Government
creates drug demand, then serves ‘customers’
by
Don Hank
Reports
seem to show that:
First
the CIA helped usher in the drug culture.
Then
with these CIA-made customers, the agency went into business and became the
world’s largest drug cartel, on your dime. http://www.globalresearch.ca/america-s-war-on-drugs-cia-recruited-mercenaries-and-drug-traffickers/22777
After
all, who was to stop them? You aren’t supposed to know what they’re up to.
Nurenberg Trials be damned.
Whether
this sequence of events from demand creation to providing supply was preplanned
is not known. But it did happen this way.
The
New American reports:
“According
to the article, which also cites former CIA officials and even ex-Drug
Enforcement Administration boss Phil Jordan, Los Zetas has already prepared to
disrupt and possibly even subvert Mexico’s 2012 national election. Ironically,
many leaders of the criminal empire supposedly threatening the existence of the
Mexican government were actually trained in the U.S. at the infamous military
training center known as School of the Americas.”
This
fits with what we know about Panamanian strongman Manuel Noriega (http://www.unsolvedrealm.com/2011/06/12/true-conspiracy-cias-history-of-drug-trafficking/),
who also was trained at the School of the Americas, in Panama, and enlisted as a
CIA agent. Once installed as president, Noriega was given tacit permission to
sell drugs in exchange for his cooperation with the Nicaraguan Contras. (Also
see the video The Panama Deception, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h1Txky2IH60 (Preview) and http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rPbUnpqz5OI (Preview) ).
Russia
has also complained about the CIA’s protection of Afghan drug
production:
The
US refusal to destroy opium poppy crops in Afghanistan guarantees that raw drug
sources there will be inviolable, leading to heavy drug use in Russia, the head
of the Russian federal drug control agency said.
The
amount of narcotics brought into Russia has increased two-fold since the
beginning of the anti-terrorism
operation in Afghanistan, Viktor
Ivanov, Russian
Federal Drug Control Service chief, said on Saturday.
-
See more at:
http://www.globalresearch.ca/russia-lashes-out-at-nato-for-protecting-afghan-drug-production/17841#sthash.v9P9qYnG.dpuf
Now
let me clarify my position. I do realize that the 'War on Drugs' is 100% phony.
But unlike the libertarians, I do not advocate legalizing drugs simply because
supposedly 'banning drugs won't help' any more than banning alcohol helped
during Prohibition. Heroine is not alcohol and kids who take it once
often becomes slaves to it for life. The CIA Cartel likes this. It's good
for business. It also keeps the DEA in business.
What
I do advocate is dismantling these centralized 'anti-drug' agencies because they
are corrupt and doing more harm than good. After all, they have always operated
on the premise that supporting the lesser of two evils is beneficial. This
policy, antithetical to Biblical teachings on which our nation is
founded, never works that way in real life and has never worked for
the US government.
The
libertarians' urging to legalize drugs is similar to the East Indies Trading
Company's policy (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_India_Company) of
selling drugs to China. When China banned opium imports, the powerful company
simply prevailed upon the British government to declare war on China and
force it to accept 'free' trade. Not much different from today's 'free'
trade policies foisted upon an unwilling Western public by Western
Oligarchs.
Either
way, the People are not involved in the policies, which are in effect forced
upon them, to the detriment of their children and hapless Americans who are sold
the idea that drugs are a right, not a dangerous substance that can kill them
and enslave their minds.
If
you like action movies, "Two Guns," with Denzel Washington and Mark Wahlberg (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1272878/), plausibly
illustrates how collusion between US agencies and the Mexican cartels might be
working in the real world.
CIA helped introduce the drug culture:
MKUltra CIA
Thanks to the CIA-induced demand, it went into business and became
the world’s largest drug cartel, on your dime:
CIA recruited mercenaries and drug
traffickers
According
to the article, which also cites former CIA officials and even ex-Drug
Enforcement Administration boss Phil Jordan, Los Zetas has already prepared to
disrupt and possibly even subvert Mexico’s 2012 national election. Ironically,
many leaders of the criminal empire supposedly threatening the existence of the
Mexican government were actually trained in the U.S. at the infamous military
training center known as School of the Americas.
This fits with what we know about Panamanian strongman Manuel
Noriega, who also was trained at the School of the Americas and enlisted as a
CIA agent. (See the video The Panama Deception, available at YouTube). Don
Hank
And here is Vlad Putin’s government, complaining about the CIA’s
protection of Afghan drug production:
The
US refusal to destroy opium poppy crops in Afghanistan guarantees that raw drug
sources there will be inviolable, leading to heavy drug use in Russia, the head
of the Russian federal drug control agency said.
The
amount of narcotics brought into Russia has increased two-fold since the
beginning of the anti-terrorism
operation in Afghanistan, Viktor
Ivanov, Russian Federal Drug Control Service chief, said on
Saturday.
-
See more at: http://www.globalresearch.ca/russia-lashes-out-at-nato-for-protecting-afghan-drug-production/17841#sthash.v9P9qYnG.dpuf
Allegations
of collusion with Mexican federal government forces[edit]
In
May 2009, the U.S. National
Public Radio (NPR) aired multiple reports alleging that the
Mexican federal police and military were working in collusion with the Sinaloa
Cartel. In particular, the report claimed the government was helping the Sinaloa
Cartel to take control of the Juarez Valley area and destroy other cartels,
especially the Juarez Cartel. NPR's reporters interviewed dozens of officials
and ordinary people for the journalistic investigation. One report quotes a
former Juarez police commander who claimed the entire department was working for
the Sinaloa Cartel and helping it to fight other groups. He also claimed that
the Sinaloa Cartel had bribed the military. Also quoted was a Mexican reporter
who claimed hearing numerous times from the public that the military had been
involved in murders.[citation
needed] Another source in the story was the U.S. trial
of Manuel Fierro-Mendez, an ex-Juarez police captain who admitted to working for
the Sinaloa Cartel. He claimed that the Sinaloa Cartel influenced the Mexican
government and military in order to gain control of the region. A U.S. Drug
Enforcement Administration agent in the same trial alleged that
Fierro-Mendez had contacts with a Mexican military officer. The report also
alleged, with support from an anthropologist who studies drug trafficking, that
data on the low arrest rate of Sinaloa Cartel members (compared to other groups)
was evidence of favoritism on the part of the authorities. A Mexican official
denied the allegation of favoritism, and a DEA agent and a political scientist
also had alternate explanations for the arrest data.[48] Another
report detailed numerous indications of corruption and influence that the cartel
has within the Mexican government.[49]
Prohibition: Government poisoned 10,000
people
Precursors
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