America’s Famous Drug & Immigration Problems: Creating Crises, Blaming Others, and Cashing In
America’s Famous Drug &
Immigration Problems: Creating Crises, Blaming Others, and Cashing In
The Manufactured U.S. Drug War:
Profiting While Destroying South American Economies
If there’s one thing that the U.S. excels at, it’s
manufacturing crises out of thin air and then pointing fingers at anyone but
itself, no matter which party governs America. The so-called “Drug and
Immigration problems” are textbook examples—one helping to create the other—all
to enrich large corporations while targeting minorities and the helpless. Those
who have been left homeless, starved, and forced to flee their countries
through no fault of their own are ridiculed as “illegals.” The beast in the jungle
has taken everything from them, including their dignity, forcing them to live
far from their homes, only to be demonized. Ironically, many of these people
worship the same God as the beast that preys upon them.
For decades, white upper-middle-class Americans—especially
those who religiously vote Republican—have perfected the art of deflecting
responsibility. When it comes to the destabilization of South American nations,
they seem blissfully unaware that their beloved Wall Street overlords and
interventionist policies have helped reduce entire economies to rubble. The
logic is flawless: first, break an entire region through exploitative policies
and militarized interference; then, act absolutely bewildered when people from
these nations seek a better life elsewhere.
Take the infamous “illegal drug problem” that America has
been fighting for decades. According to the grand American narrative, drugs
flow northward from South America into the U.S., corrupting innocent citizens
and leading to tragic overdoses. But hold on—whose problem is it really? Should
South American nations be held responsible for teaching Americans not to use
illegal substances? Or should the U.S. perhaps look inward and consider that
education, law enforcement, and healthcare could be more effective solutions?
But no, introspection is simply too exhausting.
The U.S. government, with its unimpeachable moral compass,
took it upon itself to intervene in South America under the pretense of
eliminating the drug trade. Enter Reagan, who, in a dazzling display of
hypocrisy, traded weapons with Iran while meddling in Nicaragua and Panama,
setting the stage for decades of chaos. Of course, no South American nation
attempted to march into Washington to arrest U.S. officials for these actions.
That would be absurd. The rules, after all, are different when you wear the American
flag.
Fast forward, and now we find out that the U.S. wasn’t just
fighting drug cartels—it was making business deals. Turns out, the so-called
war on drugs was more of a joint venture. The pharmaceutical industry was eager
to get in on the action, and before long, legally manufactured opioids were
killing hundreds of thousands of Americans. And yet, curiously, no one seemed
to be held accountable. Not the drug companies. Not the government. Not Wall
Street, which has a well-documented appetite for illicit substances. Instead,
the blame fell on desperate South American migrants, who, after years of
U.S.-induced instability, were left with no choice but to seek refuge
elsewhere.
These once-peaceful nations, turned into hotbeds of crime,
have become unlivable due to violence fueled by illegal arms sales and
selective drug enforcement policies. And, shockingly, many of these weapons
originate from—you guessed it—America. But please, let’s continue pretending
that South Americans should just “fix their own countries.”
Meanwhile, multinational corporations are happily buying up
the best real estate in these regions, displacing locals and turning entire
economies into playgrounds for the ultra-rich. The people affected by this
pillaging? They’re left with few options other than to migrate. But, of course,
rather than addressing the economic devastation the U.S. has contributed to,
it’s easier to stoke fear about an “immigrant invasion.”
If South American nations ever decided to file a class-action
lawsuit against the U.S. for the economic and social devastation wrought by
American intervention, there’s no doubt they’d have mountains of evidence. But
good luck winning against the world’s largest exporter of chaos, where
corporate profits always come before accountability.
And will anything change? Unlikely. The corruption that fuels
these cycles of exploitation isn’t confined to U.S. borders. The leadership in
these South American nations, much like their American counterparts, is just as
complicit. So the cycle continues, with the same players, the same tired
excuses, and the same manufactured outrage.
The immigration problem? Oh, it was never really a problem.
Just another convenient distraction from the real culprits who keep cashing in
while pretending their hands are clean.
Making money for these U.S. corporations does not stop there.
Now, many TV series are made about these drug wars, where we can clearly see
the failures of U.S. policies and the U.S. corporations once again milking
billions from these stories. And I am quite sure none of this money will go to
the people who have been hurt by these policies and continue to suffer from
U.S. actions. I wish there were laws that would force all those responsible for
these crimes and profited to be held liable so that these people could be given
the justice they deserve.
This article lays bare the hypocrisy of U.S. policies that manufacture crises for profit while shifting the blame elsewhere. From the so-called war on drugs to the vilification of migrants, the pattern is clear—corporations and political elites reap the rewards while the most vulnerable suffer. Until accountability takes precedence over profit, the cycle will continu
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