So how do we stop Americans from buying drugs?
And above your tomb, the stars will belong to us.
you can't.-Sh1fty- wrote:
So how do we stop Americans from buying drugs?
Last edited by Reciprocity (2010-08-23 00:42:52)
you can't ever stop anyone from buying drugs, period.-Sh1fty- wrote:
So how do we stop Americans from buying drugs?
Last edited by Uzique (2010-08-23 00:32:51)
Education, buying animal fur and blood diamonds has become unacceptable, buying cartel cocaine should too.-Sh1fty- wrote:
So how do we stop Americans from buying drugs?
and just where there have been fashion and jewelry substitutes for the aforementioned, to fill the gap in demand...Dilbert_X wrote:
Education, buying animal fur and blood diamonds has become unacceptable, buying cartel cocaine should too.-Sh1fty- wrote:
So how do we stop Americans from buying drugs?
Last edited by Uzique (2010-08-23 01:46:59)
And systemic corruption, economic disparity, weak infrastructure, declining oil revenue, cripplingly limited natural resources (water) and noncompetitive industrial base (in the battle to make cheap things cheaper, China stomps Mexico)Uzique wrote:
shifty i think you're missing the point a little in your rudimentary understanding of mexican history...
american demand for their drugs is what is fueling their current 'crisis'.
Last edited by rdx-fx (2010-08-23 02:26:59)
and in the land of teh free and the brave it's not that way, huh?rdx-fx wrote:
And bribes are expected in that culture.
Everything is negotiable, everything can be made to move a little faster with a little money in the right hands.
Yes, it will look exactly the sameUzique wrote:
and just where there have been fashion and jewelry substitutes for the aforementioned, to fill the gap in demand...Dilbert_X wrote:
Education, buying animal fur and blood diamonds has become unacceptable, buying cartel cocaine should too.-Sh1fty- wrote:
So how do we stop Americans from buying drugs?
... so we will get some form of government-produced or synthesized-chemical cocaine
Pretty sure by value its not marijuana.by the way, fyi dilbert the main drug produced and fought-over in mexico is marijuana, not coke.
there is no major cocaine production in mexico. by value and by quantity it's marijuana and methamphetamine for the redneck clientele.Dilbert_X wrote:
Yes, it will look exactly the sameUzique wrote:
and just where there have been fashion and jewelry substitutes for the aforementioned, to fill the gap in demand...Dilbert_X wrote:
Education, buying animal fur and blood diamonds has become unacceptable, buying cartel cocaine should too.
... so we will get some form of government-produced or synthesized-chemical cocaine
Pretty sure by value its not marijuana.by the way, fyi dilbert the main drug produced and fought-over in mexico is marijuana, not coke.
Last edited by Mekstizzle (2010-08-23 05:35:40)
you're wrong, as ive said 3 times already in this thread.Mekstizzle wrote:
Legalising is not the easy solution. I think the drugs these cartels/militants around the world deal in is not your simple weed grown in a field somewhere. In the case of Mexico I think it's mostly cocaine and for the Taliban it's heroin/opium. These aren't drugs you can just legalise on a whim in order to tackle the supply, it's not like weed where there isn't usually many serious consequences of using it and legalising it would bring alot of benefits.
It's harder than simply legalising weed to solve the problem, plus that's the only drug I can see as making sense to legalise... the rest (meth, cocaine, heroin and such), they're abit much to have as legal.Mexico, a major drug producing and transit country, is the main foreign supplier of cannabis and a major supplier of methamphetamine to the United States.[13] Although Mexico accounts for only a small share of worldwide heroin production, it supplies a large share of the heroin distributed in the United States.[13][17] Drug cartels in Mexico control approximately 70% of the foreign narcotics that flow into the United States.[18]
The US State Department estimates that 90% of cocaine entering the United States transits Mexico, with Colombia being the main cocaine producer[19]—and that wholesale of illicit drug sale earnings estimates range from $13.6 billion to $48.4 billion annually.[13][20] Mexican drug traffickers increasingly smuggle money back into Mexico in cars and trucks, likely due to the effectiveness of U.S. efforts at monitoring electronic money transfers.[21]
the thing is, when people actually have choice... drugs like meth will drop off the radar.Mekstizzle wrote:
I've never tried meth, but I haven't heard much good from it from those who have. It doesn't seem like something that would be harmless or make sense to legalise in the same way weed would, which everyone knows about its illegal status making things stupid.
I bet they're making a ton of money transiting cocaine.Uzique wrote:
all the money for the mexican cartels are in selling weed and meth to americans. cocaine transit is not what they're fighting over. stop trying to spin it.
Agreed.rdx-fx wrote:
Do not send the US military to help Mexico.
If we so much as step foot in Mexico, then in the eyes of the Mexicans all of their problems of the last 30 years will be El Gringo's fault.
We've got our own problems to sort out.
Fuck off, we're closed.
yes but the drug cartels aren't fighting and killing one another over the transit-routes.Dilbert_X wrote:
I bet they're making a ton of money transiting cocaine.Uzique wrote:
all the money for the mexican cartels are in selling weed and meth to americans. cocaine transit is not what they're fighting over. stop trying to spin it.
We would be a lot less wealthy in terms of purchasing power. The level of productivity that China provides us for imports is far beyond Mexico's capabilities.Dilbert_X wrote:
The Mexicans will be taking a fat cut for safe transit, no question about that.
It would be interesting to know what would have happened if US companies hadn't effectively moved all their manufacturing from Mexico to China.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/ma … rs-cartelsguardian wrote:
Much of the violence has been between the Sinaloa cartel, led by the country's most famous trafficker, Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán, and rivals vying for control of cocaine trafficking corridors across Mexico. The killing is also associated with growing cartel interest in other crime, from the domestic drugs market to kidnapping, arms dealing and people smuggling.
npr wrote:
But Calderon's war is not just about cocaine, heroin and other "hard" drugs. Mexican troops are also fighting gun battles to stop the trafficking of marijuana — the weed that might be legalized later this year across the border in California.
As Mexico's biggest agricultural export, marijuana generates billions of dollars in revenues each year for the brutal narcotics cartels. By some estimates, it is the most profitable product for the Mexican drug gangs.
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/stor … =126978142Marijuana and cocaine are the two largest sources of revenue for the cartels, generating billions of dollars in illicit profits each year. But some analysts say marijuana may be the cartels' greatest source of cash in part because the Mexican gangs control the production, trafficking and distribution of the drug. The cocaine they move has a higher street value, but they initially have to buy it from the Colombians.