This country experienced the same things during alcohol prohibition as the Mexican people are experiencing now. We were smart enough to put a stop to it by repealing the 18th amendment. Hopefully the Mexican people will smarten up as well. There is an easy fix.
This country experienced the same things during alcohol prohibition as the Mexican people are experiencing now. We were smart enough to put a stop to it by repealing the 18th amendment. Hopefully the Mexican people will smarten up as well. There is an easy fix.
This has nothing to do with prohibition. As far as the Mexicans are concerned, there is no prohibition to the sales of drugs. This is an internal war over who is going to get to distribute it and profit from it. It's a war over territory.
This is an internal war over who is going to get to distribute it and profit from it. It's a war over territory.
It's an international war, on both sides of the border. What make is worthwhile for them is the profit of selling ILLEGAL drugs. If they weren't illegal they'd be very little profit, no drug war, and a lot less illegal traffic across the border.
This has nothing to do with prohibition. As far as the Mexicans are concerned, there is no prohibition to the sales of drugs.
That is a ridiculous statement and typical of drug warriors who refuse to acknowledge that the negative consequences of the WOD has caused worse problems than the drugs themselves. There most definitely is a prohibition to the sale of drugs in Mexico. If there were not then the border towns all along the border would be full of stores where a person could walk in and purchase pot, crack, heroin, etc. etc.
This is an internal war over who is going to get to distribute it and profit from it. It's a war over territory.
You contradict yourself. If there were no drug prohibition in Mexico, this would not be taking place. This is purely a manifestation of the black market in drugs.