Who Died and Made Trump the Global Drug-War King? By Jacob G. Hornberger

Trump really does think the U.S. can be the world’s policeman. From Jacob G. Hornberger at fff.org:

According to NBC News, the Trump administration is now considering a military attack on Mexico. That’s on top of Trump’s obvious internal struggle on whether to do the same to Venezuela. Another possibility is Columbia, whose president, according to Trump, is an “illegal drug leader.”

Oh, the difficult life of an interventionist drug-war president who is ostensibly set on making America great again. Who to attack first? Who to kill? How many to kill? Which killing route will be more apt to make America great again? How best to win the Nobel Prize for Peace?

Trump says that the governments of these three countries aren’t doing enough to stem the manufacture, production, and flow of drugs out of their countries and their transportation to the United States.

I’ve got a question: Why has the Trump regime failed to halt the possession and distribution of drugs here inside the United States? Maybe — just maybe — no regime, including the Trump regime, is capable of stopping the operation of black markets arising from the criminalization of peaceful activities.

But I’ve got another question: What business is it of Trump or any other U.S. drug official what a foreign country’s drug policy is? Why isn’t that the business of those countries? Who died and made Donald Trump the worldwide imperial drug-war king?

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One response to “Who Died and Made Trump the Global Drug-War King? By Jacob G. Hornberger

  1. MIGA is always first with Moshe Trumpstein.

    Surrounded by CPUSA (D) states that sell weed.

    Anytime government gets its mitts on something you can count on fail.

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