Secretary Clinton: America Is To Blame For Mexican Drug Trade
It’s our insatiable demand for illegal narcotics, you see.
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) – U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Wednesday that an “insatiable” appetite in the United States for illegal drugs was to blame for much of the violence plaguing Mexico.
“We are. How could anybody conclude any differently?” Clinton told reporters in response to a question during a flight to Mexico for a two-day visit likely to be dominated by a drug war that killed 6,300 people in Mexico last year.
Clinton’s visit comes as Washington has announced plans to ramp up security on the increasingly dangerous U.S.-Mexico border. Fears are growing that the spiraling violence in Mexico will spill over into the southern United States.
“Our insatiable demand for illegal drugs fuels the drug trade. Our inability to prevent weapons from being illegally smuggled across the border to arm these criminals causes the death of police officers, soldiers and civilians,” Clinton said. “I feel very strongly we have a co-responsibility.”
Hillary is right, to an extent. I think that our federal government’s permissive attitude toward illegal border crossings in general, driven in no small party by liberals like Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, that has allowed this problem to become as bad as it is. But there’s no doubt that America’s thirst for illegal narcotics is driving much of the gang violence we’re seeing down along the southern border.
Which is interesting in that there’s a historical context for this. Alcohol prohibition also sparked this same sort of gang violence in places like New York. Chicago. And in communities at sea ports along the coasts and along our borders with Mexico and Canada.
In fact, we have prohibition to blame for the rise of notorious criminals like Al Capone and any number of other organized crime thugs.
The solution, in large part, to that violence was just making booze legal again. People wanted it, and no laws or regulations were going to change that. I wonder if we aren’t in a similar situation now.
As sinister as the big government types try to make these illegal narcotics sound, it’s worth noting that roughly 70% (if not more) of the Mexican drug violence is fueled by the marijuana trade. Given that marijuana, really, is no more or less inebriating or addictive than beer wouldn’t it just make sense to cut our losses, save the billions we pour into prohibition of marijuana and just let Americans use this substance that they’re clearly going to use anyway regardless of what the government does?



