News (Media Awareness Project) - US MA: OPED: 'Tripod' Of Legalizing, Regulating Drugs Only Way to Win 'War' |
Title: | US MA: OPED: 'Tripod' Of Legalizing, Regulating Drugs Only Way to Win 'War' |
Published On: | 2010-06-10 |
Source: | Gloucester Daily Times (MA) |
Fetched On: | 2010-06-13 03:01:31 |
'TRIPOD' OF LEGALIZING, REGULATING DRUGS ONLY WAY TO WIN 'WAR'
Legalize them. Regulate them. Tax them.
Those steps are what I refer to as the "Tripod of Victory in the War
on Drugs."
It is time for both the U.S. government and the American people to
admit our so called "War on Drugs" is an abject failure.
It is time for the U.S. government and the American people to admit it
is both the demand for drugs in the United States, coupled with our
lax gun laws and easy access to military style weaponry, that is then
shipped south of the border by U.S. arms traffickers in pursuit of big
profits fueling the bloodshed in Mexico and in other countries further
south in Central America, including Costa Rica.
It is time for the xenophobes who use the crime and bloodshed south of
the border as a rationale for their immigrant bashing to face reality.
The cartels may, indeed, have made small inroads in a few American
cities, but the truth is violent crime, whether drug related or not,
according to a recent study conducted by the FBI, is down all across
the country, even in Phoenix, El Paso, and San Diego, where the
xenophobes would have people believe Mexican cartel "jefes" now
control those cities, and every latin looking immigrant is a likely
cartel member.
It is a bogus assertion that may make for good right wing, Tea Party,
white fright politics, but it is not a reflection of reality on the
ground.
If anything, as Mexican President Felipe Calderon has conducted his
heroic war on the cartels, many of the cartels are retreating south to
countries in Central America, not moving north across the border as
the American xenophobes assert.
Nothing exemplifies that reality more than what is happening with the
notoriously vicious "Zeta" cartel. Under mounting pressure from the
Mexican authorities, the Zetas have retreated south across the border
into Guatemala where they now control vast amounts of territory.
This southward migration of Mexican cartels, coupled with the
northward migration of Colombian cartels under pressure from U.S.
forces there, is quickly transforming Central America into a literal
"cartel playground" in countries ill equipped to counter their growing
influence, given the financial and fire power the cartels possess.
In Costa Rica, for example, much of the country's Pacific commercial
fishing fleet is under the control of the FARC, the Revolutionary
Armed Forces of Colombia. The FARC funds its war against the Colombian
government largely via the profits it takes in from the cocaine it
moves to the lucrative U.S. market. Costa Rica's Pacific fishing fleet
has become an important link in the transport of that cocaine from
Colombia to the U.S.
Last year, in the capital city of San Jose, the chief of the
metropolitan police force was arrested on charges he was accepting
bribes from both Colombian and Jamaican cartels in exchange for
letting them conduct their business freely in the city.
The OIJ, Costa Rica's version of the FBI, estimated as many as one in
four metropolitan police officers were also on the payrolls of the two
cartels.
What is infuriatingly ironic to me is neither the U.S. government nor
the American people seem to realize, or take any responsibility for
the fact that cartels get their great power from three main sources --
the demand for drugs in the United States, the huge profits that
demand generates, and lax U.S. gun laws that allow the cartels easy
access to the kinds of weapons that, in reality, make them better
armed than many countries' police forces and militaries in the region.
This "War on Drugs" is lost folks, and unless we implement the
"tripod" and take the power away from the cartels, it probably is only
a matter of time until some cartel "jefe" controls a city like
Phoenix, El Paso, or San Diego -- no matter how high the wall the
xenophobes build might be.
And if that day comes, responsibility will rest on the shoulders of
those Americans who insisted on living in denial and playing games
with the truth in order to score cheap, short term, race based,
political points in their pursuit of power.
Legalize them. Regulate them. Tax them.
Those steps are what I refer to as the "Tripod of Victory in the War
on Drugs."
It is time for both the U.S. government and the American people to
admit our so called "War on Drugs" is an abject failure.
It is time for the U.S. government and the American people to admit it
is both the demand for drugs in the United States, coupled with our
lax gun laws and easy access to military style weaponry, that is then
shipped south of the border by U.S. arms traffickers in pursuit of big
profits fueling the bloodshed in Mexico and in other countries further
south in Central America, including Costa Rica.
It is time for the xenophobes who use the crime and bloodshed south of
the border as a rationale for their immigrant bashing to face reality.
The cartels may, indeed, have made small inroads in a few American
cities, but the truth is violent crime, whether drug related or not,
according to a recent study conducted by the FBI, is down all across
the country, even in Phoenix, El Paso, and San Diego, where the
xenophobes would have people believe Mexican cartel "jefes" now
control those cities, and every latin looking immigrant is a likely
cartel member.
It is a bogus assertion that may make for good right wing, Tea Party,
white fright politics, but it is not a reflection of reality on the
ground.
If anything, as Mexican President Felipe Calderon has conducted his
heroic war on the cartels, many of the cartels are retreating south to
countries in Central America, not moving north across the border as
the American xenophobes assert.
Nothing exemplifies that reality more than what is happening with the
notoriously vicious "Zeta" cartel. Under mounting pressure from the
Mexican authorities, the Zetas have retreated south across the border
into Guatemala where they now control vast amounts of territory.
This southward migration of Mexican cartels, coupled with the
northward migration of Colombian cartels under pressure from U.S.
forces there, is quickly transforming Central America into a literal
"cartel playground" in countries ill equipped to counter their growing
influence, given the financial and fire power the cartels possess.
In Costa Rica, for example, much of the country's Pacific commercial
fishing fleet is under the control of the FARC, the Revolutionary
Armed Forces of Colombia. The FARC funds its war against the Colombian
government largely via the profits it takes in from the cocaine it
moves to the lucrative U.S. market. Costa Rica's Pacific fishing fleet
has become an important link in the transport of that cocaine from
Colombia to the U.S.
Last year, in the capital city of San Jose, the chief of the
metropolitan police force was arrested on charges he was accepting
bribes from both Colombian and Jamaican cartels in exchange for
letting them conduct their business freely in the city.
The OIJ, Costa Rica's version of the FBI, estimated as many as one in
four metropolitan police officers were also on the payrolls of the two
cartels.
What is infuriatingly ironic to me is neither the U.S. government nor
the American people seem to realize, or take any responsibility for
the fact that cartels get their great power from three main sources --
the demand for drugs in the United States, the huge profits that
demand generates, and lax U.S. gun laws that allow the cartels easy
access to the kinds of weapons that, in reality, make them better
armed than many countries' police forces and militaries in the region.
This "War on Drugs" is lost folks, and unless we implement the
"tripod" and take the power away from the cartels, it probably is only
a matter of time until some cartel "jefe" controls a city like
Phoenix, El Paso, or San Diego -- no matter how high the wall the
xenophobes build might be.
And if that day comes, responsibility will rest on the shoulders of
those Americans who insisted on living in denial and playing games
with the truth in order to score cheap, short term, race based,
political points in their pursuit of power.
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