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Mexico collapsing?

graybyrd ๐Ÿšซ

I've been researching crime, drugs, & cartels in Mexico for a story. Despite hours of cable & internet news awareness, it was shocking and depressing to learn that conditions in Mexico due to rampant, wide-spread crime, corruption, drug cartel violence, and increasing terrorism have that nation on the verge of government and societal collapse. Cable TV news, internet news sites, and US government info releases seem to ignore the Mexican situation. Yet, the DEA reports that the expanding criminal activity there is "the greatest single threat" to the U.S. crime situation. Also, the US State Department now has Mexico mostly under a condition 3 travel advisory, meaning "if you intend to travel there, reconsider!" It's too dangerous. That web url is: https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/traveladvisories/traveladvisories/mexico-travel-advisory.html

Question: does anybody have information or comment? It's not easy to get current information, probably because Mexico is now one of the world's most dangerous places for journalists: the murder rate is very high.

Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@graybyrd

This is my opinion.

The Mexican government needs to treat it as a war, not a police action. They should call up the army and don't make arrests. They should go in shooting and kill as many as they can just as they would an enemy combatant. Basically declare war on the cartels.

But that's my opinion.

Replies:   Dominions Son  Tw0Cr0ws
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

The reason the problem got so bad in the first place is rampant government corruption. What makes you think their army isn't in on the corruption?

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Dominions Son

The reason the problem got so bad in the first place is rampant government corruption. What makes you think their army isn't in on the corruption?

When the Chicago police were so corrupt during Prohibition, the government set up a special group under Eliot Ness (the Untouchables) to take down Capone.

That's oversimplification for the Mexican cartel problem, but the government needs to clean house (at the federal and local levels) at the same time. I never said it would be easy. But hang a corrupt policeman for treason rather than put them in prison for corruption and they might think twice.

I keep thinking about the movie "Mississippi Burning" where the Gene Hackman FBI character didn't follow the rules and got the job done. Drastic measures for a drastic situation.

ETA: Maybe it's because I wrote my Lincoln Steele series where Steele doesn't follow the rules of law to get justice. LOL

Replies:   Dominions Son  Tw0Cr0ws
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

That's oversimplification for the Mexican cartel problem, but the government needs to clean house (at the federal and local levels) at the same time.

I disagree. I think that the Mexican government needs to do a good bit of cleaning up it's own house before they can even get close to making a dent in the drug cartel problem.

Replies:   Remus2
Remus2 ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

I think that the Mexican government needs to do a good bit of cleaning up it's own house before they can even get close to making a dent in the drug cartel problem.

It's too late for that. Whatever comes out the other side of their civil war will not be the Mexican government of before. The former Mexican government has been shattered in all but name.

Replies:   graybyrd
graybyrd ๐Ÿšซ

@Remus2

Whatever comes out the other side of their civil war

Hard to call it a "civil war" when the two sides are grossly unequal. The government, rotten to the core with corruption and political self-interest, seems to have withdrawn into itself while polishing its brass, holding parades, and making speeches. Meanwhile, the wealthy elite have sequestered themselves behind walled barricades and private security forces. The CIA recently said 20% of Mexico was cartel-occupied; the current President, Oberon, merged Army units with elements of the former Federal Police to form a new force, the National Guard. It is having as little success (poor to none) as former efforts. It's not a "civil war," it's more like an inevitable surrender to syndicated crime & terrorism.

Replies:   Dominions Son  Remus2
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@graybyrd

If the cartels win, do they start fighting amongst themselves, or get together form a new government, legalize drugs and go legit?

Replies:   Jim S
Jim S ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

If the cartels win, do they start fighting amongst themselves, or get together form a new government, legalize drugs and go legit?

This is just a guess based on history. If the government collapses completely, i.e. losing to the combined cartels, the situation is analogous, on a much smaller scale, to the dissolution of the Western Roman Empire circa 450-600 A.D.
Which ushered in a complete balkanization of the West and the Dark Ages.

I don't see any advance in social development among the present day actors vis-a-vis the thugs that dismembered Rome. Hence, I'd expect the balkanization to proceed apace.

The only wildcard that I do see is the United States sitting right next door. But then the Eastern Roman Empire was right next door to the West and did nothing. And given the current leadership of the U.S., I hesitate to expect correct action should a breakup occur.

My two centavos.

Replies:   graybyrd  Not_a_ID
graybyrd ๐Ÿšซ

@Jim S

At the risk of sounding hysterical or alarmist, I believe we here in U.S. had damn well better wake up to the danger. We already suffer the polarization of class inequality and economic dysfunction. With no shortage of violent players and given enough money, motivation, agitation, and urban paramilitary police forces losing public trust and support -- the cancer from the south will find fertile ground here and we'll have a bitter fight to contain it.

Replies:   Jim S  Remus2
Jim S ๐Ÿšซ

@graybyrd

That thought has occurred to me more than a few times. In fact, one of my favorite arguments with my son is how many different countries would arise from the U.S. should such a breakup ever occur. My best estimate is five.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Jim S

My best estimate is five.

Mine would be 4-6.

East Coast.
West Coast, except for Alaska.
Almost everything between the Appalachians and the Rockies.
Hawaii goes for independence due to distance.

The two big unknowns are Alaska and Texas.

Alaska won't join the rest of the West coast states, but do they go for independence, or join Canada?

Does Texas go for independence or join the rest of the middle.

Replies:   Jim S  graybyrd
Jim S ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

I figured East Coast, West Coast, the South, Texas by itself and the rest of the country. Hawaii never entered my thought process. They might end up aligned with China but, then, Japan fought a war over the Pacific with us last century so that's anyone's guess. I think Alaska would hang with the rest of the country.

Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Jim S

I think Alaska would hang with the rest of the country.

I don't see any advantage to Alaska in sticking with the upper mid-west. In your division, the only access for goods between AK and the upper mid west is either through Canada or across the north west passage and back in through the Saint Lawrence Seaway.

The AK population may be too low for independence to work well, which is why joining Canada whom they share a land border with might be attractive.

Question, with your split do Florida and Georgia go to the East Coast or the South?

Replies:   Jim S
Jim S ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Dominions Son

I don't see any advantage to Alaska in sticking with the upper mid-west.

Oil, once the pipeline that Biden shitcanned got built.

Florida and Georgia stay in the South. As does Virginia, but that might mean another split ala West Virginia leaving during the Civil War. Quite possibly the same could happen in Pennsylvania with the western portion going with the rest of the country.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Jim S

Oil, once the pipeline that Biden shitcanned got built.

The gulf coast states have most of the refining and shipping capacity. I don't see that as a driver for Alaska joining the Upper Mid-West in a US breakup.

Replies:   graybyrd
graybyrd ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Dominions Son

Alaska's economic strengths, based on their resources, align closely with British Columbia, and Historically they would align with western WA (Seattle) as their market connection. And Seattle is very akin socially & politically with Vancouver, BC. So a very good case could be made for a coastal alliance of WWA, BC, and AK allied as a unit.

Replies:   Dominions Son  Not_a_ID
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@graybyrd

. So a very good case could be made for a coastal alliance of WWA, BC, and AK allied as a unit.

True But that presupposes a simultaneous collapse of both the US and Canada.

If the US collapses and Canada does not, that supports Alaska joining Canada.

Not_a_ID ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@graybyrd

Alaska's economic strengths, based on their resources, align closely with British Columbia, and Historically they would align with western WA (Seattle) as their market connection. And Seattle is very akin socially & politically with Vancouver, BC. So a very good case could be made for a coastal alliance of WWA, BC, and AK allied as a unit.

You clearly haven't been paying attention to Canadian politics regarding Alberta and their efforts to build a pipeline in BC to export oil to the west. Or the fights they've had with Ontario and Quebec over building a pipeline to export to the east.

Coastal BC(where most of the population is) is solidly "team green." And if Canada gets pulled apart in the process you likely end up with most of California, the portions of Washington and Oregon west of the Cascades, and Victoria Island/Vancouver BC areas becoming a Pacific Coastal nation. The more rural northern portions of CA, and the eastern portions of Oregon, Washington, and the rural portions of BC, AB, Yukon, NW Territories, SK, and MB likely end up joining up with the Upper Midwest of the US.

Ontario also has a decent chance of breaking apart along an urban/rural split as well. Quebec would do its own thing, and the eastern English speaking provinces of Canada are on their own... Probably joining up with New England and the "East coast" faction.

Grey Wolf ๐Ÿšซ

@Jim S

I'd be surprised if Texas held together in that sort of situation and, if it did, if it would simply be 'Texas'. State pride aside (and, of course, there's a lot of that), El Paso would be far more likely to make common cause with populated New Mexico than not, simply based on geography. If El Paso stayed in Texas, it would make sense to pull in at least parts of New Mexico.

Same thing on the other borders. There are reasons parts of southern Oklahoma, western Arkansas, and western Louisiana might attach themselves to Texas, if it was setting up as a nation.

An independent Texas that made common cause with New Mexico would contain both Los Alamos and the Pantex plant, making it a nuclear-capable nation in both design and manufacture.

StarFleet Carl ๐Ÿšซ

@Jim S

I figured East Coast, West Coast, the South, Texas by itself and the rest of the country. Hawaii never entered my thought process. They might end up aligned with China but, then, Japan fought a war over the Pacific with us last century so that's anyone's guess. I think Alaska would hang with the rest of the country.

East Coast from Virginia north, following the mountains, but that follows along the Great Lakes I-29 south to 94, down to I-80, so MN, WI, IL, IN, and OH split in half . West Coast, with the Rockies splitting Oregon and Washington in half, everyone on the east side joining the Central nation. Hawaii joins the West Coast unless they go independent. Alaska either joins BC or with the pipeline being completed now, the Central. Entire rest of the country is one nation, with certain enclaves (Austin, Denver, Tulsa). Utah conceivably could say screw you all, and become Deseret again.

Replies:   mauidreamer
mauidreamer ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@StarFleet Carl

West Coast, with the Rockies splitting Oregon and Washington in half

minor nit - Cascades not Rockies .. and area 'tween them more likely to join Deseret than Central ..

Replies:   Ernest Bywater
Ernest Bywater ๐Ÿšซ

@mauidreamer

minor nit - Cascades

if the fault under the Cascadians ever lets go the problem is solved as what's west of there will sink into the Pacific.

Replies:   mauidreamer  graybyrd
mauidreamer ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Ernest Bywater

will sink into the Pacific.

The fault line is not under the Cascades, it is offshore to the west a couple hundred miles where the Juan de Fuca plate is being subducted under the North American plate, with the Cascades being formed by the volcanism from the melting of the JdF plate. So, if anything, the Oregon/Washington coast will be rising rather than sinking into the Pacific.

Replies:   Ernest Bywater
Ernest Bywater ๐Ÿšซ

@mauidreamer

I was talking about the fault itself, not just the Fault Line which is where the fault is closest to the surface. One end of the over lap is the fault line and the end of the over lap is where the Cascade Mountains are.

From the video on it I saw the other day I was left with the impression that US west coast along that fault line is having the western lifted up. Think of it like having you hand on a table, you hold the palm still but bring the fingers back toward the palm so they bend up, thus the knuckles are lifted up, then when the fault next lets goes it will be like you then straighten your fingers out. Thus the coast is the top of the knuckles when they're raised due to the fingers being bent under and the very top of the knuckles is just above the water line, so when it's released and the fingers straighten out the land springs back like the fingers straightening out and thus it goes below the water. Then the process starts all over again.

Replies:   mauidreamer  Not_a_ID
mauidreamer ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Ernest Bywater

First, "US west coast" is deceptive - the PAC NW faults are very different from the CAL faults.

Second, I'm not sure what video you saw, but I suspect it was referring to the San Andreas fault in CAL. It gets a lot of attention and is probably the best-known fault in the world. It's a transverse fault between the No. American and the Pacific plates, and supposedly will dump the "granola" part of CA into the Pacific Ocean when (not if) the next "big one" hits.

That is not expected to happen further north.

Not_a_ID ๐Ÿšซ

@Ernest Bywater

From the video on it I saw the other day I was left with the impression that US west coast along that fault line is having the western lifted up. Think of it like having you hand on a table, you hold the palm still but bring the fingers back toward the palm so they bend up, thus the knuckles are lifted up, then when the fault next lets goes it will be like you then straighten your fingers out. Thus the coast is the top of the knuckles when they're raised due to the fingers being bent under and the very top of the knuckles is just above the water line, so when it's released and the fingers straighten out the land springs back like the fingers straightening out and thus it goes below the water. Then the process starts all over again.

A "big rip" is due in the northwest, and it will be a zinger when it happens. It'll make the Japan Earthquake and Tsunami from 2011 look like a cakewalk by comparison. Although Seattle and Tacoma should be "reasonably" sheltered from the Tsunami itself. The earthquake itself is another matter.

As to the subsidence that would likely result. Evidence indicates it would probably be close to what was witnessed with 2011 earthquake in Japan. The shoreline along most of the subduction zone would likely see a couple feet worth of subsidence at most. That isn't going to put Portland or Seattle under water permanently. That Seattle is built mostly on large hills further protects it on that front.

The Tsunami the quake creates might give them a run for their money though.

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Not_a_ID

As to the subsidence that would likely result. Evidence indicates it would probably be close to what was witnessed with 2011 earthquake in Japan. The shoreline along most of the subduction zone would likely see a couple feet worth of subsidence at most. That isn't going to put Portland or Seattle under water permanently. That Seattle is built mostly on large hills further protects it on that front.

That will all depend on where the epicenter is, and the ground conditions in the local areas.

As for Seattle, yes. It is mostly built on fill, which we know will sink. Even in the dry San Fernando Valley, buildings sank inches and in some cases a foot or more into the ground because of liquefaction. Even as the ground around them rose.

And the same thing happened in Anchorage in 1964. Some areas saw the ground wise by 10 meters. Others, the land sank. In general, in a thrust fault the ground on average always rises. But soil conditions locally can have the reverse as cohesion breaks down during the event.

Then there is tsunami, which can also wipe out a lot of land through extreme tidal action.

Replies:   Not_a_ID
Not_a_ID ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

In the case of "the big rip" off the Pacific Northwest, you're basically looking at a near exact repeat of the 2011 Japan earthquake.

It would be an earthquake triggered along a fault line that is part of a inter-plate subduction zone, involving part or nearly all of the subduction zone beginning not far north of he California/Oregon Border and extending into Canada. Running for several hundred miles north-south.

We're not talking about one of the "lesser" fault systems running throughout the region of the Pacific Northwest.

We're talking about the one that feeds the volcanic systems of the Pacific Cascade Range courtesy of melting down the oceanic crust and the magma that seeps up to the surface ass a result of that process.

Evidently as a subduction zone builds up pressure prior to it's "release" is acts kind of like a jack on the nearby plate, slightly compressing and lifting it.

When that subduction zone lets go, as happened in Japan in 2011, and as is evidenced in the soil records here in the US. The Continently plate will move slightly to the west(relieving the compression), and also sink a bit lower until the next round of mounting pressure "ratchets" the land level back up again for the next round several centuries later.

Many parts of Coastal Oregon and Washington are likely to loose at least a couple feet in elevation when their "big one" hits. The evidence is there from prior events, and the process is becoming better understood as time progresses.

Replies:   graybyrd
graybyrd ๐Ÿšซ

@Not_a_ID

There's an excellent book called The Big Rip that came out a few years ago, explaining the situation. "Not_a_ID" describes it well. The book is NOT for anyone faint of heart who lives here in the region. As for me & my partner, growing old together, we live on an island in the middle of the impact zone. We expect to be isolated for several months should the event occur, and we've planned accordingly. (Our island is solid rock, and we reside at sufficient elevation on the lee side so tsunami impact is not relevant. But the bridge and ferry service will not survive, so we'll be relying on stockpiled resources.)

It really ain't funny, nor inconsequential. It's a fact that many will die; more will suffer. It's only a question of 'when,' and nobody can predict that.

So life goes on. And we waste resources recounting votes (again) in Arizona. Isn't the definition of insanity the engagement of the same actions over and over, expecting a different result?

Replies:   rustyken
rustyken ๐Ÿšซ

@graybyrd

dotB wrote a story that used an earthquake in that area as a key element. If I remember correctly the title was "Aftershock".

graybyrd ๐Ÿšซ

@Ernest Bywater

No, we won't sink into the Pacific. I live here (on a big island) so I've got a vested interest in researching the reports & predictions, including a couple of very good books.

Basically the distant offshore fault complex is a junction of several plates, one of them rather small but active. Also there is a whole subsystem of faults on the mainland, some of which have caused significant damage in the Seattle area. But...

The "big one" is expected to occur, not "if" but when, and when it does it will be the offshore fault that slips. It was a Japanese account of a 'mystery tsunami' that led to the discovery of onshore traces of a huge quake & tsunami here on the PacNW coast.

When it occurs, nobody wants to be here. We will NOT sink, but the aftermath will be terribly grim. Much of our urban development (such as petroleum tank farms) has been on landfill on Puget Sound and Elliot Bay's edge, for example. This will liquefy and be destroyed.

Many buildings are not up to earthquake code; or are insufficient to withstand a Richter 9 quake. Our main transportation corridor is Interstate 5, linking our major coastal cities. It will be destroyed at every overpass that collapses. In recent history we had a minor bridge knocked down by an over-height truck and it tied international freight traffic up in knots for several weeks while state crews frantically worked to raise and repair the bridge section. There was no practical bypass except for rural residential lanes not built to handle the load.

All of our services come down through mountain passes, along with all major highways to the east. These will be destroyed.

Airfields and ferry terminals will be severely damaged, preventing fixed wing aircraft from landing or ferry links to function.

Water and sewer arteries will be broken, out of service. Power will be down, with major transmission lines knocked down.

FEMA has warned Bend, OR to expect a huge number of quake refugees straggling in weeks after the event, as an example.

In short, we live on a very narrow band of coastal lowlands, with the high Cascades at our back with vulnerable passes carrying major resource links. And we depend on a narrow ribbon of interstate freeway and rail corridors that cross countless bridges across all the streams flowing down out of the mountains. Much of the coastal area is low, subject to tsunami destruction.

Economics dictated that when the I-5 freeway was built, there were NO practical alternative routes. Everything funnels onto the freeway. When it's broken, most everything grinds to a slow trickle.

Not a pretty picture. As I said, nobody will want to be here when it happens.

Ernest Bywater ๐Ÿšซ

@graybyrd

Not a pretty picture. As I said, nobody will want to be here when it happens.

From the picture you paint of how it is right now I have to wonder why anyone would want to be there right now.

What's for sure is when it goes it's mega destruction time along west of the Cascade Mountains.

Replies:   mauidreamer  graybyrd
mauidreamer ๐Ÿšซ

@Ernest Bywater

Well, lots of free and very rich farmlands 'tween the coastal range and the Cascades. Plus the last big quake was over 300 years ago ...

graybyrd ๐Ÿšซ

@Ernest Bywater

Ernest, you are forgetting the universal human mindset concerning things that could happen: "Not Me!"

mauidreamer ๐Ÿšซ

@graybyrd

FEMA has warned Bend, OR ....

I predict shortly after the shake that avalanches/rock slides, etc., will close off 26, 20, 58, 138 and possibly 62 ....

Also, there's a lower Coastal Range and wide Willamette Valley between the narrow coastal lowlands and high Cascades ...

Replies:   Radagast  Tw0Cr0ws  Not_a_ID
Radagast ๐Ÿšซ

@mauidreamer

Bremerton could cause some interesting problems in a tsunami. Home port for 8 boomers, 5 other nuclear submarines, one nuclear aircraft carrier and the arsenal / weapons facility for same.

Replies:   mauidreamer
mauidreamer ๐Ÿšซ

@Radagast

While I once saw some interesting modelling of Tsunami effects on the San Juan Islands north of Whidbey, at the end of the Strait of Juan de Fuca, Bremerton is much further "upstream" and would be pretty well protected by Bainbridge Island from whatever tsunami effects that would reach mid-Puget Sound.

I'd guess the Navy may have had some modeling done but they'd probably be classified. My guess would be no more than a couple of feet.

Tw0Cr0ws ๐Ÿšซ

@mauidreamer

I predict shortly after the shake that avalanches/rock slides, etc., will close off 26, 20, 58, 138 and possibly 62 ....

Like that saying 'Any problem can be solved with a sufficient application of high explosives'.

Not_a_ID ๐Ÿšซ

@mauidreamer

I predict shortly after the shake that avalanches/rock slides, etc., will close off 26, 20, 58, 138 and possibly 62 ....

Interstates 84 and 90 are also likely losses due to landslides. Less so with I90 to my knowledge, but I wouldn't count on it.

There is growing evidence however that the "Bridge of the Gods" that the local tribes talked about existing for a time on the Columbia River about 20-ish miles east of Portland was the result of a landslide that likely coincided with the last "big rip" about 500 years ago.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bridge_of_the_Gods_(land_bridge)

richardshagrin ๐Ÿšซ

@graybyrd

offshore fault that slips

This is a potential problem for the entire Pacific Rim in North and South America and Asia as well, and most islands in the Pacific Ocean.
"Most tsunamis, about 80 percent, happen
within the Pacific Ocean's "Ring of Fire," a
geologically active area where tectonic
shifts make volcanoes and earthquakes common."

graybyrd ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

Jumping in here: remember that the Cascade Mountain range on the west coast is not only a physical barrier but a political barrier. It's commonly recognized that the western side of WA and OR would join as a liberal urban-interest state, and the eastern side of WA and OR would join forces as a conservative rural-centric state. They already vote in that fashion; it's only the state boundaries that hold them apart.

As for California, it's a crap shoot. Mostly its north vs. south, that is, north/south of Sacramento. As for anything & everything east of the Sierra Nevada, there's too little population to count. They'll have to join forces with the great interior basin of eastern WA and OR, Idaho, Nevada, Utah, and so on until you reach the Mississippi River.

As for Arizona, they'll declare war on Mexico, will lose, and will become continental headquarters for the Greater North American crime syndicate.

Just supposin' ... but my knowledge of the west coast is pretty solid.

Remus2 ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@graybyrd

the cancer from the south will find fertile ground here and we'll have a bitter fight to contain it.

It already has. However, I'd like to point out that it's not the general population south of the border at fault. The friends I have in Mexico, C.Am, and S.Am, are all good people. The cancer you speak of takes the forms of corruption, lawlessness, and greed. The bad elements at most, make up 5-6% of their populations.

Unfortunately, any time a group in the minority starts to perpetrate violence to get what they want, the good people first try to placate them to stop the violence. That has never worked in written history.

What has worked is forcibly subduing them first, then addressing their concerns. Even then it's not guaranteed. The viability of that plan depends on the value placed on human life by those bad elements. Therein is the problem. Where human life has no value, there can be no expectations for logical solutions.

Not_a_ID ๐Ÿšซ

@Jim S

The only wildcard that I do see is the United States sitting right next door. But then the Eastern Roman Empire was right next door to the West and did nothing. And given the current leadership of the U.S., I hesitate to expect correct action should a breakup occur.

The other option here is the US cleans up its own house and switches to saner approach to the war on drugs. Mostly by legalizing a lot of it.

The cartels are only a problem in Mexico because the illegal drug habits of Americans are funding them.

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Not_a_ID

Mostly by legalizing a lot of it.

The cartels are only a problem in Mexico because the illegal drug habits of Americans are funding them.

Already done in a lot of states, like California, Oregon, and Colorado. Which has only fueled even more smuggling from Mexico and increased the death tolls.

That is a false connection, and always has been. Alcohol has been legal for almost a century, yet bootlegging is still big business. A big chunk of the money the Russian Mafia makes comes from cigarette sales, and those are certainly legal.

Hell, if anything I bet all the organizations that make money off of cigarette sales are now cheering. The new ban going into effect will only make them even more money.

Replies:   Remus2
Remus2 ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

As long as severs taxes exist on those items, there also exist a potential profit margin by organized crime or other criminal elements to make money from illegal sales. Make it legal minus those taxes and that changes.

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Remus2

As long as severs taxes exist on those items, there also exist a potential profit margin by organized crime or other criminal elements to make money from illegal sales. Make it legal minus those taxes and that changes.

Right. Do you expect governments to eliminate taxes?

And they do not even need to be "excessive". Just pennies on the dollar is enough to drive people to obtain products through illegal means. And at this time, you only have local and state taxes. Imagine where it was legalized nationwide, and say the BATF got involved.

You are talking fantasy, not reality.

Replies:   Dominions Son  Remus2
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

Just pennies on the dollar is enough to drive people to obtain products through illegal means.

Name one legal product for which aggregate sales/stamp taxes are under 10% of final retail price and for which a significant black market exists.

Replies:   palamedes
palamedes ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

Name one legal product for which aggregate sales/stamp taxes are under 10% of final retail price and for which a significant black market exists.

Here is 4 go ahead and pick 1

Movies / Video Games / Music / and the SOL favorite BOOKS

Replies:   Dominions Son  Mushroom
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@palamedes

Movies / Video Games / Music / and the SOL favorite BOOKS

Someone selling pirated books on Amazon is not a black market.

Nor is selling cheaply made counterfeit copies of expensive physical products through normal retail channels a black market.

File sharing (which is largely done at no cost to down loaders) is also not a black market.

Replies:   palamedes
palamedes ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

black market

Maybe you need to look up what black market is then.

black market -

Any system in which goods or currencies are sold and bought illegally, esp in violation of controls or rationing.

--------------------------------

Selling on Amazon is just a way for the person to market their goods and in no way any different then them selling it on the street, newspaper ads, or the back room of a business.

As to your comment about file sharing all I can do is shake my head as your statement alone if proof that you find it in no way illegal or a black market enterprise because you don't take money out of your own pocket. Do you really think that you could download that file for free if the place you where downloading it from wasn't making money ?

Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@palamedes

As to your comment about file sharing all I can do is shake my head as your statement alone if proof that you find it in no way illegal or a black market enterprise

No, it's definitely illegal, it's just not a market of any kind. A market requires an exchange of value. The vast majority of the downloaders aren't making any kind of contribution.

Do you really think that you could download that file for free if the place you where downloading it from wasn't making money ?

Again, I don't get involved in that sort of thing.

That said, yes, I think it would be happening even with no one making any money.

Most of it these days is happening on peer to peer networks, no big central system that someone has to pay for and that the authorities can shut down.

For most of the people driving it, it's a labor of love. They have a moral/ideological objection to the notion of copyright.

Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@palamedes

Maybe you need to look up what black market is then.

I don't accept your definition of black market, it's an oversimplifcation.

Here's another one.

https://www.investopedia.com/terms/b/blackmarket.asp

What Is a Black Market?

A black market is an economic activity that takes place outside government-sanctioned channels. Black market transactions usually occur "under the table" to let participants avoid government price controls or taxes. The goods and services offered in a black market can be illegal, meaning their purchase and sale are prohibited by law, or they can be legal but transacted to avoid taxes.

Amazon.com is not outside government sanctioned channels.

Replies:   palamedes
palamedes ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

Maybe my definition is an over simplification it still says the same thing as your definition

Amazon.com is not outside government sanctioned channels.

Amazon has so far been able to skirt liability for this crime by claiming they are merely a venue for the sale of such products, as opposed to being the actual seller. While copyright and trademark laws are clearly being broken en masse on the Amazon platform โ€” which has been shown ad nauseam by media sources, research firms, and even Amazon's own legal litigations โ€” the company won a landmark lawsuit in 2015 which removed them from responsibility for what third party merchants sell via their platform.

The founders of Milo & Gabby initially thought that a lawsuit against Amazon would be a slam dunk: counterfeits of their trademarked products were clearly being advertised and sold on Amazon, the e-commerce giant was taking a commission from each sale, storing the illegal items in their warehouses, and distributing them via their Fulfillment by Amazon program. In a country that is packed with laws to prevent things like this from happening, how could they lose?

However, they were very, very mistaken. After a legal battle that dragged on for two years, a nine-member jury decided in favor of Amazon on all counts, ruling that "the company was not behind the counterfeit content listed on its site, and had technically not made an 'offer to sell' โ€” the legal requirement to hold Amazon liable for the counterfeit goods."

Amazon took this ruling and ran with it โ€” instantly being removed from legal liability for over 50% of what you see on their site, from bearing responsibility for hundreds of millions of products being sold. So IP-infringing, hazardous, or otherwise illegal goods can be sold on Amazon by third party merchants, stored and shipped by Amazon, with complete impunity for the company -- and if these items are being sold across international borders, this protection extends to the seller as well.

Replies:   Remus2  Keet
Remus2 ๐Ÿšซ

@palamedes

I've yet to figure out how they got around some of the international import export rules...

Replies:   palamedes
palamedes ๐Ÿšซ

@Remus2

My guess is that they print Amazon on the box and that gets them the free pass.

Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@palamedes

Amazon took this ruling and ran with it โ€” instantly being removed from legal liability for over 50% of what you see on their site, from bearing responsibility for hundreds of millions of products being sold.

Personally I consider Amazon a criminal organization and refuse to buy anything from there, or even go to the site.

richardshagrin ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

Amazon

"Is the Amazon river healthy?
Pollution is a real threat to the Amazon. ... There have been cases of cancer and death as a result of drinking the polluted water. Animal species are becoming extinct because they live in delicate balance with the environment." There are other threats when you use the Amazon. Dangerous animals, insects and chemicals. Its water are brown for a reason. It drains a very large region. It is likely full of feces.

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

Personally I consider Amazon a criminal organization and refuse to buy anything from there, or even go to the site.

I regard it more as a pre-criminal organisation, indulging in unethical business practices that will eventually be banned or properly taxed.

AJ

Replies:   Keet
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

I regard it more as a pre-criminal organisation, indulging in unethical business practices that will eventually be banned or properly taxed.

They have passed that stage long ago. There are several examples, even some mentioned here in the forum concerning copyrights.

palamedes ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

Personally I consider Amazon a criminal organization and refuse to buy anything from there, or even go to the site.

Agree

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@palamedes

Here is 4 go ahead and pick 1

Movies / Video Games / Music / and the SOL favorite BOOKS

Easily. In fact, some states like Oregon have no sales tax. Which has prompted states like California to go after people for tax evasion by buying big ticket items in Oregon. Under California law, when you file your state taxes you are supposed to disclose any large purchases you made out of the state, and pay the appropriate taxes.

When physical media was still a thing, there was a thriving industry in California for bootleg movies, CDs, and almost everything else from power tools to electronics. I knew more than one computer store that would take a drive to Oregon a few times a year and stock up on tax free computer items. Bookwise he listed all money made as "labor", which let him pay it as income tax and explained the income, but he avoided all sales taxes that way.

And one enterprising couple I knew in Alabama would before a hurricane hit make a drive to Mississippi or Georgia. Their sales tax was 2% lower, and they would fill a truck and trailer with tarps, generators, gas cans, and the like. Then sell them at a premium after the hurricane left. With around $50,000 in supplies when they returned, they saved over $1,000 and almost doubled their money at the same time.

Just a regular person can easily do that, by purchasing things in another state where there is a large difference in the sales tax compared to where they sell them. Both Washington and California are always looking for individuals who do that in Oregon. Make large purchases, then reselling them can net a large profit once sales taxes are eliminated.

And I have seen military guys get arrested for it. Everything from selling rice in Japan to computers and TVs in California. Make a purchase on base, and there is no sales tax. One enterprising wife of a guy I knew in Japan was even kicked out of the country because she paid their landlord every month with about 200 pounds of rice. Arrested by local authorities for black marketing and kicked out of the country. He also got court martialed and kicked out.

On a small scale, I even once did that myself. Picking up 8 cartons of cigarettes when I had an apartment in Tijuana, and selling them to smokers I knew back in LA. That actually paid for my apartment and the gas to go there and back on my days off.

Replies:   Remus2  palamedes
Remus2 ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Mushroom

Tennessee has no state income tax, but they do have a high sales tax rate. We drive over into Georgia when it's time for the bigger ticket items. Tennessee does not go after people for it. However, they have arrangements to collect sales tax from Amazon and the smaller groups that sale gift cards in the state.

We have a lot of storage space here, so we keep a lot of wood and other supplies that come up short after natural disasters. Our friends along the gulf and Atlantic Coast know to call us if in need as long as they are willing to pay transport cost, we sell those items to them at cost if we have them. Some of them have purchased those items ahead of time and we've stored them.

Storage is the issue in an emergency. If your house and land gets wiped by a hurricane, it would have been pointless to have pre-supplied yourself at your location. I suspect a person could make money just setting up storage away from danger zones like that.

palamedes ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

In my area it is people going to Indiana for liquor as it is cheaper but I don't know how much money they save as it is a 4 hour round trip drive. I myself figure the cost of gas and my time is worth more then what ever they must be saving plus I myself don't drink as I never found a beer that I like but I do like brandy and a single bottle of that can last me 5-10 years at the rate I drink it as my go to drink is coffee. I do know a person who spent 2 1/2 years in Federal Prison for buying cigarettes on the Indian Reservation and selling them out of his car at work and to college kids at the University of Michigan back in the 90's.

Replies:   Remus2  Mushroom
Remus2 ๐Ÿšซ

@palamedes

I do know a person who spent 2 1/2 years in Federal Prison for buying cigarettes on the Indian Reservation and selling them out of his car at work and to college kids at the University of Michigan back in the 90's.

If it avoids federal taxes, it's illegal.

Replies:   palamedes
palamedes ๐Ÿšซ

@Remus2

If it avoids federal taxes, it's illegal.

I never said it wasn't illegal I was just stating that I personally knew someone that was doing something similar as mushroom stated and ended up in Federal Prison. That isn't the local County Jail or a State Prison but a Federal Prison that is maintained by the Government of the USA.

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@palamedes

In my area it is people going to Indiana for liquor as it is cheaper but I don't know how much money they save as it is a 4 hour round trip drive.

We see the exact same thing here. I live not far north of the Oregon-California border, and here they have state controlled liquor stores.

Driving on both sides of the I-5, there are signs stating the last place to buy alcohol before you leave California, and the closest places to buy alcohol once you enter California. And the price is quite a bit cheaper, $2-5+ a bottle.

And I saw the same thing when I lived near the Alabama-Florida border. There were literally some liquor stores on the highways just inside the Florida state line, where as Alabama also had state owned stores.

But if nobody has lived in a state with a State Liquor Store system, the state sets all the prices. Texas does the same thing, which is why I was often asked to buy bottles for civilian friends out in town. But that was also for selection, as a state owned or run store is very limited in what they stock.

Whenever I went to visit my mom in Idaho, I always brought with me a few bottles of alcohol that she liked, but were never stocked in the state owned stores.

And yes, the same thing has happened in California with people driving across state lines to buy large quantities of cigarettes. Quite a few over the decades have been arrested and given huge fines for trying to evade the state cigarette taxes.

There were even signs in our local Indian Casino stating to all buyers that it is against state and federal laws to resell any tobacco products bought there.

And for years now, California has tried to pass legislation many times to try and find a way to tax tobacco sales on reservations and military bases. But it never makes it out of committee, as they lack any kind of power to do that. But they keep trying to find a loophole to exploit.

But as far as military, that is kind of pointless now. President Obama passed an executive order banning military exchanges from "competing with the local economy". Which has led to many exchanges becoming almost ghost towns as they are actually more expensive than the stores out in town now.

And if this makes no sense, it really does. Retail stores have sales all the time, even regional ones to take advantage of local tastes and competition. But the exchange rarely does sales, and have standardized prices nationwide. Plus all food items in the commissary have a surcharge of around 8%, to help cover expenses.

So when you live in a state like California, the food there is even more expensive as they do not tax food. My wife and I largely stopped going to the commissary or exchange, unless it was one of those odd products they always carried that were impossible to find anywhere else. Johnsonville Chorizos for example, I have never seen those outside of a military commissary.

Replies:   Keet  palamedes
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

But if nobody has lived in a state with a State Liquor Store system, the state sets all the prices.

Little choice and state set pricing. That sounds so... Russian? Chinese? Definitely not Free Enterprise.

palamedes ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

Johnsonville Chorizos

Sounds tasty

Replies:   Mushroom  awnlee jawking
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@palamedes

Sounds tasty

They are. And although I have looked in stores nationwide, I have ONLY found them in military exchanges. I have even asked stores near where I live and they have never stocked them.

https://www.johnsonville.com/products/chorizo.html

Whenever I go to one, I always pick up half a dozen or so packages. Even if I buy nothing else while I am there.

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@palamedes

Johnsonville Chorizos

Sounds tasty

You know 'Johnson' is a slang synonym of penis, don't you? Why would anyone willingly want to eat spiced penises?

AJ

Replies:   palamedes
palamedes ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

You know 'Johnson' is a slang synonym of penis, don't you? Why would anyone willingly want to eat spiced penises?

I do know that but as you stated it is just a slang name unlike eating Mountain Oysters / Rocky Mountain Oysters or also known as Prairie Oysters in Canada. Of course we will not even mention where the meat scraps come from to make the hot dog. Plus there are some counties and places that just straight up sell Bull, Ox, Goat, Sheep, Cow (yes there is a difference between a Bull and Cow), Deer, Yak, Donkey, Dog, Seal, Kangaroo penises for sale in the local market and no it isn't just China or Korea.

Replies:   joyR  awnlee jawking
joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@palamedes

Yup. In the UK dried bull pizzles are still sold as dog chews.

Replies:   Dominions Son  palamedes
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

In the UK dried bull pizzles are still sold as dog chews.

You can get them in the US too.

Replies:   joyR
joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

You can get them in the US too.

Oh..? I thought in the US you could only elect them?

:)

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

I thought in the US you could only elect them?

Those are rectums, not pizzles.

palamedes ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

Yup. In the UK dried bull pizzles are still sold as dog chews.

The real reason for why they always sniff the crotch.

Replies:   Dominions Son  joyR
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@palamedes

@joyR

Yup. In the UK dried bull pizzles are still sold as dog chews.


The real reason for why they always sniff the crotch.

I saw a video on a porn site once that showed two cats standing on their hind legs batting with their front paws at a suction cup dildo stuck on to the top drawer of a dresser. Their claws were out.

The thought that went through my head was "And then their owner's boyfriend walks in the room naked..."

joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@palamedes

The real reason for why they always sniff the crotch.

You say that like it's a bad thing...??

:)

Replies:   palamedes
palamedes ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

You say that like it's a bad thing...??

Well yes it is for me if you are training your dogs to believe this is a treat and they get crazy ideas like thinking oh goody another snack.

Replies:   joyR  Radagast
joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@palamedes

Well yes it is for me if you are training your dogs to believe this is a treat and they get crazy ideas like thinking oh goody another snack.

Personally I find that when my guard dog's nose is within sniffing distance of an uninvited stranger they act with a more sober, polite demeanour than would otherwise be the case.

:)

Radagast ๐Ÿšซ

@palamedes

Already been done as a story. I think on Lit, I can't recall the title. Wife announces she is cuckholding MC with her boss. MC starts feeding their dog with sausages tucked through the fly of his pants. Boss comes over for some midday nookie...

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@palamedes

Bull, Ox, Goat, Sheep, Cow (yes there is a difference between a Bull and Cow), Deer, Yak, Donkey, Dog, Seal, Kangaroo penises

You didn't mention gnu penises. Dyslexic survivalists will be most disappointed ;-)

I imagine penises are a very good source of protein. Low fat too!

I use 'cow' as a generic term for the UK's domesticated bovines, but also for their females. I use 'bull' for the males.

Is US usage different?

AJ

Replies:   Dominions Son  palamedes
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

I use 'cow' as a generic term for the UK's domesticated bovines, but also for their females. I use 'bull' for the males.

Is US usage different?

If you talk to someone in the relevant industries no.

However, yeah for a lot of the general public, cow is a gender neutral term, bull = male cow, and they wouldn't know what you were talking about if you mentioned bovines.

mauidreamer ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

Bull is a breedable male. Steer, also called bullock, is a young neutered male cattle primarily raised for beef. In the terminology used to describe the sex and age of cattle, the male is first a bull calf and if left intact becomes a bull; if castrated he becomes a steer and about two or three years grows to an ox.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@mauidreamer

Bull is a breedable male. Steer, also called bullock, is a young neutered male cattle primarily raised for beef. In the terminology used to describe the sex and age of cattle, the male is first a bull calf and if left intact becomes a bull; if castrated he becomes a steer and about two or three years grows to an ox.

I was already aware of that. However, if you think the US general public would understand any of those distinctions, you are delusional.

richardshagrin ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

wouldn't know what you were talking about if you mentioned bovines.

Vines with BO (bodily odor).

palamedes ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

I use 'cow' as a generic term for the UK's domesticated bovines, but also for their females. I use 'bull' for the males.

Is US usage different?

AJ

No technically all male bovines are called bulls unless they are castrated then they are called steers.

Once castrated the animal becomes less aggressive, has less muscle mass, and will fatten up faster for market.

They use the term cow penis in market to distinguish it from other bovine animals and to also inform the buyer that this was from a castrated animal.

Remus2 ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

You are talking fantasy, not reality.

Nope, I'm talking reality. The make it legal plan is fantasy without addressing the root cause. Will governments do that? Probably not.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Remus2

The make it legal plan is fantasy without addressing the root cause.

The root cause of what?

Replies:   Remus2
Remus2 ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Dominions Son

Root cause of the violence and criminal activity. Are you deliberately trying to be obtuse? Money and power.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Remus2

Are you deliberately trying to be obtuse?

No, you may think it's clear what you were referring to, but it wasn't.

Remus2 ๐Ÿšซ

@graybyrd

Hard to call it a "civil war"

https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/civil%20war

Definition of civil war

: a war between opposing groups of citizens of the same country

It is by definition, a civil war. If you have some other definition, please do state it.

Tw0Cr0ws ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

When the mayor of Tijuana disarmed the police there the crime rate went down 12 percent.

No, no senor there is no problem here.

Replies:   Remus2
Remus2 ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Tw0Cr0ws

In my recollection, TJ police were not as bad as the Rosirito police and the federales between TJ and Ensenada. However, in 2007 the Rosirito police shot the wrong person. A dozen or so of them ended up dead that weekend. Their killers cut off their heads, stuffed them into their guts (head upside down), then hung the bodies by their feet at that pedestrian bridge over Mexico 1 just south of Rosirito. The story made Mexican news, but was blacked out in San Diego.

I passed under that bridge at dawn that day. I know at least one of them had been killed less than an hour prior to that as a few drops of blood got on my truck.

Tw0Cr0ws ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

Meanwhile the current president of Mexico vows 'Hugs, Not Bullets.'

Remus2 ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@graybyrd

I've lived and worked in Mexico off and on in my life. The collapse you speak of is nothing new. The only new part is, it's gotten so bad now that the news cannot be suppressed.

Some of the more troubling elements have slipped across the US border. Most of which were not Mexican citizens to begin with. The majority were of Central American and South American origins. Even with the mass influx of criminal elements causing problems in America, it's been far worse for Mexico. I think many Americans forget the fact that those elements had to cross Mexico to get here.

The majority of that problem can be rooted in Mexico's former president Fox. When he declared war on Mexican cartels and removed some of them, he created a power vacuum among the criminal gangs/cartels. While they were criminals, they at least identified as Mexicans and tended to help the citizens of their area of influence. The central and southern America's criminals that moved in to fill the vacuum had no such limitations.

In saying that, not all of Mexico has had the problems.

Remus2 ๐Ÿšซ

@graybyrd

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Familia_Michoacana

There is a good example of what I'm talkin about. In 2006, thanks to Fox, the Los Zetas and La Familia Michoacรกn split due to influences from C.America. In that split, the original LFM's primary mission of protecting Michoacรกn citizens was lost. Both became focused on purely criminal activity. Prior to that, they had built schools, roads, and clinics for Michoacรกn residents. Why? Because the level of government corruption was so high, it was practically impossible to achieve otherwise.

Replies:   graybyrd
graybyrd ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Remus2

That's a good reference. As usual with most, it's 11 years out of date. "New" news is hard to find.

The section labeled "The I-75 Corridor" is a bit chilling, in how it describes even way back a decade ago, the cartel leaders were evading US federal and local authorities in a cat & mouse game. Which (IMHO) highlights the frustration of asymmetrical conflict and why "sending in a strike force" is doomed to failure. Every time Mexico "sent in the army" it's resulted in failure and made the problem far worse. In some cases, the army was soundly defeated with heavy losses and El Presidente was forced to release the captives.

Replies:   Remus2
Remus2 ๐Ÿšซ

@graybyrd

The most recent information will only come from direct contacts. People around this site are quick to scream for a source, so I deliberately did not mention my most recent information for that reason. Giving the names of my sources simply isn't going to happen.

What I will say is this. The situation is a few order of magnitudes worse than what you originally posted in your OP.

Ernest Bywater ๐Ÿšซ

@graybyrd

From what I've read over the decades is the mess created years ago is that between the interference in Mexican politics by Spain, France, and mostly the USA the Mexican people a chance to develop a decent central government. Thus everything was done at the regional level, and that's where the criminal organisations have their greatest strength. Also, the Mexican psyche has never recovered from the several imperialistic endeavours into Mexico by the US during the 19th Century, thus they don't trust the US government, and are right to feel that way.

Between the lack of central power, the strength of local power, the low economy and wages, and the centuries of bribery and corruption Mexico has some major issues that can't be easily straightened out.

Remus2 ๐Ÿšซ

@graybyrd

The part that frustrates me about this OP, is that I've made mention of this problem in the past and was told I didn't know what I was talking about. If I recall correctly, one person suggested I was a racist for even mentioning it. I'll if I can't find that thread if it wasn't deleted.

richardshagrin ๐Ÿšซ

@graybyrd

Mount Rainier
Stratovolcano in Washington State

Mount Rainier, also known as Tahoma or Tacoma, is a large active stratovolcano in the Cascade Range of the Pacific Northwest, located in Mount Rainier National Park about 59 miles south-southeast of Seattle.
Elevation: 14,411โ€ฒ
Last eruption: 1894
Prominence: 13,212โ€ฒ
Mountain range: Cascade Range"

It seems unlikely most of the area near the Cascades will end up underwater. It would have to increase by over 14,000 feet to cover up Mount Rainier. It would be much easier to cover Seattle.

"Elevation of Seattle

The elevation of a town, city, monument, mountain, or other key location around the world tells us how high it is in relation to sea level and can be a very important geographical statistic for a variety of reasons. Measuring elevation in Seattle is challenging as the city has some places that are much higher up than others. The highest point in the city of Seattle has an elevation of 520 feet (158 m), while the lowest point is out on the water, which has the same elevation as sea level. The average elevation of Seattle is generally calculated to be around 170 feet (52 m).

Many major cities around the United States, especially those that are situated in coastal locations like Seattle, tend to have quite low elevations as they're so near the sea. This is true of places like New York City and Los Angeles for example. Back in the state of Washington, the highest town is Waterville, located in Douglas County and sitting at an elevation of 2,622 feet (799 m), and the state itself has a mean elevation of 1,700 feet (520 m), so Seattle's elevation is much lower than the state average.

The highest point in all of Washington State is Mount Rainier, which is the highest mountain in the Cascade Range in the Pacific Northwest and has an elevation of 14,417 feet (4,394 m). The lowest point in the state of Washington is technically the Pacific Ocean, which is at sea level. Other major cities in the state include Spokane, which has an elevation of 1,843 feet (562 m), Tacoma, which has an elevation of 243 feet (74 m), and Vancouver, which has an elevation of 171 feet (52 m). Compared to all of these cities Seattle has a lower elevation on average."

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@graybyrd

Mexico is a complete mess, and I don't see it ever changing.

And the reason is many. For one, the insatiable demand of the US for illegal drugs means that the business is simply to profitable to walk away from.

Add to that, the ease of getting mules to take your product into the country cheaply.

Another major factor is the Mexican justice system. The maximum sentence there is 40 years, so there is little reason for people to not break the law. Also, ne extradition if the sentence is to be in excess of 25 years in the country the criminal would be sent to.

This is why Mexico lets many criminals walk free, even though the US has requested them to be extradited. Many face capital offenses, therefore Mexico will not send them back.

Plus, as some have said they are trying to treat this as a routine police matter, and not recognizing that many of these gangs are better armed and trained than their own military. And have been increasingly been using tactics as has been seen in the Middle East. Decapitations, roadside bombs, and mass slaughter.

I lived for years in El Paso, literally across the river from Juarez. It is the deadliest city in the world, and a decade ago was having a higher death toll than both Iraq and Afghanistan combined. Almost daily we would hear traffic reports saying to avoid a certain route because the freeway was close because of decapitated bodies being hung from the bridge.

The University of Texas El Paso is less than a quarter mile from a bad drug area in Mexico, and they even erected a huge concrete wall around the southern side of the University because bullets from shootouts kept hitting the campus. Many locals after it was erected would walk along it and make a game counting the bullet holes in the wall.

But until the government there gets serious about trying to actually stop the problem, it will not end. I used to go to Mexico frequently, and even once had an apartment there. But I have not been there since 2002, and I can't see myself ever going back there again. It is simply too dangerous.

When the military puts Mexico on the "Banned Travel" list with countries like Iraq, Iran, and North Korea, you know they have a serious problem. And in almost 2 decades, they have yet to solve that problem.

Replies:   graybyrd  richardshagrin
graybyrd ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

The maximum sentence there is 40 years, so there is little reason for people to not break the law.

It's reported that prison sentences in the US are on average eight times longer than other countries, yet we have the largest prison population, percentagewise, of any of them. So Q: how is a longer sentence proving to be a deterrent, or are we just that much better at running criminals to ground?

Also,

"But until the government there gets serious about trying to actually stop the problem, it will not end."

Yes, we can agree on that. But the reason the Mexican gov't isn't "serious" about fixing the problem is the simple fact that the Mexican gov't is a huge part of the problem! That, and the Mexican state governments who are outspent, outgunned, outmanned, and as a result the Governors and their lieutenants hop into bed with the cartels rather than die opposing them. It's also reported that--traditionally--the various state governors treat the state police as a political extension of their personal power base...

Yes, the US is a huge sponsor of Mexican drug trade and the cartel domination. No, we will do nothing to change that fact that will succeed. We've had this so-called "War on Drugs" for as long as I can remember, and it has done nothing effective.

My _personal_ opinion is that drug addiction in the US is a symptom of cultural dysfunction. We're an extremely UNHAPPY population, and many take drugs to escape it. There is little to be done: the 1% who own and dominate this nation are too short-sighted to even recognize the problem, let alone lend a hand to fix it. So down we go... spiraling down.

Mexico is leading the way. As long as drugs flow north, and guns and money flow south, its a permanent bargain with the four horsemen.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@graybyrd

No, we will do nothing to change that fact that will succeed. We've had this so-called "War on Drugs" for as long as I can remember, and it has done nothing effective.

If would probably make a significant positive difference if we ended the "war on drugs" and de-criminalized recreational drugs.

Replies:   graybyrd  Mushroom
graybyrd ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

If would probably make a significant positive difference if we ended the "war on drugs" and de-criminalized recreational drugs.

And YES! We can _absolutely_ agree on that! Then we could sit back and enjoy the evening news again, watching reports of the drug companies at war with each other (grin). Speaking of which, its kinda illuminating that one of the most destructive in terms of human lives and economic damage to the U.S. was the drug addiction brought on by the pharmaceutical companies in their wild-assed dash for profits with opioid-based painkillers, and the reckless use of them by the medical community. We're still reeling from that, but the news has shifted to death by police bullets rather than death by addiction. (Sorry for that trigger statement, but I'm rattled: today's cable news brings us the joy of the Chicago video of a 13-year old boy being shot to death while his empty hands are raised in the air. Sure, maybe he threw something over the fence, but a _reasonable_ person would wait until the kid was cuffed and _then_ take peek behind the fence. Shooting is kind of permanent; seldom can one "unshoot" someone.)

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@graybyrd

Speaking of which, its kinda illuminating that one of the most destructive in terms of human lives and economic damage to the U.S. was the drug addiction brought on by the pharmaceutical companies in their wild-assed dash for profits with opioid-based painkillers, and the reckless use of them by the medical community.

Just another lie by the drug warriors.
https://reason.com/2021/04/09/a-new-study-finds-no-relationship-between-opioid-prescriptions-and-unintentional-deaths/

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

If would probably make a significant positive difference if we ended the "war on drugs" and de-criminalized recreational drugs.

Nope, because that has already been tried and might even be making the problem worse.

California largely did that a decade ago, yet illegal pot is still shipped there by the ton. After all, the street sellers can sell it for a fraction of what the clinics charge, and still make a good profit.

And this is not even unique. I can tell you where to go in LA to buy bootleg alcohol and cigarettes also. And each time they raise the taxes on those products, the criminal gangs simply laugh and raise their prices as well. Knowing they will make even more money, and still undercutting the price in most stores.

In fact, since legalization in California, it is believed that the illegal sales have boomed, and are over three times the legal sales. They do not call I-10 the "Weed Corridor" for nothing. Much of it comes into the US from the Juarez Cartel, and travels that freeway to California.

Ernest Bywater ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

The problem they have with the war on drugs is they destroy the captured drugs. What they need to do is to make personal drug use legal in the same way as alcohol use is legal with the same restrictions, take the captured drugs and purify them, then sell them at low rates to the public. By undercutting the smugglers they'll drive them out of business, and be doing it with the smuggler's own drugs.

Replies:   Mushroom  madnige
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Ernest Bywater

The problem they have with the war on drugs is they destroy the captured drugs. What they need to do is to make personal drug use legal in the same way as alcohol use is legal with the same restrictions, take the captured drugs and purify them, then sell them at low rates to the public. By undercutting the smugglers they'll drive them out of business, and be doing it with the smuggler's own drugs.

Which does nothing to solve the issue. Might as well sell anything else that is captured that is bootlegged and make the same claim.

Alcohol, cigarettes, movies, software, clothing, etc, etc, etc.

Bootlegging is not just a problem with drugs, it covers almost all industries. And you can't just "purify" most of these products. For example, all "crops" grown legally use food grade fertilizer and pesticides. In illegal crops, they use whatever is cheapest usually.

Back in the 1970s and 1980s there were deaths related to pot being sold that was grown with the aid of Colchicine. This is a chemical that will kill most plants, as it prevents the chromosomes from separating after division. It kills most plants, but in those that survive the application, it created "Frankenstein plants" that are of huge proportions. It is commonly applied to flowering plants because it makes the flowers much larger than those of normal plants.

However, the results are also highly toxic. The use of this chemical is illegal among legitimate growers, but is common among illegal ones as it can grossly increase plant yields (profits). At the risk of becoming toxic to the end user.

Replies:   Ernest Bywater
Ernest Bywater ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

Which does nothing to solve the issue. Might as well sell anything else that is captured that is bootlegged and make the same claim.

Yes, and use the money to reduce the cost to the people of providing the service. The key aspects is the recovered goods sold must be safe for use. For the counterfeit brand name products the name can be removed and then sold.

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Ernest Bywater

And how much exactly do we spend to ensure that they actually are safe? And who takes liability if they are not and people get hurt or die?

Replies:   Ernest Bywater
Ernest Bywater ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

And how much exactly do we spend to ensure that they actually are safe? And who takes liability if they are not and people get hurt or die?

How you purify the drugs will depend on the drug and what is used to dilute it. However, a lot will depend on where in the supply chain it's intercepted as the drugs aren't diluted until they reach the streets as it's easier to move the smaller packs of the pure drugs until they're about to be sold to the retail sellers.

The purification etc. can be done by the companies who currently sell the legal forms of the drugs, and they'll deal with them the same as their normal stocks.

Replies:   LupusDei  Mushroom
LupusDei ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Ernest Bywater

One of the most mind bending cases of bootlegging I have ever read about happened within few last years somewhere in Africa. Some sold a significant amount of, supposedly, rice (and we're talking about dozen or dozens of metric tons) that in fact where potato flour in plastic skins. Someone, presumably in China, had set up production of such strange stuff on industrial scale. If boiled, such "rice" predictably disintegrated. The plastic skin of the "rice" grains wasn't very toxic, as implied from what I read about it, but definitely inedible.

There's no way you can possibly "purify" such a product to become indeed rice.

That's extreme example, of course, but in many cases bootlegged products aren't even close to what they supposedly represent. And in almost all cases, almost by definition, they are of much lesser value than the original product imited.

Ernest Bywater ๐Ÿšซ

@LupusDei

Instead of going off on weird tangents about totally fake products I suggest you look at the posts and use some logic.

My first post was about illicit drugs and using the captured drugs on the legal market instead of just destroying them. Then when the question of bootleg products was raised I suggested they could also be sold as no name products. Sadly, I expected everyone to know that products that aren't fit for use at all should and would be destroyed - items like the fake rice you mention. However, the fake top brand name designer jeans could have the labels removed and sold cheap as no no name jeans etc.

Although I can't think of why anyone would go to the trouble of creating fake rice.

Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@LupusDei

That's not really bootlegging in the drugs/alcohol sense, it's just fraud. The goods aren't what they are represented to be, but they are more than likely moving in the normal stream of commerce, not in some sort of black market operation.

No, you couldn't purify that to become rice, but you could break the plastic skins, separate them out from the potato flour and sell the potato flour as potato flour.

This kind of fraud does happen with recreational drugs (selling powdered sugar as cocaine or some innocuous herb (oregano) as marijuana). But that is an entirely separate problem from real drugs.

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

That's not really bootlegging in the drugs/alcohol sense, it's just fraud. The goods aren't what they are represented to be, but they are more than likely moving in the normal stream of commerce, not in some sort of black market operation.

Actually, an amazing number of "bootleg" products really are mostly legitimate.

About a decade or so back, there was a flood of fake Levi and Nike products started to come from China. And after investigation, it turns out they were coming from the actual factories that made the real products. They simply never reported them to Nike, so no royalties were paid. But they were 100% of the same quality as "authentic Nike" and Levi products.

And bootleg products are a huge cash industry for criminal gangs. Most of the Russian Mafia in LA is supported by bootleg cigarette sales. The most common brand if you knew where to ask for them were "Ararat", from Armenia. About 20 years ago when I lived in Hollywood the liquor store across the street sold them, but you had to know to ask for them.

I remember they were $3 a pack, when most generic brands were going for $5. They were nasty, but when you remove the taxes, cigarettes are actually dirt cheap. The only reason they cost so much is the taxes.

When I was in the Middle East, the exchange was not mandated to sell at prices equal to the local economy, and there were no taxes on cigarettes. A carton of Pell Mell was $20, Marlboro was $25. At least half of not more of what you pay here in the US is all tax.

And more and more in the last few years counterfeit computer chips have become an increasing problem. China has been flooding the world with them for years, but only recently are many starting to actually realize the problem.

Not unlike the counterfeit capacitors they sold about 20 years ago, which took a few years until they started failing wholesale.

Replies:   awnlee jawking  Tw0Cr0ws
awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

Most of the Russian Mafia in LA is supported by bootleg cigarette sales. The most common brand if you knew where to ask for them were "Ararat", from Armenia.

Does the Armenian Mafia sell Russian cigarettes?

AJ

Replies:   Remus2
Remus2 ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

Ararat cigarettes are Turkish cigarettes. Any mafia would sell anything if there is a profit in it. I have doubts that the Armenian Mafia would work with Russian mafia elements.

Tw0Cr0ws ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

Actually, an amazing number of "bootleg" products really are mostly legitimate.

About a decade or so back, there was a flood of fake Levi and Nike products started to come from China. And after investigation, it turns out they were coming from the actual factories that made the real products.

That is a standard business practice in China.
They make 1000 of your product, then they take the part of the mold that has your name out and make 10,000 with another name and sell them in competition against you.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Tw0Cr0ws

That is a standard business practice in China.
They make 1000 of your product, then they take the part of the mold that has your name out and make 10,000 with another name and sell them in competition against you.

Those products are counterfeits, but they aren't bootleg in the sense of being smuggled in and sold on a black market.

As to black market cigarettes, that is 100% about tax avoidance. In many states, cigarette taxes are higher than the wholesale cost of the cigarettes sans taxes.

Replies:   Tw0Cr0ws
Tw0Cr0ws ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

As to black market cigarettes, that is 100% about tax avoidance. In many states, cigarette taxes are higher than the wholesale cost of the cigarettes sans taxes.

True.
Some years ago Canada was adding a dollar per pack tax on cigarettes per year in an attempt to discourage smoking due to their socialized medicine system or at least make the smokers pay a larger share for their own treatment.
They forgot that their border with the US is twice as long as the US border with Mexico and is less well watched.

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Tw0Cr0ws

They forgot that their border with the US is twice as long as the US border with Mexico and is less well watched.

Hell, you do not even need to smuggle.

Drive to the border, and purchase 2 cartons on your way one direction at the duty free store. Then when you return, pick up 2 more cartons at the duty free store heading home.

That is 4 cartons a month, legal, with no taxes. I did the same damned thing when I used to go to Mexico regularly.

Replies:   Tw0Cr0ws
Tw0Cr0ws ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

you do not even need to smuggle.

During that time the Canadian govt. made bringing them in very restricted; a single opened carton was all that was allowed, more was confiscated as was a single unopened carton.

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Tw0Cr0ws

There were still duty free stores, and such regulations do not apply.

Duty free is not smuggling. However, the quantities are limited. Every time I went through, it was 2 cartons per person per month.

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Ernest Bywater

How you purify the drugs will depend on the drug and what is used to dilute it. However, a lot will depend on where in the supply chain it's intercepted as the drugs aren't diluted until they reach the streets as it's easier to move the smaller packs of the pure drugs until they're about to be sold to the retail sellers.

The largest and most profitable cash crop from Mexico is marijuana. It is not cut or diluted, but chemicals are used to increase the yield.

And largely the same with all the other drugs smuggled in. Bathtub operations, where you would have to check almost every other pill or gram for contamination. Just the cost of testing alone will be more than you can make by selling them.

You just can't do that. It would be like taking alcohol diluted with wood alcohol, and demanding that some lab some ho9w remove that contaminant. It just can't be done, you destroy it.

The problem is not dilution, it is way back when they were originally manufactured. Take meth for example. Everything from lighter fluid, gasoline, ammonia, lead, arsenic, transformer oil (Polychlorinated biphenyls - "PCBs"), the list of highly toxic chemicals used to make street meth means that none of it could be "purified". It was polluted at the very time of manufacture.

And you really want to try and force the pharmaceutical companies to try and "purify" these, then distribute them through their regular channels? Oh, I can tell you exactly what will happen. Every single one will outright refuse to do so. And there is no way you can make them do it.

madnige ๐Ÿšซ

@Ernest Bywater

take the captured drugs and purify them, then sell them at low rates to the public.

Nah, I'd take the captured drugs, cut them with cyanide (or Ricin, or Thallium...), and return them to the illicit supply chain and publicise that this has been/will be done. Will that reduce demand?

Replies:   Keet  joyR
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@madnige

and publicise that this has been/will be done. Will that reduce demand?

Not publicizing will reduce demand faster, the number of customers will literally drop fast :D

Replies:   madnige  StarFleet Carl
madnige ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Keet

Not publicizing will reduce demand faster

No, publicising will drive away many more customers than are directly killed (look how people reacted to the pesticides-on-apples flap), and those who do die, they're incapable of kicking the habit without major intervention - they'll either stick with the illicit supply (and a few will die), or they'll register as addicts to get a clean supply and enter a program to safely wean them off it. The effects will be far wider than the distribution of the tainted illicit product - people won't be able to know if their supplier is has got good stuff or bad. A few deaths, however, will do a lot to drive down demand even further, so if you say you're going to do this, then you really will need to do it.

ETA: ...and this can be run in parallel with EB's suggestion.

Replies:   Keet
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@madnige

You might be right, fear is a very strong motivator. On the other hand, we're talking drug addicts here. Very little will prevent them to take whatever they can get, even if it kills them. Registering for rehab will only help those that aren't too far along yet, for a time. The real success rates for rehab are hard to find but they seem to be way below 50%. The relapse percentages are almost impossible to find. All in all that route isn't going to help a lot of them.

Replies:   Grey Wolf
Grey Wolf ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

On the other hand, we're talking drug addicts here.

This, right here. Many drugs to which people are addicted are eventually lethal. Take 'krokodil' (illicit desomorphine) - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desomorphine. The vast majority of its users know it will kill them. Maybe today, maybe next week, maybe next year, but it will. Almost no one gets off of it voluntarily (people do, but it's usually when they're so disabled by it that they're forced away from it by hospitalization or imprisonment). It does horrible things to you on the way to killing you.

It's a very, very common drug in Russia. People who start it know what happens to people who start it.

It'll scare away the more rational, high-functioning addicts. That's a good thing. It'll kill the less rational, lower-functioning addicts.

Also, remember that one of the things addicts do really, really well is to lie in pursuit of their high. That includes lying to themselves. Unless the market penetration of the now-toxic drugs presents an overwhelming risk, they'll roll the dice. Suppose you get to 1% of the illicit drug traffic (that's doing pretty well!). There's a lot of evidence that people will accept a 1% risk of Very Bad Things in a lot of cases, especially since there's reinforcement every time one rolls the dice and 1% doesn't come up. "Can't happen to me!"

StarFleet Carl ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

the number of customers will literally drop fast

I think that was part of the plan in 'Kingsman - The Golden Circle'.

joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@madnige

Nah, I'd take the captured drugs, cut them with cyanide (or Ricin, or Thallium...), and return them to the illicit supply chain and publicise that this has been/will be done. Will that reduce demand?

Committing premeditated murder isn't really a cure. Demand might drop, but since the messed up lives and deaths from un-poisoned drugs doesn't stop new people taking them the demand will likely remain.

What might work, but not in the USA, is making certain drugs legal and cheaper than is cost effective for drug dealers to produce, plus introducing the death penalty for anyone buying, selling, making or using illegal drugs. Include anyone involved in manufacturing legal drugs without a license.

I say it won't work in the USA because the legal system couldn't do it speedily, efficiently and without plea bargains or 'special circumstances' for the Senator's daughter.

Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

California largely did that a decade ago, yet illegal pot is still shipped there by the ton. After all, the street sellers can sell it for a fraction of what the clinics charge, and still make a good profit.

Mostly because of California imposed ridiculously high taxes on it. Taxes are also the main driver of black markets in alcohol and cigarettes.

Then you have the problem that its still illegal under federal law and federal law blocks state legal sellers from financial services.

Would decriminalization of drugs be a panacea for Mexico? No, of course not. That does not mean it would have no effect at all.

richardshagrin ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

Juarez

Is the city name pronounced War is?

Paladin_HGWT ๐Ÿšซ

@graybyrd

I am writing a story that takes place3 Mostly in Mexico, especially the State of Chihuahua, a bit in Mexico City, and in various parts of the USA, especially, New Mexico, Texas, and Wash. D.C. where various people are trying to figure out WTF! (Using nearly 2 years of research). If you have questions about the Mexican Armed Forces I have some pretty good data c.2018 Also about the Mexican Federales (Law Enforcement)

Mexico has some of the Strictest official, and Unofficial press censorship. It is very difficult to get accurate information.

Accurate information about the Mexican Military is Difficult to obtain, even by Members of the US Armed Forces serving as Liaisons to the Mexican Armed Forces.

The USA knows More about the PLA (Communist Chinese Peoples Liberation Army), the Russian Armed Forces, or the Iranian armed forces!

Replies:   graybyrd
graybyrd ๐Ÿšซ

@Paladin_HGWT

Great! See my email.

hst666 ๐Ÿšซ

@graybyrd

Decriminalize and/or legalize all drugs now. Get rid of the DEA. Best things we could do to end the violence.

Replies:   graybyrd
graybyrd ๐Ÿšซ

@hst666

That sounds good in theory, but there's a problem with states and localities taking up the slack, imposing high taxes on the "legalized" market. One criminal network is replaced by another: the state legislatures and greedy county and city tax vampires. As has been explained earlier, the tax-inflated pricing structure will encourage massive smuggling and black markets... so little will have been gained except a grossly-misshapen drug economy. And just like the tobacco billions from an earlier misguided legislative fiasco, none of the tax revenues will go to treatment or assistance for the victims. It will wind up in pork projects for elected officials, shouldering each other aside in a rush to the trough like avaricious swine.

Yeh, color me cynical. Decades of observing the results does that to a person.

hst666 ๐Ÿšซ

@graybyrd

There's no problem with ending the Drug wars in Latin America fueled by US policies. Sure there may still be black markets like there are for cigarettes and alcohol, but those are substantially less lucrative than the current system.

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