As an habitant of Juarez, one of the cities that was hit the most with Calderon's war against drugs, this is insulting. We all know it's impossible to end drug trade. That's why most cities had this sort of "understanding" with the cartels. They move some stuff around, they leave the people alone and everything works out (e.g. Though Juarez had a lot of Drug related crimes before the "war on drugs", it was mostly contained, but still we had a lower than average rate for other types of crime like armed robbery and such).
But this wasn't about the wear on drugs, this was about territory: The local government had deals with the local cartel, but the Sinaloa cartel started fighting for more territory, allegedly with the aid of the army/federal police. Suddenly Juarez is impossible to live in, not because of all the narco murders but because federal agents and armies are stopping you every three blocks and suddenly you have a lot of blackmail, threats, etc coming from the guys that are supposedly there to protect. We knew they were not there to end the drug problem, they were there as a part of it, and we know it's impossible to end it, but it's better to have it out of sight, out of mind.
Now he's leaving and of course he had to come up with a conclusion like this. I just hope cities get back to the balance they had from before the war and this drug traffic problem stops spilling to the general population. As long as there is a market there will be someone to fill the need, and being the next door neighbor we're sadly in a good position to have those kinds of people.
Yes Mr. Calderón, it's impossible to end drug trade, you knew it, we knew it, this is not news... And yet you had us suffering in fear and crime for six years just because you wanted to help some buddies and look as if you were actually doing something.
If you haven't seen the movie Traffic (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0181865/), I highly recommend it. There's a scene where Michael Douglas' character, who plays the role of US Drug Czar, is in a room full of politicians and lobbyists. He is told by one of them that basically this is a war that will never be won nor end. The only success would be vaguely getting usage down. There will always be a demand that creates the supply.
Mexico's problem is in essense, that outside market pressure makes its inhabitants behave in a way that is at odds with keeping up a state under the rule of law.
As a thought experiment, think what would happen if Mexico made drugs legal. Their government would had to fight against the cartels, and might at some point win.
What you have then is a system where Mexico has much less criminality. They can't export to the US directly of course, but people will just buy drugs legally in the Mexican north and try to smuggle it the the US. The US can decide for themselves if they want to legalize it or not, and if they don't the US criminality is still there, but the Mexican criminality is gone.
Well what would likely happen then is another 1989 Panama. One of the main reasons why the US invaded Panama was its involvement in drug trade. So the US would criticize Mexico publicly, and at some point probably invade it.
It looks to me like current time Mexico is stuck between a rock and a hard place. They must be opposed to drugs because their powerful northern neighbor wants them to, but outside market pressure, from the very same neighbor at the same time destabilizes it.
So it's an issue that should be solved by an outside party - the US. But that party won't tackle the issue because Mexican people can't vote in the US.
> Their government would had to fight against the cartels, and might at some point win.
I dont think that would be a big problem. Everybody that has a car coule without any trouble start trafficing drugs into the US, without fear of the police. The goverment would essentially only have to be passiv antil the funds of the cartels drain.
Guns and stuff are expensive. A well organised logisics firm (for example) could outperform these cartels in drug transportation. All the goverment would have to do is protect the firms.
Many of the people that work for the cartels could get jobs in 'legal' frims that do the same thing, witch would be a better workplace for people.
> Well what would likely happen then is another 1989 Panama. One of the main reasons why the US invaded Panama was its involvement in drug trade. So the US would criticize Mexico publicly, and at some point probably invade it.
MMhhh possible but Im not sure the US people or the international community would stand for this. I doute that the US would go so far.
I think legalizing drugs is the only workable solution for Mexico.
The flaw in the argument that ending the drug war will financially starve the cartels..(true) & if fighting criminality is our stated policy then it's the right thing to do..is that it's overlooking the accompanying weakening of the law enforcement- prison-military industrial complex & YES, I know people don't look at it that way, but the police & the entire drug fighting establishment are also an interest group set on keeping their budgets & their privileges.
Calderon is a coward, he should have stated the obvious before he was set to leave office. How many lives were lost in Mexico because of his stubborn delusion..or cynical political calculations ?
> the police & the entire drug fighting establishment are also an interest group set on keeping their budgets & their privileges
In a way, there's this angle, sure. However, nobody wants the drug war to get so violent policemen drop dead all the time, like they do in Mexico. Nobody actually wants an all out war, despite the name "War on Drugs."
It's impossible to end the illegal drug trade != No organization with the means is willing to do what it takes.
The Mexican drug cartel supposedly has close to 150,000 "soldiers." I use the term soldier loosely because its really just a bunch of degenerate shitbags that have been given firearms. They are allegedly larger, more organized, and better funded than Al Qaeda has ever dreamed of being. Still, there are bullets enough in this world to solve such a problem. It would be long, ugly, and bloody for all parties involved, but if we were serious enough to actually go about it the right way, the entire planet would be far better having seen it to completion.
When an ultraconservative thinks about the war on drugs, they are generally thinking of the elimination of mind-altering substances from the face of the earth. When I think of the war on drugs, I think first of finding ways to prevent children from becoming addicted to hard drugs before they are old enough to know what decision they are making, and secondly, the annihilation of the violent, terrorist organizations that currently control the industry. I understand that nothing will ever completely eliminate the recreational use of drugs, but by my definition the war on drugs is absolutely winnable. Unfortunately, just because something can be accomplished, doesn't mean that it's going to happen.
See, this is a rather simplistic and ignorant comment. I do not mean to insult you - actually, I wish it was as simple as you're saying, just kill them and end with it. However, the problem is incredibly more complex than what you think it is.
I live in Mexico, next to a city that a couple of years back was one of the worst in the country in terms of violence and drug distribution. (In fact, one of the big cartels started in that city.) I've interacted with people involved in those cartels and with their families. I've interacted with officers who're in it, too. The problem is deeply rooted, and it's a problem of, among other things, culture.
The solution is not to "kill them all," but rather to educate. According to one article[1] (note: it's in spanish), Mexico invests less than 0.5% of its GDP into science and research. While Mexico has always had top competitors in international competitions for math, biology, robotics, science and engineering in general, and even chess, they're anomalies and products of extremely expensive private schools. Hell, even GNOME was made by two Mexican hackers. Schools in Mexico are beyond messed up.
Lack of education, mixed with poverty, create criminals. In Mexico you rarely ever see racism, but instead there's classism. Unlike in the US, our government officials aren't old white guys, but people of all kinds of skin color with money. Mexican culture - and maybe I'm wrong in this comparison, but this is from what I understand - is similar to black culture, where you have to fight your way out of your impoverished group by primarily violent means. You don't earn the respect of your fellow poor friends by getting an A on a test, but by having designer jeans or by having the latest iPhone.
And this is what gets most the "bunch of degenerate shitbags that have been given firearms" that you mention. These are literally teenagers (or even younger kids) that want to get out, probably even help our their family or community, and this is the only way they can do it.
I may be going a bit off-topic, but killing them off won't do any good. In fact, starting an all-out war might make things worse. These kids don't fear death because they have nothing to lose. The higher ups also don't fear the government or the army.
Another thing is that, if a war against organized crime were to start, it would create fear instead of peace. It would make the population, at least to my understanding, "uneasy" to say the least.
What I would propose instead of killing people would be to educate and invest in shit other than fighting a meaningless war.
EDIT: Hmm, I noticed that I rambled a bit too much. There are several other things I wanted to mention. I am not in a position to offer a concrete solution as I'm not an expert in this topic. I've only seen this from afar and read almost daily on the newspapers about what's happening in the country. As I mentioned, the problem is far too big to be reduced into a couple of paragraphs. There are countless books, articles, essays, blog posts, etc, devoted to this specific topic and the solution offered varies (albeit slightly) from person to person.
If anyone is interested in more information, let me know and I'll see what I can do.
1-"degenerate shitbags, or maybe adults making a rational decision to work for an employer balancing risk & compensation in a chronically high unemployment society working for a company operating in a very high margin business.
2- "there are bullets enough in this world to solve such a problem." the same amount that solved the Afhanistan war, right ?
3- "I think first of finding ways to prevent children from becoming addicted to hard drugs" . what a patronizing & woefully uninformed profiling of the typical drug user.
4- "Unfortunately, just because something can be accomplished, doesn't mean that it's going to happen." 50 years, trillions of dollars & hundreds of thousands of dead beg to differ.
All this would do is raise the price of drugs. Really, mass murder is not going to solve any of this and lack of resolve is definitely not the first cause of failing to find a solution.
What you describe is basically what we're doing now, to the extent we're willing to fund it.
But instead of, you know, invading yet another country on the barest of pretenses, how about legalizing the drug trade, thereby depriving these cartels of their funding and, indeed, their very raison d'etre. The addiction problem you can solve within the health care and education systems, at far less cost (and much more effectively!) than waging a global, never-ending war on drugs.
Then, if you're up for it, after the members of the now-defunct cartels are weakened, you can go after them with the bullets. Should be much easier.
I mean, you say it right in your post: "long, ugly, and bloody for all parties involved". In fact what you describe is not a hypothetical at all, it is the existing War on Drugs. But then you just sort of dismiss that and continue on with your insane 'plan'.
"At one time, the sleeping pill Quaalude was as big a problem in the United States as heroin and cocaine. But then, in a matter of just a few years, it disappeared. If the successful strategy the DEA pursued in cracking down on Quaaludes had been followed when meth surfaced a few years later, experts say it is unlikely the meth epidemic would ever have happened. "
Under the unrealistic assumption, that this is not a troll comment, it should be nominated as the most loony anti-Bush statement in a while.
Just because the Bush administration (successfully!) got the misuse of a sleeping pill under control, they were getting people hooked on meth?
There is absolutely not causation identifiable in the linked article. Plus the effects and user groups seem to be very little overlapping, illegal use of the drug had surged, especially among teenagers. Users would 'lude out," combining the drug with alcohol to achieve a drunken, sleepy high sounds like a suburban middle class problem, while I suspect Meth a lot less socially accepted. But Meth is a disruptive drug through its super low barriers of entry to become a producer, therefore super price competitive and a tendency for over supply.
What he is saying is that it is in human nature to get high.
And we better accept this and tailor our legislation accordingly, instead of trying in vain to deny it.
Legalizing would stop violence, increase taxes, allow for open research of the substances, would de-stigmatize use, which in turn would make users more willing to seek cure or support of others and would allow for better education of future potential users (aka children) on the caveats of drug use and abuse.
Drug use has produced a great deal of 'positive' outcomes for our society. They have drastically changed our culture, art, economy and technology.
Of course, their dark side is well known, but I think it would be a lot easier to deal with the dark effects of drugs if they were legal.
I'm glad there's lots of signs that this is about to happen all around the world pretty soon. Let's see what happens.
There are so many ramifications, specially with what happens in terms on the national relationships once the money flow is cut to some with drugs being made legal. We don't know how bad things could get for Mexico, and which strings are being pulled when the wrong people being left out of the money. There's also the people. It's easy to think a narc will become a happy member of society and do the nice drugs business once it's legal and stay there in a bubble. You're talking about people knowingly poisoning others and murdering by the hundred. Legalizing the substance won't make those people ethical well behaved persons caring for society. With truckloads of capital to move to other industries, imagine if the doors are fully open for top cartel people to move freely and move to rule the food, communications, or health industries. They're not the kind of people who would rather loose money to stop producing a bad batch of food that poisons people or avoid making people sick to increase profits.They can easily threaten a government inspector, wipe whoever gets in their way since they already do that, plus they have many of the law enforcers in their payroll. It's not like making new law will stop them from doing things their way. If legalization is the solution, at least first their economy and power can't be big enough so that they won't wreck other hubs in the country. So far seems like a fight to make cartels as small as possible to be controllable.
Without ongoing revenue the shadow government cannot sustain its own life. It's blood is bribes (quite literally sadly).
This idea that cartels can take their capital on hand and then move directly into being the monopoly player in some other market is more than a bit fantastic.
In a way I am indifferent to legalizing drugs, because I won't buy them anyway. However, I wonder what it would be like in reality? Would it mean you could walk down the supermarket aisle and buy a substance for 9,99$ that ruins your life within seconds? The danger seems to me to signal "drugs are safe" by legalizing them - usually the government is supposed to ban dangerous foods, I think?
Sure, you can already buy cigarettes and alcohol, but I don't think they make you addicted after just one shot.
Just asking - perhaps there are plans for distributing them in a different way?
Also, even if they were legalized, would it mean those drug cartels would go away? They are now an organization embedded in society, why should they loosen their grip? Like if an independent drugstore opens to sell legal heroin, what would stop them from setting it on fire and shooting the owners?
There's not really anything out there that makes you addicted in one shot. Oftentimes people have awful experiences on first dosages of heroin, because overwhelming nausea is a common side effect of high dosages of opiates. It takes more than once to be addicted.
Cigarettes are mostly as addictive as crack cocaine and it still takes sustained high levels of use over days to develop a physical addiction to either.
The FDA would still exist, and would still have a job to do. You wouldn't be able to just sell literal poison in the supermarket alongside the oatmeal. The FDA currently classes items approved for sale into a broad number of categories: food supplements, medicines, etc., but there is nothing there for recreational psychoactive substances and there would probably need to be. The difference between that and the current regime I imagine would be that the focus is on the purity and relative safety of the product rather than 'does this have any medical use' because often it simply doesn't. And as a result of this some things would still be illegal, but it would be more about selling heroin that is only 20% actual heroin and the rest is who knows what, or selling something as marijuana when it's actually low-quality shit laced with PCP or whatever. Banning an entire class of a substance would be a rare thing, I imagine.
As to your second point, I think it's more likely that existing cartels would, in trying to transition to legal enterprise, find that running an actual business takes a set of skills that your typical pack of thugs just doesn't have, and you'd see some retaliation against legitimate suppliers who are kicking their ass on price and consistency. But unlike now where it's law enforcement taking on organized criminals with a shitload of money, they're taking on a husk of an organization that has seen its primary source of funding evaporate almost overnight. Different set of rules, there.
Honestly though I don't know what the cartels would do. It's hard to say. But one thing they wouldn't be doing is spending billions terrorizing innocent people, because they wouldn't have that kind of coin, anymore.
I for one am grievously offended. This degree of Truthspeak is a Droneable offense, and the number of priceless American jobs that would be lost with marijuana reform is an insult to the tens of thousands of Mexicans slaughtered for them.
I still dont understand they governments, especially the uber capitalist ones like the US, make damn sure with their laws, that the money and power are in the hands of drug dealers and cartels.
Restricting supply ups the price. You cant control demand in anything close to a reasonable way. Frankly people want drugs. Americans know this better than most since they had prohibition.
I have always wondered if some how it suits government to have violent criminals controlling the supply and money. If just the money which goes to the war machine, or something else?
It's impossible to end any trade for which there is a market. Drugs, sex, nuclear weapons, state secrets, etc. all seem to create markets to satisfy demand. It might be that the best way to protect innocent lives is to actually encourage the development of the markets to keep them above board and in the public eye.
I read people saying "duh, this is obvious". Of course it is, and everybody knows it, but it is still important when political personalities start to say it publicly.
When people say 'impossible' there is a mutually understood subtext of 'without going absolutely off the fucking rail to make it happen'. In order to stamp out the drug trade you need to:
* Render extinct-in-the-wild (or just plain extinct) a great many species of plants, fungi, and even a few animals, many of which have a rather large range and are difficult to kill.
* For whatever you miss in step one either because the precursors have legitimate uses we can't do without, or because we find we just can't kill them all, you need to tightly regulate and enforce a strict prohibition on those precursors in order to track who is doing what with what.
* Implementing the above step in a way that will really effectively reduce drug availability to nearly zero would require nothing short of global, endless warfare and a dystopian police state that would make Oceania look like - I don't know, Iceland? This is because some drugs are synthesized with very common materials and as such the only way to be sure no one is making them is to know what everyone is doing, all the time.
* To the extent you can't implement the previous step in full, you need to be sure the punishments meted out for failure to comply are especially harsh, so that enough people who think they can skate by under the radar are deterred.
* If you can do all this, you will drive the prices of drugs so high that the reward for manufacturing even a small quantity of something, provided you have the means to move the product, will definitely motivate people to try anyway. And if they achieve some success, they now have resources to fight you/bribe your allies.
So, doing the War on Drugs 'right', means giving up anything more than a pretense of freedom and democracy. Meanwhile, the cost of just legalizing the shit and treating addiction as a medical issue seems far less dire in comparison. When people say 'impossible' they mean 'impossible to do so in a way consistent with our values'.
Can you say the same for fighting fraud, speeding, and the sale of body organs? I think that you cannot.
If you think it's bad for somebody's health or is addictive, then I've got news for you: alcohol, sugar, caffeine, bacon.
I've never even tried pot or anything stronger, but I still support legalization.
But let's cut to the chase, this is not about drugs and health issues. This is about money and jobs for DEA. Essentially, we're pissing away our tax money to pay for DEA agents and their expensive toys, who, in turn, don't provide any real service.
This drug war is expensive, it costs dollars and lives. It's trivial to end it, but it's not happening. Too many dollars at stake.
I would not tax them anymore then they are taxed allready.
> But let's cut to the chase, this is not about drugs and health issues. This is about money and jobs for DEA. Essentially, we're pissing away our tax money to pay for DEA agents and their expensive toys, who, in turn, don't provide any real service.
The burocratic overhead is one reason for sure but I do not think its the most importend one.
I think the most importend one is that the politics does not want to admit that the ware wrong for 50 years. How would that look if the democrats came out with legal drug policys? Tell people X for 50 years and then switch to telling them (not X).
The next reason is the ignorance of the people, 50 years of anti-drug propaganda had a effect. This kind of propaganda becomes self-enforcing after a while. Many people actually belive all that crap that is said about drugs.
But let's cut to the chase, this is not about drugs and health issues. This is about money and jobs for DEA. Essentially, we're pissing away our tax money to pay for DEA agents and their expensive toys, who, in turn, don't provide any real service.
This drug war is expensive, it costs dollars and lives. It's trivial to end it, but it's not happening. Too many dollars at stake.
I was with you until this, not because I disagree but because I think it's an irrelevant issue. There are many examples of enforcement/regulation wings of the government being rolled back when the political tide turned against them. The issue is that law enforcement expenditures, like military expenditures, are pitched as a response to public fears.
If you talk to older generation, suburban family folks who support criminalization instinctively, their number one stated concern is, in my experience, that they are afraid of drug-related crimes -- robbery, burglary, theft i.e., crimes being committed to support a habit (so the hypothesis goes). Now the obvious response to that is to point out that those things happen now, but then you are engaging an issue of the heart by attacking a point made in their head. This will probably segue into an argument about stiffer criminal penalties -- the exact opposite of what we want -- because the person is still afraid.
DEA toys don't figure into this argument, even if that is the end result, so if you want this to happen before that generation is old and gone you have to have an argument that addresses the core concerns people actually have. If you have to talk about the DEA, even if you are technically correct, I doubt anybody can be swayed by such an argument -- it's all cerebral and doesn't address the central issue, which is fear.
and probably spend the tax dollars to educate society about using said drugs responsibly in a controlled fashion, and you probably have a pretty good system.
After all, a big part of the problem is a lack of knowledge in the users on how to manage their use of the substances.
Which parties win more in the war on drugs even if most battles are lost? Hmm... let's see...
Firstly, government agencies that are in the frontline they get as they get hefty budgets to spend on whatever they find necessary to carry out their mission. Since they fight a war that means weapons, vehicles, communications and surveillance tech, etc. here profits go to industries that provide the goods, lobbyists, and corrupt government agents.
Secondly, by having no illegal cheap alternatives, people who like to get stoned will have to resort to legal drugs. Alcohol, and nicotine come to mind as being equally cheap, but not as effective. Also, prescription drugs, harder to get and a little more expensive, tough widely accept by society. No need to layout the parties who profit the most here.
In the end everyone else in society has something to loose by dealing with the aftermath of yet another hopeless war. Something much worse then educatating peers about the drug use and spending tax money in improving society as a whole.
We have to end this nonsense. But, here's the the trillion dollar question. How can we do it when so many people profit on this?
Decriminalization for all substances but legal production only for the ones that do not severely harm the body in short-term (not heroin, crack, crystal meth and similar ones)
[+] [-] benbeltran|13 years ago|reply
But this wasn't about the wear on drugs, this was about territory: The local government had deals with the local cartel, but the Sinaloa cartel started fighting for more territory, allegedly with the aid of the army/federal police. Suddenly Juarez is impossible to live in, not because of all the narco murders but because federal agents and armies are stopping you every three blocks and suddenly you have a lot of blackmail, threats, etc coming from the guys that are supposedly there to protect. We knew they were not there to end the drug problem, they were there as a part of it, and we know it's impossible to end it, but it's better to have it out of sight, out of mind.
Now he's leaving and of course he had to come up with a conclusion like this. I just hope cities get back to the balance they had from before the war and this drug traffic problem stops spilling to the general population. As long as there is a market there will be someone to fill the need, and being the next door neighbor we're sadly in a good position to have those kinds of people.
Yes Mr. Calderón, it's impossible to end drug trade, you knew it, we knew it, this is not news... And yet you had us suffering in fear and crime for six years just because you wanted to help some buddies and look as if you were actually doing something.
[+] [-] sharkweek|13 years ago|reply
edit: this scene from The Wire also has a great perspective on the war on drugs -- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BA5za4VsskM
[+] [-] Gring|13 years ago|reply
As a thought experiment, think what would happen if Mexico made drugs legal. Their government would had to fight against the cartels, and might at some point win.
What you have then is a system where Mexico has much less criminality. They can't export to the US directly of course, but people will just buy drugs legally in the Mexican north and try to smuggle it the the US. The US can decide for themselves if they want to legalize it or not, and if they don't the US criminality is still there, but the Mexican criminality is gone.
Well what would likely happen then is another 1989 Panama. One of the main reasons why the US invaded Panama was its involvement in drug trade. So the US would criticize Mexico publicly, and at some point probably invade it.
It looks to me like current time Mexico is stuck between a rock and a hard place. They must be opposed to drugs because their powerful northern neighbor wants them to, but outside market pressure, from the very same neighbor at the same time destabilizes it.
So it's an issue that should be solved by an outside party - the US. But that party won't tackle the issue because Mexican people can't vote in the US.
Sounds like bad US colonialism to me :-(
[+] [-] nickik|13 years ago|reply
I dont think that would be a big problem. Everybody that has a car coule without any trouble start trafficing drugs into the US, without fear of the police. The goverment would essentially only have to be passiv antil the funds of the cartels drain.
Guns and stuff are expensive. A well organised logisics firm (for example) could outperform these cartels in drug transportation. All the goverment would have to do is protect the firms.
Many of the people that work for the cartels could get jobs in 'legal' frims that do the same thing, witch would be a better workplace for people.
> Well what would likely happen then is another 1989 Panama. One of the main reasons why the US invaded Panama was its involvement in drug trade. So the US would criticize Mexico publicly, and at some point probably invade it.
MMhhh possible but Im not sure the US people or the international community would stand for this. I doute that the US would go so far.
I think legalizing drugs is the only workable solution for Mexico.
[+] [-] sami36|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] daniel-cussen|13 years ago|reply
In a way, there's this angle, sure. However, nobody wants the drug war to get so violent policemen drop dead all the time, like they do in Mexico. Nobody actually wants an all out war, despite the name "War on Drugs."
[+] [-] phaus|13 years ago|reply
The Mexican drug cartel supposedly has close to 150,000 "soldiers." I use the term soldier loosely because its really just a bunch of degenerate shitbags that have been given firearms. They are allegedly larger, more organized, and better funded than Al Qaeda has ever dreamed of being. Still, there are bullets enough in this world to solve such a problem. It would be long, ugly, and bloody for all parties involved, but if we were serious enough to actually go about it the right way, the entire planet would be far better having seen it to completion.
When an ultraconservative thinks about the war on drugs, they are generally thinking of the elimination of mind-altering substances from the face of the earth. When I think of the war on drugs, I think first of finding ways to prevent children from becoming addicted to hard drugs before they are old enough to know what decision they are making, and secondly, the annihilation of the violent, terrorist organizations that currently control the industry. I understand that nothing will ever completely eliminate the recreational use of drugs, but by my definition the war on drugs is absolutely winnable. Unfortunately, just because something can be accomplished, doesn't mean that it's going to happen.
[+] [-] ralonso|13 years ago|reply
I live in Mexico, next to a city that a couple of years back was one of the worst in the country in terms of violence and drug distribution. (In fact, one of the big cartels started in that city.) I've interacted with people involved in those cartels and with their families. I've interacted with officers who're in it, too. The problem is deeply rooted, and it's a problem of, among other things, culture.
The solution is not to "kill them all," but rather to educate. According to one article[1] (note: it's in spanish), Mexico invests less than 0.5% of its GDP into science and research. While Mexico has always had top competitors in international competitions for math, biology, robotics, science and engineering in general, and even chess, they're anomalies and products of extremely expensive private schools. Hell, even GNOME was made by two Mexican hackers. Schools in Mexico are beyond messed up.
Lack of education, mixed with poverty, create criminals. In Mexico you rarely ever see racism, but instead there's classism. Unlike in the US, our government officials aren't old white guys, but people of all kinds of skin color with money. Mexican culture - and maybe I'm wrong in this comparison, but this is from what I understand - is similar to black culture, where you have to fight your way out of your impoverished group by primarily violent means. You don't earn the respect of your fellow poor friends by getting an A on a test, but by having designer jeans or by having the latest iPhone.
And this is what gets most the "bunch of degenerate shitbags that have been given firearms" that you mention. These are literally teenagers (or even younger kids) that want to get out, probably even help our their family or community, and this is the only way they can do it.
I may be going a bit off-topic, but killing them off won't do any good. In fact, starting an all-out war might make things worse. These kids don't fear death because they have nothing to lose. The higher ups also don't fear the government or the army.
Another thing is that, if a war against organized crime were to start, it would create fear instead of peace. It would make the population, at least to my understanding, "uneasy" to say the least.
What I would propose instead of killing people would be to educate and invest in shit other than fighting a meaningless war.
[1] http://www.metronoticias.com.mx/nota.cgi?id=378883
EDIT: Hmm, I noticed that I rambled a bit too much. There are several other things I wanted to mention. I am not in a position to offer a concrete solution as I'm not an expert in this topic. I've only seen this from afar and read almost daily on the newspapers about what's happening in the country. As I mentioned, the problem is far too big to be reduced into a couple of paragraphs. There are countless books, articles, essays, blog posts, etc, devoted to this specific topic and the solution offered varies (albeit slightly) from person to person.
If anyone is interested in more information, let me know and I'll see what I can do.
[+] [-] anigbrowl|13 years ago|reply
http://www.economist.com/news/americas/21564897-most-wanted-...
[+] [-] sami36|13 years ago|reply
2- "there are bullets enough in this world to solve such a problem." the same amount that solved the Afhanistan war, right ?
3- "I think first of finding ways to prevent children from becoming addicted to hard drugs" . what a patronizing & woefully uninformed profiling of the typical drug user.
4- "Unfortunately, just because something can be accomplished, doesn't mean that it's going to happen." 50 years, trillions of dollars & hundreds of thousands of dead beg to differ.
[+] [-] batgaijin|13 years ago|reply
http://nsfwcorp.com/dispatch/narco-war-update
I'd rather fight marines than these guys; at least I'd get a double tap instead of something much worse...
[+] [-] jacquesm|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] gws|13 years ago|reply
Of course it is possible to kill the current 150 000 drug soldiers but it just becomes a giant game of whac-a-mole.
One gigantic waste of money, time, and human lives.
[+] [-] dasil003|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] bluedanieru|13 years ago|reply
But instead of, you know, invading yet another country on the barest of pretenses, how about legalizing the drug trade, thereby depriving these cartels of their funding and, indeed, their very raison d'etre. The addiction problem you can solve within the health care and education systems, at far less cost (and much more effectively!) than waging a global, never-ending war on drugs.
Then, if you're up for it, after the members of the now-defunct cartels are weakened, you can go after them with the bullets. Should be much easier.
I mean, you say it right in your post: "long, ugly, and bloody for all parties involved". In fact what you describe is not a hypothetical at all, it is the existing War on Drugs. But then you just sort of dismiss that and continue on with your insane 'plan'.
[+] [-] stch|13 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] FSEA|13 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] lifeguard|13 years ago|reply
"At one time, the sleeping pill Quaalude was as big a problem in the United States as heroin and cocaine. But then, in a matter of just a few years, it disappeared. If the successful strategy the DEA pursued in cracking down on Quaaludes had been followed when meth surfaced a few years later, experts say it is unlikely the meth epidemic would ever have happened. "
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/meth/faqs/quaaludes....
[+] [-] stfu|13 years ago|reply
Just because the Bush administration (successfully!) got the misuse of a sleeping pill under control, they were getting people hooked on meth?
There is absolutely not causation identifiable in the linked article. Plus the effects and user groups seem to be very little overlapping, illegal use of the drug had surged, especially among teenagers. Users would 'lude out," combining the drug with alcohol to achieve a drunken, sleepy high sounds like a suburban middle class problem, while I suspect Meth a lot less socially accepted. But Meth is a disruptive drug through its super low barriers of entry to become a producer, therefore super price competitive and a tendency for over supply.
[+] [-] codeboost|13 years ago|reply
Legalizing would stop violence, increase taxes, allow for open research of the substances, would de-stigmatize use, which in turn would make users more willing to seek cure or support of others and would allow for better education of future potential users (aka children) on the caveats of drug use and abuse.
Drug use has produced a great deal of 'positive' outcomes for our society. They have drastically changed our culture, art, economy and technology.
Of course, their dark side is well known, but I think it would be a lot easier to deal with the dark effects of drugs if they were legal.
I'm glad there's lots of signs that this is about to happen all around the world pretty soon. Let's see what happens.
[+] [-] checoivan|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jasonwatkinspdx|13 years ago|reply
This idea that cartels can take their capital on hand and then move directly into being the monopoly player in some other market is more than a bit fantastic.
[+] [-] klibertp|13 years ago|reply
Tobacco and alcohol dealers do the same, yet they are quite civil...
[+] [-] rizzom5000|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] anigbrowl|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] tnuc|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] ninetax|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] tomflack|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] drivebyacct2|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Tichy|13 years ago|reply
Sure, you can already buy cigarettes and alcohol, but I don't think they make you addicted after just one shot.
Just asking - perhaps there are plans for distributing them in a different way?
Also, even if they were legalized, would it mean those drug cartels would go away? They are now an organization embedded in society, why should they loosen their grip? Like if an independent drugstore opens to sell legal heroin, what would stop them from setting it on fire and shooting the owners?
[+] [-] rms|13 years ago|reply
Cigarettes are mostly as addictive as crack cocaine and it still takes sustained high levels of use over days to develop a physical addiction to either.
[+] [-] bluedanieru|13 years ago|reply
As to your second point, I think it's more likely that existing cartels would, in trying to transition to legal enterprise, find that running an actual business takes a set of skills that your typical pack of thugs just doesn't have, and you'd see some retaliation against legitimate suppliers who are kicking their ass on price and consistency. But unlike now where it's law enforcement taking on organized criminals with a shitload of money, they're taking on a husk of an organization that has seen its primary source of funding evaporate almost overnight. Different set of rules, there.
Honestly though I don't know what the cartels would do. It's hard to say. But one thing they wouldn't be doing is spending billions terrorizing innocent people, because they wouldn't have that kind of coin, anymore.
[+] [-] jpxxx|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] alan_cx|13 years ago|reply
Restricting supply ups the price. You cant control demand in anything close to a reasonable way. Frankly people want drugs. Americans know this better than most since they had prohibition.
I have always wondered if some how it suits government to have violent criminals controlling the supply and money. If just the money which goes to the war machine, or something else?
[+] [-] qq66|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] ucee054|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] galactus|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] pcvarmint|13 years ago|reply
Where there is demand, there is supply.
This is as inviolable as the law of gravity.
[+] [-] petercooper|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] bluedanieru|13 years ago|reply
* Render extinct-in-the-wild (or just plain extinct) a great many species of plants, fungi, and even a few animals, many of which have a rather large range and are difficult to kill.
* For whatever you miss in step one either because the precursors have legitimate uses we can't do without, or because we find we just can't kill them all, you need to tightly regulate and enforce a strict prohibition on those precursors in order to track who is doing what with what.
* Implementing the above step in a way that will really effectively reduce drug availability to nearly zero would require nothing short of global, endless warfare and a dystopian police state that would make Oceania look like - I don't know, Iceland? This is because some drugs are synthesized with very common materials and as such the only way to be sure no one is making them is to know what everyone is doing, all the time.
* To the extent you can't implement the previous step in full, you need to be sure the punishments meted out for failure to comply are especially harsh, so that enough people who think they can skate by under the radar are deterred.
* If you can do all this, you will drive the prices of drugs so high that the reward for manufacturing even a small quantity of something, provided you have the means to move the product, will definitely motivate people to try anyway. And if they achieve some success, they now have resources to fight you/bribe your allies.
So, doing the War on Drugs 'right', means giving up anything more than a pretense of freedom and democracy. Meanwhile, the cost of just legalizing the shit and treating addiction as a medical issue seems far less dire in comparison. When people say 'impossible' they mean 'impossible to do so in a way consistent with our values'.
Can you say the same for fighting fraud, speeding, and the sale of body organs? I think that you cannot.
[+] [-] rorrr|13 years ago|reply
Legalize all drugs and tax them.
You can't stop something that people want them.
If you think it's bad for somebody's health or is addictive, then I've got news for you: alcohol, sugar, caffeine, bacon.
I've never even tried pot or anything stronger, but I still support legalization.
But let's cut to the chase, this is not about drugs and health issues. This is about money and jobs for DEA. Essentially, we're pissing away our tax money to pay for DEA agents and their expensive toys, who, in turn, don't provide any real service.
This drug war is expensive, it costs dollars and lives. It's trivial to end it, but it's not happening. Too many dollars at stake.
[+] [-] nickik|13 years ago|reply
I would not tax them anymore then they are taxed allready.
> But let's cut to the chase, this is not about drugs and health issues. This is about money and jobs for DEA. Essentially, we're pissing away our tax money to pay for DEA agents and their expensive toys, who, in turn, don't provide any real service.
The burocratic overhead is one reason for sure but I do not think its the most importend one.
I think the most importend one is that the politics does not want to admit that the ware wrong for 50 years. How would that look if the democrats came out with legal drug policys? Tell people X for 50 years and then switch to telling them (not X).
The next reason is the ignorance of the people, 50 years of anti-drug propaganda had a effect. This kind of propaganda becomes self-enforcing after a while. Many people actually belive all that crap that is said about drugs.
[+] [-] jessedhillon|13 years ago|reply
This drug war is expensive, it costs dollars and lives. It's trivial to end it, but it's not happening. Too many dollars at stake.
I was with you until this, not because I disagree but because I think it's an irrelevant issue. There are many examples of enforcement/regulation wings of the government being rolled back when the political tide turned against them. The issue is that law enforcement expenditures, like military expenditures, are pitched as a response to public fears.
If you talk to older generation, suburban family folks who support criminalization instinctively, their number one stated concern is, in my experience, that they are afraid of drug-related crimes -- robbery, burglary, theft i.e., crimes being committed to support a habit (so the hypothesis goes). Now the obvious response to that is to point out that those things happen now, but then you are engaging an issue of the heart by attacking a point made in their head. This will probably segue into an argument about stiffer criminal penalties -- the exact opposite of what we want -- because the person is still afraid.
DEA toys don't figure into this argument, even if that is the end result, so if you want this to happen before that generation is old and gone you have to have an argument that addresses the core concerns people actually have. If you have to talk about the DEA, even if you are technically correct, I doubt anybody can be swayed by such an argument -- it's all cerebral and doesn't address the central issue, which is fear.
That's MHO anyway.
[+] [-] hkmurakami|13 years ago|reply
After all, a big part of the problem is a lack of knowledge in the users on how to manage their use of the substances.
[+] [-] wildranter|13 years ago|reply
Firstly, government agencies that are in the frontline they get as they get hefty budgets to spend on whatever they find necessary to carry out their mission. Since they fight a war that means weapons, vehicles, communications and surveillance tech, etc. here profits go to industries that provide the goods, lobbyists, and corrupt government agents.
Secondly, by having no illegal cheap alternatives, people who like to get stoned will have to resort to legal drugs. Alcohol, and nicotine come to mind as being equally cheap, but not as effective. Also, prescription drugs, harder to get and a little more expensive, tough widely accept by society. No need to layout the parties who profit the most here.
In the end everyone else in society has something to loose by dealing with the aftermath of yet another hopeless war. Something much worse then educatating peers about the drug use and spending tax money in improving society as a whole.
We have to end this nonsense. But, here's the the trillion dollar question. How can we do it when so many people profit on this?
[+] [-] jQueryIsAwesome|13 years ago|reply