Love Waxing Cold – Lawlessness – Violence – Homicide – School Shootings
Jesus indicated that one (of many) signs of the end times or the end of the age grace would be that love for one another would grow cold. Matthew 24:12, “And because iniquity shall abound, the love of many shall wax cold.” This can also be interpreted that lawlessness will abound. This includes violence, murder, terrorism, shootings, abortion, sexual attacks, knife attacks, car/van attacks, chemical attacks and other similar acts of destructive and evil behavior. Yes, these things have occurred in time past. But consider the frequency, intensity and devastation of these types of attacks and mass school shootings. They are like birth pangs in frequency and intensity. This is just one part of the CONVERGENCE or CONVERGING of signs.
‘15’ of the World’s most Violent and Deadly Cities are in Mexico. No other country on earth has more homicide/murder in its borders than Mexico. Proof of a satanic influence correlation or causation.
7:39 a.m. EDT July 29, 2019. USA Today.
Wall St. reviewed the world’s 50 most dangerous cities – the ones with the highest murder rates – as reported by El Consejo Ciudadano para la Seguridad Pública y la Justicia Penal (The Citizen Council for Public Security and Criminal Justice), a Mexico City-based advocacy group.
49.
Chihuahua, Mexico
• Homicides per 100,000 in
2018: 38
• Homicides in 2018: 352
• Population: 938,713
The capital of the northern Mexican state, situated about 150 miles from the
Mexico-U.S. border, barely eked into the list of the world’s most dangerous
cities for 2018. The city’s homicide rate fell in 2018 from 49.5 per 100,000
residents in 2017, mostly the result of gang violence. The 2018 rate is also
measurably lower than in was in 2013, the first year the annual ranking was
published. That year Chihuahua’s homicide rate topped 50 per 100,000, and the
city was Mexico’s fourth most dangerous city.
42. Reynosa, Mexico
• Homicides per 100,000 in
2018: 41
• Homicides in 2018: 295
• Population: 711,130
This northern Mexican border city first appeared on this annual ranking on
2017, debuting as the world’s 38th and the country’s 11th most dangerous city.
Reynosa is one of the bigger cities in the country’s northeastern Tamaulipas
state, where Mexican anti-cartel operations successfully dismantled the Gulf
and Zetas cartel. Unfortunately, this led to turf wars between emerging
splinter groups that ravaged the state.
36.
Tepic, Mexico
• Homicides per 100,000 in
2018: 45
• Homicides in 2018: 230
• Population: 512,387
Like Reynoa (No. 42 on this list), this capital of the western Nayarit state
debuted on this annual list in 2017 with then a homicide rate of 47.1 murders
per 100,000 residents, making it the 10th most dangerous Mexican city at the
time. Though Tepic’s murder rate is relatively unchanged, the city has dropped
to Mexico’s 13th most dangerous city because the murder rates in other Mexican
cities increased. This provincial capital has experienced a sharp increase in
gun-related homicides in the past couple of years, along with a regional rise
in clashes between rival drug gangs.
34.
Ensenada, Mexico
• Homicides per 100,000 in
2018: 47
• Homicides in 2018: 253
• Population: 542,896
This coastal city on the Baja Peninsula, 65 miles south of Tijuana, is one of
six Mexican cities debuting on this ranking amid a nationwide increase in
violent crime. Ensenada has traditionally avoided cartel-related violence
inflicting other parts of western Mexico, but like other Baja cities, the
violence seems to be shifting its direction. In 2017, the tourist city of Los
Cabos, on the tip of the Baja peninsula, was the world’s most dangerous city.
Los Cabos fell from the list in 2018.
32.
Celaya, Mexico
• Homicides per 100,000 in
2018: 47
• Homicides in 2018: 240
• Population: 510,787
Like Irapuato, located just 40 miles to the west, Celaya has debuted on the
2018 annual ranking largely due to a recent increase in violent criminal gang
activity in Mexico’s central Guanajuato state, which has recently emerged as a
hot zone for violent crime. Despite its proximity to Celaya and Irapuato
(located less than 100 miles from both cities), the state capital Guanajuato
City has so far avoided making the list.
26.
Coatzacoalcos, Mexico
• Homicides per 100,000 in
2018: 48
• Homicides in 2018: 162
• Population: 335,077
Another Mexican city to debut on this annual ranking amid a national rise in
violent criminal activity is the major eastern port city of Coatzacoalcos, in
the center of the country’s petrochemical sector. Like elsewhere, organized
criminal gangs have increased their activities, including kidnapping and drug
gang-related killings.
25.
Aracaju, Brazil
• Homicides per 100,000 in
2018: 49
• Homicides in 2018: 463
• Population: 949,342
A popular coastal weekend getaway for Brazilians in the region, the capital of
Sergipe, the country’s smallest state, experienced a drop in its homicide rate
in 2018 from 58.9 murders per 100,000 residents in 2017. Thanks to improvements
elsewhere, however, Aracaju’s rank among Brazil’s most dangerous cities rose to
fifth highest from sixth the previous year. In 2016, the murder rate in the
city exploded to nearly 63 per 100,000 from nearly 38 per 100,000 in 2015,
pushing it down from the 15th most dangerous Brazilian city to third.
20.
Ciudad Obregón, Mexico
• Homicides per 100,000 in
2018: 52
• Homicides in 2018: 179
• Population: 343,613
This northwestern Mexican city debuted on this annual ranking in 2014 with a
homicide rate of 37.7 murders per 100,000 residents, the world’s 31st and
Mexico’s fourth most dangerous city that year. After nearly dropping from the
list in 2015, ranking 50th that year, the murder rate rose to 52 per 100,000 in
2018 largely due to local rival drug-gang violence.
18.
Uruapan, Mexico
• Homicides per 100,000 in
2018: 55
• Homicides in 2018: 189
• Population: 346,640
A recent increase in violent crime has put this highland inland city on this
list of the world’s most dangerous cities for the first time since records
began in 2013. Violent crime, largely in the form of gun-related homicides,
continued in 2019, despite reported heightened security operations. The
governor of Michoacán state has pledged to further increase police presence to
stem a rising tide of organized criminal activity.
16.
Culiacán, Mexico
• Homicides per 100,000 in
2018: 61
• Homicides in 2018: 585
• Population: 966,609
The capital of northwestern Sinaloa state has a long history as a center of
drug cartel activity, and though it ranks high among Mexico’s most dangerous
cities, it’s fallen from second place in 2014 to seventh in 2018. The homicide
rate declined in 2018 from 70.1 murders per 100,000 residents in 2017. Like
other cities in Mexico’s northwest and border regions, Culiacán struggles to
contain drug-gang gun violence with only a recent modest decline in killings.
13.
Cancún, Mexico
• Homicides per 100,000 in
2018: 64
• Homicides in 2018: 547
• Population: 848,465
The popular tourist destination of Cancún on the country’s Caribbean coast has
emerged for the first time on this annual ranking. The local murder rate more
than doubled in 2018 as violence escalated amid a nationwide record-breaking
homicide rate in 2018 attributed to drug and non-drug related criminal gang
violence. More Mexican cities have appeared on this list for the first time
than the number cities that dropped from the list last year.
6.
Irapuato, Mexico
• Homicides per 100,000 in
2018: 81
• Homicides in 2018: 473
• Population: 580,808
A newcomer to this annual ranking, Irapuato has debuted with 81 murders per
100,000 residents in 2018. Suddenly, this lush city in the center of Mexico’s
Guanajuato state, known for its scenic gardens, has become Mexico’s fifth most
dangerous city. Irapuato has been sucked into a regional rise in criminal gang
activity, including kidnappings and extortion.
5.
Ciudad Juárez, Mexico
• Homicides per 100,000 in
2018: 86
• Homicides in 2018: 1,251
• Population: 1,462,133
This border city of over 1.4 million people across the river from El Paso
experienced a sharp increase in murders in 2018, with the murder rate rising
from 56.2 homicides per 100,000 residents in 2017 to 86 per 100,000. The city
appeared first on this list with a homicide rate of nearly 38 per 100,000
residents in 2013, at the time Mexico’s seventh most dangerous city. The city
fell off the list in 2015 but reappeared a year later. Since then, the homicide
rate has increased in each of the past three consecutive years, and Juárez now
has the third highest murder rate in Mexico.
4.
Ciudad Victoria, Mexico
• Homicides per 100,000 in
2018: 86
• Homicides in 2018: 314
• Population: 365,089
The capital of Tamaulipas state, at Mexico’s northeastern border with Texas,
has been ravaged in recent years by turf wars between offshoot gangs that split
off from the Gulf and Zeta cartels in the wake of heightened security
operations. Killings flared in 2016, when the city’s homicide rate jumped to
nearly 85 murders per 100,000 residents from just over 30 per 100,00 a year
earlier. Victoria is currently Mexico’s third most dangerous city.
2.
Acapulco, Mexico
• Homicides per 100,000 in
2018: 111
• Homicides in 2018: 948
• Population: 857,883
Tijuana may have been the murder capital of Mexico last year, but the touristic
western port city of Acapulco has been the most or second most dangerous
Mexican city every year since 2013, the first year of this report. Acapulco has
racked up a significantly higher body count over the years than other Mexican
cities on this list, with homicides rates of between 104 and 113 murders per
100,000 residents in each of the past six years.
1.
Tijuana, Mexico
• Homicides per 100,000 in
2018: 138
• Homicides in 2018: 2,640
• Population: 1,909,424
This Mexican border city 15 miles south of downtown San Diego has long been one
of Mexico’s most violent cities. But even by murder-capital standards, Tijuana
has an extremely high murder rate, with no signs of the killings abating.
Already, 2019 kicked off with three murders on New Year’s Eve. The city’s
homicide rate jumped from roughly 100 murders per 100,000 residents in 2017 to
138 per 100,000 in 2018.

