Wednesday 23 December 2020

Drug Trafficking: The Dirtiest Little Secret

 

Drug Trafficking: The Dirtiest Little Secret

by Chris Farrell  •  December 23, 2020 at 5:00 am

Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Telegram Send Print
  • In a border community like El Paso, the Mexican cartels have an insidious, silent and powerful control that few people wish to acknowledge or accept -- that includes a largely compliant news media who usually report what happens, but rarely, if ever, ask "Why?" or "How can this go on, decade after decade, without accountability or resolution?"

  • If a population is dying from overdoses that is one-third as large as the COVID pandemic -- and we don't see, don't hear about it, and apparently don't really care about it, what does that say about us?

  • Tens of thousands of law enforcement officers, billions of taxpayer dollars, fifty years -- and the highest overdose rate in history? It is terribly unpopular to blame law enforcement, especially when they are being unfairly attacked by the militant fringe elements like Antifa and various lunatic municipal officials seeking to defund them -- but cleaning house within various agencies and increasing police pay would go a long way towards thwarting our greatest domestic threat.

  • A year ago, President Donald J. Trump declared he would name Mexican Cartels as foreign terrorist organizations. He paused his decision, and then tabled it, based on assurances from Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador and a reported wave of resistance from his own cabinet. The incoming Biden administration has the cartels virtually "high-fiving" each other -- they know a Biden administration will do nothing to stop cartel dominance and control of the US-Mexico border.

Pictured: United States Marshals guard the Brooklyn Federal Court in New York City on July 17, 2019, after the court handed down a sentence of life in prison to Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzman, former leader of Mexico's powerful Sinaloa drug cartel. (Photo by Johannes Eisele/AFP via Getty Images)

Here is the answer: Law enforcement corruption. The question? Why are we continuing to fight and lose the "War on Drugs," proclaimed by President Nixon, almost fifty years ago, in June 1971?

Think about the U.S. forces arrayed against Mexican drug cartels: DEA, FBI, Homeland Security, state police forces, county sheriffs, municipal police forces, even the postal service. We have established High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area task forces with their own regional fusion centers.

The United States is incapable of defeating Mexican cartels? We can transport armored and special operations forces halfway around the world to the Middle East and Southwest Asia, and defeat both conventional and irregular military forces -- but we cannot secure our southern border and stop the poisoning of our own population?

Continue Reading Article

No comments:

Post a Comment