April 21, 2009

The film "Drug Wars: The Camarena Story" is a true story about a DEA
agent murdered in Mexico. It shows how high up the corruption goes. It
was made in 1989, four years after Enrique Camarena was killed.
In the film there is a scene where the US President (Reagan) made a
policy decision to focus on discouraging use of drugs in the US rather
than interdiction.

This was more than a political decision. It involved international
economics. Hillary Clinton Secretary of State repeated a similar
policy statement in March 2009

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7963292.stm

before Obama met with Felipe Calderon Mexico's President. Does that
suggest that not much has changed and the corruption is still at high
levels in Mexico? What evidence is there that the same corruption does
not exist this country?

Images came to my mind watching the part when the Mexican Attorney General was protecting the drug cartels misleading the DEA agents who were investigating their colleague's death. I kept thinking about Harvard University administrators and Massachusetts state court judges. That is not to say that Harvard University administrators and Massachusetts state court judges are as corrupt as the Mexican officials in the film, just that their images came to my mind.

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