Arathain Kelvar wrote:
Not getting your point. The fact that people grow it here surely reduces prices already. You don't think it does?
You cannot assume that further reduction in price would make importing cost-ineffective, especially since legalization would allow for greater volume.
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It is my understanding that these haciendas are not solitary structures in remote areas. They are complexes with several families. This includes children.
That probably varies from hacienda to hacienda but in any case I don't give a ****. If they want to spill their violence over here, then they had best move their families.
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Depends. While I think operations would be temporarily disrupted, chaos within the cartels would increase violence (struggle for new leadership and territory), and could make it more difficult to gain intel on what's going on. Driving it underground would have some benefits, and some costs. I'm not convinced it would reduce attacks on Mexican authorities.
An internicine struggle between the cartels would cause them to expend resources on each other, improving the position of the Mexican government. I also don't see how it would make it more difficult to ascertain what's going on, since chaos and infighting would be easier to spot than the "calm" of business as usual.
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Their entire business is already at least partially underground. If you give them a choice - profitable business underground or no business above ground without getting bombed, then they'll move underground. You'll kill a few bosses, they'll restructure, and you're back at square one.
You're hardly back at square one. So they restructure - that doesn't automatically mean they're as effective as before and they have lost the top people in their organizations. The replacements may not be so talented and may not be so willing to be aggressive. Again, these are not fanatics. In any case, forcing it underground makes it less profitable and therefore easier to get a handle on in the long run.
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And that's a bad idea. Mexican civilians are having enough trouble as it is without having to worry about US collateral damage.
That's A) not my problem and B) not really a problem at all, since I'm not talking about attacking Mexico at large.
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Ok, I agree with this. But... "smashed immediately" is not as easy as you are making it sound. To do what you want to do would require troops. No more of this "playing at war" **** by throwing some bombs around, patting ourselves on the back, and going home.
I don't see that it necessarily would, nor am I talking about "throwing bombs around". These people are used to dealing with the Mexican government which greatly lacks the resources and skills we possess, especially in the area of intelligence gathering and targeting.
Its considerably superior to sending troops in there because we avoid the expense of yet another lengthy ground war. Troops, if employed at all, should be used in conjunction with airstrikes in an in-and-out approach, destroying targets and then leaving swiftly. It's hardly "playing at war"; in fact it's the opposite. "Playing at war" is what's bought us such lengthy conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq and a military designed to fight anything other than a war.