So, where are the arrests? The killer showed his face on the livestream on TikTok when he killed the 23-year-old Mexican beauty influencer on May 13th, 2025. The Mexican government promised justice, so where is it? With all the face recognition software there is in the world, why haven’t they gone to his home and arrested him spectacularly for such a horrendous crime? Because they can’t, because the drug cartels run Mexico and the token government there, just like globalists were trying to do to the United States, won’t allow it. In Mexico, it’s a dump, and the government facilitates that kind of violence. Valeria Marquez was trying to escape her drug cartel boyfriend, be a good girl, and turn her life around as a social media beauty consultant. And when her old boyfriend saw that men were sending her gifts because she was very popular and had quite a large audience, he decided to send a hit man into the salon, right in front of everyone, and while the livestream was running, assassinate her while she clutched a cute little stuffed animal. And in those moments where her life was stolen from her, she looked like a little girl who, just ten years prior, would have been a little girl thrilled to get such a stuffed animal from a trusted adult. But she was brutally murdered because she wanted independence from a personal tyrant, and it has turned out to be a terrible story. But you know what is most sad about it? You would have never heard about this story if she weren’t a popular social media star. Because they happen all the time, and in Mexico, they happen every few minutes. Mexico is a dump, and the criminal elements who run these governments in the world want to keep it that way, because it gives them power over the degradation.
Violence in Mexico is so bad that the other day I saw a Family Guy episode where Peter Griffin made a joke as his head had been cut off and stuck on a pike, bleeding profusely. And he said, “I took one step away from the resort,” meaning that’s how it is in Mexico. The drug cartels leave the resorts alone most of the time to give the illusion that things are safe enough to have a tourist economy. But if you step out of the lines they give you, it’s anything goes, and tourists end up dead all the time. But more than that, young women like Valeria Marquez know they have no choice. Once they hit puberty, if somebody sees them and they look reasonably attractive, the cartels will take them away from their families, and there isn’t much they can do about it. When people wonder why she was dating a gang banger, she had no choice. If she wanted to live, she had to play the game; her family could do nothing about it. If you have a pretty daughter, in places in the world where crime rules, which is most places, the world will take her and use her until they are done with her. And at that point, they might let her return to an everyday life. But in the case of Valeria Marquez, she was just too pretty. At 23 years old, her shelf life for sexual exploitation was expiring. It’s the young girls that these drug dealers want, and at that point, they are starting to get old. So she tried to turn her life around with a social media account that took off, and hoped that the high profile would save her. But her ex-boyfriend figured if he couldn’t have her, nobody else would, so he had her killed.
The problem in Mexico is so bad that not even the latest Rambo movie dared to deal with the situation as we needed to. In the last Rambo movie with Sylvester Stallone, even the famous movie star bent the knee to the cartels’ power. Otherwise, Mexico wouldn’t have considered allowing that production company to film there. The Mexican government pretends that it wants to put an end to cartel violence when, in truth, it wants the world to know just how bad it is so that it will be afraid and be very compliant. Rambo in the movie I’m talking about, Last Stand, went to Mexico to save a young girl, much like Valeria Marquez, from the cartels, and he ended up getting beaten up pretty bad, which is not the way the Rambo movies were supposed to go. Rambo, in true American fashion, should have gone to the stronghold of the cartel members and killed every last one with a spectacular gunfight. But instead, he had to barely escape Mexico with his life to retreat to his home in America, where the cartel came to kill him on his home turf, to show the power and control they have even in America. And Rambo managed to live as they destroyed his home. But the whole movie was flat because it failed to solve the problem. What the movie did show accurately, even if it’s really what the Mexican government wanted out of the deal, was to show how the grooming process works for young women, and what the substructure of the organized crime was really like. And not even John Rambo was strong enough to confront it.
The power of these drug cartels even extends into our Supreme Court, where they have refused to get behind Trump’s war against the cartels, because there is real fear that some hit man will come to their homes and kill them, just as they did Valeria Marquez. And that’s the point. Not everyone has the kind of security that President Trump has, and they don’t want to be killed for fighting back against the drug cartels. These criminals want to make a product that poisons its targets, and we are supposed to let them do it, which is what the Supreme Court decided in its attempt to stop Trump from deporting criminal thugs. The people Trump has been deporting were the kind of people who killed Valeria Marquez. And they terrorize the world, especially in socialist countries like Mexico, where the government exists to facilitate organized crime. There is no concept of private property, so there is no reason to defend it, even if it’s a daughter. If you have a pretty daughter, you aren’t allowed to have a gun to protect her from criminal thugs. Instead, you are supposed to surrender her over to them and let them have their way. And if you don’t, you will be killed too. It’s so common that it’s even joked about on the popular show, Family Guy. It’s not even a secret; everyone is in on it. And the bad guys in the world, many who find themselves in government and getting kickbacks from allowing the crime to occur, facilitate the violence to keep the easy money coming, because they are too lazy and stupid otherwise to earn an honest living. That is the truth of Mexico. They don’t want to catch the killer of Valeria Marquez because they want the fear of such killings to keep people under their power and dependent on the government for their safety, which has only perpetuated the problem into the mess we see now. There are a lot of young women like Valeria Marquez. And there aren’t enough good people in the world to save them. And that is a shame.
Rich Hoffman

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