Are football teams seriously going to boycott the US World Cup?
Fear Instead of Football: Guadalajara, Cartels, and the World Cup Lie
Bread and circuses.
That was the Roman strategy to keep a restless population quiet.
In 2026, it’s back—just with better branding, bigger screens, and a lot more blood in the background.
Welcome to the FIFA World Cup.
The Party That Isn’t
In Guadalajara, one of the host cities of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, the script is already breaking.
A playoff match at the Estadio Akron should have been a celebration. Cheap tickets. A full house. Fans doing the wave.
Instead? Half-empty stands.
Why?
Because it took up to two hours to travel 15 kilometers.
Because infrastructure is unfinished.
Because reality doesn’t care about FIFA deadlines.
A City Held Together by PR and Fear
Officials say Guadalajara is “ready.”
Let’s translate that:
- Roads: unfinished
- Water: contaminated
- Safety: outsourced to soldiers—temporarily
Residents report brown water coming out of their taps. Not metaphorically. Literally.
Meanwhile, the real headlines aren’t about football—they’re about:
- kidnappings
- extortion
- bodies found in garbage bags
This is the territory of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel—arguably the most powerful and brutal cartel in Mexico.
After the killing of its leader “El Mencho,” the cartel responded the only way it knows how:
- burning vehicles
- blocking highways
- attacking security forces
- dropping explosives from drones
Let that sink in.
Drone warfare. Against police. In a World Cup host city.
Football Over Corpses
Guadalajara isn’t new to football glory.
At the Estadio Jalisco, legends once played:
- Pelé
- Michel Platini
Matches that defined eras. History that meant something.
Now?
Tickets for World Cup games are being flipped for $700 to $3000.
Hotels have raised prices up to eightfold.
Locals are saying it out loud:
“This World Cup isn’t for us.”
They’re right.
It’s not.
The Disappeared Don’t Fit the Narrative
Here’s the part FIFA won’t show you.
In the state of Jalisco:
- 16,000 missing people (official)
- 25,000+ (according to families)
Fathers like Héctor Águila Carvajal walk the streets every weekend, hanging posters of their disappeared children.
And now?
Authorities are considering banning those posters.
Because they ruin the image.
“If they remove the posters, our children die a second time.”
That’s not activism.
That’s desperation in a country where grief has become routine.
Security Theater
The government promises safety.
President Claudia Sheinbaum pledged to turn Guadalajara into a fortress.
Reality check:
- Security forces are visible only near stadiums and tourist zones
- Cartels still operate openly elsewhere
- Drug dealers work in the historic center—in plain sight
Translation:
Tourists get protection. Locals get survival.
Let’s Talk Risk (Since Nobody Else Will)
You asked the uncomfortable question—so here’s the uncomfortable answer.
Risk of cartel violence in Mexico
- Mexico records ~25,000–30,000 homicides per year
- Not all cartel-related, but a large portion is
-
Risk is highly uneven:
- If you’re involved, local, or in contested regions → risk spikes
- If you’re a tourist in controlled zones → risk drops significantly
Risk of “friendly fire” / law enforcement violence in the U.S.
- Civilian deaths by law enforcement: ~1,000+ per year
- ICE-related deaths are far lower but politically charged
-
Risk is low overall, but not zero, especially depending on:
- location
- race / profiling
- type of encounter
Blunt truth
You are statistically more likely to:
- die in everyday violence in certain parts of Mexico than as a tourist
- be killed by police in the U.S. than in most developed democracies
But here’s what matters:
👉 Both systems selectively manage visibility.
👉 Both sanitize reality for global audiences.
Bread. Games. Silence.
Mega-events like the World Cup don’t solve problems.
They stage-manage them.
They:
- hide poverty behind banners
- militarize public space temporarily
- inflate prices
- displace truth
And when it’s over?
The cameras leave.
The soldiers leave.
The cartels don’t.
Enough
Enough with pretending this is just about football.
Enough with billion-dollar spectacles in cities where people are afraid to go out at night.
Enough with exporting a fantasy of unity while locals live in fragmentation.
If countries like Italy can host large-scale sporting events with relative stability, infrastructure, and public trust, then the bar isn’t unrealistic—it’s just inconvenient.
Final Word
The real question isn’t:
“Will the World Cup be successful?”
It will be. Financially. Spectacularly.
The real question is:
Successful for whom?
Because right now, in Guadalajara:
- Fans can’t reach the stadium
- Families can’t find their children
- Citizens can’t trust their government
But hey—
At least the wave looked good on TV.
yours truly,
Adaptation-Guide
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