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Traffic : The Post Modern Civil War

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Kevin Holcomb
Pepe Zerda
PSC 201-B01
22 September 2014
Traffic: The Post-Modern Civil War
Traffic is a film written by Simon Moore and Stephen Gaghan, directed by Steven Soderbergh, and released in 2000 by USA Films. The movie tells three different stories. The first story is of two Mexican police officers, which become entangled in the Mexican cartel war, during a drug bust of one of the cartels. The second story in the movie is about a conservative federal judge in Ohio who has been appointed by the President to the position of director of the Office of National Drug Policy, or the United States Drug Czar. The judge’s daughter is slipping into drug addiction during his turnover process. The third story is about two Drug Enforcement Agents that bust a dealer in the United States that is working as the main distributor for one of the Mexican cartels involved in the first subplot of the movie. All three plots emphasize control and follow through with a conclusion of not having control at all. In comparison, the United States government maintains an appearance of having control of the War on Drugs, but when examining the statistics on the War on Drugs and adding to that, the fact that it continues with people still using illegal substances, it becomes apparent that there is no control over the drug problem in the United States. The movie also depicts, as part of the war on drugs, the American criminal justice system, the political appointments to oversee the issues at

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