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Mexican Cartels Are Worse Than You Think 

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The Mexico-United States geopolitical relationship is strategically important but the armed cartel gangs are holding us back. Mexico shares a 2,000 mile long border. The DEA and Mexican army are trying to stop the cartels. Mexico and America have have close trade, cultural, and demographic ties. The United States military and army works with Mexican armed forces and police to prevent cartel attacks.
Written by: Chris Cappy & Byron Tialios
Byron Tialios graduated with an MA in international security with a concentration on intel analysis. He served as a Green Beret in 3rd Special Forces Group.
Video Edited by: Michael Michaelides
Follow the host: / cappyarmy
But there is one big threat to this important partnership: the powerful Mexican Transnational criminal organizations, the Cartels. According to this US department of homeland security study on Bi-national criminal proceeds, Mexican cartels earn between $19 and 29 billion dollars each year. I think we are finally at a point where these Cartels should be defined as a commercial insurgency and major threat to US National security interests but maybe not in the ways you might think. In this video we’ll also analyze the reasons why bilateral cooperation between these two great nations has recently started falling apart and the steps we might be able to take to improve relations.
On January 6th 2023 the Mexican military sent 3,000 soldiers to capture El Chapo’s son Ovidio Guzman in the city of Culiacán. Gang members set fire to vehicles and used them as roadblocks while shooting 50 caliber sniper rifles at military and civilian aircraft, shutting down the local airport for the entire day. Mexican military helicopters rained down heavy machine gun fire onto the Sinaloa Cartel gang members. Ovidio Guzman was captured and sent to face justice in Mexico city, but it came at the cost of 10 brave Mexican soldiers who were KIA and an additional 35 injured. 19 enemy cartel members were taken out and 21 more were arrested according to Mexico’s defense minister Sandoval. Mexican cartels have expanded into a strategic regional security threat for the United States of America.
Task & Purpose is a military news and culture oriented channel. We want to foster discussion about the defense industry.
Email capelluto@taskandpurpose.com for inquires.
#MEXICO #GEOPOLITICS #EXPLORE

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27 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 10 тыс.   
@sgranda4315
@sgranda4315 Год назад
I grew up as kid in Mexico, Guerrero. I had a friend who was the same age as I am (44 now) He'd started a recycling business where he was successful. As it is common the cartel hit him up for a "piso" charge $. He finally refused to pay and got shot 3 times as he hid in the bathroom, and got killed. No one went to his burial except his immediate family, 5 total, as all extended family were petrified of being exposed to cartel informants. Our relatives from down there told us. This happened February 2nd, 2023 I use to play with him when we were around 5-7 before my mother decided to come over to the US Rest easy Roberto!
@lemonhead9628
@lemonhead9628 Год назад
Bruh that's so fucking depressing man, RIP. The Cartel must be stopped and the U.S. officials should stop supporting them.
@JO3BID3N-is-a-P3D0
@JO3BID3N-is-a-P3D0 Год назад
he should have used his god given right to bear arms to clap back at the cartels...
@rafaelgrajales8251
@rafaelgrajales8251 Год назад
Make US stop selling weapons to the cartels.
@Oskivel
@Oskivel Год назад
@@JO3BID3N-is-a-P3D0 fighting back would of just had them target his family right after him
@JO3BID3N-is-a-P3D0
@JO3BID3N-is-a-P3D0 Год назад
@@Oskivel get that family some guns. Live free or die
@paulv22
@paulv22 Год назад
"there's nothing that creates strong bonds and friendships like mutually disliking someone" Truer words were never spoken.
@Sleepyjew
@Sleepyjew Год назад
I read this as he was saying it. What a trip lol
@bolobalaman
@bolobalaman Год назад
Basically ww2
@timh6845
@timh6845 Год назад
Especially when you say it with a German accent
@erikstolzenberger1517
@erikstolzenberger1517 Год назад
@@timh6845 Nein nein nein! ^^
@wederMaxim
@wederMaxim Год назад
Чисто коммунисты и монархисты в России когда видят либерала.
@quetevalgavergaaa
@quetevalgavergaaa Год назад
As a Mexican, I've lost 3 members of my family to cartels, when we have nothing to do with them, and they threatened to kidnap me so we had to flee and leave my house with everything inside, and never came back.
@Wowietalks
@Wowietalks Год назад
Wow very sad keep your head up and carry on 💖🤘
@gabrielbarragan178
@gabrielbarragan178 Год назад
Dead by American guns 😢
@Jesayou
@Jesayou Год назад
@@gabrielbarragan178 dead by cartel members this humanitarian problem that should be addressed
@marioguti9887
@marioguti9887 Год назад
@Tesssayou The root of the problem is the US insatiable need for illicit drugs. It's Capitalism 101, if there is a demand, someone will supply it, if there isn't a demand, there's no point in supplying something no one wants. We can never advance until the US gets their shit in order...
@marcusknoll9500
@marcusknoll9500 Год назад
Right...guns don't kill ppl.....ppl kill ppl
@city6291
@city6291 Год назад
I would hate to be in the Mexican army and die fighting cartels when my boss, some corrupt politician higher up in the food chain is already in their pocket assisting the actions im dying for
@jaymartinez908
@jaymartinez908 3 месяца назад
Me too. There is a RU-vid channel where a Mexican army veteran exposes the corruption between the Mexican army with drug cartels. The channel name is GAFE429.
@robertpaul6257
@robertpaul6257 3 месяца назад
A lot of the ex military end up working with the cartels!!
@ghoetzinjal2660
@ghoetzinjal2660 2 месяца назад
That’s why you join the US instead of
@alejandroortega3902
@alejandroortega3902 2 месяца назад
En Estados Unidos mueren por guerras que enriquecen solo a los políticos petroleros de Estados Unidos apoco crees que solo aquí pasa eso? 😂 La DEA es el mayor cartel de drogas del mundo y envenenan a su propia población, los grandes bancos de Estados Unidos lavan en dinero de los carteles y aún así creen que el problema está acá en México? No sean ingenuos
@luism.5999
@luism.5999 10 дней назад
They're not all the same. He'll get his, watch. It's a game.
@MrKyketsuki
@MrKyketsuki Год назад
This is the first time I heard someone outside Mexico say "Michoacan" so I had to do a second take. But yeah, some people believe that joining and/or supporting the cartels is a better alternative to the corruption within the government. Which is a shame knowing that this country has a lot of potential from its people, culture and location they can provide to the world.
@c433z
@c433z Год назад
Hearing this guy pronounce non-english things cracks me up everytime
@Zoo-Wee-Mama-Sq
@Zoo-Wee-Mama-Sq Год назад
Miochohan
@Zoo-Wee-Mama-Sq
@Zoo-Wee-Mama-Sq Год назад
11:40
@mcinteer19
@mcinteer19 Год назад
But he mispronounced it…🤷🏼‍♂️
@ec6052
@ec6052 Год назад
You never smoked that Michoacan man?
@xisotopex
@xisotopex Год назад
i have always thought that our short sighted politicians should spend more time engaging with Mexico, a country that is very similar to us in history and culture, and not china.
@kani6855
@kani6855 Год назад
Buddy they’re spending time with Mexico we have a great relationship with Mexico so many people on both sides have their hands in the cookie jar we are the ones buying drugs not producing 😂😂😂we have to handle our drug problem and mental health problem before we get mixed up in other countries problems just look at what we are doing to hati😭😭 maybe bc I’m the younger generation but people worry too much about what other countries are doing then what’s going on at home it’s just sad that we come together when they try to take our guns or police brutality we don’t have any unity here
@dianapennepacker6854
@dianapennepacker6854 Год назад
China is the biggest threat to the US. They also don't give a crap about their labs selling God knows what to Americans. Can't say I blame them because it is our problem. Mexico... Not sure what else we can do personally. We send them money and Intel. Corruption is on both sides. There is no easy solution.
@kani6855
@kani6855 Год назад
@@dianapennepacker6854 I think it’s just funny that we get mad at countries for doing the same thing we’ve been doing for the past 40 years let’s not bring up the cia selling crack cocaine in the early 90’s that pretty much separated America 😭😭
@erpherp4047
@erpherp4047 Год назад
@@kani6855 not to mention the whole cartel thing is an awesome boogey man when ya rile up rightwingers nvm that they knowingly have addicts and sellers in their own families that contribute to the cartels cashflow. ppl too scared to address the mental health issue cus they see it a moral failing instead of a mental sickness brought about by economic instability for most and a straight up mental issue for the rest.
@kani6855
@kani6855 Год назад
@@dianapennepacker6854 like I get what ur saying but we have a lot of fucked up shit that a lot of people don’t even know y’all would be surprised with the amount of wild things we’ve done I just don’t think we should be blaming everything on China or get mad when a country does shit we do we bully a lot of countries 😭😭
@daikansanchez7674
@daikansanchez7674 Год назад
I'd call this whole issue a "Narco-Feudalism" rather than a comercial insurgency. This is because the cartels here in México are more akin to medieval feudal-states in the ways they operate.
@hewagoda
@hewagoda Год назад
good observation. Also the assimilation with feudal Japans Yakusa criminal organizations.
@Big_Caesar1
@Big_Caesar1 Год назад
Cartels are out here playing crusader kings irl
@wetguavass
@wetguavass Год назад
The DEA run the cartels, just ask Obama's buddy, Genaro Luna.
@jonathanpasillas3519
@jonathanpasillas3519 Год назад
That's just how any group coming to power start slowly working its way to the government tier of cohesion, many ways this can go since drugs aren't going away the US will probably continue treating this as a way to make some money just like the Mexican government is.
@weaselwolf8425
@weaselwolf8425 Год назад
You make an excellent point
@raginasiangaming910
@raginasiangaming910 Год назад
I worked for a little bit in Mexico as an analyst for the USG. The biggest issue that I saw is that narcos have a weird, semi-accepted/semi-romanticized place in local culture. From my understanding it's a very complicated relationship that has to do with mistrust of the government, governmental corruption and failures, a history that glorifies outlaws (who were often seen as freedom fighters), work by the cartels in the communities, and fear and poverty. While most people I met admitted the many faults with the cartels, many also expressed that getting rid of the cartels and bringing in the Mexican government would be worse. Alternatively, others I spoke with equated the cartels to the government (ie, cartel corruption drives many aspects of government). This is a major issue that we noted, including a tendency for police and cartels to work together and even have dual membership. What did become apparent is that simply 'getting rid' of the cartels was not going to be a realistic goal nor a lasting solution. This is especially true since the US plays a healthy role in supporting and enabling the cartels. The major customer base for cartel products (drugs mostly, but also some prostitution and other activities) are US citizens. Until the US takes meaningful steps to address and combat its own massive drug problems, the cartels are guaranteed to exist. The conservative mantra of 'let's attack the cartels' is simplistic, infantile and will never succeed. So long as there is a massive consumer base in a wealthy nation like the US, desperate people and criminals in impoverished nations will band together to exploit that consumer base for profit. Any approach to the cartels has to be multi-dimensional, comprehensive and long-term. Unfortunately, the USA has proven itself to be largely incapable in terms of any of these aspects (we don't do multi-dimensional plans, we don't seek comprehensive solutions and we have the attention span of a squirrel when it comes to issues).
@wutm8
@wutm8 Год назад
It's like the Italian mob in America in the early 1900s Even years after the collapse of the Italian mob US citizens were still obsessed with mob movies like "good fellas" and "The Godfather"
@granmabern5283
@granmabern5283 Год назад
Glad to see you pointed out the customer base being responsible.
@InnerDness
@InnerDness Год назад
There will never not be a market for drugs everywhere. Mexico will never not be between the US and cocaine-producing countries. Instead of blaming the consumer, maybe you should look at how much money filters into the cartels through alphabet agencies
@InnerDness
@InnerDness Год назад
​wut m8 obsessed? Goodfellas was about the decline and demise of the mob and the Godfather was fictionalized and operatic. Those also happen to be two of the most well made films of the latter 20th century. They're not some surface-level appeal to a passing fad
@wutm8
@wutm8 Год назад
@@InnerDness people don't make bafia movies. It's a passed fad
@buumiiiiiii
@buumiiiiiii Год назад
I'm from Mexico and I live near a state totally in the red zone and evaded by the cartels, even though my city is quiet... when I have to drive to another city or just walking the streets late at night I'm scared that something happens to me. The worst thing is that unfortunately there are many people who have these beings as idols
@CuarentaZ40
@CuarentaZ40 Год назад
It’s gotta be Tamaulipas, zacatecas, or Michoacán. Am I right?
@damigamermx-us8291
@damigamermx-us8291 Год назад
I live in a red state and my city is full of cartels and military, and shootings happens too often, and people on my city now see it as a normal thing
@progressforme6346
@progressforme6346 Год назад
@@CuarentaZ40 Tamaulipas, Zacatecas, o Michoacan son muy conocidos por su nivel de inseguridad por culpa de los medios. Son buenos estados y la gente es bella. Creo que los peores e mas peligrosas ciudades son Texas, California, Illinois, Florida, entre otras. Un chingo de racismo y sobre todo tiroteos a lo loco. En Mexico no esta permitido portar armas y si no fuera por culpa de los gringos de andar vendiendo tanta arma (vista gorda), Mexico seria un paraiso para la seguridad. Nuestro querido presidente AMLO heredo muchisimo corrupcion e inseguridad. En tan solo tiempo ha barrido e disminuido la corrupcion y inseguridad. MEXICO ES BELLO. LES INVITO A CONOCERLO MEJOR ANTES QUE LO CRITIQUEN. MEJOR ANALIZAN LA CORRUPCION, RACISMO, INSEGURDIAD, DROGADICCION ENTRE OTRAS COSAS EN TU PROPIO PAIS. YA NI EL MUNDO LOS QUIERE, POR METICHES E ABUSIVOS. Trump once said "america first, america alone". Well, its gonna become reality very soon. Nobody likes a gringo, just your dollars.
@maxloval775
@maxloval775 Год назад
@@CuarentaZ40 Yeah those are the worst, besides Ciudad Juarez. Other than that, the rest of the country ain't that bad
@bigsmoke3906
@bigsmoke3906 Год назад
Los narcos son los heroes del pueblo
@rickhicks6833
@rickhicks6833 Год назад
Not worse than I think, I've been following information about the cartels for about 10 years. Most people have absolutely no concept of the true horror of the cartels.
@leothelion8796
@leothelion8796 Год назад
I even informed the dangerous of purchasing illicit narcotics that fund a cartel but they shrug it off. They don't really care and I suspect the US Federal government is enabling the drug war
@andreivaldez2929
@andreivaldez2929 Год назад
Yeah; really boils my blood when people downplay them or just turn a blind eye to the violence they use to strangle their own country.
@seanld444
@seanld444 Год назад
Videos like the infamous "Funkytown" have shown me exactly why these people need to be stopped.
@adoc4015
@adoc4015 Год назад
I think most people just don't understand on what these cartels are capable of nowadays while also being ready to use brutality for their own good.
@TylerLucero21
@TylerLucero21 Год назад
@@adoc4015 I think the cartel is so powerful they are working with the elites
@deftonesmetallica
@deftonesmetallica Год назад
As a Mexican that lives in Tijuana, I can say that these type of issues needs way more exposure on foreigners because its a big problem here and can impact US-MEX relations especially on the economic growth sector so for both countries to grow further we need to address the cartel problem. Excellent work on documenting this topic Mr Cappy
@ismalinkin
@ismalinkin Год назад
You should spread the word about Genaro Garcia Luna and his trial if youre truly a mexican, because im and youre kind of ignoring some things that must be said
@EckRD
@EckRD Год назад
All that is required is sanctions. The same level as Venezuela and inflation 10x. I don't think the cartel bosses will manage and will escape. How will they pay their subordinates and the people will guns. 🤣
@analbeats
@analbeats Год назад
Obama sold cartels automatic rifles, Fast and Furious, look it up. A BP agent was killed with one of those said guns.
@Bagnerdpak
@Bagnerdpak Год назад
If USA consumes less drugs then it would solve the cartel problems, and it can also sell less gun to Mexico.
@wickssr_yt1354
@wickssr_yt1354 Год назад
@@ismalinkin why don’t u do it
@kevinjenkins6986
@kevinjenkins6986 5 месяцев назад
“Drug demand in the US is worse than you thought”
@josephmonkele5992
@josephmonkele5992 2 месяца назад
It's not American junkies regularly kidnapping people and torturing them in unspeakable ways
@BobbyB910
@BobbyB910 Год назад
I grew up in Texas and even as a child in the 90s I was told to watch out for cartels and never try to fight the Mexican kids I went to school with. Turns out I went to school with 3 kids that had family In cartels and I made friends with them until I went into the military in 2008
@deepsecret-jp9oj
@deepsecret-jp9oj Год назад
So u were trying to bulling spanic kids don't u
@D-A-A-
@D-A-A- Год назад
@@deepsecret-jp9oj no I think he means he was told by parents watch out for the Mexican kids more than the other kids who aren't involved to the most powerful criminals on earth that's not including government
@BobbyB910
@BobbyB910 Год назад
@@D-A-A- exactly
@juliehernandez80
@juliehernandez80 Год назад
Glad you got away from those roaches.
@mishaa7263
@mishaa7263 Год назад
@@juliehernandez80 that's a weird thing to say considering your last name
@Tanktaco
@Tanktaco Год назад
As someone who lives closer to the border than the vast majority of my fellow Americans, I get very skeptical of non local coverage of Mexico. I gotta say I'm impressed at Cappy's work, and it's why I hold him and T&P in high regard.
@mikeblair2594
@mikeblair2594 Год назад
Just don't let him say Spanish words and you're right.
@jft7174
@jft7174 Год назад
Mucho Garcia Cappy!
@busterbeagle2167
@busterbeagle2167 Год назад
because they kill any reporters in mexico that they can that report on them at all.
@newsieboys1171
@newsieboys1171 Год назад
Or maybe because the cartels' main interests may be well beyond the border and thus its activities?
@Taskandpurpose
@Taskandpurpose Год назад
thanks for the kind words, it's tough to do the topic justice and this is my attempt to begin to explore all of the different perspectives on the issue
@BLANCOYNEGROFILMS
@BLANCOYNEGROFILMS Год назад
I wasn’t expecting this from you Cappy, thanks for talking about my country. Unfortunately, narcos and this problems are not the first priority of our government due to the deep connections they have in almost every sphere of it
@davidl.7317
@davidl.7317 Год назад
What are the biggest issues you see that are the biggest issues?
@MaverickBlue42
@MaverickBlue42 Год назад
@@davidl.7317 I think the biggest issue is that organized crime has been allowed to get to the point that they're putting out promotional videos and have their own advertising campaign.....
@jrshaul
@jrshaul Год назад
Which is a damn shame, because "Made in Mexico" is a lot more appealing than "Made in China." Remind me - which country is internationally famous for bridge and dam collapses, and which one invented tacos?
@fernando_713
@fernando_713 Год назад
@@davidl.7317 biggest issue would be how corrupt the government has become. Cartels literally own the police
@denyspoyner8815
@denyspoyner8815 Год назад
Yep, sadly there's a lot of corruption in Mexico. Too easy to pay people off to look the other way. 😔 I work with a guy who immigrated to America and was born in Mexico. Ramon tells me some scary stories about the Narcos. Not to be messed with. The head guy has his own personal army. They know who he is, where he is but are too afraid to go after him.
@cargopilotguy305
@cargopilotguy305 Год назад
“You cannot confront violence with violence” Then explain literally every single war throughout all of human history
@lmm6665
@lmm6665 6 месяцев назад
Has war stopped? Lol
@GIedits-vf7re
@GIedits-vf7re 6 месяцев назад
​@@lmm6665wars stop
@GIedits-vf7re
@GIedits-vf7re 6 месяцев назад
Amlo is a complete clown. Also, el Salvador effectively showed amlos lie
@chasegimbel1904
@chasegimbel1904 6 месяцев назад
@@lmm6665what a dumb response, just because wars as a whole don’t stop doesn’t mean wars are pointless, are the nazis still in power? Unfortunately there are some things that only violence can solve
@lv1543
@lv1543 6 месяцев назад
You confront violence with ultraviolence
@timbrwolf1121
@timbrwolf1121 Год назад
Cappy: gets kidnapped in Mexico 900K members of the spare parts army with varying levels of training and equipment: *And we took that personally*
@elielcreado
@elielcreado Год назад
@@ivangarcia1327 Como el pirata oh que?
@joshscott5213
@joshscott5213 Год назад
Mexico government wondering why thousands of armed American citizens are wandering into their country at an alarm rate
@Bruno_bm151
@Bruno_bm151 Год назад
Npc
@MyFunkymonkey7
@MyFunkymonkey7 Год назад
@@Bruno_bm151 literally lol
@ML-xx9kc
@ML-xx9kc Год назад
Oh lord no, they can have him.
@raulguerrero8119
@raulguerrero8119 Год назад
The problem with the cartels are not mainly on its fire power , but it is in their capacity to corrupt the Mexican institutions. As a mexican, I can tell you that the cartels are not going to disappear because the government is so entangled with them that , is impossible nowdays
@adspur
@adspur Год назад
So it’s a cultural problem.
@420bingbong69
@420bingbong69 Год назад
Everyone gets their cut from a Mexican beat cop to us agencies. Even China gets a peice. It's been said the Cia/dea favors sinaloa while China favors cjng catel.
@user-ri4qk1xy3c
@user-ri4qk1xy3c Год назад
@@adspur yes, American culture is obsessed with drugs use.
@Susieq26754
@Susieq26754 Год назад
God is still in control. Praying everyday 🙏 ❤️
@raulguerrero8119
@raulguerrero8119 Год назад
@@adspur absolutely, yes
@angelleon8997
@angelleon8997 7 месяцев назад
It’s complicated when there is corruption in the government on both sides of these countries
@ProfaneVestige
@ProfaneVestige Год назад
As a Mexican American with strong ties to both lands it makes me weep on how bad the relationship is between the two countries. I see the destruction the drug consumption has taken entire families and towns in the north. And the sheer fear and dependence of families and towns in the south. I hope there can be some sort of reform to help heal this wound.
@viridianacortes9642
@viridianacortes9642 Год назад
I hate to say this, but it’ll only happen when the cartel gets bolder in the north. The USA will use more force and it’ll pressure Mexico to do the same. Change only happens when there is no other way. 😔
@Gizziiusa
@Gizziiusa Год назад
the US deep state is aligned with most, if not all of the cartels simply because there is too much money to be made from it. They simply dont care how bad it negatively affects society in general. Lastly, they are practically "above the law" and immune from any justice, plus the MSM hides/shields this info from the public. its only going to get worse. prepare accordingly.
@SmokeyChipOatley
@SmokeyChipOatley Год назад
Same background. I share the same feelings brother. The saddest thing about this whole thing in my opinion though is that Mexico is an amazing country and its people are some of the kindest, most welcoming and compassionate in the world but the common consensus among most Americans is that Mexico is a failed state with nothing to offer outside of the top three resort cities (some wouldn’t even dare visit those either). While I’m of Mexican descent, I’m not “Mexican-Mexican” so I wouldn’t dare speak for them out of respect. All I will say is that Mexico is a country of striking dichotomies. Land of billionaires and shantytowns, kindness and violence, beauty and horror. What many Americans miss though is that Mexico doesn’t exist in a bubble. Maybe if we realized how much our country has had a hand historically in shaping Mexico into the country it is today, for better or for worse, we wouldn’t be so quick to judge and criticize their problems. I know many Americans won’t like hearing that but it’s the truth. I myself was oblivious to many of these issues because it either wasn’t taught in school or greatly mischaracterized in favor of the US. Just look at the Mexican-American War for example. North of the border it was all “manifest destiny” while down south it was “the US stole half of our sovereign territory after an unprovoked invasion”. I understand the truth lies somewhere in the middle, but it sure as hell wasn’t “we were gifted the empty territory from California to Texas by Mexico” as I was led to believe in an elementary school history lesson.
@GasPipeJimmy
@GasPipeJimmy Год назад
So, it’s all America’s fault. Thanks!
@bigdopamine9343
@bigdopamine9343 Год назад
@@GasPipeJimmy it is. We’ve created an entire illegal industry through the war on drugs and other dumb policies.
@nicholaidajuan865
@nicholaidajuan865 Год назад
I agree that targeting the cartels money is a good way to hurt them. Unfortunately when the FBI uncovered HSBC was knowingly laundering massive amounts of cartel money no one went to jail. There was a large fine dished out, but ultimately all it amounted to was a few weeks of profit
@erpherp4047
@erpherp4047 Год назад
fines for big cash is just an other operating cost, that said we could be using them as a mole now.
@delancyj67
@delancyj67 Год назад
There has never been a real crackdown on crime. The 'war' is only on the easily blamed and the easily caught.
@jonatand2045
@jonatand2045 Год назад
Legalizing drugs would reduce their profits, but nobody wants to admit the war on drugs made the cartels stronger.
@mikeblair2594
@mikeblair2594 Год назад
@@jonatand2045 Ain't that the damn dirty truth.
@saladv6069
@saladv6069 Год назад
@@jonatand2045 I live in a state in which marijuana is legal yet I personally know people that still get their drugs illegally.
@deusvult6920
@deusvult6920 Год назад
You didnt mention the CIA trading guns for coke for DECADES.
@user-vx5bd1ii3y
@user-vx5bd1ii3y Год назад
It's good to see somebody taking a measured and insightful approach to a complex topic in a time where others rush to uninformed action. We need more stuff like this in our foreign policy discourse and in our politics, in general.
@catra195
@catra195 Год назад
Operation fast and furious (ATF Gun Scandal) look it up
@liberatedentrepreneur149
@liberatedentrepreneur149 Год назад
You're trying too hard
@catra195
@catra195 Год назад
@@liberatedentrepreneur149 who r you talking to?
@serily4524
@serily4524 Год назад
no politics.
@vangoghaway626
@vangoghaway626 Год назад
Mistrust and corruption on both ends will always be an issue
@arreca09
@arreca09 Год назад
corruption is not an issue in the US, stop falling for propaganda
@ommsterlitz1805
@ommsterlitz1805 Год назад
When i hear americans complaining of having hard working and christian mexicans on their soil, they really should contemplate what we have deal with in Europe as we would gladly take them in instead of the lsIamists who hates our society and Europeans and only come for money and to not have to work for it.
@kani6855
@kani6855 Год назад
It’s why it’ll never happen two many people on both sides have they’re hands in the cookie jar😭😭
@erpherp4047
@erpherp4047 Год назад
that fast n furious op did a damn good job of fucking shit up. stank of contra bs.
@towakin7718
@towakin7718 Год назад
@@kani6855 1. too many, 2. their.
@kentwilliams4152
@kentwilliams4152 Год назад
The U.S. trained a number of Mexican soldiers at Fort Brag by special forces instructors. The goal was to train and equip them in their government's fight with the cartels. The outcome was predictable by those of us in the U.S. Border Patrol back then. Those trained and equipped in the U.S. immediately hired on with the cartels. They called themselves, "Los Zetas."
@mahomesgoat
@mahomesgoat Год назад
You think that’s a coincidence?
@DaveSmith-cp5kj
@DaveSmith-cp5kj Год назад
@@mahomesgoat Given it was during Obama and after seeing what Obama did in Fast and Furious and the weapons he was feeding ISIS? I wouldn't doubt intent.
@davidortiz4884
@davidortiz4884 Год назад
It was fort Campbell
@alexjoens5014
@alexjoens5014 Год назад
@@mahomesgoat sounds like how the people who did 911 where trained in the US also
@speedymx2376
@speedymx2376 Год назад
They switched sides to make a living not as prominent as before but not to be played around with
@Kaiyats
@Kaiyats 3 месяца назад
Fun fact there wouldn’t be a cartel if the people just regulated the damn market
@mookm6639
@mookm6639 3 месяца назад
Regulated the human trafficking market?
@Kaiyats
@Kaiyats Месяц назад
@@mookm6639 Drug market actually
@WilliamKemann
@WilliamKemann 29 дней назад
@@Kaiyats bro you need to understand that drugs is just one business they profit. They highly involved in every aspect of society that’s it’s pretty much impossible to get rid of them. On top that, some people glorify and would rather deal with cartels than the government as the government has failed them so many times. This issue is way more complex than we think
@robertwarden8408
@robertwarden8408 Год назад
You didn't mention the cartels' almost total control of the human smuggling across the border as a revenue stream. Depending on the distance traveled, and the country of origin, it can cost $10k-20k per person. This typically incurs a debt which must be rapidly re-paid when the trafficked individual arrives here. Failure to do so brings a rather severe punishment.
@Aqueox
@Aqueox Год назад
Traffickers get executed. Allowing for anything less is to be a traitor, at which point said traitor is executed as well.
@evangelicalsnever-lie9792
@evangelicalsnever-lie9792 Год назад
@@Aqueox Which point does somebody do the same to your family for revenge? Revenge is real and those who want it know that torturing your will hurt you more than killing you. Careful how bad you think you are. There are people out there worse than you.
@JK-vi3jm
@JK-vi3jm Год назад
Here’s what I call a White man solution: focus less on drugs and savagery and work on introducing civilization to your country! El Chapo Taco was reduced to being a SuperMax prisoner when he tried his shenanigans in the USA.
@p51mustang24
@p51mustang24 Год назад
Since most mexicans and central americans don't have 10-20k USD cash, they are getting that money from jewish micro-finance operations, often with whatever minimal property they have in mex/C. America as collateral.
@Aqueox
@Aqueox Год назад
@@evangelicalsnever-lie9792 Defending hostiles? You get to die for your sins.
@vxxiii4160
@vxxiii4160 Год назад
As a Mexican living in Mexico that is sick of cartels, I would love to see a solid and plausible solution to end this crisis that is affecting both countries in equal measures.
@jacobolopez7007
@jacobolopez7007 Год назад
You won’t not until the United States stop sending weapons guns R 15 their behind this shit let’s not make fool of ourselves
@jj576i9
@jj576i9 Год назад
There will be not to worry God will take care of it
@Twiggo_The_Foxxo
@Twiggo_The_Foxxo Год назад
Invasion
@nosywendigo592
@nosywendigo592 Год назад
Mexico has to grant military access to the US military on three conditions: 1. The military access is only available as long as the US military operates jointly with Mexican military with the sole objective of taking out the cartels. 2. The US military makes available use of SFO-D, Green Berets or Rangers. Any use of explosive ordnance, including MOABs, must be approved by the Mexican government before being used on cartel targets. 3. The US military is granted immunity in taking out cartel targets if they warn civilians inside the target area a strike will happen in the area. Any life loss is not prosecutable.
@Teadon86
@Teadon86 Год назад
Get a gun and protect yourself. What's the problem?
@deputydog5261
@deputydog5261 Год назад
Mexico needs to go with the El Salvador solution.
@p_ro9532
@p_ro9532 3 месяца назад
El Salvador is essentially the size of a small US state. What you are saying is, a policy that worked for a tiny country can work for a large one. It’s not that simple. Apples to oranges.
@alejandroortega3902
@alejandroortega3902 2 месяца назад
In the United States they die from wars that enrich only the US oil politicians. Do you think that only here does that happen? 😂 The DEA is the largest drug cartel in the world and they poison their own population, the big banks in the United States launder money from the cartels and yet they believe that the problem is here in Mexico? Don't be naive.
@ulisesguzman8574
@ulisesguzman8574 Год назад
When i was in elementary school a friend of mine was having a birthday party in small cyber cafe Infront of his apartment building, luckily i wasn't there, turns out the house next to the café was a safehouse, cartel people from a rival cartel found out, went there and threw 2 grenades and fired machine guns at the house with zero regard for the children next to it. As far as i recall thankfully no kids where injured but it shows how soulless these people are. Thank you for shining some attention on the issue. Most Mexicans hate the cartels and see how they're destroying our country but sadly they do have an extremely powerful and large propaganda machine that feeds on the poor, uneducated or marginalized.
@Ninja_Bryden
@Ninja_Bryden Год назад
Cartels are fucking monsters man. They'd even torture children that are not in any way involved.
@mikejozefowicz888
@mikejozefowicz888 Год назад
Back in the 80's you could walk into TJ and have a great time without fear. The last time I went for work we had to travel in the company security van with an armed guard. Wee were not allowed to leave the hotel. The food at the hotel was awful, at least they had beer and cable tv.
@saurondp
@saurondp Год назад
Even in the mid-90s it was still relatively safe.
@ProfessorFickle
@ProfessorFickle Год назад
Lol, mike is a fearful guy. I was walking to revolution Street , had the best Italian Ravioli in my life .
@joeyindahl2593
@joeyindahl2593 Год назад
It was a bit shady when I was stationed tin San Diego in 2000 , but I think shortly after that it really got bad. I spent many a night in TJ and somehow came out unscathed
@wasanoix
@wasanoix Год назад
Scarry cat!
@AwesomeTea
@AwesomeTea Год назад
I grew up in TJ. Things were okay, only the occasional violence that would make headlines. Nowadays I don't know anyone that hasn't been a victim or personally known a victim of murder, armed robbery, extortion, or kidnapping. You'll probably be fine walking around Playas, having tacos and going to department stores for a day or two. But if you stay long enough, or you get unlucky, something will happen to you or someone close to you.
@UwUsaurio69
@UwUsaurio69 5 месяцев назад
The worst part is that both goverments take profit from these groups. Thats why they don't disapear.
@gandalfthegrey6592
@gandalfthegrey6592 Год назад
I am so happy about the amount of coverage that I've been seeing about cartels as of late. We NEED people to understand how influential these cartels are over the lives of people in Mexico. They are ruthless and have killed thousands in Mexico and Southern America in pursuit of their selfish goals.
@txbased1752
@txbased1752 Год назад
Facts its too engraved in their culture to grow up into a cartel. Shit is sad 🤦🏽‍♂️
@erikstolzenberger1517
@erikstolzenberger1517 Год назад
Well, the rise of those cartels profited in large parts of the U.S.'s idiotic drug and foreign policies, but hey...it's far easier to blame a bunch of Mobsters than the shortcomings and sometimes willfully manipulative Actions of some elected career criminals...sarcasm:off, had to be said.
@SVC96.
@SVC96. Год назад
@@txbased1752 why do y'all blame the cartels though who are the ones that created them in the first place I can tell you for sure that it wasn't the Mexican government it's was the ones that created al Qaeda an isis that's where that's who
@txbased1752
@txbased1752 Год назад
@@SVC96. cartels have always been there with and without us. Naturally a criminal organization will rise and thrive in a corrupted country bro.... The difference now some organizations had been trained by Navy seals for their tactics. that is why ZETAS was created and raised the bar of ultraviolence that is seen daily. That was a while back. Now we got the people from El Mayo, Los Chapitos, El Mencho organizations fighting each other and the government at the same time. It's a pure clusterfxck that can't be undone. That old training may have been forgotten but the newfound brutality still remains strong 🤦🏽‍♂️🤦🏽‍♂️
@txbased1752
@txbased1752 Год назад
@@SVC96. Al Qaeda & ISIS only want to kill non believing infedels, they take their quran Bible too literally when they read that line 🤦🏽‍♂️ cartels kill just to kill, look up cases like La Barbie and Chino Antrax
@aaroncoffey2109
@aaroncoffey2109 Год назад
I met a Mexican exchange student while stationed in Belgium. We quickly realized that we had very much more in common with eachother than the Europeans. The Europeans thought mexico was a third world hell hole with no movie theaters and they thought America was a violent barbaric country full of idiots. Mexico and south America should be the American focus. Also Breakfast burritos are vastly superior to Coca Cola.
@victorfortunato
@victorfortunato Год назад
The thing is neither of them ( México and south américa) wants EEUU
@gpl992
@gpl992 Год назад
Well we're the Europeans really wrong...
@dogrum1
@dogrum1 Год назад
@@gpl992 yes, just as wrong as your use of "we're" instead of "were".
@kocholawis1851
@kocholawis1851 Год назад
we dont eat breakfast burritos in Mexico, that is texmex
@tylr3669
@tylr3669 Год назад
Can confirm. I found the same in Germany when I met with Brazilians and Columbians. We were way more culturally similar than the Americans and Europeans. Side note: I thought it was hilarious when they asked me to show them on a map where Romania was (to prove Americans don't know geography), and I responded by asking them where Uruguay was! Lol, they put it in Peru. At least I pointed to Hungary.
@humbertodzulvazquez7406
@humbertodzulvazquez7406 Год назад
Nice work Cappy! As a Mexican myself I got to say, you Got it pretty accurate and I strongly believe that your prop for a resolution on this matter should be taken more in consideration. Love the way you make geopolitical war related issues pretty easy to digest.
@unapersonamas4262
@unapersonamas4262 Год назад
Pensaba que era el único mexicano en activo que veía a capy, xD y pues si la situación es muy jodida , aquí en mi ciudad que es una de las más importantes del país las calles las controlan los criminales, a 2 cuadras de donde vivo está el punto de venta de droga y tienen comprada la policía, ya te imaginarás toda la podredumbre, balaceras ya no hay como en el 2010 pero es por la corrupción asquerosa el gobierno es el que más provecho saca de todo eso
@thinkbeforeyoutype7106
@thinkbeforeyoutype7106 Год назад
Looks like he CAN’T cover the Ukraine war since they’re LOSING in Bukhmut’s meat grinder courtesy of Russia’s offense. Don’t forget this channel promotes U.S military PROPAGANDA due to the fact that he calls the same FAILED “war on terror” and “war on drugs” nonsense which only gives government more excuse to takeaway our civil liberties (freedom). I used to like this guy when he was objective. Now he’s becoming a JOKE!
@AndrewAMartin
@AndrewAMartin Год назад
And he stayed on brand with his atrocious pronunciation of non-English words (and threw in a bonus mispronunciation of the USAF general's name too)...
@Tricklarock
@Tricklarock Год назад
@@sdpadres3896 Orale Dago PBVX3
@Taskandpurpose
@Taskandpurpose Год назад
hey neighbor! glad to hear it sounds like I got some things correct. great to hear from our allies to the south.
@yaranen2797
@yaranen2797 22 дня назад
Trading Coca Cola for Breakfast burrito’s is a MASSIVE steal lol
@EnriqueMaganaCruz
@EnriqueMaganaCruz Год назад
You did an amazing job explaining the problem in detail. One missed piece of information is that the soldiers that went to the US (Fort Benning) for training ended up creating their own cartel: Los "Zetas". Doesn't exist anymore, but was the most vicious of them all.
@gscryinlikeabitch
@gscryinlikeabitch Год назад
You think worse than the cjng cartel? While I believe crime for crime the zetas were worse the additional power and overall manpower and show of force the CJNG possessed always far outweighed what the zetas could accomplish which is why they didn’t survive.
@purplespaceship2417
@purplespaceship2417 Год назад
The School of Americas, aka the US military sponsored torture school, responsible for countless human rights abuses in Latin America. They trained Latin American military personnel to use terror and bloodshed against civilians, the declassified training manuals advocate using torture methods, blackmail and execution. Almost a dozen dictators were produced by that school alone, it's no surprise that some of its graduates went on to form a cartel. And barely any Americans even know about the school's existence.
@josemorapx1644
@josemorapx1644 Год назад
@@gscryinlikeabitch Yes man it was worse, they didnt have much power but I think they knew that and make up for it in cruelty, I think you can still find their videos on internet they were famous. They were the ones that started the dismembering and insane tortures trend among cartels
@ET-ix9vo
@ET-ix9vo Год назад
The zetas do exist.
@slammedc2003
@slammedc2003 Год назад
Well, the Los Zetas got wiped out by the other Zeta cartel a few years ago and then CJNG came along and asserted their dominance as the most highly trained and lethal cartel. There are probably still fragments/holdovers of the Los Zetas in existence but they are smart enough not to brag about it.
@mexicanwitharock
@mexicanwitharock Год назад
Now that your talking about Mexico, could you talk about the main Mexican rifle, the FX-05
@Aguila_Azteca_1810
@Aguila_Azteca_1810 Год назад
Estaría chido.
@michaelgj23
@michaelgj23 Год назад
@@u2beuser714 eeeeee that’s dark
@mexicanwitharock
@mexicanwitharock Год назад
@@Aguila_Azteca_1810 simon
@mexicanwitharock
@mexicanwitharock Год назад
@@michaelgj23 what the rifle?
@whomagoose6897
@whomagoose6897 Год назад
The FX-05 Xiuhcoatl rifle looks very similar to the H&K G36. Not an exact copy. So no trademark patent violations. Has been in heavy use since 2006 so you can consider the FX-05 Xiuhcoatl rifle very good, very dependable and worth the money. And the FX-05 Xiuhcoatl uses the 5.56-NATO ammunition. Uses typical STANAG magazines. STANAG is NATO standard. Your AR-15 uses the same magazines as the FX-05 Xiuhcoatl. Plus, this rifle is not one of those stupid bullpup rifles. Such as the British SA-80, French FAMAS or the Israeli TAVAR. The magazine on the FX-05 Xiuhcoatl is in front of the trigger like all good rifles have. One interesting thing is the name. Xiuhcoatl is a Mayan word for "fire snake." The only problem I have is I don't know how to say Xiuhcoatl.
@beesod6412
@beesod6412 Год назад
Mexican Soldiers are made of something different. as someone from the US, all I can say is thank you for serving your country, and protecting the Mexican people and help keep drugs out of the US.
@beesod6412
@beesod6412 Год назад
and thank you for the best food EVAR!
@elcocaino8728
@elcocaino8728 Год назад
​@@beesod6412
@Edith.G.G.
@Edith.G.G. Год назад
Thank you for your appreciation of Mexico, but I have to be honest and realistic. The cartels, the government, the police, the military and in general the institutions, are all in complicity, they overlap and benefit from traffic. From the lowest-ranking municipal police officer in a small town, to the president of the country, everyone knows what is happening with this movement and they are complicit. And in the USA, it is practically the same. Our governments and militias have the ability to conquer almost any nation on earth if they want to, but oddly enough, they can't do anything against the criminal groups, that will never surpass them in strength.
@Head_shot.
@Head_shot. Год назад
Thank you for acknowledging that
@wutm8
@wutm8 Год назад
​@@Edith.G.G. Afghanistan
@leogomez4657
@leogomez4657 Год назад
My parents are from Mexico and I'm really concerned about the CJNG in Puebla, my dad's hometown since they are the most dangerous cartel. I pray to God in order to help my family to get out of this horrible situation. One of my uncles one of them is my dad's brother was kidnapped by a group of cartel members and was forced to walk across a hilly desert. The cartels and this corruption must be stopped. God bless Mexico ✝✝✝✝
@anthonyperez8845
@anthonyperez8845 Год назад
My people from Puebla too
@TheSubwizzle
@TheSubwizzle Год назад
What’d they want with your uncle?
@mariocasarez3896
@mariocasarez3896 Год назад
Don't pray, VOTE!!!!
@leogomez4657
@leogomez4657 Год назад
@@TheSubwizzle idk he may have been kidnapped in the streets
@robertoordaz7938
@robertoordaz7938 Год назад
@mariocasarez3896 wish it was that easy. Much like the USA, Mexico has 2 primary political parties that overwhelmingly have controlled the country for many decades. The PRI party has held on to power the longest and is widely viewed as corrupt. The current party in power is called MORENA and hasn't accomplished anything different in 4 years in power. Electoral fraud is also a huge problem here. Politicians buy people's votes for $50 worth of groceries.
@northamericanintercontinen3207
As a Mexican I thank you for bringing this to the spotlight I won’t let my country fall to the cartels and the CCP
@blahblah2779
@blahblah2779 Год назад
😂 Your country has already been controlled by the cartels for a long time. The only thing you’re doing here is making yourself feel better about something that you have no power to stop or change.
@soccom8341576
@soccom8341576 Год назад
US needs to legalize drugs and begin its own unrestricted manufacturing. This is the only thing that will bring the prices, revenues and profits down, and cartel, corrupt powers down with it.
@Enkie0911
@Enkie0911 Год назад
It already has fallen
@TraderJoe007
@TraderJoe007 Год назад
@@Enkie0911 yo mama has fallen too
@tenzingobom4748
@tenzingobom4748 Год назад
@@TraderJoe007 so as your mom
@jaybay5538
@jaybay5538 Год назад
Never forget "Operation Fast and Furious" and that the US government trained the group that became "Los Zetas".
@snufft2904
@snufft2904 3 месяца назад
THIS!!!!
@Trytostopmeh
@Trytostopmeh 3 месяца назад
Those mfs were very effective in making the environment tougher
@M4teo.
@M4teo. 2 месяца назад
Most cartels also get their guns because of how stupidly Easy it Is to get weapons in the US
@casbot71
@casbot71 Год назад
Don't worry, _public attention_ will focus back on Mexico again, when the next Sicario film is released …
@tedmihalca
@tedmihalca Год назад
Fucking wild...I feel like Americana have a hard on for these movies but don't realize that shit is actually happening in Mexico and sometimes even in the US. People are worried about even hitchhiking through the woods because of the cartels.
@specialnewb9821
@specialnewb9821 Год назад
Since those were done by the guy who does Yellowstone and all the spin offs be a long wait
@technollusion
@technollusion Год назад
@@specialnewb9821 would be nice to see a sicario TV series on hbo or one of those networks.
@JavierGarcia-nm4zr
@JavierGarcia-nm4zr Год назад
I’m loving this frequency in your uploads!
@carlosotero934
@carlosotero934 Год назад
I'm from el paso and grew up with the Juarez cartel next door. Honestly long as there's a demand for drugs and other criminal activities there will be cartels to keep on going. Where there's a will, there's a way and Mexicans are geniuses when it comes to finding ways.
@Rollanotheronemyfriend
@Rollanotheronemyfriend Год назад
If there wasn't drugs there wouldn't be a demand
@jorgenoname6062
@jorgenoname6062 Год назад
@@Rollanotheronemyfriend Absolutely false.
@clumsiii
@clumsiii Год назад
@@Rollanotheronemyfriend The other side of that coin is legalizing cocaine and growing it (somehow?) in US. Tax dollars, but yikes. A cocaine dispensary? Basically just steal the cartel's customers
@ofmanyone
@ofmanyone Год назад
@@Rollanotheronemyfriend what a white lie.
@BakuganBrawler211
@BakuganBrawler211 Год назад
@@clumsiii Decriminalizing those who are addicts and leading them down the path to eventual rehabilitation would cut much of the demand especially if you use drugs that aren’t cut with things like fentanyl or tranq that would happen outside a highly regulated domestic system.
@anelcarmona6814
@anelcarmona6814 9 месяцев назад
What a thoughtful non-partisan approach to this enormous problem. Thank you for making a video that manages to expose such a delicate problem without getting anyone upset. This is very insightful and even offers some hope.
@beef1541
@beef1541 Год назад
It's been a minute since I visited Mexico, but the Federales I came across seemed way less sketchy than the soldiers that were patrolling, interesting change.
@supersmashbrosevil
@supersmashbrosevil Год назад
Every president since Felipe Calderón have been trying to militarize the country, Obrador took it to the ultimate level, the federal police was just the beginning, many civilian institutions are being replaced by the army, the results have been horrible as you may expect
@luis_zuniga
@luis_zuniga Год назад
🤔 It's possible those weren't soldiers but cartel members, you never know nowadays.
@KennyNGA
@KennyNGA Год назад
@@luis_zuniga why not both
@cheli_silva_1653
@cheli_silva_1653 Год назад
@@KennyNGA The troop is generally legal. It is easier to buy 1 or 3 bosses than 100 soldiers. In addition, the areas of operations are usually rotated, therefore, you must buy a different boss or buy a higher-ranking one.
@grimskid
@grimskid Год назад
Nah bro you want to trust the soldiers over the feds
@gotico4312
@gotico4312 Год назад
my stories with the narco as a mexican 1, they kidnapped my parents for not paying rights to use the floor in their business, they are fine but they were kidnapped in the local police parking lot, this was in the worst time of drug trafficking in Mexico in about 2008 2- I was 20 and in the middle of the night I heard the most powerful gun shots I've ever heard lol, a car ran from a military checkpoint and they chased him until he crashed his car into the house on the back street, there was an exchange of shots (where all the narcos died) and another car of narcos arrived trying to recover the bodies and fired at the army behind them and threw two grenades and god the grenades exploded hard xD, balance: another car of dead narcos when returning them the attack 3- Two houses from mine there is a point of sale for drugs and at one point a rival group went by a car and fired their weapons at the front causing the junkies and the seller to end up running inside my property leaving traces of blood. eventually on another occasion they killed the seller but the site continues to be used by other people who do not value their life
@prioris55555
@prioris55555 Год назад
The Prohibition in early 1900s taught that any war on drugs would be a failure. Most people are politically authoritarian hence support authoritarian politicians especially conservatives. They turn a blind eye on historical lesson of Prohibition and have long sanction police corruption and violence. They are attracted to politicians who preach demagoguery. Police oppose legalizing drugs because it would destroy their protection racket for drug traffickers.. The war on drugs helps demagogue politicians especially conservatives because it helps fuel crime and violence.
@Elhastezy888
@Elhastezy888 Год назад
@@prioris55555 A.k.a, by the pupoet masters "population control"
@Elhastezy888
@Elhastezy888 Год назад
@bacon bros your ability to laugh while describing that trauma is a little bit commendable & a little bit scary /sad at the same time. I hope you take care of your mental health. Wishing you many blessings
@prioris55555
@prioris55555 Год назад
@@marklampo8164 mass media censorship and even domestic murders are sanctioned by the political establishments are sanctioned by politicians and grassroots in US who support them. grassroots live by the ethics and morality of a mafia. mexico estimated missing people in over last 10 years is over 100K and clearly the military, police and politicians in mexico are helping cover up the abductions and their murders in open view. US politicians are relatively very silent. the US arrested the former head of the mexico military defense briefly because he was involved in protecting the cartels so even the top of the. law enforcement chain is involved. they should be charged with treason. many grassroots people in mexico have to protect themselves against the police. if the cartels need someone assassinated, the police pick them up and deliver them to the execution site.
@mikestein1024
@mikestein1024 Год назад
@@prioris55555 great points but it’s not only conservatives the left could have legalized drugs many times but has not , also they are all one big party right and left a uni party the left with its mobs, unions, corruption , regulations , is not any cleaner or better if it’s not a corporation exploiting then it’s a dem supporting union that will take its place exploiting the labor
@Munchable420
@Munchable420 7 месяцев назад
Just imagine, the war on terrorism but its south of OUR border. I honestly dont think most Americans could handle that.
@moic9704
@moic9704 6 месяцев назад
Another thing nobody talks about is that if cartels are declared terrorists then probably tens of thousands of American citizens would be guilty of working for terrorists. It is a giant can of worms
@wayv7973
@wayv7973 Год назад
As a Mexican, we have this lady that went to clean our house with her 3 children and she was a very kind woman that we relied on for years. Sadly, it was until then that she lost one of her children. There’s some theories on what happened; he was last heard from when he went to Tijuana with his “shady” friends that could’ve been involved with the cartel. they think that the cartel could’ve kidnapped him and had forced him to join them. It’s really sad on how bad the situation in Mexico is.
@MustangJunky
@MustangJunky Год назад
Since ur Mexican I gotta ask, would u support the American military coming into Mexico to destroy the cartel
@anthonylewis2080
@anthonylewis2080 Год назад
​@@MustangJunky : 👍👍👍👍👍👍!.
@PublicUnindoctrinator
@PublicUnindoctrinator Год назад
Yeah western war against Mexico is the only solution to the cartels
@tommyscott9085
@tommyscott9085 Год назад
@@MustangJunky Military occupation aint gonna do shit.
@MustangJunky
@MustangJunky Год назад
@@tommyscott9085 explain
@DomesticTruther
@DomesticTruther Год назад
A follow up on their influence in the USA would be awesome
@andreivaldez2929
@andreivaldez2929 Год назад
Yeah; kinda would like to see that, and how it influences organized crime here.
@losfromla1480
@losfromla1480 Год назад
There's a documentary about how the cartels have infiltrated the marijuana growing operations in California.
@devilish2136
@devilish2136 Год назад
i wish us military go in and all countries supply weapons to cartels and stupid muricans i want to see that
@patriciaramirez3139
@patriciaramirez3139 Год назад
AND THE INSATIABLE APPETITE THAT AMERICANS HAVE FOR DRUGS, I WANT HIM TO TALK ABOUT HOW THIS IS AFFECTING BOTH SIDES, IS A VICIOUS CYCLE, THE CARTELS SELL THE DRUGS AND AMERICANS ARE BUYING AND CONSUMING.
@Student0Toucher
@Student0Toucher Год назад
No influence only food and music
@oswaldoflores9206
@oswaldoflores9206 Год назад
It's sad and frustrating that people sees these organizations as heroes, or allies.
@Octopanda55
@Octopanda55 Год назад
When youre an outsider it is sad. I saw it the same way but someone had told me that residents of some towns would much rather have cartel help than government help since cartels have a quicker response to needs. Sad reality that people adore the cartels because the local gov fails to help, or get impeded
@ianjohngonzales4066
@ianjohngonzales4066 Год назад
Sickening.
@alexjoens5014
@alexjoens5014 Год назад
Humm can you tell me how many civs the cartels have killed and maybe tell me how many the US military killed in Iraq alone
@BonaldDrump
@BonaldDrump Год назад
@@alexjoens5014 this is about México coño not the US. And we know already damn.
@wonder777warrior6
@wonder777warrior6 Год назад
@@alexjoens5014 so we just going to overlook the fact of them killing civilians? their days are numbered.
@petraautio3498
@petraautio3498 Месяц назад
The weapons the cartels use are mostly transported from the US. The demand for drugs is in the US and Europe. This is not solely a Mexico promblem that it needs to solve on its own. Both the US and Mexico have huge fundamental problems in their societies that have lead to this situation (overperscription of painkillers and accessible weapons in the US; poverty and lack of opportunities for certain communities in Mexico).
@markrobbins1018
@markrobbins1018 Год назад
Unfortunately what so many Americans fail to understand is the role our government has in the rise of the Mexican cartels. I know from experience that we have trained and still train Mexican soldiers and Central America soldiers in military tactics at a school at Ft Bennings now known as "The Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation" formerly known as "The School of Americas" it's intent was and still is to teach foreign soldiers the art of jungle warfare, special warfare, intelligence, and counterintelligence, etc But the unfortunate outcome is that we end up training our enemies. For some inexplicable reason, we never learn from our mistakes, for example, we trained the Afghan mujahideen during their war with Russia who after the war became what is now known as al-Qaeda. However, in Mexico, money or the lack of it is what motives crime and corruption a soldier makes very little dinero so when a cartel offers him 3 or 4 times what he normally makes to either come to train others or even to keep wearing the uniform but turn a blind eye it's hard to say no, especially when everyone else in your unit said hell yeah. This is why the cartels have so much power and control, there are also beaucoup American border control agents that are on the cartel's payroll rather you believe that or not is up to you
@djangokill65
@djangokill65 Год назад
🎯🎯🎯
@djangokill65
@djangokill65 Год назад
@@nobodynever7884 The School of the Americas changed its name after the fall of the Soviet Union but is NOW known as The Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation. They may not combat "Marxism" anymore but are now a tool of the Neoliberal/NeoCon order. Basically an organization to protect American (corporate) interests and prevent sovereign governments from independent governance and nationalization of resources. They are responsible for many coups in Latin America when governments elect leaders or enact policy that go against US corporate interest. Different name, same SHlTshow.
@Roylamx
@Roylamx Год назад
@bloobabboon ​ @bloobabboon Restoration of good government might be a place to start - Q; What is good government? One which respects and is made up of laws based upon fundamental human rights as listed in the Magna Carta and US Bill of Rights - Life, liberty & Property must be inviolate. Any government which violates basic rules of individual rights creates an underlying hostility to it's citizens, looses legitimacy and respect, fostering discontent, rebellion and anarchy. Good laws are more supportive of individual rights encourage honesty, thrift, independence and industry, making each individual and community stronger and less needy of government hand-outs or protection.
@ivanmartinezhernandez3962
@ivanmartinezhernandez3962 Год назад
@bloobabboon you cant ask that here i mean is the whole point of the problem
@weaselwolf8425
@weaselwolf8425 Год назад
Actually everything was by design. Cite the CIA We were only in Afghanistan to contain communism and nowadays China and Russia
@cristiancastro1565
@cristiancastro1565 Год назад
As a Mexican living on the border Reynosa/McAllen,Tx. The violence here has decreased drastically. We use to have full blown chaos every month. The cartels would drive in convoys with their guns hanging out like they was in a parade. Mexico will turn into Columbia and instead of cartels we will just have business men and politicians trafficking the drugs.
@manpdr1233
@manpdr1233 Год назад
They still do it, here in Matamoros I've seen convoys of 10,20,30 trucks full of gunmen, but they don't mess with the people.
@michaelbean9165
@michaelbean9165 Год назад
Mexico already has become Colombia, and then some. Businessmen and politicians are trafficking drugs now. The current situation is not a look into the future, this is now and it's ugly and urgent. Drug addiction is at the bottom of this particular problem. The political corruption is another war altogether and will still need to be addressed.
@r.d.9399
@r.d.9399 Год назад
The general there was directly involved with the cartels. Should do like El Salvador and lock up every cartel member for life.
@___Truth___
@___Truth___ Год назад
@@manpdr1233 Sure they don't mess with the people. You really believe that huh? No innocent people get targeted by these cartels, right?
@albertubaldo8652
@albertubaldo8652 Год назад
@@michaelbean9165 totally out of context, Colombia is a completely different case from Mexico, truly some politicians , and common people had protected some drug dealers as well as inside US territory where the largest amount of addicts can be found, US government does not treat this as a public health issue instead of that they approved the use of fentanyl as the same way as Tylenol, now they are struggling with a huge problem. If the American youth accept their problems and co-responsability probably many answers can be solved.
@albertoramos4312
@albertoramos4312 9 месяцев назад
The cartel problem we have in Mexico starts with america being the biggest consuemer
@cbdy1358
@cbdy1358 Год назад
I remember when I was a kid there was a cartel hit successfully carried out in Mesquite TX. Scared the crap out of me because this was so far north and I didn’t realize how large their reach was. Note I’ve seen reports that cartels have already divided Texas up into different regions of their control
@antonnurwald5700
@antonnurwald5700 Год назад
Prepare to see dudes with heavy pick-up trucks, military gear and automatic weapons in Texas.
@false-set
@false-set Год назад
Legalise it...
@bruhism173
@bruhism173 Год назад
Need send in the army, but only after we have 100% male combat units if you send them in with women, I'll join the damn cartel at that point.
@Pistolita221
@Pistolita221 Год назад
They own blocks in michigan as legitimate businessmen.
@musek5048
@musek5048 Год назад
@@Pistolita221 jeez sounds like they're well on their way to infiltrating the US government the way they did mexico.
@nathansamuelson
@nathansamuelson Год назад
I find it fascinating that practically half of the violent crime in the US is gang related. I knew violent crime was on the decline but I didn't expect gang wars to be up so high.
@thelordofcringe
@thelordofcringe Год назад
It shouldn't be that surprising, since almost all major shootings happen in neighborhoods that are basically ethnic enclaves. It's usually cartels vs black/white gangs.
@fuck4317
@fuck4317 Год назад
Not really on the decline anymore. Look at all the big cities and what leftoid mongoloid policies did there.
@berniekatzroy
@berniekatzroy Год назад
Bro cholos are still an issue
@jaybelle1909
@jaybelle1909 Год назад
It's because of weak leadership but they only blame ppl who warned them of what not to do and what the real world is like
@richarda996
@richarda996 Год назад
You should live around Houston.
@Energine1
@Energine1 Год назад
I'm in Jalisco and I'm impressed. More nuanced understanding than I was expecting. There are good people involved. We can do much better than a war.
@Energine1
@Energine1 Год назад
@@SusanWojcickiTheBolshevik Stop what? They cant fix your pharmacutical industry or those turned into drug addicts by it.
@Energine1
@Energine1 Год назад
Personally I would suggest taking some of that $50,000,000,000.00 you are using to wage another proxy war and invest it in some drug rehab clinics for your loved ones.
@Energine1
@Energine1 Год назад
@@SusanWojcickiTheBolshevik Ever hear of the war on drugs? Its the one you couldnt win. You couldnt win. Because you were fighting your neighbors freedom.
@Energine1
@Energine1 Год назад
@@SusanWojcickiTheBolshevik Yes you need to treat them for addiction
@Energine1
@Energine1 Год назад
@@SusanWojcickiTheBolshevik Its very sad
@michaelcantu6071
@michaelcantu6071 Год назад
I’ve been saying this for years! We need to stop sending billions of dollars to countries halfway across the globe and focus on the country right below us. But our politicians would rather start pointless wars than help the Mexican government fight off the cartel. The cartel is horrible to the people living in Mexico, but it directly affects Americans too.
@perezoso763
@perezoso763 Год назад
Focus on your territory
@michaelcantu6071
@michaelcantu6071 Год назад
@@perezoso763 did you even read my comment 🤣
@tommyscott9085
@tommyscott9085 Год назад
​@@michaelcantu6071Hes not wrong though but I agree.
@quissbird-10
@quissbird-10 Год назад
​@@perezoso763we are. The cartels are causing quite a ruckus on our territory too
@yasminbarry7941
@yasminbarry7941 Год назад
I've got news for you: the only reason billions of dollars are being sent half way across the world by the US Governement is NOT charity. It's done to control all the resources in those countries.
@lolfu6492
@lolfu6492 8 месяцев назад
Cartels will never die unless America stops being the worlds worst junkie.
@yurichtube1162
@yurichtube1162 7 месяцев назад
If Mexico were to solve the cartel issues, it wouldn't be as bad
@davidwright873
@davidwright873 2 месяца назад
@@yurichtube1162 they won't....too much money changing hands..
@DBoone123
@DBoone123 Месяц назад
Victim blaming at its finest
@davidwright873
@davidwright873 Месяц назад
@@DBoone123 he does have a point. Its not really victim blaming in the sense of the phrase but just pointing out the obvious...Drugs addicts didn"t have have a gun pointed to their heads nor were their families held hostage if they didn't do a line...So, technically, it free will, not victimization.
@DBoone123
@DBoone123 Месяц назад
@@davidwright873 I agree but these drugs are sold because they are addictive and keep customers coming back. The addicts are like mice, putting the drugs above everything else. Stop making the drugs available to buy and the addicts will not be created
@ArmaBiologica35
@ArmaBiologica35 Год назад
*"Mexican labor is better skilled than Chinese."* DAMN RIGHT IT IS!! *"Mexican labor costs lower than Chinese"* ...damn right it does.
@lawsonj39
@lawsonj39 Год назад
Don't know about labor costs, but transportation costs would probably be considerably lower, which would be helpful from an environmental point of view, too.
@ArmaBiologica35
@ArmaBiologica35 Год назад
@@lawsonj39 Okay, fair enough.
@comradesillyotter1537
@comradesillyotter1537 Год назад
Businesses yet again pursuing the most exploited labor pools it can access
@sadawkwardblob.8738
@sadawkwardblob.8738 Год назад
@@comradesillyotter1537 mexicans are hardworks that dont care to work for cheap, were the best business partners anyone could have
@comradesillyotter1537
@comradesillyotter1537 Год назад
@@sadawkwardblob.8738 Don't care to work for cheap? Money back home is worth more than here, dude. What happens to the rest of that money that isn't paid to them anyway? Disappears? No, it's in the owner's pocket
@joselemus1171
@joselemus1171 Год назад
Pretty much nailed it... I'm a Mexican army sergeant I've been fighting this fucking war for 12 years and I still see my self fighting this war till I retire, that is if I get to retire and not end up dying.
@italiansandvich3942
@italiansandvich3942 Год назад
What kind of involvement does the army play against the Cartels?
@mulan7015
@mulan7015 Год назад
Its a losing war the cartles are so curropt you never know if the solider next to you is legit or not.
@joselemus1171
@joselemus1171 Год назад
@@italiansandvich3942 the armed forces are the only ones who are facing the cartels, the police turns a blind eye when ever they see cartel members, they don't have the fire power, training or man power to face them.
@joselemus1171
@joselemus1171 Год назад
@@italiansandvich3942 don't think of cartel as criminals think of them as para military groups they move in convoys of up to 200 men with full automatic weapons and granade launchers.
@joselemus1171
@joselemus1171 Год назад
@@mulan7015 the main problem here is congress and the laws they don't want to legislate. Their might be corrupt soldiers but not to the point it effects operations.
@adoe2305
@adoe2305 Год назад
How anyone can look at Mexico and think, the U.S should ban guns, is literally insane
@CM-xr9oq
@CM-xr9oq Год назад
Cappy, thank you for sharing part of your personal life and battle with addiction. One day at a time, brother. You got this.
@jaymata1218
@jaymata1218 Год назад
Man.. hearing news about the cartel always makes me sad. Just a very difficult situation.
@antinsanwo
@antinsanwo Год назад
Yeah it’s so complex, with a lot of money, power and influence involved in the corruption that spreads through all levels of business, politics and law enforcement. It’s pretty well known that the CIA and DEA and ATF have been involved in supporting certain cartels, as well as having undercover agents selling huge amounts of drugs and guns to fund political uprisings and arming rebel armies to overthrow governments that don’t do what the US wants like what happened in Nicaragua. The CIA was trafficking tonnes of cocaine into the US, and was responsible for spreading the recipe to cook it into crack and spread it through ghettos of the US. They then used the money from this to arm and fund a rebel army in Nicaragua to overthrow the leader and replace him with someone they choose which they couldn’t do legally and openly so they did it using undercover agents and black market drug money. That was decades ago and it was proven by whistle blowers involved, a CIA plane crashed leaving Nicaragua with 4 tonnes of cocaine onboard, it’s all documented and proven fact but the government and media sweeps it under the rug.
@Marinealver
@Marinealver Год назад
Well just take a look at Afghanistan, and know that we are just as effective against the cartels as we were against the Taliban.
@bvegannow1936
@bvegannow1936 Год назад
Legalize drugs. Alcohol prohibition created violent alcohol cartels. Legalizing alcohol made it go away
@robandcheryls
@robandcheryls Год назад
Most of the places to “Not Visit” in Mexico, are my favorite places to visit. Never seen or had a problem in 14 yrs of traveling there. 🇲🇽. 🇨🇦 Veteran
@bloodthunder301
@bloodthunder301 Год назад
Guess you got lucky
@QuantumNoir
@QuantumNoir Год назад
Alot of No Visit areas are silly. A shooting will happen in a area of a state and the entire state gets listed on there. Imagine if foreign governments did that with us!?
@Hushh_2024
@Hushh_2024 Год назад
Just don't end up in LiveLeak
@robandcheryls
@robandcheryls Год назад
@@Hushh_2024 I will try not too.
@alamsucksemirisbetter2329
@alamsucksemirisbetter2329 Год назад
Stop calling them gang members, the cartel is NOT A GANG. They are paramilitary organizations.
@jbw53191
@jbw53191 Год назад
Definition of a cartel: "An association of manufacturers or suppliers with the purpose of maintaining prices at a high level and restricting competition." I left the United States 2 years ago because of the cartels in the US -- The healthcare and medical insurance industry.
@timf2279
@timf2279 Год назад
Good keep on trucking.
@TetoSuperFan
@TetoSuperFan Год назад
wow youre such a smart boy do you want a cookie?
@wilhelmheinzerling5341
@wilhelmheinzerling5341 Год назад
Lmaooo
@Razordreamz
@Razordreamz 10 месяцев назад
I hope Mexico and the US can figure this out. As a Canadian I'm a bit distanced from this, but we are still feeling the effects. The US Canadian border is so large, and very easy to cross it's an issue for us in Canada as well.
@dmaster225
@dmaster225 Год назад
The bad thing is that to get rid of the cartels you have to get rid of the corrupt politicians first, because they will let them right out of jail.
@richardtrudeau7363
@richardtrudeau7363 Год назад
People need to quit using Drugs.If you have a Ton of.Cocaine and no buyers well you would find something else to do.
@buckfizzard291
@buckfizzard291 Год назад
And to get rid of them you have to get rid of the bankers
@DaveSmith-cp5kj
@DaveSmith-cp5kj Год назад
@@buckfizzard291 The heck, bankers have literally nothing to do with it. Cartels don't exactly follow regulations and pay taxes you know. lol And if you are talking about Wells Fargo that was literally a single employee. Plus the amount of money he laundered was like 1/100 of what Chapo paid the president in a bribe.
@waynesmith7746
@waynesmith7746 Год назад
@@buckfizzard291 not really. Banks don’t like cartels either. They make it so less people want to save and invest in Mexico. Only big time money launderers like the cartel.
@xisotopex
@xisotopex Год назад
in large parts of Mexico, the cartels actually do function as the de facto state, providing social services, security, economy ects...
@TurtleChad1
@TurtleChad1 Год назад
They basically are the government
@Rob_F8F
@Rob_F8F Год назад
That was true when the Sinaloa Cartel was in charge. Now the successor gangs are not interested at all in providing social services to the communities where they are.
@olivergrayhoundII
@olivergrayhoundII Год назад
Like the mafias in Sicily, they only did it when a state was actually a threat to their local power. When the state disregards, the barbaric truth of gangs and cartels really shows. States are beholden by laws to some extent and some balance of power. Gangs are beholden to none. Mexico and US have to tackle these cartels soon or else it will be bad for our two economies. Who wants to do business in a country that your workers or businesses can get robbed at any moment?
@neurofiedyamato8763
@neurofiedyamato8763 Год назад
Evidence of the Mexican(and to an extent, the US) government not doing their job. The cartel and crime would not be as prominent if the government provided social services(financial support, job finding, public housing etc.), education(easy access to affordable high quality education), and anti-corruption measures like increased transparency and an independent organization that investigates corruption. Do more community policing to regain trust. US also have to do similar measures as they are the primary customer of the cartel. So improve mental health treatment. Also improve social services and healthcare availability. Housing first policy and mixed income housing. Lastly, rehabilitation over punitive prison systems. These are all proven methods backed up by research.
@RogelioDominguez_2006
@RogelioDominguez_2006 Год назад
@@Rob_F8F not "Gangs" Sinaloa is still the most powerful cartel in The Americas
@usapanda7303
@usapanda7303 Год назад
I hope Canada, Mexico, and US can form a stronger union. Mexico is a wonderful place but these cartels are getting too big for their britches.
@Puffmaster6558
@Puffmaster6558 6 месяцев назад
Cartels reading rich dad poor dad killed me 😂😂💀
@qjones6109
@qjones6109 3 месяца назад
lol same
@theprospecttor
@theprospecttor 3 месяца назад
They move more money than the guy that wrote that book, its sad!
@boot2165
@boot2165 Год назад
Great episode Cappy, head and shoulders above your usual amusing and informative content. Not bad for an average infantryman. Living near the southern border, I can say that Hispanics and Mexicans in particular are friendly, hard working, great people, and want the same freedom and safety we do. Whatever we can do to help them solve their corruption and crime issues will help us as well and make North America a better region. In our spare time, we can work on corruption and crime in the US.
@RegentDeMarquis005
@RegentDeMarquis005 Год назад
Agreed 🇲🇦🇺🇲🇲🇦 let's start with giving our youth proper knowledge
@channingdeadnight
@channingdeadnight Год назад
Legalize and regulate drugs and so many of these problems go away. The cartels would go broke almost instantly. The drug war has failed in every metric. Let's try something else, and no longer let puritan christians make our decisions.
@guiltyspark659
@guiltyspark659 Год назад
@@channingdeadnight Or they would begin taking over legal grow operations in places like NorCal.
@jaypoop4874
@jaypoop4874 Год назад
@@channingdeadnight or regulate guns in the U.S. The cartels get most of their weapons from the U.S so it would help if they were more regulated
@katschrodinger954
@katschrodinger954 Год назад
@@jaypoop4874 Regulate guns how? it's already against the law (State and Federal) to purchase guns to send even across State lines without proper background checks, let alone send guns across International borders. Regulation of guns to control criminal activity will effect the civilian population. The American People also have this thing called the Constitution, which we hold dear to our hearts.
@aaronsgamingshow2773
@aaronsgamingshow2773 Год назад
It’s pronounced meech-ooh-ah-kan but either way thank you so much for the exposure to how detrimental the cartels are to society in both Mexico and the US 💛 It seems as tho people give less of a shit every day and most don’t know how violent it is down their. My own family emigrated from Michoacán in the early 90’s
@iamkyros2233
@iamkyros2233 Год назад
My parents go to michoacan every other month. As long as you display a humble lifestyle and respect the people there, you will be fine for the most part. I still go every year and enjoy the beauty and culture of Mexico.
@aure92
@aure92 Год назад
Thanks for the Spanish lesson teacher 😂
@Sora_Nai
@Sora_Nai Год назад
@@iamkyros2233 oh yeah live humbly so it makes it all ok. Everything the cartels do is fine just ignore it and you'll be fine 🙂
@EvLSpectre
@EvLSpectre Год назад
I'm pretty sure it's Mantequilla. As he was the last of the Mehicans.
@iamkyros2233
@iamkyros2233 Год назад
@@Sora_Nai i never said it was okay, but it's been going on for over a decade, so ppl have learn to adjust to it. They kill each other, but mostly its between ppl who are involved in organized crime. Im sure you have never stepped foot there, so you have no idea how life is there. We own multiple properties there and i lived there for over 5 years when i was younger.
@845835
@845835 Год назад
The Cartels are just supplying the demand.
@yxngblxxd69
@yxngblxxd69 Год назад
I work road construction in Atlanta. Met some guys outside of my hotel who offered us some Modelos, they were from Honduras. They told us if they didn’t send money back to the cartel from their checks that the cartel would kill them or their family if they ever saw them back in Mexico. Scary shit dude
@knigt_rider_999hd6
@knigt_rider_999hd6 Год назад
As a mexican I can say we agree that the cartels need to be dealt with but mate you need something to solve corruption first. As Alejando said "there aren't many of those here who uphold the law, and those who resist corruption, dissapear". Meaning that if you dont have someone strong here whatever you do is going to fall apart over time.
@keptick
@keptick Год назад
Thank you for once again looking at the details and presenting facts from all sides of the story with a neutral point of view. Quality content as always!
@richardpatton2502
@richardpatton2502 Год назад
The problem the US government is worried about it’s the amount of money flowing the “wrong” way All the best to everyone
@badgerpa9
@badgerpa9 Год назад
The billions of tax dollars spent to help Mexico?
@neurofiedyamato8763
@neurofiedyamato8763 Год назад
@@badgerpa9 Money spent helping the poor.
@jaybelle1909
@jaybelle1909 Год назад
🇺🇸 is mad cartels are stealing our game
@davidgarcia32323
@davidgarcia32323 Год назад
@@neurofiedyamato8763 money going into the cartels pockets and not theirs.
@timsexton
@timsexton 8 месяцев назад
Task & Purpose, baby! Great piece, well researched effort. *_TRUST !!_*
@isaaccuster4329
@isaaccuster4329 Год назад
Kinda makes me sick how they were just giggling over the fact that a cartel took over the Avocado trade. May not directly affect her life since she probably likes her avocados picked by 5 year old orphans in the California heat but it still affects thousands who had their livelihoods just stolen from them.
@TacticalGamingFool
@TacticalGamingFool Год назад
She mightve been giggling about the koala and kangaroo fist bumping
@isaaccuster4329
@isaaccuster4329 Год назад
@@TacticalGamingFool lmao probably
@phincampbell1886
@phincampbell1886 Год назад
*I* was the DEA front cover graphic artist that year. It was my high point of the year. You've broken my heart... :-(
@OK-yy6qz
@OK-yy6qz Год назад
Mexico needs to take a lesson from El Salvador Policies and just start mass arresting all the known cartel members and throw them in Jail without a trial. Between this and using the army and US support to take a few strategic locations from Cartel control (destroy Weed and Poppy fields, take back control of illegal mines,kick them out of certain cities etc) it would absolutely devastate them
@marck-trend524
@marck-trend524 Год назад
Como Mexicano me siento muy apenado de la imagen que nos han dado los carteles alrededor del mundo, México es muy bello, Rico y creo que es más que eso.
@crazemate
@crazemate Год назад
But the image is very true, it may be beautiful in places like Jalisco, in which it has a beautiful countryside but the place is developing in safety. Just more immigrants getting out to seek a better life. Very ashamed I am too
@jlq1116
@jlq1116 Год назад
No te sientas avergonzado, mucho menos ante estos hipócritas, ellos tiene una gran parte de la responsabilidad en el aumento de poder de los Carteles, durante más de 20 años han Estado convirtiendo a los carteles en un ejército paramilitar dándoles armas y dinero a base del consumo de drogas, recuerda que sin demanda no hay oferta y a los estados unidos NUNCA les ha importado detener la demanda de droga, mucho menos detener los ríos de sangre que sus armas causan en México todos los días.
@Fck_the_atf
@Fck_the_atf Год назад
@@jlq1116 yeah and when someone actually wanted to do something about it by building a wall to halt the drug trafficking everyone called him a “racist” and was against it.
@clemintineorgasmface4019
@clemintineorgasmface4019 Год назад
@@jlq1116 my friend died because of the thugs in your country...
@tlamatini4617
@tlamatini4617 Год назад
@@jlq1116Don’t forget that American and European banks money launder for the cartels and Bush/Obama administration + DEA were caught making deals with the Sinaloa cartel behind closed doors!
@juicebirdmedia1406
@juicebirdmedia1406 Год назад
It's a shame because Mexico could be a HUGE tourist destination for Americans but most Americans are afraid to go there because of things like this.
@moic9704
@moic9704 Год назад
Mexico is already in the TOP10 of world tourism.
@melosova-suav8930
@melosova-suav8930 Год назад
It’s very simple to get rid of the Cartels: 1. We need to stop providing all the Junkies 2. We need to stop providing them with firearms. 3. American and European banks need to stop laundering their money. Viola!
@erikdejesusherrerasantacru1456
Agree
@josemedrano8551
@josemedrano8551 Год назад
Straight facts
@sroberts837
@sroberts837 Год назад
Great! That seems so simple. Let's cure the people addicted, remove all the guns from the U.S. and tell banks to stop being so greedy, then all will be well. 🙄
@megamelvin25969
@megamelvin25969 5 месяцев назад
This simple no cartels could ever exist if government would not want it
@MadComputerScientist
@MadComputerScientist Год назад
Remarkably clear-eyed, technical, and well-sourced. Solid vid on the subject. And as an American, much love to our Mexican neighbors. Together we got this.
@alexy6093
@alexy6093 Год назад
We must not allow cartels buying up chicken chain. Especially in New Mexico area.
@micwclar
@micwclar Год назад
Thanks for this, you did a good job of keeping a relatively open mind about next steps. I would agree that working together and making the financial end more difficult would be the smartest approach, as it gives the most return and has the least potential for collateral damage. Plus, splitting the sized funds can seriously help the economies of both nations.
@disbeafakename167
@disbeafakename167 Год назад
Violence is literally the only way to stop violence...
@magical8013
@magical8013 Год назад
Since I can remember the cartel has ran the drug trade in America like it does in Mexico. It's so easy to find someone selling for the cartel in America, if you know what to look for and you're a past drug addict it's really simple to find a drug dealer selling stuff for them. Easier than going to the store and buying groceries
@brandonknight6575
@brandonknight6575 Год назад
Facts 💯 as a former addict living in Denver I got my shit from a Honduras kid whom was obviously directly affiliated with a cartel. If I wanted any quantity of product, he could get it. As long as the money was there the product would be too. Supply and demand. At least back in those days the shit was pure and not being fetanyl laced like most of it is now. That's a whole different issue tho.
@diegolisandror2
@diegolisandror2 Год назад
Man you did a phenomenal investigation here, you most have Mexican friends or something because you nailed it in every point. Subscribed
@Bacontruffle
@Bacontruffle Год назад
I only have second-hand knowledge of the matter, a loved one living in Mexico. But I think one of the biggest (if not the single biggest) problems is that any attempts to fight the cartels tends to end up just being a massive nuisance and even dangerous to the local population. Simply put, for most civilians, the cartels are less of a problem than the actions taken against them are. The cartels seem to be very effective at becoming part of daily life, and local economical woes make it very tempting for people to do business with the cartels. I do think that at the heart of it, Obrador has the right idea. Many Mexicans still get roped into exploitative jobs, being overworked and screwed over by their bosses with little to no protection from the government. It's hard to move up when you don't grow up in a family with some means. And when people are stuck in a situation like that, they're ripe for exploitation and influence from the cartels. Setting up more industry and trade between Mexico and the US might help to actually uproot the main source of power from the cartels. Mexican law is good on paper, but it seriously needs to be upheld for it to function. When you see elderly people working 15h/day jobs trying to pay for their children's medical bills, being treated horribly by their boss and the local police does nothing... You're allowing your people to become far too vulnerable to influence from cartels. Mexico is a beautiful country, with awesome people, and it deserves better. It absolutely has the potential to become a regional powerhouse, but this growth has to begin from the bottom up.
@JI814
@JI814 Год назад
Right. Just like the surrounding tribes grew to accept a high percentage of their people being sacrificed by the Aztecs.
@Aqueox
@Aqueox Год назад
>the cartels are less of a problem than the actions taken against them are And so the "civilians" side with drug peddlers, human traffickers, rapists, murderers, etc. They are complicit and can either help kill cartel members on the lines, in a work camp, or they can die defending them.
@Bacontruffle
@Bacontruffle Год назад
@@Aqueox I did not say that, and I think that's too harsh. What I was trying to get at, is that in order to take down the cartels, the government needs support from the local population. And when arresting the cartel leader just means having to stay at home scared to become collateral damage, civilian deaths and general mayhem while not really changing anything for the better for the local population... I wouldn't call that being complicit. The people simply have little to no power to do anything, and whatever is done doesn't seem to help.
@Aqueox
@Aqueox Год назад
@@Bacontruffle You did, and no measure is too harsh when dealing with hostiles. That's kinda the thing about war, it is the most brutal thing out there.
@Bacontruffle
@Bacontruffle Год назад
@@Aqueox My dude, this isn't war... With your logic, it's entirely acceptable to just bomb Sicily into the sea because the local population doesn't aid in anti mobster operations Look at what China is doing to the Uyghurs under the guise of "anti-terrorism".
@magnusalexandros4562
@magnusalexandros4562 Год назад
It was going great but lost me at “mio-cho-han”😂
@davidmoreno2121
@davidmoreno2121 Год назад
wish you talked about how big pharm and insurance companies are making bank off of the problems too.
@Sleepyjew
@Sleepyjew Год назад
So glad to see this topic covered in a pragmatic way. The lack of coverage from our southern border is outstanding, compared to international affairs.
@synsol1008
@synsol1008 9 месяцев назад
It would make sense to try to get rid of usa gangs first before trying to get rid of crime in other countries
@nickb1762
@nickb1762 8 месяцев назад
Or just secure our border.
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