drug lord thanks american lawmakers

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viper

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Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman Loera reported head of the Sinaloa cartel in Mexico, ranked 701st on Forbes' yearly report of the wealthiest men alive, and worth an estimated $1 billion, today officially thanked United States politicians for making sure that drugs remain illegal.
According to one of his closest confidants, he said, "I couldn't have gotten so stinking rich without George Bush, George Bush Jr., Ronald Reagan, even El Presidente Obama, none of them have the cajones to stand up to all the big money that wants to keep this stuff illegal. From the bottom of my heart, I want to say, Gracias amigos, I owe my whole empire to you."
According to sources in the Mexican government, President Calderon is begging American officials to, in the words of reggae great Peter Tosh, legalize it. "Oh yeah," said an official close to the Mexican president, "Felipe is going crazy. He's screaming at everybody who comes in, 'Why don't they make this sh*t legal already! You're killing me here!' Look, everyone knows, when you have Prohibition, you create gangsters. And the more you prohibit, the more gangsters you make. El Chapo is hero now to all those slumdogs who want to be millionaires. Kids in the street, when they play games, they all want to be El Chapo, the baddest man in the whole damn town."


Meanwhile, many speculate that rich and prominent Mexican families are in cahoots with American businessmen in the alcohol industry, wealthy industrialists who launder the unprecedented profits from the drug business with their legitimate enterprises, and lawmakers who get gigantic kickbacks and payoffs to make sure that these drugs remain illegal, so they can remain rich, fat and happy. According to sources on both sides of the border, tens of millions of dollars in payoffs and kickbacks are stashed in Swiss banks every year, blood money from the brutal business made possible by a corrupt system supported by laws that don't, and have never, worked.
Rather than putting El Chapo and his kind out of business by modernizing outdated laws and in the process making billions of dollars from taxing drugs (as is done with cigarettes and alcohol), United States government has spent hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars chasing its tail, and offered a $5 million reward for the capture of El Chapo. Many have said that the offer is unofficially: Dead or Alive.
Meanwhile, as an epidemic of murderous violence rages on the Mexican-US border, and the American government wastes boatloads of badly needed money on the illegal drug business which results from the Prohibition laws, El Chapo is laughing all the way to the bank. "Whoever came up with this whole War on Drugs," one of his lieutenants reports he said, "I would like to kiss him on the lips and shake his hand and buy him dinner with caviar and champagne. The War on Drugs is the greatest thing that ever happened to me, and the day they decide to end that war, will be a sad one for me and all of my closest friends. And if you don't believe me, ask those guys whose heads showed up in the ice chests."
 
You can't just post made up tripe in the news section, quote your source.
 
thanks for the info viper...Tater man...dang you bring things down.
 
Bring things down or don't allow people to mislead others?

I don't accept things at face value and I suggest everyone does the same. Question everything, question me, question what other people tell you. The marijuana culture is all about casting off lies, lies about pot, its effects, lies about its medical benefits etc. So why should we tolerate misinformation inside our own ranks?

Perhaps instead of seeing my post as trying to bring you "down" why not look at it as a demand for proof? Nothing wrong with posting your opinion, but there is something wrong with posting an opinion and trying to pass it as fact.

Not one point of the above story rings true to me, I can't see those words comming from a legitamite journalist but hey believe whatever you wish, I prefer to see the world without a wool cap over my eyes.
 
ok tater here is the polite way...


hey viper thanks for the info do you happen to have the source?

see?
 
This is a cocaine trafficking kingpin. What's that gota do with ganja?

Quote your source.
 
I've read this in many different places on the web. Here's one source, where I originally read it:

hxxp://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-henry-sterry/mexican-drug-lord-officia_b_179596.html
 
Everything I can find on this piece links back to that same blog and while he is a professional writer the article itself lacks a lot of validity. I can't cross refrence the site anywhere. Every other site took its original info from his blog. A blog hardly qualifies as a reliable source of information. I'm not saying that this never happened just that this telling of it should be treated suspect at best.
 
no sir, first you said i cant post made up tripe , now you change your story to as being treated suspect at best ? a simple quote your source would have sufficed

By David Henry Sterry, The Huffington Post - Friday, April 3 2009
 
Its not a published article, its a blog entry, there's a difference.
 
Don't shoot the messenger comes to mind. I also think that a story this strong should have a source linked. We are all friends here remember. 2 dog got it right.
 
Tater, Blogs are taking over the world. Look at all the newspapers and magazines that are now folding, yet the blogosphere gets stronger every year. The blog I quoted is Huffington post, considered VERY reputable and quoted by our president, whom you may like or dislike, but it does indicate that powerful people do consider the validity of that particular media blog.

In addition, The HuffingtonPost.com was named among the 25 Best Blogs of 2009 by Time Magazine, and it won the 2006 and 2007 Webby Awards for Best Politics Blog. Huffington Post contributor Bennet Kelley was awarded the Los Angeles Press Club's 2007 Southern California Journalism Award for Online Commentary for political commentary published on the site.
The Huffington Post is ranked the most powerful blog in the world by The Observer. Huffpo's co-founder, Arianna Huffington was named as number 12 in Forbes' first ever list of the Most Influential Women In Media in 2009. She has also moved up to number 42 in the Guardian's Top 100 in Media List.

I'd say that pretty much qualifies it as a source of reputable, quality information. You may well disagree, and that's fine. We can disagree and still be nice about it. May there always be chocolate and vanilla and a million other flavors!
 
bleh....blogs are crap.....i should go write a blog right now about how they are gonna legalize it here in tn.....get it ? my ex is a "blogger" and she writes crap that is totally false all the time...
 
i am to the point of only believing what i see and only when i'm not stoned...
 
Puff, yes, many blogs are total crap. ANyone can make up a blog. But there are some very big and respected blogs out there like HP, which have over 20 million readers. And if you'll look at Huffpo, you'll see it's not a regular blog like a blog you could make or I could make or your hated Ex could make. Huffpo has a large paid staff, and they handle all types of media. They have articles, not just blog entries. This is the future of publishing! I'm not talking about some person's private blog, or a blog with few readers. But the major blogs now are taking over the media market. Newspapers and magazines are dying quick.
 
i am familiar with huffpo...i'm a drudge guy and i still don't believe everything i read there.....regardless of who "wrote" it...
 
my ex is far from hated...she's just niave and easily swayed by popular opinion....global warming was gonna kill the planet in the 70's but i guess it changed it's mind..remember ???
 
Even if it aint true,,you can bet yur ***,,that he, {"El Chapo"} really is,from the bottom of his heart,,, thanking them!!!
 

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