Mexican Resorts Reportedly Drugging, Robbing and Raping American Tourists

Goy Orbison
Daily Stormer
July 24, 2017

Mexico is a country that, geographically speaking, is very beautiful. It has amazing beaches, lush rain forests and breathtaking landscapes that bring in tourists from all around the world.

Pretty cool, huh?

There’s only one problem: Mexicans.

For the longest time, it’s been assumed that as long as you stayed within the property of these upscale beach resorts and didn’t wander off into the notoriously seedy and dangerous Mexican cities, you were safe.

Apparently, that’s no longer the case.

Houston Chronicle:

A shocking report by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel alleges that multiple all-inclusive resorts in Mexico may be serving tainted alcohol, leading to the death, or harm, of several guests.

In interviews with dozens of travelers and their family members, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel uncovered vulnerable vacation goers may have been given tainted alcohol or possibly drugged, in order to mug, sexually assault or extort them. The accounts of travelers were backed up by hospital, ambulance and hotel records.

This could be us, but Paco spiked our drinks.

Out of all the habits that white people have, the one that gets us into the most trouble is putting our guard down in potentially dangerous situations. This is due to centuries of living in high-trust, homogeneous societies where you didn’t have to worry about your neighbor robbing or assaulting you at random.

Well those days are over. Our trusting nature has been twisted into naiveté by outsiders who wish to exploit it. Whether it’s blacks begging for money or offering you their fire mixtape, Jews playing sad violin music so you’ll open your borders to Middle Eastern and African rapists, or whites thinking it’s a good idea to go to a resort in fucking Tunisia, this habit of projecting trustworthiness onto people that clearly don’t deserve it has become a major issue for our people.

Now of course, the last thing on someone’s mind when they’re relaxing on a vacation is that their bartender is going to drug them and take advantage of them. But the fact of the matter is, you’re in Mexico. This is a country run by ruthless drug cartels; where cops expect a bribe any time you interact with them and you’re highly likely to get robbed by the locals. People need to be aware of where they’re at. Some website giving one of these places an arbitrary five star rating doesn’t mean anything.

In one case, a pair of teenage brothers woke up covered in mud with their wallets and cellphones missing and no recollection of what happened. Another woman said she was sexually assaulted and her husband woke up with a broken hand. In at least three cases, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel said travelers suspected of being extorted by local hospitals who over charged them.

What Mexican vacation is complete without your wallet missing and your wife getting violated by Frito Bandito?

“Sorry you got molested, honey, but Expedia gave it 5 stars!”

The Sentinel article goes into more detail about numerous incidents at these “high-class” resorts, including drownings, robberies, rapes and trips to hospitals where the gringos get taken to the cleaners.

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:

Extortion? In at least three cases, travelers reported that local hospitals, part of the Hospiten chain, appeared to be gouging them, demanding large sums of cash. One man was told to take a cab to an ATM. The vacationers suspected Iberostar might be in cahoots with the medical company. The resort contracts with Hospiten and refers sick and injured guests to Hospiten’s facilities. Abbey Conner’s family paid about $17,000 to a small medical clinic south of Playa del Carmen and within several hours paid tens of thousands more to a hospital in Cancun, north of the resort, where Abbey and her brother were transferred.

Mexico: Come For the Beaches, Stay For the Rape and Extortion

The case of Kathy and Jeff Daley highlights just what a disgusting and corrupt shithole that country is.

The group had a round of tequila shots, the first drink of the day for Kathy.

She had been careful to stick with water throughout the day to stay hydrated. She didn’t care much for the shot, so when everyone else had another, she declined. The bartender offered her something else. Something special, he said. It was a mixed drink of some kind — she wasn’t sure what. She took a few sips.

She lost consciousness. The next thing she remembers is being in a hospital. Vomiting and disoriented.

Hospital workers told Jeff they needed to collect $2,000 cash for her visit. When he said he didn’t carry that kind of money, they said they would take a taxi with him to an ATM.

Jeff, an advanced emergency medical technician, said the way the resort and hospital handled his wife’s care could have killed her. He said the hotel doctor resisted calling an ambulance and charged them $139 before he would let them leave in the ambulance. The defibrillator in the ambulance had no battery and nobody seemed to know how to get oxygen hooked up.

Hospital workers later reported to the Daleys’ travel insurance company that aside from being inebriated, they found drugs in her system.

These are the kind of people that big-eared queer Paul Ryan, Lindsey Grahamnesty and John McTumor want to bring into the country. And if they get their way, get ready to have to grease the palms of the ambulance driver while your loved one is bleeding out on the sidewalk.

“We’re here to peek up a body, esé. Just slide me a twenty, holmes, and we’ll get her to the hospital.”

Resorts like this maintain their five star ratings despite these incidents because it appears that websites like TripAdvisor are running cover for them.

When Kathy tried to post a review on TripAdvisor warning travelers about what happened, a TripAdvisor representative told her in an email that it didn’t meet the guidelines. Daley’s review did not contain profanity. It included a couple sentences that recounted what a bartender said to her daughter as well as what her husband and friends did when they saw her struggling.

Tara Lieberman, a TripAdvisor spokeswoman, told the Journal Sentinel the company has guidelines stating that “every review must be unbiased, family friendly, based on a first-hand experience, and relevant to other travelers.”

Why wouldn’t her name be Lieberman? I guess a beaner drugging your drink and making lewd comments to your daughter isn’t exactly “family friendly.”

Let this be a lesson to naive white people who think the third world is as safe as their neighborhoods. It doesn’t matter if some Jew-owned website gave it 10 stars.

It’s Mexico. Just don’t go there.

The wall can’t come soon enough.