Pubdate: Mon, 02 Mar 2009 Source: Rebel Yell, The (U of NV at Las Vegas, NV Edu) Copyright: 2009 The Rebel Yell Contact: http://www.unlvrebelyell.com/letters_to_the_editor.php Website: http://www.unlvrebelyell.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1362 Author: Leslie Ventura Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mexico LEGALIZING MARIJUANA WILL CURB HOSTILITY AMONG DRUG CARTELS The lead contributor to the violence in Mexico is suffocating in its own cloud of smoke. Stringent in its attempt to win the war on drugs, the U.S. continues to drown itself in a haze of ignorance. The media has ignored the situation in Mexico, as it has in many other nations plagued with internal conflict in the past. Six thousand Mexican civilians died last year due to escalating tension between drug cartels, but the only prevalent issue covered involving Mexico was illegal immigration. The pressure to cover issues like the violence in Mexico is minimal until the increasing death toll forces the world and the U.S. to listen. For months, the only news regarding Mexico and the U.S. was the image of Mexicans crossing the border illegally. While Americans wanted a wall to keep them out, a civil uproar was beginning and we didn't even pretend to care. Perhaps the wall is a good thing. Maybe it can keep the violence contained within Mexico and we can just go about our daily lives here in the U.S. Except, that won't happen. Unlike dealing with catastrophes in Sudan and other far away regions, Mexico is too close to turn a cold shoulder. Not to mention, more importantly, that the U.S. is the reason for this upheaval. The U.S. continues to consume 60 percent of the world's drugs. As the states continue to forge the war against drugs, the only thing changing is the unstable condition of Mexico. According to the Los Angeles Times, former Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo issued a report urging the U.S. to consider legalizing marijuana. While we have been through this debate repeatedly, at every instance the proposition is negated. It simply isn't just a matter of stopping kids from getting high anymore. Stemming far beyond any potential health risks marijuana imposes are the atrocities that will only get worse in Mexico that will eventually spill into the U.S. considering the economic exchange between the two countries. Due to an extremely profitable illegal drug economy, drug cartels will continue to take matters into their own hands. They will use whatever means to protect their routes into the U.S. so that Americans can have their drugs and they can have their profit. Americans will always have their drugs. No matter how hard we try to fight this imaginary war and no matter how much money we pump into the system, there is a demand for the product. Clearly, the violence is not contained in Mexico. Secretary Marisella Molinar, who lived in El Paso, Texas but worked in Mexico, was killed last December when driving across the border. Her boss, who had asked Molinar to drive him into the U.S. to go Christmas shopping, was one of the targets on the Mexican drug cartel's list that day. The report of her killing months ago only surfaced in the news this week. While most students are just disappointed they can't go to Cabo San Lucas for spring break, Americans should be aware of the implications this war has to them as well. The unrest, caused by the demand for drugs within the U.S. and the perpetual war on them, is sure to continue. Even if by some chance marijuana was made legal in the country within the next couple of years, the transition would surely create another rift in Mexico. Nevertheless, it is a decision that not only people from the U.S. want, but that innocent people from Mexico need. Legalizing marijuana could curtail unnecessary violence that could plague Mexico and the U.S. for years to come. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin