Drug War claims more victims
Artus Register
The AP is reporting that in the latest wave of violence eleven men were killed in the eastern Chihuahua state of Mexico. The response is typical of government: use force to “crackdown” on drug trafficking, which will result in arrests, seizures and ultimately higher prices for the increased risk and relative scarcity of product and therefore more profit for dealers. The higher profit will result in more jealously guarded territory which means more violence.
Since the US forced Mexico to abandon its drug decriminalization plan in the spring of 2006, the country has instead engaged in a massive crackdown on drug dealing. The result? 5,300 people were killed in drug-related attacks in 2008 alone, which was more than double the amount from the previous year.
Citizens and politicians alike in many Latin American countries are tiring of the incessant drug-violence and are considering the obvious: wiping away the profits with the stroke of a pen.
In the past few years governments in Mexico, Columbia, and Honduras have either seriously discussed or actually attempted drug decriminalization. Additionally, governments of Bolivia, Venezuela, and Ecuador seem to be tiring of the all-out drug war approach and may be warming to the idea of ending violence by ending prohibition.
Thus far the American government, ever the on-paper proponent of free enterprise, has imagined into being a mystical exception to simple economics for the drug trade, pretending that neither risk and reward, nor supply and demand have any bearing on the economy of drugs.
Add comment January 15th, 2009
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