together to take some action, the result will most often be different from what any of them intended before they began interacting a group” (Allison and Philip, 1999, p. 258). On March 2007, George W. Bush made a visit to the Mexican state of Yucatán to meet the recently elected Mexican president Felipe Calderón. Moreover, in this state visit, Calderón made a point about the US’ lack of cooperation in the fight against drugs and “asked the United States to help fight the criminal mafias based in his country
127). At the same time, however, Mexican governors were seeking to use their power for personal enrichment, which meant engaging in the drug trade as it was spiking during World War II (other drug traffic pathways to the United States were blocked by the war). As a result, between the 1930s and 1970s, “state governors, not
Committee Background Committee Background This committee, The Executive Cabinet of Mexico, is appointed by the President of Mexico, Enrique Peña Nieto. There are eighteen secretaries that each oversee various parts that are crucial to the smooth running of this country. There are many routes that can be taken, in regards to the topics for discussion in this committee; however, during the duration of the committee sessions, we will be focusing on drug trade and emigration as our two primary topics
The United States have declared that it is doing its best to combat the war on drugs. The drug problem has not stopped and the people continue to buy drugs no matter what circumstances they are obtained. With drugs prices rising, people are willing do anything to get drugs even if it leads them to become involved in criminal
Mexico’s drugs wars as well as bloody drug cartels are echoed in a controversial folk music genre commonly known as narco corridos or simply as drug ballads. They tell the stories allied to shootouts, drug lords, betrayals including daring criminal operations. Narco corridos are not a new style in Mexican music, in fact, they have been around for years, and they are popular among the old and the young. This genre has evolved to be modern fugitive music that fuses the emotional responses of antique
The war on drugs plunged Mexico into violent depths in 2005, especially along its northern border. Drug-related homicides soared, and former elite soldiers on the payroll of a drug cartel were responsible for numerous kidnappings and killings. Murder victims’ tortured bodies frequently appeared on roadsides in key drug trafficking hubs throughout the country – and scores more victims, including more than 40 U.S. citizens, vanished without a trace. From within maximum security prisons, cartel leaders
Cartel Land, released in 2015 by Matthew Heineman, captures the movement of citizen resistance in response to Mexican drug cartel crime. The documentary’s central figures are a Mexican self-defense group called the Autodefensas and a paramilitary group called the Arizona Border Recon. The film tells a story about the complex morality of the drug war. Heineman’s film argues that war is never-ending because corruption is inescapable, and it illustrates this through graphic imagery and surprising character
The Mexican cartel is a ruthless crime origination. It controls Mexico through bribes and fear. There are many factions of the cartel, and they are at constant war with one another. They war over many reasons from drugs to human trafficking. These battles often spill out into the streets causing the loose of many innocent lives. The cartel has a strangle hold on the Mexican people. The cartels operate much like other organized crime groups. Like the Mafia there are many factions. Each faction
Mexico. In addition to México, Michoacán borders five other municipalities, Colima, Jalisco, Guanajuato, Queretaro, and Guerrero and the Pacific Ocean. Michoacán is acknowledged for being the birthplace of Mexico’s drug war that was created by La Familia Michoacán, a Mexican drug cartel in the 1980’s. In accordance with, “Official data reported by the National Institute of Statistics and
Although the narcotrafficking wars that have plagued Mexico in recent years are truly a combination of a variety of factors coming together, it is my belief that at the heart (and the primary cause) is that they are really just criminal organization fighting over turfs. Cartels are centralized around violence and intimidation rather than being centralized around the idea of an insurgency of sorts. The primary cause behind all this is the search for higher profits no matter what the means of acquisition