Video: The Mexican jail break
posted at 8:05 pm on May 22, 2009 by Allahpundit
A.k.a. why we’ll never trust Mexico to enforce its side of the border. No one breaks into prison to free shoplifters, needless to say, so don’t be surprised to find that the fugitives here are A-listers:
Interpol described the worst of the criminals, who escaped without firing a shot, as ‘a risk to the safety and security of citizens around the world.’
The inmates stole 23 guns from a prison storage room before walking out through the front gates.
A prison spokesman said the police uniforms worn by the getaway drivers and the fleet of police cars that pulled up outside the prison with flashing lights to ferry away the escapees were all fakes.
But investigators refused to rule out the possibility of police involvement.
Those “fake” uniforms look pretty real to me. Exit question: Why are the prisoners all dressed in civilian clothes?









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Hmmm…better not send Gitmo-ees there.
jgapinoy on May 22, 2009 at 8:06 PM
Coming to a city near you. Fanstastic.
HornetSting on May 22, 2009 at 8:07 PM
Yo that is Blago with the medical mask on working as the cameraman at the very beginning of the clip.
Joe Caps on May 22, 2009 at 8:08 PM
Stop being such a racist teabagger. Smoke some hopium.
Upstater85 on May 22, 2009 at 8:12 PM
Because they had diner reservations……..?
Seven Percent Solution on May 22, 2009 at 8:12 PM
Because if they were dressed as law enforcement they would probably be shot by the drug lords?
myrenovations on May 22, 2009 at 8:15 PM
this is just pathetic. I’ve tried to study Mexico and figure out why such wastes are running that country but it just doesn’t make much sense. Corruption doesn’t explain it all, the Mexican people seem to have a complete lack of respect and empathy for one another. A country with such beautiful coastlines and full of raw materials as well as billionaires should not be in such a third world status yet it is America who gets criticized for the income gap, go figure.
Daemonocracy on May 22, 2009 at 8:16 PM
It is clear that, thanks in large part to the massive price supports given them by the American War on Drugs, drug cartels have completely subsumed the Mexican government.
JohnGalt23 on May 22, 2009 at 8:16 PM
Is my right wing extremism showing?
HornetSting on May 22, 2009 at 8:16 PM
“No one have ever escaped from one of our super max prisons”–Obama
Caper29 on May 22, 2009 at 8:18 PM
When is there ever a prison escape, riot, whatever where the inmates don’t take action against the guards? Not one injured?
- The Cat
P.S. I think it has something to do with this guy.
MirCat on May 22, 2009 at 8:19 PM
A modest solution for Gitmo
http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/columns/scottott/Obama-declares-Gitmo-detainees-to-be-fetuses-45836127.html
Obama solves the Gitmo crisis by declaring enemy combatants to be fetuses.
The president noted that America’s global reputation has been devastated by U.S. treatment of terror suspects, but that “our treatment of a million fetuses each year earns us nothing but admiration, and requests for clinic-funding from those who aspire to be like us.”
Sources acknowledged continuing White House debate about whether a terrorist who escapes from Gitmo alive can still be treated as a fetus.
Perhaps it could work for Mexicans too.
Mr. Joe on May 22, 2009 at 8:19 PM
So much so that I’ve already e-mailed Napalitano on you.
myrenovations on May 22, 2009 at 8:19 PM
Yeah, you might want to order the Hopey-Changey Cover Powder (not tested on animals, of course).
Upstater85 on May 22, 2009 at 8:20 PM
The civilian clothes are pretty standard in Latin American prisons, although I was under the impression the main Mexican federal prisons were more organized. In many prisons down south, prisoners not only wear their own clothes but have food and basic toiletries only because their families supply them.
Pretty primitive, and the corruption is staggering.
J.E. Dyer on May 22, 2009 at 8:21 PM
In later reports…
Police have identified the 53 inmates, 12 were imprisoned on drug charges the remainder were charged with “failure to bribe a public official”.
F15Mech on May 22, 2009 at 8:21 PM
Are you alluding to this?
MirCat on May 22, 2009 at 8:21 PM
Its… its… All America’s fault… because… uhhhh…
We had that show the last couple of years about those guys who escaped prison…
Bambi to appologise in 5… 4… 3…
Romeo13 on May 22, 2009 at 8:22 PM
Because they needed to get across the border……….?
Seven Percent Solution on May 22, 2009 at 8:22 PM
*Heads for underground bunker under the cover of darkness* Dammit.
HornetSting on May 22, 2009 at 8:24 PM
The government offered $250,000 for information leading to the arrest of the people responsible for this jail break.
What a joke.
The cartels probably paid the local government 2 million to let them pull this escape off.
Win,win for the cartels.
At least their corrupt government knows how to make a profit unlike our corrupt government that continues to drown us in debt while raising our taxes.
I suppose Hillary and Obama will have to go national and figure out how this was America’s fault and apologize.
Mexico is well on it’s way to being a failed state right on our border.
Disease,drugs,terrorist,murderer’s,rapist,bankrupting our welfare and healthcare system.
No problem.
No need to secure the border.
That would be oppressive and racist.
It’s Rush Limbaugh and Miss California that are the real enemy… right liberals.
Baxter Greene on May 22, 2009 at 8:33 PM
Heh!!
Baxter Greene on May 22, 2009 at 8:34 PM
They’re in a race with California.
FloatingRock on May 22, 2009 at 8:36 PM
Looks like it will be a photo finish.
Baxter Greene on May 22, 2009 at 8:37 PM
Good things guns are illegal in Mexico……….
……… for a while there, I was getting worried.
Seven Percent Solution on May 22, 2009 at 8:41 PM
Can you say “Failed state?”
Theworldisnotenough on May 22, 2009 at 8:44 PM
Yes
Caper29 on May 22, 2009 at 8:57 PM
Love the limo at the end.
erik on May 22, 2009 at 9:00 PM
Were there some limos parked out there waiting? Looked like em.
Actually I think they were those Tijuana vans that transport up and down I-5. They were probably headed right to the border.
Old saying about Mexico: At its very, very best, Mexico is always just a little fucked up.
PC14 on May 22, 2009 at 9:05 PM
Stop being such a racist teabagger. Smoke some hopium.
Upstater85 on May 22, 2009 at 8:12 PM
Hopium…. TEE HEE!
txag92 on May 22, 2009 at 9:05 PM
Yea,Great idea.
(via Drudge)
PATH TO RADICAL ISLAM BEGAN IN JAILS
By PERRY CHIARAMONTE, LORENA MONGELLI in Newburgh, NY and DOUGLAS MONTERO and LUKAS I. ALPERT in New York
http://www.nypost.com/php/pfriendly/print.php?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.nypost.com%2Fseven%2F05222009%2Fnews%2Fregionalnews%2Fpath_to_radical_islam_began_in_jails_170478.htm
May 22, 2009 —
This goes right up there with quadrupling the deficit,increasing energy costs, and raising the he!! out of taxes during the “worst economic crises since the great depression”.
Morons.
Baxter Greene on May 22, 2009 at 9:23 PM
The “War On Drugs” = massive corruption = this BS.
toliver on May 22, 2009 at 9:28 PM
I first went to Mexico in 1972 and when I was in an upper middle class neighborhood of Mexico City there was a man taking a shit in broad daylight in the middle of the sidewalk on a busy street. Really nothing much has change with this 3rd world shitcan except the criminals are better armed.
wepeople on May 22, 2009 at 9:30 PM
Coming to a town NEAR YOU!!!
THRILLS!!!
CHILLS!!!!
BADLY DRAWN NECK TATTOOS!!!
Ugly on May 22, 2009 at 9:31 PM
I forgot to add:
SUNDAY!!! SUNDAY!!! SUNAY!!!
Ugly on May 22, 2009 at 9:32 PM
Heh heh! May I borrow that?!
4shoes on May 22, 2009 at 9:35 PM
Rhun to da choppa!
ohiorebel on May 22, 2009 at 9:53 PM
Sostenga el perro, olvidé mis alubias!!
Ugly on May 22, 2009 at 9:59 PM
My first guess would be that it’s simply Mexico and they can’t afford prison jump suits. I mean, look at that lobby when they’re all streaming out. It’s not at all what we call a “prison” here.
My other thought is that maybe this is a holding cell type joint, where they’re awaiting trial or something. They mentioned that some were suspected cartel members, but didn’t say they’d been convicted of anything.
Not being sure of this facility’s exact purpose, I’m going to lean towards my “too poor” guess.
RightWinged on May 22, 2009 at 10:05 PM
Are you really comparing our normal prison system to the corrupt funhouse that is Mexico’s?
Speedwagon82 on May 22, 2009 at 10:59 PM
And Obama’s over there apologizing to them and blaming America itself for all of Mexico’s ills.
Disgusting.
SilverStar830 on May 22, 2009 at 11:06 PM
…what? “Hold the dog, I forgot my beans”??
/wicked confused
//pretty sure my translation’s right…it’s been a while
Harpazo on May 23, 2009 at 12:40 AM
Harpazo on May 23, 2009 at 12:40 AM
“Hold up dog, I forgot my beans”
:D
Ugly on May 23, 2009 at 1:26 AM
Ahhh…
The definite article before perro threw me off.
Harpazo on May 23, 2009 at 2:04 AM
Who knew they would be remaking Hogan’s Heros.
jdkchem on May 23, 2009 at 2:22 AM
jajaja. Puta
Ugly on May 23, 2009 at 2:34 AM
(I’m kidding, of course (in my best Scottish accent))(even though I’m not Scottish)
Ugly on May 23, 2009 at 2:38 AM
JohnGalt23:
The irony and outright arrogance you show even SAYING that here is sickening.
1. If anything, our clampdown on drugs is the only thing keeping the cartels POOR enough to not march on Ciudad Mexico right now and overthrow the government.
2. This has been going on LONG before the drug bans.
3. In case you haven’t noticed, lagalization would probably FAVOR the illegal cartels over any legal start-up business.
The irony of having fools shouting for legalization NOW because of “OUR FREEDOMS” never seem to understand how greviously such a thing could not only affect our freedom AND lives, but also those around us.
And yet the knave shows up and tries to spin it in his favor.
Typical.
Such irresponsibility will turn Latin America red.
Turtler on May 23, 2009 at 4:04 AM
Los gringos lamentarán el día ellos dejaron las fronteras abiertas amplio
Ugly on May 23, 2009 at 4:19 AM
Ugly:
Si.
Turtler on May 23, 2009 at 4:32 AM
Obama es medio gringo.
V-rod on May 23, 2009 at 6:06 AM
Who needs a fence?
DrMagnolias on May 23, 2009 at 6:50 AM
Drug lords co-ordinate an escape. A President bound by the duty to protect his country simply wants to release some of the worlds worst terrorist into the country they hate the most. You tell me which is worse.
MichiganMatt on May 23, 2009 at 7:51 AM
I am still trying to figure out where all the al Queda and other type terrorists captured by US troops & CIA since Obama became President are being held? And have they been given US lawyers and had trials?
Or haven’t any terrorists been captured since Obama came into office?
albill on May 23, 2009 at 7:52 AM
Prediction…
Duh…
Because they are needed in the war effort.
-
RalphyBoy on May 23, 2009 at 8:54 AM
-
He did promise to catch Bin Laden ASAP… Hear anything about that lately?
-
RalphyBoy on May 23, 2009 at 8:57 AM
They just wanted change and now they have hope too. ¡Sí se puede!
Esperanza y cambio.
Mojave Mark on May 23, 2009 at 9:55 AM
First of all, you might want to use a dictionary and look up the word irony. I think this word does not mean what you think it means.
Second of all, my arrogance on this matter is well earned from years of study and work on the subject, and the fact that all my predictions on the subject have come to pass. The only thing that surprises me is it didn’t happen to Colombia first. Or maybe it did, and it just isn’t as apparent as it is in Mexico.
I am so often shocked by the economic ignorance of those who proclaim to be conservatives when it comes to this matter, that I have lost the capacity to be really shocked anymore. But with this one sentence, you are not only demonstrating an appalling lack of understanding of economics, you are also flaunting a dangeroud naivete of politics. Although from what I’ve seen of you Turtler, I really shouldn’t be surprised.
Our “clampdown”, as you put it, of cartels, is what puts real money in their pocket. $100 billion a year, Turlter, all from drugs that, thanks to our misguided policies, have a 5000% markup. If it weren’t for policies we’ve had in place for the last 75 years, Roche, SmithKline, and ParkeDavis would have been supplying our cocaine and heroin demand, and Altria and RJR would have been supplying our cannabis demand, all at 1/50th of the price for what we pay for them now.
But no. Because of policies proposed by political cowards in Congress, and cheered by economic illiterates like yourself, our drug demands are filled from organizations across the border, at wildly inflated prices nothing short of a black market supported by $100 billion in enforcement could guarantee. Bravo!
As far as cartels “marching” on Mexico City, why march, when you can drive air conditioned, armor plated limousines there to take over? These people didn’t need lead to seize power… they simply used silver. They have bought so many officials, that they essentially wield power. It is so bad that I suspect it is not the government fighting drug cartels, it is a drug cartel controlled government trying to wipe out another cartel with less control over the government.
Are you stupid?
No… forget that. By your first point, you already demonstrated that you are stupid. Now it’s just a matter of how far the depths of your stupidity go.
The drug bans started in 1914 with the Harrsion Act, and continued in 1937 with the Marihuana Tax Stamp Act. Prior to that, there were no organizations, loyal or otherwise, in Mexico that brought in revenues rivaling that of the national government. In fact, until the 1980′s, when the Mexican cartels started integrating production into their business model, they were a tiny threat, compared to their counterparts in Colombia. Since then, in a very short period of time, they have sprung to the point where they in fact control law enforcement in the country. Any doubt of that… ask yourself if those police cars, police uniforms, and police guns just materialized, or if it is more likely that they came from actual LEO’s.
Once again, your ignorance of even the most basic of economics is showing.
Why don’t you tell us, Turtler, just exactly what advantages the Gulf cartel would have over ParkeDavis. Would they be able to exploit economies of scale better than PD? Would they have better market researchers than PD? Would they be able to better negotiate a contract with distributors than PD? Better research chemists? More sophisticated accounting?
The answer to all of the above questions is, of course, no, they couldn’t. The only advantage drug cartels have over legitimate American drug and agricultural corporations right now is that American firms are prohibited by their charters from breaking the law, and the cartels are willing to do so, and use violence to further their business interests. Force the cartels into a world where disputes are handled under color of law, and where competitors can call the police when threats are made, and where advancing one’s business rests on ingenuity and hard work rather than use of violence, and the cartels will be out of business… out of the drug business, at least.
Odd. I think if you check my original post, you will find nowhere the use of the word “FREEDOM”. Maybe you simply have a little trouble reading.
Our freedoms are at stake. They are threatened by having a government on our border owned lock, stock and barrel by mafias. And if you think it will stop at Mexico, than you are a bigger fool than you have already demonstrated yourself to be. With the amount of money they have flowing into their coffers, they will (have already?) start buying American officials. It will be more difficult, because of the resilience of our political system, but certainly not impossible.
Now, you can continue your ignorance, and continue to fund the cartels through price supports brought about by prohibition. I’m sure the cartels will thank you for your assistance. Or you can rethink a policy that has not only been an abject failure on this side of the border, but the downfall of semi-legitimate government on the other side of the border.
JohnGalt23 on May 23, 2009 at 12:17 PM
Drug bans are good. Illegal Alien bans are even better.
We are funding the evil Congressional cartel right now. They just stole a trillion and won’t say where it went.
Between Mexican cartel escapees and the Gitmo terrorists, I would rather have Mexican cartel escapees. The Mexican cartel has been working both sides of the border for years and never blew up the WTC. In fact, we have less violence on this side of the border than the Mexicans have on their side of the border, because we still enforce most of our laws here. That is what stops crime, not enabling drug users
To the extent we have stopped enforcing our laws, as in not deporting illegals or not punishing business for hiring illegals, we have paid a price in higher crime and have enabled the Mexican drug cartels
Conservatism is the answer
Instead of enabling drug users, we should deport them to Mexico
entagor on May 23, 2009 at 12:48 PM
Here we go agaiiinnnn….
JohnGalt23:
Nope, I actually DID look, and from the meaning that “must include this, that the surface meaning and the underlying meaning of what is said are not the same” to ” “the use of words to convey a meaning that is the opposite of its literal meaning” Captures the foolishness of a legalization suporter who somehow thinks tossing open the doors to MORE markets for these goons will SOMEHOW make tripe like this less common.
Actually no. That just means your “years of study and work” have apparently been wasted if you cannot tell the key differences between the end of Prohibition and any potential legalization of… Mary Jane, Cocaine, whatever (here’s a hint: WHO is better prepared to exploit such an event: the legal competetors, or the thugs?).
Greviously ignoring tripe like the “PPoppy Cartel” using LEGAL PROFITS from such plants up North to fund a coup DOWN AT HOME.
But I suppose you didn’t come across THAT during your “years of study and work,” did you?
By “Colombia first,” do you mean in 1925, with the failed coup using legal funds? Or the activities of the Yakuza during the same period of time to (in part) fund Imperial Japanese expansion in the Pacific?
How odd you failed to notice those two outliers, and wonder of wonders, they started BEFORE any drug laws WHATSOEVER (1900′s-1919), and ran their course BEFORE THE MOST SEVERE DRUG LAWS WERE PASSED (1920-1940).
Did your “years of study and research” turn THOSE up?
And THIS is irony, because you apparently have never dug DEEP enough to see the underlying justification that came around from studying things like, oh, THE OPIUM TRADE, and who is best prepared to meet the demand for supply?.
So WHY THE HELL HAVE YOU NEVER COUNTERED IT BEFORE? I’ve been on these threads before, and I have been LOUDLY pointing out the “Prohibition fallacy” that the War on Drugs is like the Prohibition (in many ways, yes, but not in ALL ways, and even BEFORE the laws were passed, criminals such as the “Poppy Cartel” and the Black Dragon Society ALREADY had dominance over the market). So, why are you waiting until now? Is it because you can’t counter the assertations I have pointed out elsewhere
This coming from the person who thinks that the end of Prohibition (before which there were ALREADY legalized Breweries, which were put back to work AFTER the end of Prohibition in legitimate hands who used the PRE-EXISTING SYSTEM AND EXPERIENCE to wash away the amateur and substandard criminal products out of the market), Will be similar to a legalization (where most of the prime growing conditions and pre-existing facilities have ALWAYS BEEN OUTSIDE THE COUNTRY, and futhermroe were ALREADY under criminal control BEFORE the drug laws were passed).
Somebody needs to brush up on their history.
Proof? How did you find this out, and how do you figure? Studying the Prohibition? Looking at the history of the Chinese Opium Trade (which flatly contradicts you by pointing out that the always-bustling Opium trade actually WITHERED BADLY during the years of intense persecution, to the point that the British were willing to intervene militarily to end the restrictions)? Magic 8 Ball?
You cannot just cite figures without telling WHERE you got them.
Actually, that is unlikely.
Roche, SmithKline, and ParkeDavis would likely have set up their nascent and legal opium/Mary Jane/ whatever farms (which, by themselves, I have no problem with), and after a few months in business (if that), they would have gotten a nice “casual visit” from a few strange men (in truth representing groups like the Yakuza or the “Poppy Cartel” looking for another supplier but NOT another competetor) who offer a business proposition: you buy from them, and ONLY from them.
If you refuse, strange things such as mysterious fires, sabotage, and even murder begin the happen on your farm and related businesses. What usually happens is that they and the investors would simply drop everything and flee the area while the abandoned equipment and property is purchased by a previously unknown company whose history- after the records are open- can be traced to within one week of such an opertunity opening up (and yes, that was a real example).
Or, if you are a brave or hardy soul, you can forify your business, hire guards, institute strict security measures, and order anybody violating them to be shot on sight.
But that was a road few chose, because it was costly in money and lives, cut into the profits, and was a hassle. Most simply left.
THAT is the muscle illegal groups have over legal ones. They are not afaid to murder, to torture, and to steal to keep their place on the market, and I have no doubt you could find plenty of similar examples from the Prohibition or the end of Prohibition (where the crooks tried to put the genie back in the bottle by intimidating legal businesses).
At the end of Prohibition, it didn’t work because the push was so strong and overwhelmingly against them.
But after legalization, the sides are switched: the CROOKS are the ones with market dominance, and the LEGAL GROWER AND DISTRIBUTOR is the one who must scale THEIR territory.
It does not take several years of work and study to recognize the difference.
Cute Ad-Hominem, still no proof.
Again, forget our costs, how is the lack of legalization (remember, this is denying the legal market to them) HELPING their profits? If anything, it forces them to work under the cover of night, smuggling things in from down South or the Far East (which is costly), forcing them to a limited number (albiet a large one), and generally screwing them up.
The reason the Prohibition prospered was because the fall of legal alcohol opened the market up for cheap, often-poor quality “hooch” made illegally, or for “Bootleg” alcohol of legal quality coming up from Mexico and down from Canada.
The criminals it fostered failed when legalization opened the legal breweries up, and wiped out the poor-quality “Moonshine” and the expensive “bootleg” (because it had to be smuggled in from a foreign country rather than brewed legally and distributed).
The difference here is that legalization comes, and the problem is that the Veteren growers for the legalized plants, the people who have dominated this market FAR before criminalization, are the criminals. It is far easier for their sellers to move a few blocks down, get a fresh shave, slap some paint on the front, and open up “Big Antonio’s Entirely Legal Marajucaine Place” than it is for a legal upstart to get his/her own business, build the necessary infrastructure, hire competent staff, and open up to the wider market at home, particularly given the fact that the best growers for these products are overseas and illegal, and the fact that they can compensate for the greater costs of shipping them by forcing legal businesses who cannot stand the pressure out of business and damaging those who don’t drop out.
You were saying?
Um, because the resources of the Federales can outpace those of a single cartel, the cartels are already at each others’ throats, an alliance will be fraught with distruct and unease, the Mexican Army DOES have Armor-piercing rounds, and the central government has not grown so corrupt as to simply hand over the reigns of power yet?
In short, because they HAVE to before they can drive in in their “air conditioned, armor-plated limosines?”
True, but the fact remains that such power demands a degree of armed strength, particularly to deal with the military and the police (who have not entirely fallen into line yet).
Some areas? Yes. Throughout the country? No.
Perhaps, but this begs the question: how does legalization WEAKEN such powerful cartels RIGHT ON OUR BORDERS (with a dismal border, the lowest “shipping” cost of either the Latin American gangs of the Asiantic/Middle Eastern ones)?
No, I leave such things up to you.
But If you say so, how do you KNOW I am stupid? Proof?
Oh yes, and if you have actually STUDIED the Drug/Spice/whatever Trade throughout history, you will note similar patterns, from the Portuguese in the Indian Ocean (whose actions against their Venetian competetors fits well with the time and at the same time is eerily reminiscent of what FARC and the Mexican warlords are doing now) to the Mexican warlords today.
And for that reference in particular, I was referring to the Era of Mexico 1878-1920, where first Diaz and than vairous groups fighting for control openly sold “plants” North of the Rio Grande, and during the ban continued to do so to a lesser extent while shifting emphasis to shipping them to Europe.
But you were saying?
PotKettleBlack.
A. Proof?
B. As I mentioned, the Colombian gangs (remember the Poppy Cartel) had been doing this LONG before 1914, and the British had been doing it in China for half a century (mostly while it was legal), and the Germans did in their brief tenure in Africa. Which seem to shoot your assertations directly in the foot. The issue is not merely about the MEXICAN drug trade (though that is a large part of it), but about the Colombian/Venezuelan trade, the Middle Eastern Trade (oh yes, used to finance groups like the Taliban and Al-Qaeda, who have made inroads into Europe in spite of legalization, though this may be one of the few trades that would be killed by legalization, if for no other reason than it has armed competitors in closer proximity and a teneous hold on the market here).
Both of which you never seem to want to examine. Why Not?
Pot kettle black. And namecalling without evidence is of no value in debate.
I have ALREADY mentioned one of the most powerful ones, and have been going over the full list in other threads for a long time, but hey, I’ll do it again.
Perhaps. They- in varying forms and organizations- HAVE been able to do it for over a century.
Perhaps, but that is beside the point. Such an issue would be a problem for the DISTRIBUTOR, not the producer. The producer, in such an organization without the two melded together under one leadership, is to ship the product over in enough quantity and quality as to remain in the market but not so much as to inflate its value.
In other words, pretty much like what FARC is doing now and the Poppy Cartel did back in the ’20′s. You were saying?
Given their willingness to use violence and- if need be- to simply take distributors over, I am betting it would go something like that.
Define “better.” Better overall? Probably not. But better in what they specialize in? Perhaps.
That is perhaps the funniest thing I have heard today. And the answer is probably YES, though to what degree hiding one’s profits in slush funds and the like would matter in after legalization escapes me. The main concern they would have is in hiding their CONACTS and a few sums of money rather than the entire sum itself (remember, this would be after legalization).
Proof? And even if that is true NOW, who is to say they couldn’t LATER. Remember, such drugs are not illegal the WORLD over, and even in such lenient places as the Netherlands, the authorities have noticed the encroachment of illegal groups onto legit operations.
You were saying?
The ONLY advantage they have? What about years of experience, pre-existing contacts, a largely skilled and experienced work force, control over the producers, and openings to the market both here and in Europe?
Obviously, somebody hasen’t studied Pablo Escobar and the “Golden Traingle” of Indochina enough.
This would be in spite of the close bases of the cartels, the degree to which they have hardened in previous conflicts, their CAPITAL D Dominance of the market for 120+ years, and their previous expertise in slipping through the law?
You truly have more faith in human nature than I.
Odd, because I think most would understand that I was reffering to the posters on the OTHER THREAD. If you have trouble finding them, a few to get you started include “Free Constitution” and “dogsoldier.”
I think most observers would also understand being intentionaly stupid and not pointing out WHERE I accused you of saying it (particularly in the post you mentioned) would further undercut your case.
There is a difference between freedom and liscence.
Proof?
They are corrupt, yes, but are they entirely dominated, or have they actually been fighting back?
Foolishly ignoring the fact that it was I who mentioned the Poppy Cartel, I who mentioned the Mexican-Revolution-era Drug Trade, and I who pointed out the fallacy of applying the Prohibition model to such organizations on these forums.
AND YOU THINK OPENING UP A NEW MARKET WILL SOMEHOW STOP THEM?
And here you degenerate into mindless Ad-Hominem, strawman-growing, nad generally ignoring my points.
I REPEAT AGAIN:
You have not attacked my main thesis that the Prohibition Model does not apply here.
You have obviously never studied the Chinese Opium trade or the Poppy Cartel.
You have obviously never looked at the infiltration of such drugs into EUROPE, where many of them are legal.
Instead, you mindlessly attack my person and insult me.
Why is that?
Is it because here, like elsewhere, you cannot defeat my main points?
How do you know the legal businesses will overcome a market TRADITIONALLY DOMINATED by the cartels?
How do you think LEGALIZATION will SLOW the growth of narco-thugs on our borders when they have already shown themselves ABUNDENTLY capable of operating here LEGALLY in the PAST, and have also done so ELSEWHERE?
And what are your sources anr your logic for your numbers?
Proof?
I await your response.
Turtler on May 23, 2009 at 2:08 PM
Do you really have to ask this question? Why would the Mexican government spend any tax money on jumpsuits?
ladyingray on May 23, 2009 at 5:17 PM
This is going to happen in Kalifornia very soon, except the difference will be that it’s going to be 40,000 of them and the Governor is just going to open the gate for them.
thebronze on May 23, 2009 at 7:26 PM
First of all, you are a windy SOB, aren’t you. No wonder threads often end with your responses… people fall asleep trying to get through them.
Now, I’m not going to try to completely Fisk that tour de force (snicker). Unlike you apparently, I have a life outside the blogosphere. But some of the choicer “arguments”:
The $100 billion figure represents 1/4 of what
http://books.google.com/books?id=i3gqXlJjpoEC&pg=PA19&lpg=PA19&dq=the+economist,+illegal+drug+expenditures&source=bl&ots=oxoa_KZ_iH&sig=bt_Pq7O0jtWo5NuqIsc2V55lZ0U&hl=en&ei=SVwYSp7DCIKEtwfBn9TjDA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=9#PPA19,M1”
The United Nations estimates is worldwide retail expenditure on drug use. I used 1/4, since that is approximately the US’s share of world GDP. Frankly, I think the number is higher, since we have a far greater share than that of disposable GDP, but likewise, not all of that goes to the cartels.
The 5000% was an estimate
http://www.nationalreview.com/12feb96/drug.html“>
William F. Buckley used in his arguments for legalization.
This is backed up by
http://books.google.com/books?id=uC0_YznYjScC&pg=PA198&lpg=PA198&dq=mallinckrodt+pharmaceuticals,+cocaine,+price&source=bl&ots=rZUR7KhR7c&sig=ZNgEzQTbuHv1k5u9OD4OCzSijyw&hl=en&ei=bzUYSujZL9WEtwfZmL3oDA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3
Under The Influence, which claims that as of the mid 1980′s, Mallinckrodt Corp was supplying legal cocaine for $1800/kilo, or $1.80/gram. This is backed up by
http://www.economist.com/daily/chartgallery/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9414607
The Economist, which states that cocaine can be purchased for $2/ gram in Colombia, where the risk premium associated with it is practically zero. Compare this with retail prices in the US of $110/gram, as a result of the risk premium provided by prohibition.
Similar numbers can be found for heroin, as http://www.ffdlr.org.au/commentary/docs/Drugs%20in%20perspective.htm
Dr. Wendell Rosevear says in Drugs In Perspective:
Do your homework.
No. This is ignorance on your part (and capitalization and punctuation challenges also, BTW).
The opium trade is an ongoing thing, and we have no problem studying it now. Who is best prepared to meet those demands? How about
http://www.launc.tased.edu.au/online/sciences/agsci/alkalo/popindus.htm
Tasmania:
Funny, I don’t see Mexican drug lords strongarming American pharmaceutical firms into buying their opium from them for the legal market, as you claim would happen here:
These firms (or others like them), are already buying opium for legitimate use, and are not buying from cartels. They are buying from legitimate sources, and there is no reason to believe that would change for heroin produced for recreational purposes.
Once again, you are caught talking out of your arse.
First of, fix your Caps Lock.
Second of all, I have. I’ve only been here a few months, but I’m sure I’ve destroyed your arguments before. Just like I’m doing now.
Link to “Poppy Cartel”, and their alleged coup, please.
No, I’m referring to more recent incursions, like http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernesto_Samper
Ernesto Samper being bought by the Cali Cartel.
Of course , I don’t know if that’s worse than
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/mexico/family/genrebollo.html
Jesus Gutierrez Rebollo, Mexico’s Drug Czar, working hand in hand with Amado Carrillo-Fuentes. Either incident backs my theories though.
Once again, your ignorance of economics is unbounded.
How it helps their profits is by granting them a price support, in the form of forming a barrier to entry for other organizations into the market.
You’re right… we can forget our costs (for now), and just focus on the fact that it is illegal. These cartels do not have to compete with legitimate industry, as legit industry is barred by their corporate charters from entry into the recreational drug market. Therefore, thee cartels do not have to compete with
http://www.healthpricer.com/morphine-sulfate-30mg-compare-prices/5242067.html
Drugstore.com, that can provide medical morphine at $0.65/ dose, and can instead sell an equivalent amount of recreational heroin for $10-20.
You are either grossly misinformed, or a liar.
As I pointed out to you above, opium and coca supplies for legitimate production, while outside the country, are not under criminal control. They are under the control of
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opium#Legal_production“>
the Indian, Australian, and Turkish governments, and purchased by GlaxoSmithKline, Johnson and Johnson, Johnson Matthey, among others.
History indeed. Someone needs to brush up on the current situation.
Once again, do your homework.
No. It’s that I have more faith (and understanding of the economics) than you.
They don’t dominate the market, as I have proven. Where legitimate opium and coca are produced, there is no evidence of mafia involvement. Perhaps you would care to link to where the Tasmanian government is paying mafia protection, but I don’t think you can.
First, I doubt that there were many examples of the mafia trying to muscle in on legal production of alcohol. But of course, you are the one crying about PROOF, so why don’t you provide some examples of it.
Second, the fact is that the mafia did not successfully take over the alcohol business after prohibition, a fact that you have spent hundreds of words trying to dodge. The mark of someone intellectually dishonest.
You don’t even know what economies of scale are, do you?
You (deliberately?) missed my point. My opinion is that one of the cartels has already taken over the government, and is using their resources to try to wipe out the other cartels.
Can I prove this? No. But I would challenge you to disprove it. Given the height that the cartels have reached in the government (e.g., the Mexican drug czar), such a supposition is not off the map.
Link?
Please give an example of a country where heroin, cocaine, or cannabis are legal for recreational use. Hint: All of those three are, in fact, illegal in the Netherlands.
Once again, you are talking out of your arse.
As many years of experience as SmithKline has making opiates? I don’t think so.
As skilled or experienced as SmithKline’s? Once again, i don’t think so.
Control over the Tasmanian opium producers? I don’t think so.
You mean the cartels have been doing business with RightSource, Walgreens, and Wal-mart? Or are you saying that the Crips and Bloods would have a competitive advantage over these outlets?
Once again, you are talking nonsense.
Once again, you are either lying or grossly misinformed. American supply of
“http://www.bonkersinstitute.org/medshow/bayerheroin1901.html”>opiates, cocaine, and cannabis was above board. According to
http://www.druglibrary.org/schaffer/Library/studies/cu/cu1.html“>
Consumers Union report on Licit and Illicit Drugs
So, once again, are you misinformed, or are you a liar.
The misspellings aside, as far as I can tell, if Pablo Escobar tried to compete in the legal cocaine business, Mallinckrodt would have kicked his teeth in, economically. At least they were when they were providing pharmaceutical grade cocaine for $1.80/gram. Likewise, the Burma thugs would have to be able to supply heroin for $0.65/dose, which they have, as of yet, been incapable of doing.
and…
Well, in case you didn’t notice, this thread, and my comments, were about the Mexican cartels. In my experience, cross-thread contamination is a tactic used by the intellectually dishonest to try to appear to win an argument they are losing.
Of course, I expect little else from prohibitionists. My experience has taught me they often are lacking in etiquette and honesty. And you have done nothing to change my mind on that count.
I’m curious… at what point does corruption slip into domination? Personally, when I see Presidents and Drug Czars in the pockets of someone, I think that line has been crossed.
But clearly you have a higher tolerance for corruption than I do. As a prohibitionist, that goes without saying.
I think it is quite clear, that by pointing out the misinformation you have foisted upon the readers of this board, that I have.
I have studied the Chinese opium problem enough to know that the British East India Company, as legitimate an organization as there was on Earth, controlled the trade.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/heroin/etc/history.html“>
From PBS:
and;
No mythical “Poppy Cartel”… no, the British East India Company. Along with the British Levant, they controlled the opium trade. True, there were smugglers, but they didn’t carry anywhere near the weight of these legitimate firms. If you disagree, please provide a link.
Please name a country in Europe where cocaine, heroin, or cannabis is legal. I mean, where you can buy heroin, cocaine, or cannabis as legally as you can purchase a beer.
There are none. Doctors can prescribe them, but they can do the same with cocaine here. That doesn’t make it legal.
Becasue you are intellectually dishonest. I need no other reason.
Where the drug business is legal, be it legal opiates, or legal cocaine, legitimate firms control the market, with no apparent participation by organized crime. I have provided you links that clearly demonstrate where, both currently and historically, legal drug firms need not worry about organized crime, at least no more than any other firm does. Now, if you would care to provide evidence that organized crime does in fact control the legal opiate or cocaine trade, feel free to do so. But i don’t think you can, and frankly, I don’t even think you’ll try.
Now, you have asked for links, and I have provided them. Funny that someone would ask for links, in a 5000 word post that provides NO LINKS. Not one. No links. No citations. Just a bunch of misinformation that I have clearly shown to be at best nonsense, and at worst, outright lies.
This is the tactic of the intellectual coward.
Back in the days… oh going back to old Usenet debates, I learned early on that in internet debates, it is bad form to question someone else’s facts, figures or arguments without providing your own. Now, as I’ve said, I’ve come to expect little from prohibitionists. They are often graceless, dishonest, sloppy, and without a modicum of etiquette. I’ve tried to provide verifiable links to objective sources where you have asked for them. Now, take a stab at a little honesty, and do the same.
So, please:
Links to the “Poppy Cartel” and it’s alleged coup;
Links to where organized crime has infiltrated legitimate opium or cocaine production;
Links to where pre-prohibition drug production facilities were entirely under the control of criminal enterprises;
Links to where organized crime successfully muscled in on legitimate alcohol producers post-prohibition;
Links proving that the Mexican drug czar’s office is no longer under cartel control;
Links proving that criminal organizations, rather than legitimate business, controlled opium, cocaine, or cannabis trade in the US prior to prohibition;
Links that indicate, in any way shape or form, organized criminal cartels have a competitive advantage over drug firms that currently manufacture cocaine or opiates;
Links indicating which countries have put drugs on the same legal par as alcohol;
Links indicating that criminal organizations had as large a share of the opium market as British East India.
I’ll wait, but I think both of us know you can’t do it.
JohnGalt23 on May 23, 2009 at 8:17 PM
P.S. Sorry about the choppiness of the links… for some reason HA has a problem with some links, so I just used them without the HTML.
JohnGalt23 on May 23, 2009 at 8:34 PM
TandG very interesting debate. At thus stage T has the more logical fact base argument.
davod on May 24, 2009 at 7:32 AM
Perhaps you gringos should argue back and forth with PDF file links?!
Shy Guy on May 24, 2009 at 11:39 AM
Still waiting on you turtler.
What’s the matter? Not up to the challenge?
JohnGalt23 on May 24, 2009 at 9:28 PM
The “matter” has nothing to do with my lack of will and EVERYTHING with fighting two massive posts in two different threads (again, don’t think I didn’t notice your little love note in the Tancredo Thread, because you should know I cut time off replying to THIS one to fight that one).
I will probably be able to send both replies in today. Let’s just say they are doozies, and I would deeply appreciate if we could- in the future- put all replies in the most recent thread.
I will be finished soon.
Turtler on May 25, 2009 at 2:08 PM
Of course, of course…
This thread is about to roll of the front page, so you might want to hurry. It has been close to 48 hrs. Try to keep it to Ulysses length or shorter, if you can.
JohnGalt23 on May 25, 2009 at 4:10 PM
JohnGalt23:
Well, for angry old men like us, that has never been an obstacle, now has it? See the Tancredo Thread for evidence.
Um, no can do.
Is “War and Peace” short enough?
Turtler on May 25, 2009 at 4:27 PM