Have you ever wondered how illegal drug cartels have an effect on the Mexican people? For a decade, the drug business has become prominent over the world. Likewise, the company has also influenced the Mexican people more than anything on which they rely for money. As a result, not everyone abominates against the drug cartels as much as the individuals who have to suffer pain from it. Therefore, many people who receive help from the drug cartels has the positive reaction, and other people have endured punishment or unjust deed from the business.
At first, few people benefit from drug cartels by selling drugs where they can earn money very quickly. Moreover, it offered the jobs to Mexican individuals and employment allow the people to feed their
The Mexican cartels have impacted the society by violating many rights that human have and that are protected. The Cartels are causing too much trouble to the world especially in Mexico and its neighboring countries. They have trafficking tons and tons of drugs to world and spread its violence to nation that live in peace. The cartels have been operating for while and keep growing becoming more powerful each day and nothing has stopped them yet. The Mexican cartels have constructed their empires through the violation of human rights in the business of drug trafficking, especially through torture and deaths, resulting in worldwide corruption.
The drug war has cost many problem problem in many countries especially in mexico where the heat of the problem has come to be from raging war between the govt of mexico and drug cartels, from many cities not being safe because of the constant violence throughout the country to economic disruption and more, more than 164,000 people had died between 2007 and 2014 because of the drug war in mexico more than the iraq and afghanistan war zones combine (Kurzgesagt).
The United States is the world’s number one consumer of narcotics and thus 90% of cocaine seized in the U.S. comes from Mexico due to the close geographical boundaries it is easy to smuggle illegal drugs into the U.S. from Mexico. The U.S.’s demand for narcotics and other drugs creates an 18-39 billion dollar market each year, all coming solely from drug sales. Drug violence is a direct result of protecting each business 's product. Cartels like the Zetas use violence to create a “brand” for their franchise. The violent cartels create a sense of fear so no one gets in their way and so others will comply with their wishes and demands.
Mexico’s violence on drugs is constantly ongoing. Its imposes a security threat to the United States and threatens the stability of the Mexican state. Drug trafficking is not the only issue of mutual interest between the United States and Mexico but Mexico is the third most largest and important source of oil which has been dropping since 2005 (New York Times, Hanson, 2008). Violence is a major problem when it comes to its drug cartels. They have tried to double their police force to make sure military forces from involving themselves in the drug movement. Consumers have become very upset at the quality of the drugs they are receiving so that increases the violence. Due to the drug violence increasing so much that kids cannot play in their neighborhood due to fear and intimidation. It’s not a safe environment for their citizens
The cartels affect lives by taking them and living love ones behind. He cartels even take the happiness away from innocent people. And killing people if they choose the. The cartels like to stall and tack brags they would be lada as brag traffickers. They take lives and probably bo not request them.
The Mexican cartels drug war have been an ongoing situation in Mexico’s society for years. The history behind the start of these cartels and how they affect society in Mexico is very important. The most prominent and influential Mexican cartels today are The Jalisco New Generation Cartel, Los Zetas Cartel, and the most powerful and notorious, The Sinaloa Cartel. Led by drug lords who themselves are ruthless and powerful, Cartels are very violent criminal organizations. Mexican cartels known for being some of the worst criminal organizations also do good things for society. Obviously doing them for the advantage for themselves there’s no reason for multiple sides in history.
“Since former president Felipe Calderon launched an all-out war against the cartels in 2006, about 80,000 people have been killed,” (Dana). From 2007 to 2014 the crime affairs in Mexico have claimed more lives all together than the war that has been taking place in the Middle East with Iraq and Afghanistan. Not only has the number of casualties include cartel members themselves but also those numbers include young children, men and women of a variety of ages. More than 164,000 Mexicans have disappeared or been killed in the conflict, and the extreme and chronic violence, coupled with great poverty “Mother Jones”. As for the numbers keep growing, and as the years add up this The continuous war on drugs that has been going on for an extended amount of time may have some valuable lessons for the Middle East (Dana). In the years since the Calderóns administration, Mexico has undoubtedly seen a decrease in the number of gangland executions (the eerie way “progress” is measured in a country immersed in a drug-fueled Civil War). There are a couple of revealing situations that indicate an increase in the advancement of these cartels not only getting more violent but as well as gaining more territory. Such incidents include executions in non-metropolitan areas that have remained
Mexico’s lack of clear leadership and political corruption may have helped establish and strengthen the drug cartels, and done little to effectively carry out the drug war against the kingpins in Mexico. As a result, there is a growing culture spreading throughout Mexico known as the Narco-Culture. A recent documentary on the narco-trafficking community in Mexico shed light on a new trend that is hardly contained inside of Mexico, and is over-spilling outside of the Mexican border and into the United States. They are calling it the American dream 2.0. This paper will argue that it requires more than on-theory democracy to defeat the drug cartels, and it will spark some insight into the impact that the government and drug-cartels had in the Mexican society.
In Juarez, Mexico, there is no law; the drug cartels hold all the power, and they use it to control every facet of society, not only to extort the citizens, but also to impose their will, which they achieve with brutal public savagery. In the mid-to-late 1900s, areas like Juarez were rare, but now, cities like it are on the rise and something must be done. To provide some context, 2006, the year of Felipe Calderon’s election, marked the beginning of Mexico’s ineffectual war on drugs (Buchenau). Since then, almost nothing has changed, and cartels still enjoy shocking impunity, resulting from their deep penetration of Mexican society. The Mexican drug war has affected Mexico’s poor and middle-class severely, causing them to live in constant fear of cartels more powerful than the Mexican government itself, and making violence, extortion, and kidnapping commonplace. These problems have the potential to spill over into the southern United States, which acts as a pathway for drug smugglers to transport their products to satiate America’s enormous drug demand. To combat this, Mexico and the United States, usually acting in spite of the other, have tried to reform the justice system and end the drug violence, but, up to this point, their efforts have been largely ineffective: some progress has been made, but not enough to really disrupt the cartels and return
But recent investigations have revealed new numbers, between 2007 and 2014, more than 164,000 Mexicans were victims of homicide and “some counts have blamed the drug war for as much as 55 percent of all homicides. Others have put the estimate as low as 34 percent” (Breslow, 2015). Drug-related crimes are hard to accredit to drug-related crimes because of its nature. Even before 2006, crimes were hardly related to drug activities and criminal organizations, it was after 2006 when, because of the raise of violence and the social media coverage of the acts violence within cartels, authorities start noticing and recognizing such crimes as drug related. Mexico as a country has had a violent past, and the violence has not stopped. The roots of the ongoing conflict between the Mexican government and the drug cartels can be traced back within Mexico’s own culture and
What if I told you the drug cartel violence in Mexico is still one of the largest drug distributions in the world. The drug cartel violences taking place in Mexico have been going on for many years now and nobody has really tried to put a stop to it. Although Mexican drug cartels have existed for several decades, their influences have increased. Mexican drug cartels now dominate the wholesale illegal drug market. Arrests of key cartel leaders have led to increasing drug violence as cartels fight for control of the trafficking routes to take over in the United States. The Mexican cartel violence has become a dangerous reality in our lives and needs to be put to a stop.
Crime in Mexico is one of the most urgent and serious concerns facing Mexico today. Crime statistics in Mexico show that even over the years, the crime rate has decreased. Over the last 100 years or more there has still been a huge upswing in drug related crimes, especially within the last few decades (Tuckman). Crimes as of today are not all reported, so the rates may be higher than statistics indicate. The government is not able to catch all of these drug and violent crimes going on throughout the country. The vast majority of these crimes are due to assault and theft. Mexico is known as the “gateway” for illicit goods and all things illegal; many criminals take that to the extreme advantage. Many
The Mexican Drug war has been an ongoing conflict for several decades. Mexico is in an ideal location in a geographical sense because of its place in between the United States and Latin America. The cartels are able to smuggle large amounts of dangerous drugs across the borders, in turn generating large amounts of money. These acts of smuggling almost always produce large amounts of violence and bribery. It is important to look at this conflict not just for what it is right now in the present day, but also at the conflict’s core.
The drug cartels in Mexico have branded themselves as businesses instead of just crime organizations. They participate in transcontinental and global drug trades in a professional manner. They also advertise to current army members that the conditions under the cartels outmatches those provided by the government. The hire these soldiers as well as militias in order to secure the lands they have influence over. Often misconceived, the drug related violence that is associated with the cartels is in defense of the trade routes through mexico with which their drugs from the Central America to the Unites States. The different cartels fight over territories used for their transportation, and that is the cause of the huge number of deaths associated
The government has made some gains, but at a heavy price. A total of 34,612 people have died in drug-related killings in Mexico in the first four years (Siddique). Most of these killing are between cartel rivals fighting for the control of territories. There are five cartels operating in Mexico: the Sinaloa, the Gulf, Juarez, Tijuana, the Zetas. The major cartels are the Gulf, Sinaloa and Juarez (Cook 21). Many of these cartels have joined together forming powerful alliances known as the “Federation” (Cook 17). The cartels work together, but they remain independent organizations.