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World News See other World News Articles Title: Forget the Russian ‘Threat’: Mexico Is Our Real Problem The cartels control our southern neighbor We often hear the Russia-haters accuse Vladimir Putin of murdering journalists: when Oliver Stone recently challenged the veracity of that unproved charge, he was booed by Stephen Colberts audience of trained seals hand-raisers. Yet we hear almost nothing about the one country where journalists who report on official corruption are routinely killed, and in such numbers that the death toll makes Russia look like a utopian paradise Mexico, where more than one-hundred reporters have been slaughtered by the drug cartels and their collaborators inside the Mexican government. The killers are rarely found, let alone punished: as of 2012, 98% of homicides in Mexico went unsolved. I doubt the impunity rate has improved much since then. On May 15, Javier Valdez was sitting in his car on a crowded street in Culiacan, capitol of Sinaloa province, in broad daylight, when suddenly at least two gunmen appeared, forced him out of his car, and pumped at least thirteen bullets into him. Valdez was an award-winning journalist whose reporting on the intersection of the drug cartels and the Mexican government had won him the Committee to Protect Journalistss International Press Freedom Award. He was a national correspondent for La Jornada, a major paper out of Mexico City. He was also the founder of Riodice, a weekly newspaper out of Mexicos drug-ridden Sinaloa province, the home of El Chapo, and the epicenter of the violent war between rival cartels that is threatening the stability of the Mexican state. The import of this latest assassination was underscored by Marcela Turati, a journalist and friend of the deceased, who told The Intercept: We thought Javier was untouchable. He was one of the most internationally recognized journalist in the country. How do we protect ourselves if they are able to kill the most visible with impunity? But who is doing the killing is it just the narcos? Valdez didnt think so. Time and again he pointed to the politicians who use the cartels as their bankers and hit squads. As Valdez told Al Jazeeras John Gibler: Thats why it is organized crime, because they have people inside the Mexican state people inside the governmental apparatus working for them, because the police form a part of the criminal structure, because they have an army of hired killers, because they have financial operatives and business people whom no one bothers, by the way also involved. The essence of the problem besetting our neighbor to the south was succinctly summarized by Valdez in an interview with a Mexican reporter: I fear the government more than I fear the narco. Theres drug trafficking because there is no government
the principal problem with practicing journalism is la autoridad [translated as the government]. The political class is the child of drug trafficking. Intolerant, dangerous, powerful, colluding with organized crime, every type of criminal. Mexico is suffering under the reign of what the paleoconservative writer Sam Francis dubbed anarcho-tyranny. As he put it: What we have in this country today, then, is both anarchy (the failure of the state to enforce the laws) and, at the same time, tyranny the enforcement of laws by the state for oppressive purposes; the criminalization of the law-abiding and innocent through exorbitant taxation, bureaucratic regulation, the invasion of privacy, and the engineering of social institutions. Under anarcho-tyranny, ordinary citizens are victimized by both criminals and their enablers in the political class. Francis was writing about the US, but his analysis exactly describes the current agony of the Mexican people. Ive written about that agony in this space repeatedly over the years, making the point that the emerging crisis requires at least some acknowledgment to no avail. The Mexican mess is studiously ignored, both by our own politicians and Mexicos elites, and, as bad as things are getting, luckily for them theres a convenient diversion readily available to take the focus away from the corruption and channel the anger of the Mexican people toward an external enemy: Donald J. Trump. While Mexicans are preyed on by the narcos, journalists are routinely tortured and killed, and the grinding poverty of the nations working classes drives them northward in search of sustenance, Trump is the major issue in Mexican politics today. The leading candidate in Mexicos presidential election, the progressive Andres Manuel Obrador, has just written a book, Oye Trump, detailing his recent anti-Trump tour of the United States: he attacks Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto whose poll numbers are in the dumps for not standing up to Trump. Rather than confront Mexicos actual problems, which have been driving its citizens to flee the country, its much easier for Obrador to whip up Mexican nationalism and posture as the defender of the nations dignity. The US sends $3.6 billion to Mexico annually, ostensibly to help them fight the war on drugs. But this money is going into the pockets of 1) the corrupt Mexican political class, which makes the reign of the narcos possible, and 2) our own corrupt political class, i.e. the numerous contractors who, as The Intercept points out, [R]eap enormous profits from contracts on everything from Black Hawk helicopters to armed vehicles, intelligence equipment, computer software, night-vision goggles, surveillance aircrafts, satellites systems, and more. Additionally, weapons companies benefit from direct sales of arms and other equipment, which net another billion each year for the weapons contractors. This is the swamp that Trump vowed to drain, and yet still it bubbles and floods the land, spilling over the Rio Grande while its denizens feed and multiply on both sides of the border. So whats the solution? Libertarians would say: legalize drugs! Except it isnt that simple. For this would legalize the drug cartels themselves born in criminality, and bathed in blood and legitimize the criminal networks they have established. While I am in favor of legalizing drugs, Ive got to admit that it is very far from a panacea. The issue is separate from the question of the cartels: after all, the Mafia in America didnt disappear because alcohol prohibition was lifted. Aside from that, the political reality is that drugs arent going to be legalized either here or in Mexico any time soon. Some problems dont have solutions, and this may be one of them. The accumulated stupidity and venality of the Mexican and US authorities over past decades has created such a toxic brew of social decomposition and political dysfunction that we can only await the coming explosion with a mixture of fear and hope hope that our leaders will force their gaze away from the far horizons of the Middle East and focus on the rising crisis right here on our own southern border. So you think Russia is a threat? Youre worried that the borders of Afghanistan are insecure? All this pales before the real threat that is growing south of the Rio Grande, a gathering storm that will inevitably spill over the border and impact life right here in the United States. Dont say I didnt warn you. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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