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Royal Sloan 09

(406 posts)
Sun Apr 8, 2012, 03:40 PM Apr 2012

The US War on Drug Cartels in Mexico Is a Deadly Failure

This is the third article in a Truthout series on viewing US immigration and Mexican border policies through a social justice lens, focusing on the lower Rio Grande Valley, Brownsville, Texas, area. Mark Karlin, editor of BuzzFlash at Truthout, visited the region recently to file these reports. The first two installments in the series are, "The Border Wall: The Last Stand at Making the US a White Gated Community" and "Murder Incorporated: Guns, the NRA and the Politics of Violence on the Mexican Border."

The Official Story From the US State Department

On March 29, 2012, William R. Brownfield, US assistant secretary of state for the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (in other words, Hillary Clinton's point person on drug issues), testified before the House Subcommittee on State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs. His subject was the war on drugs in the Western Hemisphere outside of the United States and Canada. Few, if any, reporters from the US press attended.

Approximately 50,000 or more Mexicans have been killed since Mexican President Felipe Calderon launched a so-called war on drug cartels. (In a recent appearance in Toronto, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta claimed 150,000 people have died in the drug war in Mexico, but the timeline Panetta was referring to was unclear, as was the origin of the figure he cited.) Given that five Juarez police officers were gunned down at a party the night before Brownfield's testimony, the Spanish-language press, unlike the American media, took an interest in his remarks.

You see, Juarez is kind of a sore spot for Mexicans. In 2010, more than 3,000 homicides took place in the city where killings are committed with general impunity, making it the murder capital of the world that year. Although Juarez's murder rate has now lowered slightly, the city's mayor - who lives across the Rio Grande in El Paso, Texas - indignantly denies that Juarez is the deadliest city on earth, even though it almost certainly remains close to being just that. Borderland writer Charles Bowden writes in "Murder City: Ciudad Juarez and the Global Economy's New Killing Fields": "The violence is everywhere. It is like the dust in the air, part of life itself."

http://truth-out.org/news/item/8371-the-us-war-on-drug-cartels-in-mexico-is-a-deadly-failure


As a follow up to the actions taken recently in Oakland with the raids at Oaksterdam Univ. it appears that the government of the United States is at odds with the people of it's own country. Reading this article only reinforces the statement "Every time you close down someone like Richard Lee, no one is cheering louder than Mexican cartels"

How much more of this can We support in this country?, because remaining silent is giving them consent to continue these policies.

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The US War on Drug Cartels in Mexico Is a Deadly Failure (Original Post) Royal Sloan 09 Apr 2012 OP
Prohibition Sucks - The End! malcolmkyle Apr 2012 #1

malcolmkyle

(39 posts)
1. Prohibition Sucks - The End!
Mon Apr 9, 2012, 05:58 AM
Apr 2012

The future depends on whether or not enough of us are willing to take a long look at the tragic results of prohibition. If we continue to skirt the primary issue while refusing to address the root problem then we can expect no other result than a worsening of the current dire situation. - Good intentions, wishful thinking and pseudoscience are no match for the immutable realities of human nature.

* Many important advancements in human society (even the reasonable requirement that gynecologists wash their hands before examining a patient) have been vehemently resisted by unconscionable, selfish individuals who were willing to use outright mendacity, specious logic and fear mongering to sacrifice the well-being of the rest of us.

Never have so many been endangered and impoverished by so few so quickly!

* The urge to save humanity is almost always a false-face for the urge to rule it. - H. L. Mencken (1880-1956) American editor, essayist and philologist.


* 2010 Reported Corporate Revenues:

Johnson & Johnson = $61.90 billion
    Pfizer= $50.01 billion
    GlaxoSmithKline = $45.83 billion
    Novartis = $44.27
    Sanofi-Aventis = $41.99 billion
    AstraZeneca = $32.81 billion
    Merck & Co. = $27.43 billion
    Eli Lilly = $21.84 billion
    Anheuser-Busch InBev (2007) = $16.70 billion
    MillerCoors = $3.03 billion
    Pabst = $0.50 billion

* As with torture, prohibition is a grievous crime against humanity. If you support it, or even simply tolerate it by looking the other way while others commit it, you are an accessory to a very serious moral transgression against humanity.

* The United States re-legalized certain drug use in 1933. The drug was alcohol, and the 21st amendment re-legalized its production, distribution and sale. Both alcohol consumption and violent crime dropped immediately as a result, and very soon after, the American economy climbed out of that same prohibition engendered abyss into which it had foolishly fallen.

“You can always count on Americans to do the right thing, after they’ve tried everything else.”
- Winston Churchill

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