Thread: Monterrey
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04-16-10 04:38 #2005
Posts: 382Originally Posted by UnospongeBob
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04-11-10 01:55 #2004
Posts: 1383Pretty Funny...
(_!_) Un culito normal…
(__!__) Un culito gordo…
(!) Un culito chiquito….
(_._) Un culito mucho tiempo sentado….
{_!_} Un culito celulítico…
(_o_) Un culito con mucho “kilometraje”..
(_O_) Un culito con mucho más “kilometraje”
(_*_) Un culito roto…
(_x_) Un culito fruncido…
(_X_) Un culito clausurado…
(_$_) Un culito que vale oro…
[_T_] Un culito cuadrado…
(_:_) Un culito raro..
(_@_) Un cyberculo…
(_?_) Un culito misterioso…
(_#_) Un culito lastimado…
(__) Un culito cerrado…
(_%_) Un culito con granitos…
(_\/_) Un culito con tanga…
Y no podían faltar…
(o)(o) tetitas perfectas…
( )( ) tetitas falsas de silicona…
(*)(*) tetitas de pezón alto…
(@)(@) tetitas de pezón grande…
(^)(^) tetitas con frío…
(o)(O) tetitas disparejas…
\o/\o/ tetitas caídas…
( – )( – ) tetitas mordiditas….
(oYo) tetitas pequeñas pero seductoras..
( o Y o ) ¡¡¡ UUUUY QUE PAR DE TETAS!!!
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04-10-10 11:43 #2003
Posts: 1383You have been going home at 1am for ten years...what "self imposed" curfew? You mean compared to 30 years ago? :-)
Things are for the most part, business as usual right now in Monterrey, with just a slight, and I do mean slight, increase in a heightened awareness when you're out and about, or running around at night. However, I do know a couple of girls that have stopped working the clubs for fear that they might get caught in some kind of cross fire late at night if they continually expose themselves to that late night environment. They have left their jobs in the strip club industry and are cutting hair, fearing for their lives.
Originally Posted by Amigomio
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04-10-10 06:56 #2002
Posts: 1388You are right Will,
Paranoia reigns in Monterrey right now.
Truth is after the events 3 weeks ago everything has calmed down.
I still do my rounds, I still go to the clubs, though I am back home by my 1 am selfimpossed curfew.
Hopefully in 2-3 months everything will be back to normal.
Originally Posted by Willa1
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04-08-10 21:31 #2001
Posts: 377Originally Posted by Amigomio
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04-08-10 03:23 #2000
Posts: 160Originally Posted by Amigomio
Thank you for the maps! I was able to get into Monterrey on the 22nd. And had unexpected free time at 9 PM on Tuesday. At your suggestion went to Infinito. I agree. The lineup was INCREDIBLE! Best of the group for me anyway was Stephanie. English was passable. Good conversation & excellent privado. Unfortunately, her shift ended at 11(?). She stayed til midnight. One last privado. Two other quick meetings, rolled out a satisfied man at around 3 PM. I can't wait to get back! And I owe you a beer or two!
As a sidenote. You could tell that there is a lot of nervousness in Monterrey over the violence. Several co-workers reported trucks being hijacked & set on fire blocking busy streets. Most would not bring families out at night. A significant departure from a couple of years ago. For me. I felt very safe. Took the white cab from the Anciro. And green cab from Infinito back. No issue. I really do like this town!
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04-08-10 02:18 #1999
Posts: 1383Last month, as I was traveling by bus between Monterrey and the US border, I paused to reflect on all the violence that I had been hearing about, sometimes wondering over the course of the 3.5 hour trip, if I was perhaps being a little too careless in coming back to Monterrey so often, that I might just be risking my own neck foolishly, feeling a little apprehensive at being a Gringo in Mexico.
I specifically recall, as the bus pulled into the outskirts of Monterrey, noticing that life is pretty much as usual. The closer we got to El Centro, the more normal everything seemed to be, everybody going about their daily business, everybody seeming as though nothing had really changed as far as their own safety is concerned, amidst what is most definitely a statistical increase in violent crime.
Certainly, the increase in violence is quite noticeable if you examine the statistics. But, having noticed how things appeared to be so normal as I came into the heart of Monterrey that day on the bus, it put everything in it's proper perspective, and I felt a lot more at ease about being there.
Monterrey is not Beirut, Iraq, or Afghanistan. Fact is, Monterrey is not probably any worse right now than some of our major US Cities, where I heard a few weekends ago, there were 16 people shot in Chicago on one weekend night.
If you were to visit Chicago, just as I first entered Monterrey on that bus, you would never know that it is such a violent place. Because, just like Chicago, life goes on in Monterrey, and the inhabitants are treating their own everyday existence just as routinely as they always have, with not much more than a matter of fact acknowledgment that things have gotten worse compared to a few years ago. Everybody is just a little more alert, a little more careful, and a little less carefree. But, life goes on for the 99.99% of them that are never even remotely touched by the statistical increase in violent crime.
And, that is what comforts me in my decision to return, that 99.9% of us beat the odds day in and day out whether we are in Chicago or Monterrey. For me, the added risk of being harmed just isn't worth the psychological harm that would result to my psyche were I to eliminate the delights of Monterrey from my life in favor of what is a comparatively delusional perception of safety achieved by staying in my own home town.
Originally Posted by Marius 67
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04-08-10 00:43 #1998
Posts: 382Originally Posted by Amigomio
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04-07-10 17:06 #1997
Posts: 1388Marius, perhaps your recomendation should have been posted at the "Other Areas" thread cause Tampico is 5 hours away from Monterrey by land.
I would have been preferable if you'd said "if you go to Mexico don't go to stripclubs owned by narcs, and be careful when at Tampico cause the federal forces are indeed after what's left of the Zetas."
Also, Tampico is NOT a border town, this is one half of the twin cities of Tampico and Ciudad Madero, oil towns on the Gulf Coast.
Perhaps you should also read in the news that the Zetas, former gunslingers to the Cartel del Golfo are on the run and are being hunted by everyone, army, navy, other cartels.
Perhaps you also don't know that they have been pushed from the State of Tamaulipas border towns to the middle of the country and you are seeing the last of the local bastions trying to defend what little they got.
Hopefully this will over in a couple of months.
Originally Posted by Marius 67
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04-06-10 18:19 #1996
Posts: 63Violence in Mexico
This shoot-out was in Tampico Mexico on April 3rd.
Please moderater do not censore the link I will post. This is to show are friends here; the potential risk we take for going to Mexico.
Mexico is pure chaos right now in the boarder states of Tamaulipas and Nuevo Leon.
I'am not saying not to go. But use common sense. When sitting at the clubs; sit somewhere that makes you a hard target and an easy way to get out of a bad situation. If possible go in pairs. Be smart and don't take any
Unnecessary.
This happened at a popular Strip Club in Tampico.
Please do not censore as this is a legitimate News article
http://www.blogdelnarco.com/fotos-de...-dance-mirage/
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03-28-10 20:20 #1995
Posts: 1388Strike, you can find girls exactly like her at clubs like Harem and Casino.
Preferably Casino, where the girls are not as agresive fichawise as in Harem
But names... sorry, you'd need to wait till after our Easter Week for me to get you names.
Am off-duty for one week.
But Casino is a good option.
Originally Posted by Strike 69
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03-28-10 14:00 #1994
Posts: 377Porn Star type body
Originally Posted by Amigomio
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CTP9-IVAJGo
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03-27-10 15:12 #1993
Posts: 2128Originally Posted by doubt98
us cbp ain't dumb, they know how easy meds are obtained here, and have rules what is and isn't allow to pass.
i see and hear of a lot of americans bringing meds to the usa, the most important thing is to declare them at the border, failure to do so is smuggling, even if the meds are legit.
from about.com
medication
rule of thumb: when you go abroad, take the medicines you will need, no more, no less. narcotics and certain other drugs with a high potential for abuse - rohypnol, ghb and fen-phen, to name a few - may not be brought into the united states, and there are severe penalties for trying to do so. if you need medicines that contain potentially addictive drugs or narcotics (e.g., some cough medicines, tranquilizers, sleeping pills, antidepressants or stimulants), do the following:
* declare all drugs, medicinals, and similar products to the appropriate cbp official;
* carry such substances in their original containers;
* carry only the quantity of such substances that a person with that condition (e.g., chronic pain) would normally carry for his/her personal use; and
* carry a prescription or written statement from your physician that the substances are being used under a doctor's supervision and that they are necessary for your physical well being while traveling.
u.s. residents entering the united states at international land borders who are carrying a validly obtained controlled substance (other than narcotics such as marijuana, cocaine, heroin, or lsd), are subject to certain additional requirements. if a u.s. resident wants to bring in a controlled substance (other than narcotics such as marijuana, cocaine, heroin, or lsd) but does not have a prescription for the substance issued by a u.s.-licensed practitioner (e.g., physician, dentist, etc.) who is registered with, and authorized by, the drug enforcement administration to prescribe the medication, the individual may not import more than 50 dosage units of the medication into the united states. if the u.s. resident has a prescription for the controlled substance issued by a dea registrant, more than 50 dosage units may be imported by that person, provided all other legal requirements are met.
please note that only medications that can be legally prescribed in the united states may be imported for personal use. be aware that possession of certain substances may also violate state laws. as a general rule, the fda does not allow the importation of prescription drugs that were purchased outside the united states. please see their web site for information about the enforcement policy for personal use quantities.
warning: the u.s. food and drug administration prohibits the importation, by mail or in person, of fraudulent prescription and nonprescription drugs and medical devices. these include unorthodox “cures” for such medical conditions as cancer, aids, arthritis or multiple sclerosis. although such drugs or devices may be legal elsewhere, if the fda has not approved them for use in the united states, they may not legally enter the country and will be confirep001ed, even if they were obtained under a foreign physician’s prescription.
then this is what cbp has to say..
http://www.cbp.gov/xp/cgov/travel/cl...tion_drugs.xml
medication/drugs
the federal food, drug, and cosmetic act (the act) prohibits persons from importing into the united states any prescription drug that has not been approved for sale by the united states food and drug administration (fda), or which is adulterated or misbranded within the meaning of the act. moreover, in those instances where a united states manufacturer makes an fda-approved prescription drug and sends it abroad, the act also prohibits any person other than the original manufacturer from importing the drug back into the united states. thus, in virtually all instances, individual citizens are prohibited from importing prescription drugs into the united states.
fda enforcement policy regarding the personal importation of violative drugs
the fda has developed guidance entitled “coverage of personal importations” which sets forth the fda enforcement priorities with respect to the personal importation of unapproved new drugs by individuals for their personal use. under this guidance, as an exercise of enforcement discretion, fda may allow an individual entering the united states to import a three month supply of an unapproved drug if all of the following conditions are met:
1. the intended use of the drug is for a serious condition for which effective treatment may not be available domestically;
2. the drug will not be distributed commercially by the importer;
3. the product is considered not to represent an unreasonable risk;
4. the individual seeking to import the product affirms in writing that the drug is for the patient’s own use and provides the name and address of the doctor licensed in the united states responsible for his or her treatment with the product, or provides evidence that the product is for the continuation of a treatment begun in a foreign country.
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03-27-10 13:43 #1992
Posts: 190Originally Posted by Amigomio
I have always wondered about the Dr.'s adjacent to some of the pharmacies. How much does it cost to get a prescription from one of them? Can they write a prescription for most anything? And a general question I have always wondered; what about crossing the border with a prescription from Mexico. As long as you have a prescription will they not hassle you?
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03-27-10 09:03 #1991
Posts: 1388Antibiotics will be sold only with a prescription
I know many of you guys buy medicines in Mexico, some of you at the border towns.
In april, all antibiotics will be sold only with a medical prescription in Mexico.
Asides from being harsh and stupid, it will be done next month.
This newspaper link has a complete list of the antibiotics that will no longer be available to us:
http://www.elmanana.com.mx/notas.asp?id=173245