|
domingo, octubre 07, 2007 Escrito PorAdam J. Segala las03:12 PM | Comentar | Imprimir | Enviar a Correo This week we’re asking you to weigh in on whether the Mexico can win the war against drug cartels with help from the United States.
The U.S. Congress may soon be asked to vote on a massive billion-dollar anti-drug aid package. Do you think this enormous budget is enough to win the war on drugs in Mexico? Should the U.S. be investing in the battle within Mexico? Last week the Dallas Morning News reported on some of the initial details (excerpts):
According to a report from the Financial Times today (excerpts): Just last week the U.S. and Mexico announced a milestone in the joint fight against drugs and are claiming key victories. Has the price of cocaine risen because of the crackdown? Are successes rising simply because drug shipments are increasing? Interestingly, Reuters has an article about the obstables the U.S. government faces in fighting against drug producers in other countries and how their best allies may not be the policy but rather the militaries (two excerpts). Mexican President Felipe Calderon has won praise from Washington for deploying about 25,000 troops to fight drug-smuggling cartels since he took office last December.But at least one major human rights advocate in Mexico wants the country’s military to be taken off the anti-drug assignment. Has the Mexican army committed human rights violations during the war on drugs? Does Mexico has a recent record of cross-border cooperation on this issue? The San Antonio Express-News editorial board raises doubts about the potential for success based upon systemic problems in Mexico (excerpt): Mexico, meanwhile, faces its own problem in the war against drugs — corruption. It is hard to fight the bad guys when the bad guys wear badges. The federal government has launched an initiative to weed out dirty cops, but the problem is so systemic that it may take years before a resolution is reached. Last month, MATT columnist E.J. Rangel wrote about the urgency of a binational approach to the anti-drug efforts. And last March, just two months after the new Mexican president took office, wrote about a drug crackdown that he argued was right on target. What do you think about the apparent U.S. plan to fund a $1 billion Mexico anti-cartel effort? Join MATT.org and comment here! |
I hate to see people on drugs. But so far, throwing money at enforcement has been a big waste of money.
What is needed is a culture shift where the entertainment media, the schools, Dr Phil, Oprah, our preachers and politicians and especially parents all communicate that each individual is responsible for his own actions. But that is not likely to happen. Too many in our culture give lip service to personal responsibility. But then they find tough love impossible to practice given their soft hearts and even softer heads.
carlyle,
You have to stop blaming the US for presenting a big drug market and trying to deflect responsibility from the criminals who run the cartels. Blame rests with the Mexican government for not stopping the drug cartels and for in many cases, helping them do their dirty work. It's funny how the pro-illegals look at personal responsibility -- a full-grown adult illegal alien from Mexico who knowingly breaks a host of US laws is "just a poor fellow trying to feed his family, he's not to blame for breaking the law." Yet the same people will blame an 11-year-old American CHILD for falling into the hands of a drug-dealer pushing Mexican-grown dope in the schoolyard. Tell me again, how it is that our CHILDREN are responsible for the growth of the ruthless and cruel drug cartels?