaysian aircraft shot down by a nuclear power over Ukraine, so I don't know how you think it's relevant to an American aircraft full of Americans being shot down in American airspace by cartels immediately on the other side of the American border.

EDIT: Unless you think Malaysia not bombing the Kremlin in retribution is somehow indicative of how America would respond to the situation we're actually talking about.

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mothballed
6 hours ago
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Unless the government is planning an attack on the cartel[s] that is so existential that such action wouldn't be considered an escalation but rather a tic for tat.

A trapped animal will generally use all its facilities regardless of its expected effectiveness.

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beepbooptheory
6 hours ago
[-]
Remember that there is no "the" cartel, just so many different towns and interests and bribed officials. It makes it a significant (and perhaps convenient) misnomer dont get me wrong, but maybe important to remember.

Extremely good, highly researched book if you want to get angry at me or call me idiot!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drug_Cartels_Do_Not_Exist

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estearum
6 hours ago
[-]
Mistakes happen though
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torpfactory
7 hours ago
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My read is most likely some kind of strike on the cartels. There hasn’t seemed to be any significant US military buildup so it’s something they’ll be able to do with a smaller force.

The trapezoid makes me worried about a ground incision there- it extends to the border and would be a cover space for an invasion force. Absolutely bonkers that we are even having this discussion.

The TFR is most likely contingency planning for possible retaliation by cartel drones and the need to keep the airspace clear so they can see (with radar) and shoot down drones and not passenger aircraft.

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grosswait
6 hours ago
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You are the first person to mention invasion. Kind of bonkers to jump to that conclusion.
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ben_w
6 hours ago
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Unfortunately, we find ourselves living in a bonkers time.
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torpfactory
6 hours ago
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It is totally nuts. We will see I guess. If there will be a ground invasion, people will see the convoys moving into position. You can’t really hide that much stuff.
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alexissantos
6 hours ago
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Nuts, definitely. Bonkers to jump to that conclusion? No, especially with this US administration. Mexico itself is concerned enough about the possibility that it's made statements to make it clear it wouldn't be acceptable. Mexico thinks it's nuts, too, but not bonkers to think the US might do it.

US troops in Mexico 'not on the table', Sheinbaum tells Trump https://www.france24.com/en/americas/20260112-us-troops-mexi...

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niij
5 hours ago
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She's on the Cartel payroll. Of course she would say that. You can't be a simple mayor without cartel involvement in Mexico.
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malfist
4 hours ago
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> She's on the Cartel payroll

> You can't be a simple mayor without cartel involvement in Mexico.

I don't know what world you're living in, but this is absolutely not the case. Mexico is not a failed state, don't get all your news from places trying to scare you.

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ranger_danger
5 hours ago
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Other commenters here in this thread as well as many people on reddit and other sites about this news are also saying the same thing. Our minds are not as unique as we think :)
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matthewaveryusa
6 hours ago
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What’s also bonkers is our political whimpiness that allowed this to happen, right? If there is a drone response it’s pretty damning evidence that we are way too dovish in our policy against drug smuggling up until now
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ben_w
6 hours ago
[-]
It doesn't say much either way.

I'm from the UK, we had the ("real") IRA put a RPG-22 anti-tank rocket at the walls of MI6 HQ (the UK version of the CIA): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000_MI6_attack

Dangerous things like these are not expensive, compared to even low budget small-time group.

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gsck
5 hours ago
[-]
I mean the RIRA is a splinter group of the PIRA which had massive funding from overseas, especially from the United States. PIRA was not a small-time group.
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pigbearpig
6 hours ago
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"Maybe, or maybe FL180 is a nice clean line for class A airspace. No need to bother transcontinental flights for a local issue."

Way more plauible

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satiated_grue
5 hours ago
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FL180 is the floor of Class A airspace, "the flight levels", where airliners etc. operate.

Relevant chapter from FAA "Pilot's Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge": https://www.faa.gov/sites/faa.gov/files/17_phak_ch15.pdf

In the "Flight Levels", altitudes are referred to not in feet above sea level but as "FLxxx" where xxx is a nominal altitude in 100s of feet.

Altimetry is done using barometric pressure. Since this varies with weather, airplanes at lower altitudes set their altimeters to the local barometric pressure for a reasonably accurate reading. In the flight levels, where planes are typically covering ground quickly and there is very little chance of your path conflicting with the surface of the Earth, every plane sets to an agreed-upon reference of 29.92 inches of mercury as the altimeter setting.

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petesergeant
6 hours ago
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What does that mean sorry?
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Someone1234
6 hours ago
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It means any aircraft transitioning over the area at high altitude isn't impacted, because they're too high to care.

It is a ground and "everything near the ground" stop. Meaning low altitude helicopters and private aircraft have to consider it, even transitioning, but realistically commercial aircraft not taking off/landing in the area won't.

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bombcar
6 hours ago
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FL180 is 18000 feet, meaning that flights OVER don’t need to divert.
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mazugrin2
5 hours ago
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It is a pedantic but meaningful distinction that I'd only point out on a sorta geeky site like this, but actually, FL180 (or, flight level one-eight-zero) is the altitude at which an altimeter will read 18,000 feet if it's set to assume that the barometric pressure is 1013 hPa (29.92 inHg). Above a certain transition altitude, aircraft switch their altimeters from reading altitude in the local pressure to this "standard" pressure. This is because above that altitude and safely away from terrain, it's no longer important to know precisely how high you are, but it _is_ important to know what altitude you are relative to all the other aircraft nearby.
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reactordev
6 hours ago
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It means that you have no business being below FL180 or 18,000ft to enter this airspace.
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anovikov
6 hours ago
[-]
That it limits local flights but not international ones as they fly higher.
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cameldrv
5 hours ago
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Doing a closure up to 18k feet is common because that's where class A airspace starts, i.e. you need a clearance to go there, you can't just fly around VFR wherever you want. The airspace above 18k might not be officially closed, but controllers can be instructed to just not give a clearance into whatever area they deem is unsafe on a particular day.
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danesparza
6 hours ago
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I think it's simpler. It's going to make the cartel drones easier to spot.
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dylan604
6 hours ago
[-]
Do you think the cartels won’t see this news? If this is all it was, the cartels can just wait 10 days and start up again.
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duxup
6 hours ago
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Shooting down civilian American aircraft like that would seem to just be for an even more strong response…

Seems unlikely.

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m4rtink
6 hours ago
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If only this was a certainty - Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 was shot down with 298 people killed 12 years ago but still no one was directly punished for it...
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bluedino
6 hours ago
[-]
Malaysia isn't going to attack Russia.
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ethbr1
6 hours ago
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I highly doubt the Russians/separatists running the Buk knew the identity of the flight before shooting it down.
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myrmidon
5 hours ago
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Most certainly not, but I don't see how that is relevant.

The problem (from a victim/Dutch perspective) is that there is complete denial from the Russian side (despite heaps of evidence around the people involved, origin and transport of the launcher from Russian territory).

Even if Russian judges and prosecutors are completely corrupt and biased, an actual investigation/trial is the least that would be expected here, but all we got are the bald faced lies that Russia is particularly fond of.

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m4rtink
9 minutes ago
[-]
At least some vengeance has been already done in blood, although indirectly, given how oversized has been dutch support for Ukraine compared to other similarly sized countries.
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FergusArgyll
6 hours ago
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> Shooting down civilian *American* aircraft like that would seem to just be for an even more strong response…
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guerrilla
6 hours ago
[-]
They would want to avoid escalation. Escalation with cartels historically does not go well for anyone involved.
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alex43578
6 hours ago
[-]
Escalation by attacking US civilians or the homeland has also gone poorly. It’s been the casus belli many times, notably ending in two Japanese cities getting nuked…
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willturman
5 hours ago
[-]
The homeland? Yikes.

The last time there was an attack within the United States’ borders it notably ended with a self-owning combination of perhaps the largest bureaucratic waste of time and money in human history (DHS/TSA) and the systematic erosion of enumerated rights.

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guerrilla
6 hours ago
[-]
Dropping nuclear bombs on Japan was in an entirely different context which has no relevance here. We're not in the middle of a global war (nor is anyone even at war with Mexico), nor in a nuclear arms race asserting nuclear capabilities for the first time in history.

You're forgetting all the times the US failed too, and those cases weren't even on its own border. Iraq, Afghanistan, Vietnam... the list is very long. Creating an existential threat on your own border is a bad move for anyone. Remember how bad Columbia got? I guess not. The current situation has the potential to be much more dangerous.

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johnmaguire
5 hours ago
[-]
> You're forgetting all the times the US failed too, and those cases weren't even on its own border.

Doesn't the US have more resources at home, not less?

Wouldn't a strike on US soil be a larger escalation and dictate a swift and larger response?

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guerrilla
5 hours ago
[-]
This is real life. They don't to cause a problem they can't solve.
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johnmaguire
4 hours ago
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You are now leaning your premise as an argument. I disagree that it would cause a problem.

I believe it's unrealistic that "the cartel" would strike back against the USG, particularly on US soil.

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derbOac
7 hours ago
[-]
Would that account for the trapezoidal shape of the one restricted area?
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torpfactory
7 hours ago
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My bet is a showy armored advance though the open terrain near there… it’ll look great on camera! /s
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Spooky23
6 hours ago
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Sounds like a great way to reinforce the "We ready to move along from Epstein" narrative.
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mothballed
7 hours ago
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It seems crazy not to just, tell people that if that's what it is. "Hey if you are flying above 18,000 please don't go lower because you could be blown up by a MANPAD."

If the cartels have MANPADS then our intel is already blown by issuing the TFR, so what's the harm in just saying it out loud?

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gordonhart
7 hours ago
[-]
Mass panic? Think of how wildly it would be misrepresented in the media and how disruptive it would be to all air travel in the country. People aren't rational actors and the most sensationalized headline is what ends up spreading
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spacephysics
7 hours ago
[-]
For your first point, on the off chance they have other equipment capable of surpassing MANPADS I’d prefer as a passenger they just fly around.

Second point, it’s not obvious if its for MANPAD reasons or it’s our own operation though we can speculate.

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mothballed
6 hours ago
[-]
I'm not sure if the person I replied to edited their comment, or I looked at the wrong one, but the one I originally read said the TFR only had the restriction below 18,000 ft. I was addressing it on that basis, which wasn't requiring people flying above that to route around it.
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JumpinJack_Cash
6 hours ago
[-]
Of course, the US elected the only celebrity of the 80s and 90s who hates blow.

On the other hand a careful analysis of the plumbing system of Trump's Tower and Trump's Hotels in general would reveal possibly the highest concentration of coke than any other building in the world considering the intersection of wealth and istrionic personalities who called those apartments home at one time or the other.

Fate sure loves irony

Besides I would go to my grave claiming that racism is particularly strong in the war on drugs, if coca grew plentiful and naturally in the US and Europe it would not be illegal at all.

But it's scary because uh ohh inssulfation of an extract of a plant coming from the global south we are all gonna die, somebody will please think of the children.

But hey you can gulp 60 oz of super strong energy drinks which equate to about 5-6 fat lines, matter of fact you can gulp 600 oz and cause yourself a heart attack and nobody would bat an eye or investigate the safety profile of such drinks

It's the same old story with alcohol too

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frumplestlatz
4 hours ago
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> But hey you can gulp 60 oz of super strong energy drinks which equate to about 5-6 fat lines

Are you joking?

Look, I’m no stranger to drugs, but coke is not a “60oz energy drink” and its potential for generally destroying someone’s life is, while not at the same level, definitely in the same ballpark as crack, heroin, and meth.

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JumpinJack_Cash
3 hours ago
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60 oz energy drink = 5-6 fat lines perhaps more

The most dense energy drinks have 350-400 of caffeine in a can these days and on top of that there's the taurine etc.

60 oz is 4 cans, do your math. 4 * 400 = 1600mg of caffeine alone

> > potential for generally destroying someone’s life is, while not at the same level, definitely in the same ballpark as crack, heroin, and meth.

That's more of the result of the enviornment and the associated people who frequent such circles and not the stimulant per se.

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frumplestlatz
2 hours ago
[-]
I don't say this lightly, as someone who has spent decades around drugs, and as a result, knows more than a few recovering addicts: this comes across as wild rationalization by an addict.

And while 1600mg of caffeine is 4x the FDA's recommended daily intake and really isn't a good idea, someone on that much caffeine is neither going to feel nor behave in any way similar to someone on coke.

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JumpinJack_Cash
38 minutes ago
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I am sorry but you are way off.

Sewer stats tell us that in reality the most civilized places in the world have the highest amount of coke in their sewers.

Zurich, Brussel, Berlin, Melbourne, Billionaire's row in NYC, Nantucket [0]

For those who don't jump the hedonic treadmill blow is just edgy chic coffee with the thrill of doing something 'illegal' and snorting it instead of consuming it orally.

Of course if you take coffee and nicotine and that gives you plenty of stimulation for 6-7 hours you have no business moving into the stronger stimulants

[0]https://www.euda.europa.eu/publications/pods/waste-water-ana...

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fabian2k
8 hours ago
[-]
There is a circular restriction around the airport and a trapezoid one next to the city (https://elpasomatters.org/2026/02/11/unexplained-faa-order-s...).

What are the plausible explanations here? I can't think of anything except military action against Mexico (or the cartels inside Mexico). But even that doesn't fit well.

A suspected terror attack could explain the airspace around the airport, but not the weird trapezoid restriction next to the city.

The duration of 10 days is also weird, that seems very long for any kind of emergency situation. And as far as I understand, it is unusual to have no exceptions at all here e.g. for medical transports via helicopter.

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viraptor
8 hours ago
[-]
The not-totally-crazy ideas from Reddit include:

- it's related to the annouced GPS disruption test (although that's a really long time and doesn't seem urgent enough)

- someone in Mexico is getting kidnapped by Gov

- nuclear tests

I wish those were crazy ideas, but here we are...

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bdbdbdb
7 hours ago
[-]
I don't know which Reddit thread you're reading (there are many I'm sure) but the one in r/Aviation seems to have a favourite theory that there was a credible threat of someone with MANPADS, which are shoulder-launched surface-to-air missiles and not some sort of sanitary product.

Apparently they have a ceiling of 18,000ft which is exactly the limit of the restriction in El Paso. Aircraft are allowed fly over if they go above that

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alex43578
7 hours ago
[-]
That's also just the cutoff for class A airspace. I think people are reading too much into the specific height.
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throw0101a
7 hours ago
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> - it's related to the annouced GPS disruption test (although that's a really long time and doesn't seem urgent enough)

Those are done regularly without TFRs. See recent example in Texas:

* https://avbrief.com/overnight-gps-testing-affects-huge-area-...

A link to a list of notices at:

* https://www.navcen.uscg.gov/gps-service-interruptions

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RupertSalt
7 hours ago
[-]
> GPS disruption

Ah, a very plausible explanation!

https://avbrief.com/overnight-gps-testing-affects-huge-area-...

The map indicates it will be centered on Lampasas and the region of effect seems to be east of El Paso. So, if the GPS exercises are the cause, the TFRs would've been more likely to bring in Austin, Dallas, and San Antonio.

Isn't it possible that a 10-day TFR could be lifted early once the concern is past? They've probably made it 10 days just to establish an upper bound.

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Johnny555
7 hours ago
[-]
If it's just routine testing, then why couldn't they have announced it earlier to allow companies to plan and/or fly their planes out of the affected area?
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JumpinJack_Cash
7 hours ago
[-]
> > The map indicates it will be centered on Lampasas and the region of effect seems to be east of El Paso. So, if the GPS exercises are the cause, the TFRs would've been more likely to bring in Austin, Dallas, and San Antonio.

Wait so people in South Texas won't be able to use GPS on the ground either?

Also if the goal is to disrupt the cartels and the people using GPS to know where they are at in the process of crossing the border illegally why is the Army involved in this at all?

The Army has no business in taking part of operations to disrupt cartels and illegal immigration, it's the whole rational behind having 3 letters agency including the evil one that rose to prominence lately

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derektank
6 hours ago
[-]
The Global Positioning System is owned and operated by Space Delta 8 at Schriever Space Force Base in CO[1]. Testing in collaboration the US Army (the primary customer of GPS services) is hardly noteworthy.

[1] https://www.spaceforce.mil/About-Us/Fact-Sheets/Fact-Sheet-D...

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elictronic
4 hours ago
[-]
Probably laser shootdown of drug carrying drones.
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superb_dev
3 hours ago
[-]
Another interesting note, the trapezoidal TFR is still in place
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mothballed
8 hours ago
[-]
Most plausible comment I found on the internet was the government lost something in that trapezoid and doesn't want anyone to fly over it and find it until it's collected.
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RupertSalt
8 hours ago
[-]
Ah, so an alien's contact lens
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bluGill
7 hours ago
[-]
Roswel is a few hours away by car. Interesting theory but they would lose it there.
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thebruce87m
7 hours ago
[-]
Broken Arrow?
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morkalork
7 hours ago
[-]
Quick, someone call Skinner and get Mulder and Scully on the case!
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tootie
7 hours ago
[-]
I honestly assume it's something petty. Like an El Paso air traffic controller was rude to a deportation flight pilot.
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nateburke
6 hours ago
[-]
My guess is nuclear test.

Airport circle to secure the transport of the device to the ground adjacent to the test site.

Trapezoid is the test site, wider on the side that is less controllable (border-facing).

Disconnected because two separate teams executed in parallel without informed oversight.

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estearum
6 hours ago
[-]
... I don't think they're detonating a nuclear weapon in a National Monument 50 miles from a large US city...

There are plenty of better places for them to do this.

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nateburke
6 hours ago
[-]
NTS was 60-80 mi away from Las Vegas.

yes there might be safer locations for an underground nuclear test, but how many of them offer the same "F U" PR capacity relative to Mexico/Juarez/cartels, etc.

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estearum
6 hours ago
[-]
A nuclear weapon is only "F U" PR to cartels if you believe they're literally braindead, which given that they run massive international businesses, I suspect they're not.

Nukes mean nothing to a cartel. What an insane idea.

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peyton
6 hours ago
[-]
It’s probably not SOP to land nuclear weapons at the municipal airport either.
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jjk166
6 hours ago
[-]
There is a military base with its own airfield located within El Paso basically right next to El Paso International Airport.
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kakacik
6 hours ago
[-]
While Mexican side has no restrictions - that would be supremely dumb even for a primary school level of thinking. Tons of civilians dead with clear reason who caused it, completely preventable.

Fantasy often likes extreme options but most probably saner reason like expected strike on cartels and their retaliation is whats happening.

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pixl97
6 hours ago
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>supremely dumb even for a primary school level of thinking

So 100% Trump

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thomasjudge
5 hours ago
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state_less
5 hours ago
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The explanation given is that cartel air drones entered US airspace.

I guess my question is, doesn't this happen all the time? I would think drones would be an easy way to fly a Kilo over the border to whatever dropspot you wanted. I wonder what the new wrinkle is?

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MiguelHudnandez
1 hour ago
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I think it's worth correcting the record here because drone warfare is pretty different from what actually happened. What they identified and shot down was a mylar party balloon.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/airspace-closure-followed-spat-...

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/us-military-shot-down-party...

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uyzstvqs
5 hours ago
[-]
The smuggling is nothing new. Sounds like they're testing laser-based countermeasures against them now.

[0] https://x.com/petemuntean/status/2021586247827828812

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guerrilla
5 hours ago
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> I guess my question is, doesn't this happen all the time?

Yes, all the time.

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camillomiller
5 hours ago
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agricultural drones used for spraying can lift up to 60-80kg payloads.
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infecto
5 hours ago
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Will be interesting when/if more information is released. I am not sure why folks are so surprised or think it’s shocking. While definitely out of the norm, my mind was immediately thinking 10 days seems like an even number where you are trying to find or do something, not sure how long it’s going to take so you just stick it. Certainly odd that it’s only a few hours but for all I know there is some written government procedure for whoever is doing that sets it at 10 days.
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Trasmatta
5 hours ago
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So bizarre

Why the 10 day announcement overnight only to totally rescind it before the majority of US citizens wake up and read the news?

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LanceH
5 hours ago
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If you shut it down for too long and there is a lapse in reopening it, planes are grounded for an extra bit of time.

If you shut it down for too short and there is a lapse in extending the grounding, planes are getting shot out of the sky (or whatever threat it was).

edit: I would add that maybe there are forms for shutting down airspace of various specific time lengths and a convenient time for something of unknown duration would be 10 days. 10 days might also be enough time to be sure whatever resources need to be brought to bear on this are available where an hour or day might not be. Shut it down basically indefinitely, or at least long enough that the crew who handles this extraordinary situation will be on hand to turn it off.

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embedding-shape
5 hours ago
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Hoping it slips under other news like "Woah someone else should pay for this wall/bridge/investigation" so no one really notices it. To be fair, seems most things are about trying to direct the news somewhere else, most of the times being successful at that too.
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fluidcruft
5 hours ago
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NYT reports they're claiming it was about testing anti-drone tech at Fort Bliss.

> The brief shutdown was related to a test of new counter-drone technology by the military at nearby Fort Bliss Army base, according to a person briefed on the matter.

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jeffwask
5 hours ago
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There is also a detention center at Fort Bliss from which some very unsettling reports have emerged.
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philistine
5 hours ago
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This is ridiculous and patently false. The US is equipped with many bases with permanent air space restrictions where they could perform such tests. It makes less than zero sense to test anti-drone tech in a crowded civilian space. I fully blame incompetence.
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fluidcruft
5 hours ago
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Latest update from NYT

> According to a social media post by the Secretary of Transportation, Sean Duffy, Mexican cartel drones breached U.S. airspace, prompting temporary closure of airspace over El Paso. The Defense Department took action to disable the drones, Mr. Duffy said. Another person familiar with the situation had described the cause of the shutdown as a test of anti-drone technology. It is unclear if the brief airport closure was directly related to the presence of drones or how the technology was deployed.

It does not seem implausible or unreasonable to me that an anti-drone system would trigger airspace restrictions when activated. Whether system activation is intended to put out a 10 days block is probably a different issue, but probably related to SOP for an event of unknown duration.

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SketchySeaBeast
5 hours ago
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I'm not a huge fan of conspiracy theories, but starting a 240 hours closure, ending it after 4, and claiming it was a test? What sort of testing are they doing that they were off by two orders of magnitude about the duration?
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fluidcruft
5 hours ago
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Who knows. Maybe the system was malfunctioning and they didn't know how long it would take to shut it down. More likely the admin is just blabbing the first thing they think will shut everyone up.
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threetonesun
5 hours ago
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Someone probably briefly thought they brought Skynet online via AI powered drones.
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spaceywilly
5 hours ago
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Hanlon’s Razor

"Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity."

Someone probably just screwed up

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input_sh
5 hours ago
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You don't screw up something this major, it doesn't happen by accident nor by incompetence.

They had plans to bomb something south of that airport, they had to postpone those plans now that the info is public enough that whatever their target was is definitely aware of those plans.

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spaceywilly
5 hours ago
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They have confirmed it was for testing a counter-drone weapon. They did not say why they set it to expire in 10 days, that part seems like it was probably a mistake.
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input_sh
3 hours ago
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They gave you a plausible-enough reason and you took their word for it. That's completely fine, you are well within your rights to decide for yourself whether you believe them or not.

I don't, and since neither of us can know for sure given the info we've been given, it's useless for us to argue about our opinions.

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spaceywilly
2 hours ago
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I am curious, what explanation would justify a full closure of the airspace over a major us city for 10 days, in your opinion? That is the real screwup here. Whatever justification they are giving is entirely beside the point. Closing the airspace, even to emergency medevac flights, is negligence.
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input_sh
1 hour ago
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Miss me with your jUsT cUrIoUs, I have no need to make up hypothetical scenarios under which this would be justifiable. The burden of proof is not on me.
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GJim
4 hours ago
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> You don't screw up something this major

Liz Truss begs to differ.

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OldSchool
5 hours ago
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If there was ever a time when the old Soviet Union could have won the Cold War... Fortunately for us, the window of top-down incompetence came far too late.
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fuzzylightbulb
5 hours ago
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Their stupidity is a true threat to our lives. Regardless of how you want to classify it we need to remove it as a threat.
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diogenes_atx
5 hours ago
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WTF? The FAA announces a ban on all flights at an international airport and then withdraws the ban within a few hours of the announcement? What kind of insane police state would try a stunt like that? Even for the Trump administration, that is setting the bar at a new low.
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joezydeco
4 hours ago
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You should have been here a month ago. The FAA halted all air traffic to and from the Caribbean region with no explanation (well, duh) and no announcement of a resume date. Then it was lifted 24 hours later with no notice.
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2OEH8eoCRo0
5 hours ago
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I think the military did a thing without telling the FAA so they had to guess?
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lingrush4
5 hours ago
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Trump needs to be impeached immediately for this. How dare he close airspace and then just lift that closure once the danger has passed.
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diogenes_atx
5 hours ago
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What danger?
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unethical_ban
4 hours ago
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What kind of government would use their statutory authority to shut down an airport when there is a risk to the planes?

Why do you think the FAA doesn't have this authority? Or, why do you think the FAA shouldn't have this authority?

In other words: This may have been needed but poorly executed; this may have been incompetent planning and response. But I wouldn't call the FAA shutting down an airport "police state".

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diogenes_atx
4 hours ago
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>> What kind of government would use their statutory authority to shut down an airport when there is a risk to the planes?

It could be either an incompetent government or an authoritarian government that is trying to militarize certain institutions of civilian life.

>> Why do you think the FAA doesn't have this authority? Or, why do you think the FAA shouldn't have this authority?

The FAA does indeed have the authority. The question is simply: why did the FAA choose to exercise its authority in this case? If there was a real danger to the public, then the FAA should be honest with the people and tell them what is the danger. That is what citizens should expect from a democratic government.

>> This may have been needed but poorly executed; this may have been incompetent planning and response. But I wouldn't call the FAA shutting down an airport "police state".

The reason why I ask if this is an example of police state behavior is because in this case the government apparently took drastic measures without explaining to the people why it was doing so.

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belter
5 hours ago
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don't attribute to security concerns...what can be explained by incompetence...
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idontwantthis
5 hours ago
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Or alcoholism
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u1hcw9nx
8 hours ago
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Action to close airspace over a major city in the US for security reasons over extended period hasn’t happened since 9/11.

10 day closure for security reasons seems really long.

edit: Same restriction imposed around Santa Teresa, New Mexico. ~15 miles northwest of the El Paso airport.

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le-mark
7 hours ago
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El Paso is the 6th largest city in Texas so not “major” but certainly large.
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u1hcw9nx
7 hours ago
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25th largest in the United States.
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SirFatty
7 hours ago
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Ft. Bliss is there as well...
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bdbdbdb
7 hours ago
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To me the trapezoid suggests something traveling south fell in the area. Narrow at the top, wide at the bottom.

Maybe they dropped a nuke by accident (again)

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kijin
7 hours ago
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That looks like a rather flat trapezoid for something that fell from high above.

With a fast-moving object, we can usually tell its trajectory across the map much more accurately than we can tell where along that trajectory it impacted the ground. See: MH370.

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daemonologist
5 hours ago
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Maybe fits the "DoD is shooting something at some kind of incoming drone" explanation - they know they're shooting _from_ the top of the trapezoid but in terms of direction, only that they're vaguely facing south. (Doesn't really explain why the TFR doesn't extend into Mexico though.)
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jjk166
6 hours ago
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The area they would expect to find it would be much narrower than the area they would expect a plane overhead to be able to observe it.
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EwanG
8 hours ago
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According to postings on a couple Reddit discussions, this surprised the El Paso city council among others:

https://www.reddit.com/r/aviation/comments/1r1r7tu/what_does...

and

https://www.reddit.com/r/ADSB/comments/1r1pqnp/10_day_tfr_is...

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shaky-carrousel
7 hours ago
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They probably lost a nuke in the area. Wouldn't be the first time.
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pandemic_region
7 hours ago
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Honest question: do you mean it was stolen or it fell out of the plane by accident or something like that?
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jffry
2 hours ago
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_boffin_
3 hours ago
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Check out the book Command & Control by Eric Schlosser
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shaky-carrousel
6 hours ago
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I mean it fell out. It has happened before.
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throwaway173738
6 hours ago
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Probably the latter.
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dathinab
7 hours ago
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speculations are it's either related to ICE or drug cartel investigations

The former has a long history of not cooperating with local authorities (also in ways I personally think are sometimes quite malicious but that is off topic). Und normal circumstances ICE would never have the power to lead to a shut down of air space, but with the current administration who knows.

And drug cartel investigations won't cooperate with the city council as an investigation big enough to shut down airspace wouldn't want to risk it leaking by speaking with a city council about it.

But this is a pretty big deal and lets hope this is just about preventing some high ranking drug cartel members from fleeing and not some retaliatory horror story implicitly triggered by the repeated public rejections and denouncements of Trump in recent week. Like if we look at full (and violent) dictatorships(1) you would expect an internet outage to follow and then a lot of people to die.

(1): To be clear no the US is not a full blown violent dictatorship. Even through things are bad, they are not "that" bad. Through IMHO there seem to be people in the government which want to make it exactly that bad.

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expedition32
7 hours ago
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The president has way too much executive power. In my country everything is decided by a cabinet meeting in America one man orders and everyone obeys.
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dathinab
6 hours ago
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Theoretically a lot of that is true for the US.

It's just that

- both parties have undermined the separation of power, and expanded power of the president repeatedly for many years (e.g. with granting special privileges to the president after 9/11 which where way to broad and not strictly limited to a very short time)

- especially Trump has undermined/dismantled a lot of "checks and balances" mechanisms, including in his previous presidency

- people spreading "legal theories" which are very clearly nonsensical but at least half of the countries press pretending they are credible potentially true. As some are about the constitution you can see this as a direct propaganda attack against the US constitution. With close no consequence, too.

- the current supreme court is IMHO strange. They are not at all impartial and have interpreted laws multiple times in ways which are neither backed by the laws wording nor it's spirit (if you based the spirit on the history due to which the laws where made) with this decision often having been reasoned by what looks a lot like "make pretend everything is normal excuses". But at the same time it hasn't gone fully "we go with whatever Trump/Mega wants" or anything like that. I can't really understand what they are thinking, tbh.

so yes, the president has too much executive power at the moment. Both more then intended with the founding of the US, and in practice more then they even legally have.

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dylan604
5 hours ago
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You’ve left out that both chambers of congress is of the same party as POTUS and have abdicated their part in checks and balances.
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ganzsz
7 hours ago
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Who forms the cabinet though? In a two party system - where one party seems to be built around a personality cult - cabinet can be filled with rubber stampers
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ClarityJones
6 hours ago
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Yeah, it could be formed by one person, or from two parties, or possibly by an even more opaque network of influence backed by god knows who.
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dylan604
5 hours ago
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The cabinet is formed with congressional approval which this spineless congress did with a rubber stamp
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RIMR
6 hours ago
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>To be clear no the US is not a full blown violent dictatorship.

The key word you forgot here is "yet".

>Even through things are bad, they are not "that" bad.

They will get "that" bad if you take on the attitude that things aren't that bad.

>IMHO there seem to be people in the government which want to make it exactly that bad.

We should act accordingly then.

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dlcarrier
10 hours ago
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Here's a direct link to the notice: https://tfr.faa.gov/tfr3/?page=detail_6_2233

Temporary flight restrictions (TFRs) tend to be pretty terse, but they do usually call out "VIP" if they're due to someone visiting.

The type listing of "security" gets thrown around a lot, though. For example there's a permanent security TFR around the closest Air Force base to me (https://tfr.faa.gov/tfr3/?page=detail_5_8746) because they regularly fly unmanned aircraft that can't fly in insufficiently controlled airspace, and the standard airspace layout around an airport of that size isn't sufficient, so instead of making special rules for that airport, there's a "security" TFR to give air-traffic controllers extra control of what would normally be uncontrolled airspace.

It is pretty unusually to get such a short notice, and to not have instructions for exemptions.

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seanf
9 hours ago
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No exemptions for medical life flights, local law enforcement, or even the military. You can read a more normal NOTAM posted for New Orleans likely for Mardi Gras (https://tfr.faa.gov/tfr3/?page=detail_6_2231)

As a Minnesotan I wonder what this does to the deportation flights going to and from Camp East Montana.

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wocka
6 hours ago
[-]
The Federal Aviation Administration said it had lifted the temporary closure of airspace over El Paso that it had imposed last night. “All flights will resume as normal,” the F.A.A. said on social media.
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huevosabio
6 hours ago
[-]
What a bizarre move.
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baq
5 hours ago
[-]
Reminds me of the chaos monkey. Building resilience by breaking and fixing stuff.

Not sure if applicable here, though.

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Nathanael_M
7 hours ago
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The percentage of comments written primarily for the purpose irrational political ranting is frustrating, considering the genuinely interesting nature of the story.
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ahhhhnoooo
5 hours ago
[-]
"I wish all these people would stop pursuing politics discussions about an authoritarian regime, instead can't we all just talk about how interesting authoritarianism is?"

Weird take...

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themafia
1 hour ago
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>> for the purpose irrational political ranting

> pursuing politics discussions

Did you intentionally ignore this specific point?

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lingrush4
5 hours ago
[-]
Closing a small patch of airspace while military activity is occurring is not authoritarianism. Get a grip you lunatic
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ahhhhnoooo
2 hours ago
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I don't think anyone said closing this airspace was an authoritarian act... double check the posts above.
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jjtheblunt
5 hours ago
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i think the comment you replied to said what you said
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exegete
7 hours ago
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1e1a
6 hours ago
[-]
poor PTZ mount :(
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3D30497420
10 hours ago
[-]
Further commentary/speculation on this Reddit thread: https://www.reddit.com/r/ADSB/comments/1r1pqnp/10_day_tfr_is...

It includes a local city Councilmember who's says he is working to get more information.

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Shank
10 hours ago
[-]
Nuclear weapons test? The latest test treaty just expired.

Edit: There are two TFRs, one in El Paso and one right next to it in the mountains: https://tfr.faa.gov/tfr3/?page=detail_6_2234

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Stevvo
9 hours ago
[-]
I think not; it's not somewhere you can conduct a nuclear test without starting a war with Mexico. However it is interesting to look at the TFR area in Google maps; it looks just like a nuclear test site, but the craters are natural volcanoes.
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IsTom
7 hours ago
[-]
Well, somebody has suggested nuking a tornado before. Why not a vulcano?
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lazide
9 hours ago
[-]
Mexico isn’t going to start a war with the US. it would last a week at most, and they’d end up glowing even more than if the us ‘downwinded’ them all year.
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mikkupikku
8 hours ago
[-]
If Mexico went to war with America they would rely on asymmetric insurgency tactics. They have no shortage of sympathetic people in America, not just Mexican nationals but native born Americans as well. America hasn't dealt with a genuine domestic insurgency situation before.
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beAbU
7 hours ago
[-]
That's exactly what russia thought before invading the Ukraine.
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tw04
4 hours ago
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Not to be pedantic but it’s just Ukraine. It is an independent country.

Russia calls is “the Ukraine” because they think it’s their territory and not an independent nation.

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K0balt
9 hours ago
[-]
Probably just closing the airspace for the space alien emissary.
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c420
8 hours ago
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Welcome. Tremendous to have you here. Really historic. Some people said it couldn’t happen, but I said keep an open mind, and now look. Intergalactic diplomacy. Nobody’s ever seen anything like it. We’re ready to make a deal, a fair deal, maybe the best deal in the galaxy.
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lvspiff
8 hours ago
[-]
If there was ever a time for a Mars Attacks style invasion it is now
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massysett
10 hours ago
[-]
Wouldn’t the Nevada Test Site be much better for this? Huge, government controlled, no major airports or cities, and moreover, already used for this sort of thing.
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baubino
10 hours ago
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This was my thought as well given the length of time of the closure.
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karlkloss
10 hours ago
[-]
3.6 roentgen you say?
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c420
10 hours ago
[-]
"A person familiar with the notices, who asked not to be identified because they weren’t authorized to speak publicly, said the action to close airspace over a major U.S. for security reasons over extended period hasn’t happened since immediately after the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001."

https://elpasomatters.org/2026/02/11/unexplained-faa-order-s...

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dlcarrier
10 hours ago
[-]
It shows how bad the lack of available sources is, when they interview someone familiar with the type notice in general, but not this specific notice.
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weirdsweatsuit
3 hours ago
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Representative Veronica Escobar, an El Paso Democrat, said in a news conference that the explanation citing Mexican drones crossing the border as the reason for the closure was “not the information that we in Congress have been told.”

She said that there was no current or past threat to the area. “There’s no threat. There was not a threat, which is why the F.A.A. lifted this restriction so quickly,” she said. “The information coming from the administration does not add up.”

“There have been drone incursions from Mexico going back to as long as drones existed. So this is nothing new” (NYT)

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con
7 hours ago
[-]
FAA closed another airspace nearby: https://tfr.faa.gov/tfr3/?page=detail_6_2234

- From February 11, 2026 at 0630 UTC (February 10, 2026 at 2330 MST)

- To February 21, 2026 at 0630 UTC (February 20, 2026 at 2330 MST)

My guess is nuclear tests

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dathinab
7 hours ago
[-]
it's too spontaneous for that

it it's "just" a training exercise or test they could have announced the closing weeks or month before it happening massively reducing the cost fallout from it

not that the current administration has in generally acted with care when it comes to causing huge financial damage to US cities, especially such they don't like

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1970-01-01
33 minutes ago
[-]
Whatever happened to the New Jersey drones? Did we give up on them or did they give up on us?
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sph
8 hours ago
[-]
Maybe there's credible threat of MANPADs from the cartels? Wouldn't be the first time around, apparently.

https://old.reddit.com/r/aviation/comments/1r1s4zt/faa_groun...

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mikkupikku
8 hours ago
[-]
Stopping life flights though? The supposed risk of cartels shooting down a helicopter vs the immediate risk of "this guy is going to die if we don't fly him to the nearest trauma center"... That risk calculus doesn't make sense.
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gsk22
8 hours ago
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To be fair, risk calculus does not appear to be this administration's strong suit.
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Errrrik
5 hours ago
[-]
Lets just for a second pretend that cartel g2a attacks are the legitimate threat. You now have a decision in regards to sparing lives: 1 Life, ground the medivacs, vs 3-4 Lives and letting them fly. Risk the life of 1 person by not allowing them fly, vs risking more lives by Allowing them to fly. (I had to explain it again so that you hopefully understand)

Seems like they understand risk calculus more than you.

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mikkupikku
3 hours ago
[-]
You forgot to weigh the relative likelihood of somebody needing a life flight to survive vs the likelihood of that flight being shot down. The first is very high, or they'd not have called for a helicopter, while the second is quite low even if there is a cartel psycho running around with MANPADS. They're more likely to hold their missile in reserve than to randomly fire it off at some helicopter out of the blue.
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utf_8x
6 hours ago
[-]
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nnnnico
7 hours ago
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More likely to be related to the E Files than the X ones
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imglorp
6 hours ago
[-]
E-File? Like, taxes?
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ahhhhnoooo
5 hours ago
[-]
Epstein files.
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baq
8 hours ago
[-]
Millions of dollars of stuck planes and cargo. If it was somebody’s fantasy, it sure was an expensive one - but I’m not sure I want to know what it was if it was a real thing
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anilakar
8 hours ago
[-]
Don't worry. Mexico will pay for it 100 %.
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thinkcontext
5 hours ago
[-]
Probably $Bs. Around 100 flights per day from there, so there would be dozens of planes on the ground.
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Havoc
7 hours ago
[-]
My money is on misplaced black budget project craft

Maybe that new F-47 did a trump and fell asleep somewhere in the desert

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dathinab
6 hours ago
[-]
But they didn't block the desert, only air zone and also only directly above the city not beyond it.
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cucumber3732842
7 hours ago
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That's kind of what I'm thinking too though my money would be on something like "super secret stealth cruise missile ripped off it's mounting pylon" or control software went crazy rather than an airframe loss.

It's likely be something small enough and with little/no fuel because if it left a big smoking hole they'd find it quick. And it's gotta be something with fairly questionable aerodynamic properties (i.e. damaged) or questionable guidance (i.e not an inadvertently released bomb) otherwise they'd have a very good idea of where it landed.

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roysting
9 hours ago
[-]
I wonder if the dormant volcanic field west of El Paso that is covered by the TFR may be similar to Iranian volcanic mountains?

Remember, the Netanyahoo just arrived in the US mere hours before this and it is always a bad omen when the devil comes to collect.

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einarfd
9 hours ago
[-]
Could it be that USA government believe that Iran might be trying to do something similar to the Ukraine operation spiderweb, where they attacked the Russian long distance bomber fleet with short distance FPV drones? While there aren't bombers at Fort Bliss. As far as I know there are other high value targets.
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mikkupikku
8 hours ago
[-]
Probably the least unhinged theory in this thread, but unfortunately it doesn't make a lot of sense to me. If they had intel about such a threat, they'd have to move all high value assets to another base pronto. A flight ban won't stop a shady box truck from rolling into town and releasing a swarm of small drones.

(It would also be uncharacteristic of Iran to actually attack America directly, on American soil. Try to find examples of Iran doing that and you'll come up quiet short.)

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roysting
8 hours ago
[-]
You may want to recalibrate things. That’s just about the most unhinged theory here. So “Iran” is just going to go “well, shucks, I guess we can’t launch our drone swarm now that they issued a TFR.”

Not even to mention you’re ignoring the TFR far outside and away from El Paso over the Potrillo volcanic mountains

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lvspiff
8 hours ago
[-]
I can hear russia/iran now “darn they thwarted our plans to take out el paso and that mountain. There are absolutely zero other targets in the vicinity we can fly to. Zero in a 100 mile radius our drone has a capability to get to within 10 days. I mean if we had 11 days sure but how do they know 10 days???”
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mikkupikku
8 hours ago
[-]
Your volcano theory is less unhinged, but most of the talk is about nuclear weapons tests, which would be enormously unhinged if that theory is true.
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codeduck
8 hours ago
[-]
Am I hallucinating? Wasn't there just an identical thread on the front page not even an hour ago?
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baq
8 hours ago
[-]
You aren’t, probably was flagged down by not being hacker enough (or more likely for being an open invitation to runaway speculation without any grounding in reality and facts)
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graemep
7 hours ago
[-]
This also seems to be an open invitation to runaway speculation.

A lot of the speculation is ridiculous given only a small area has been closed. That is not a prelude to war, for example!

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JumpinJack_Cash
7 hours ago
[-]
War no, but extraction absolutely.

Aruba, Curacao and Bonaire were closed off the day before Maduro's extraction

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debo_
6 hours ago
[-]
*runway speculation
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uncivilized
7 hours ago
[-]
You've just described every comment section on HackerNews.
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watwut
7 hours ago
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Proper hackers are interested in homeschool propaganda, but not in closed airspace.
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altairprime
8 hours ago
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Email the mods and they’ll check and merge the dupes :)
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cozzyd
6 hours ago
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During the ICE surge in Chicago drone traffic was banned for a while but this is obviously much more extreme if for a similar reason. Note that at least on some roads out (I'm most familiar with the road to Carlsbad from El Paso since I used to have to travel there in grad school, often from ELP) there are already CBP checkpoints.
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baggachipz
5 hours ago
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El Paso is in a very Red state, ICE involvement is minimal there.
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whizzter
10 hours ago
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"Special security reason", sounds like a prelude to a special military operation?
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euroderf
9 hours ago
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You mean like, a three-day invasion of Mexico ?
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lazide
9 hours ago
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Or just stirring up a bunch of ICE noise at the border.
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c420
10 hours ago
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Underground nuclear test and trying to mitigate the EMP grounding proximate planes?
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bobthepanda
9 hours ago
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An underground nuclear test is going to happen within ten miles of El Paso airport? Sounds unlikely
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c420
9 hours ago
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The second TFR which was released at the same time is in the NM desert directly east

Map of both: https://i0.wp.com/elpasomatters.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/...

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npiano
9 hours ago
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EMPs only occur in very high altitude tests
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extraduder_ire
10 hours ago
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Why wouldn't that be announced in advance? It'll be detectable internationally as soon as it happens.
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AdamN
9 hours ago
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If true they would have told the Russians and the Chinese and yes everybody will know after the fact. But for various reasons they might not want to disclose ahead of time in case Trump gets talked out of it or they realize they're not ready or various other reasons (perhaps the Energy Dept. doesn't actually want to do it but they're going forward step by step hoping it gets halted).
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mikkupikku
8 hours ago
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If they already know, complaining about it in advance will soften the public shock when it happens, which is probably not what Russia and China want. They'd prefer that the rest of the world be maximally shocked and outraged by such a transgression of international norms.
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FrankBooth
9 hours ago
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EMP from an underground blast? Ok bud.
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VizualAbstract
1 hour ago
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tantalor
1 hour ago
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Swamp gas from a weather balloon was trapped in a thermal pocket and reflected the light from Venus.
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voxadam
8 hours ago
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Judging by the previous actions of this administration — Operation Metro Surge 2: Tex-Mex Boogaloo
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einrealist
9 hours ago
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Reminds me of this: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/russia-plot-plant-bombs-c...

El Paso is a hub for cargo. Probably takes some days to go through all that parcel.

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chasd00
7 hours ago
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Some drug cartel probably bought a SAM and they’re trying to find it.
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bashtoni
10 hours ago
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According to CNN the entire airspace is closed, not just the airport https://edition.cnn.com/2026/02/11/us/faa-el-paso-texas-flig...
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dlcarrier
10 hours ago
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It's closed below 18,000 ft, over a 10 nautical mile radius: https://tfr.faa.gov/tfr3/?page=detail_6_2233
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lisper
10 hours ago
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Yep. TFR was issued three hours ago.

https://tfr.faa.gov/tfr3/?page=detail_6_2233

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durge
6 hours ago
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Could be a window for a bunch of deportation activity? It's not very low profile if that's the case.
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vincnetas
8 hours ago
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imglorp
6 hours ago
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guerrilla
7 hours ago
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It seems like you linked to a different area on the border to Mexicali?
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dathinab
7 hours ago
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that link shows the wrong blocked airspace in my case

(it shows that some areas above the border in the desert are blocked off, which makes sense to fight drug smuggling by drones without risking mistaking drones with aircrafts)

but he article is about the new circular zone directly placed over El Paso with El Paso International Airport directly in it's center. (Interestingly because they used a circle it technically covers the Mexican side of the boarder including a part of the airport on their side, but practically FAA can't shut down Mexican airspace so it's misleading).

Also worth noting there is:

- Holloman Air Force Base

- White Sands Missile Range

- Fort Bliss

- Fort Bliss McGregor Range

direct besides the city

so a Military exercise, or deployment of Military (Trump has said he will bomb cartel hideouts in Mexico) can be added to the list of possibilities

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altairprime
10 hours ago
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I wonder if this was issued by the VP’s Secret Service to the FAA directly; they got caught last year fucking with DC airspace using a beacon spoofer, and they would (presumably, they’re the SS) have the authority to issue these secretly without having to be named and answer for the impact: https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/aviation-flights-whi...

(See also Die Hard 2, I suppose.)

But: of the “less simple than invading Mexico” theory (which would be trivial to confirm or refute with binoculars and telescopes) I think the nuclear testing theory is more likely, as it would be in character for the current U.S. administration to decide to turn a border region radioactive to both decrease both the quantity of, and the median fertility of, those who cross the border, especially following posturing about health care costs. Presumably the U.S. does not view itself as liable to Mexico for across-the-border downwinder’s treatment costs. Not seeing a spike in KI prices in a couple spot checks, though.

Hopefully it’s something offensive enough to finally get the world to embargo Palantir.

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altairprime
1 hour ago
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I did not have “airspace closed for ten days to shoot down a drone with lasers” anywhere on my bingo card. Huh. When life gives you lemons, file a TFR about it, I suppose.
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bloomingeek
5 hours ago
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NPR just announced the El Paso airport is back online for air travel.
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donkeybeer
9 hours ago
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They have issued orders about banning drones around ICE agents, so it's possible the terrorist agency ICE are building a base there. ICE have been given a massive funding boost so it has to go somewhere. Or its the works for some kind of military invasion of Cuba or Mexico.

Idk what the topography of the place is. If possible someone should put a telescope there and see what's up.

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markus_zhang
8 hours ago
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Aliens? I want to believe...
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jollyllama
2 hours ago
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Related to the Guthrie kidnapping perhaps?
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burnt-resistor
5 hours ago
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It was reported on Democracy Now! that an anonymous source said the military representing Biggs Army Air Field at Fort Bliss (KBIF) couldn't guarantee safety of commercial air traffic around El Paso International Airport (KELP). There was no specific details communicated and the message released caused unnecessary panic. The most likely explanation seems to be an unresolved dispute between the military and the FAA related to improving airspace safety around military flight tracks near major airports (class B/C/D airspace).
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burnt-resistor
39 minutes ago
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Another source from Thom Hartmann mentioned the military was testing counter-drone lasers and failed to inform the FAA. Seems like the FAA used unreasonable collective punishment to passive-aggressively chastise the military publicly.
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philipwhiuk
6 hours ago
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FAA has rescinded the TFR - looks like a possible DoD goof in relation to army exercises, leading to the FAA being overcautious.
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philipwhiuk
6 hours ago
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> BREAKING: A source briefed by FAA tells me the El Paso flight ban was driven by military operations from Biggs Army Air Field at Fort Bliss https://x.com/petemuntean/status/2021573468341383284
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chasd00
5 hours ago
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Probably an attempt to embarrass the admin. Now watch for the orangemanbad articles about a reckless military operation personally planned by the president in the middle of the night on X.

Hah im trying to be tongue-in-cheek but I have to admit that doesn’t seem out of the realm of possibility actually lol

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meindnoch
7 hours ago
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Crashed alien vehicle recovery?
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wavemode
9 hours ago
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If there were some mundane reason for the shutdown (e.g. ATC staffing, or volcanic ash) it wouldn't be a secret, and if there were an emergency (one severe enough to ground all aircraft for so song) we would've heard or seen something.

Occam's Razor says, this order came down from Trump. If that's the case, only question remaining would be what is he planning.

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AnimalMuppet
5 hours ago
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Well, if the only comparable antecedent is closing American airspace after 9/11, and that order came down from Bush, it seems reasonable to suppose that this order came down from Trump.

As for why? No clue.

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t1234s
7 hours ago
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Downed UAP recovery?
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dathinab
6 hours ago
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doesn't need commercial air space lock down, at most private/small low altitude/drone plain lock down
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Noaidi
6 hours ago
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They lifted the restriction:

https://www.cnbc.com/2026/02/11/faa-el-paso-airport.html

TACOs…..

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ubermonkey
6 hours ago
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If a reasonable administration took this step without any justification, I'd have serious questions.

Under this administration, I'm very very concerned that it's cover for something deeply nefarious.

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vjvjvjvjghv
7 hours ago
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“For special security reasons”. Is a “special military operation “ following? Maybe somebody in Mexico said something mean about the president.

But seriously, is this normal without any explanation? The cost must be enormous.

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dathinab
7 hours ago
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it's in general highly abnormal

which kinda makes it normal to not have a explanation

because anything abnormal enough to cause something like that is also likely something kept secret until it's done

(Like large scale operations against drug cartel, "special military operation", or a large scale ICE operation which shouldn't be able to cause this but does because the current administration is uh, what it is.)

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JumpinJack_Cash
7 hours ago
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What are the odds that Claudia the President of Mexico has already been extracted now?
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xyst
7 hours ago
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Has anybody checked the pizza/chinese takeout traffic in DC?
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w0de0
7 hours ago
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Nothing unusual - DOUGHCON 4: https://www.pizzint.watch/
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incomingpain
8 hours ago
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https://tfr.faa.gov/tfr3/?page=detail_6_2233

This isnt a particularly special thing. It's a catchall rule and given the identical one to the west, it looks like a common military one.

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baq
7 hours ago
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Neither military nor medevac is exempted. This is unusual.
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SketchySeaBeast
5 hours ago
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The medevac is scary. This could cost lives. Hopefully there's a reason but, given how clumsy this admin is, who can say?
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metalman
10 hours ago
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There is a slim possibility that if it was airtraffic control equipment upgrades, but that would be put in the bullitin and known about long in advance, that it is just imposed with no warning is wrong and just shows how the FAA is becoming more 3 letter every day.
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october8140
8 hours ago
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Strike on Mexico incoming.
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m4ck_
8 hours ago
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Anything to distract from Congress getting unredacted access to Trumps good friend's files/emails and naming 6 of their potential clients.
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theonlyjesus
5 hours ago
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I'm from El Paso. This is bullshit if I've ever heard. There are no fucking drones around here, especially not from cartels. The only criminal cartel here is ICE.
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josefritzishere
3 hours ago
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Is Trump planning to attack Mexico?
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beej71
3 hours ago
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Who knows, but everyone's got that on their mind, now.
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kgwxd
2 hours ago
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Another distraction from the Trump Files.
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fallingmeat
6 hours ago
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guys. it's aliens. nbd.
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dummydummy1234
5 hours ago
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If it was aliens trump would be telling everyone and taking credit for finally telling the people the truth.
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dylan604
5 hours ago
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No, he’d be rounding them up and deporting them. Have you not been reading the news lately?
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JumpinJack_Cash
7 hours ago
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The entire conspiracy theory industry is praying that the closure runs its course for the established 10 days and then everything is re-opened and the reasons behind the closure are not further explained or even better become classified

Not saying this isn't suspect though.

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sylware
9 hours ago
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"Please enable JS and disable any ad blocker"
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lbreakjai
7 hours ago
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Well surely they wouldn't block flights for ten days because of ad blockers?
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pixl97
6 hours ago
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Ads are pretty risky, it could happen
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sylware
5 hours ago
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It is alright, the site of FOX is not whatng cartel web engine gated like the site of the times.
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sriram_malhar
6 hours ago
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"Wag The Dog" movie all over again. Sure looks like deflection from the Epstein Files and economy.
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KnuthIsGod
10 hours ago
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Launching the invasion of Canada and Greenland perhaps..
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sph
9 hours ago
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Aren't those countries thousands of miles away from El Paso, Texas?
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mikkupikku
8 hours ago
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Please understand, Geography is only taught for optional extra credit in American schools.

(I wish this were a joke.)

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soulofmischief
7 hours ago
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What? I had to take Geography.
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mikkupikku
5 hours ago
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They taught us that Geography is old fashioned so the geography classes and history were all replaced with "Social Studies" at some time in the 80s. Most of that class was just about reading holocaust books, I think we had a week or two where they taught us what islands and fjords are, but the only time putting names to countries and capitals on a map came up was an optional extra credit quiz in 8th grade. Most people skipped it.
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soulofmischief
5 hours ago
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We had to take Geography, Social Studies, World History, American History, Civics, etc. as separate classes.

Islands/fjords etc were covered in Geology/Earth Science, and we also took separate courses for those as well.

Geography was reserved for understanding where things are in the Earth, how borders are defined, a little bit of world history as far as borders changing, etc. And also Apartheid for some reason because I guess they didn't know where else to stick that lesson in.

Rote memorization has never been my strong suit and so I suffered a lot in geography as it was taught to me. I got a D in that class. Now that I'm out of school and can actually properly learn, it all sticks a lot better because I've learned to contextualize everything and link together facts.

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lvspiff
8 hours ago
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Well you take this sharpie and draw a line and bam direct line of attack - if it works for hurricanes it will work for war plans
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donkeybeer
9 hours ago
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Cuba could be one. While Florida is closer, it's possible due to El Paso being considered highly isolated.
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sph
8 hours ago
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If it is for a military reason (very doubtful at this point), there is a country that is literally 0 miles away from El Paso.
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donkeybeer
8 hours ago
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Mexico is also possible.
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r721
10 hours ago
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Invasion of Mexico is also possible ...

>President Donald Trump said US forces will "start now hitting land" in Mexico targeting drug cartels

https://www.euronews.com/2026/01/09/trump-says-us-to-start-n...

(Jan 2026)

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