Mexico: the birth of a Narco-State

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  • Опубликовано: 23 сен 2024
  • The weight of Mexico in the world criminal chessboard has progressively increased during the last decades of the 20th century thanks to the expansion of what are commonly called drug cartels. In order to have the most complete picture possible of the Mexican case, it's necessary to keep in mind some contextual factors, necessary to understand the dynamics that define what is called narcodemocracy. Let's talk about it.
    Sources used for this video:
    - Smichdt. Samuel (2012). México: Un estado suplantado/Mexico: A supplented State. Revista del Instituto de Ciencias Jurídicas de Puebla, México.
    - Association Against Impunity and For Transitional Justice (2020). 18º Rapporto sui diritti globali: Stato dell’impunità nel mondo. Il virus contro i diritti. (in italian)
    - Osservatorio sulla Criminalità Organizzata dell’Università degli Studi di Milano (2016). La criminalità organizzata in Messico e le forme della resistencia civile. (in italian)
    - Rosen, Jonathan Daniel; Zepeda Martinez, Roberto (2015). La guerra contra el narcotráfico en México: Una guerra perdida. Reflexiones: Revista Facultad de Ciencias Sociales Universidad de Costa Rica
    - T. Aureliani, "Messico: narcotraffico, attori criminali e resistenze civili", 2017 (in italian)

Комментарии • 369

  • @alexacosta2140
    @alexacosta2140 Год назад +14

    Mexican citizen here: The entirety of Mexico’s problems can be traced back to two events in the 20th century.
    1. In the 1920’s the Mexican institutional revolutionary party made it punishable by death to criticize the government.
    2. In the 1970’s they confiscated weapons from the civilian population.
    Essentially the people of Mexico cannot openly critique and improve their government and are also completely defenseless so anything the government says, goes. Keep in mind, there is no power at the local level… all police and officials can be bribed/blackmailed by federal authorities who are owned by cartels. The Mexican government claims to offer help to local people by sending federal troops but the people know once those troops arrive in their state, they will never leave. In conclusion, the Mexican government is a badly administered authoritarian regime that the people don’t trust and because people don’t trust the authorities anymore, criminals consolidate power at the local level. The Mexican government complains that they offer help but no one takes it. No one takes it because no one trust the government in Mexico. Last time the government offered help to Mexicans they devalued the peso and made millions worth nothing. Hundreds of thousands of Mexicans who had their life savings in the peso became poor over night and were forced to use the new peso.
    As you can see, the history of Mexico is one of a socialist government continuously abusing peoples basic human rights, which is why people trust criminals more than authorities. A natural consequence of communism/socialism.

    • @jazzcoatlmaeg
      @jazzcoatlmaeg Год назад +2

      You meant to say capitalism and neoliberalism. Don't know where you find out the priistas were communist when that was never the case

    • @AngelloDelNorte
      @AngelloDelNorte Год назад

      Sounds like left-winged policies.

  • @fuzzydunlop7928
    @fuzzydunlop7928 2 года назад +183

    In the case of Mexico, I feel it's wrong to categorize it as a "narco-state" in the classic sense. Rather than the cartels and ellicit industry co-opting the institutions of the state, it has largely been the other way around - with the pre-existing institutions and power blocs co-opting the cartels and using them and their consequences towards their own devices.
    Cartels were integrated into aspects of the state (unofficially, of course) - they did not corrupt what was already corrupted.

    • @ericktellez7632
      @ericktellez7632 2 года назад +4

      It applies more to the meaning of “state” as in a region in a country, Mexico just like the US is formed by semi independent states, there are states that are controlled by cartels but not the entire country nor the majority of states are in that situation.

    • @kevinandreszaletaandrade4461
      @kevinandreszaletaandrade4461 2 года назад +18

      It is, I'm Mexican and the municipal president of my city is well known to work with the regional cartel, as a matter of fact he just lost an election and what a coincidence the cartel began blackmailing more than usual (they hanged some bodies from a bridge 500m from goberment office) also the police started detaining lots of people with no cause and asking for money (I was one of them, had to pay 3 thousand pesos, Wich is around 15 days of work for a working class Mexican)

    • @ZeekHusky
      @ZeekHusky 2 года назад

      It’s a Narco State

    • @vaclevsta
      @vaclevsta Год назад +2

      You're right, but the end result is the same. The Mexican government simply doesn't have the resources or the manpower to stop the cartels even if they wanted to, even with significant help from the US. The best they can hope to do is prevent cartel violence from destroying the legitimate economy or harming innocent civilians. They've done a pretty good job on the first count, but obviously have fallen disastrously short in protecting human life and only made matters worse by haphazardly deploying the army.

    • @robertwest4157
      @robertwest4157 Год назад

      Im mexican and if we arent a failed narco state we are well on our way to it.

  • @autumnleaves7907
    @autumnleaves7907 2 года назад +307

    Worth noting as well, the ex military guys who would later defect and form the Zetas, recieved hardware and extensive training from U.S. special forces, to help them crush the Zapatistas. The Zapatistas were (and are? I think they're still around) a militant group who's goal was to instigate a revolution against the rise of neo liberalism that was sweeping through Mexico in the 90s (particularly in reaction to NAFTA).

    • @deusgamer4922
      @deusgamer4922 2 года назад +84

      The Zapatistas (EZLN) are still around; their quasi-state in Chiapas is one of the most crime free areas of the country solely because they are so protective of it.

    • @batpoolzilla3200
      @batpoolzilla3200 2 года назад +11

      @@deusgamer4922 it ain't like that. They are a joke.

    • @Chilam.
      @Chilam. 2 года назад +36

      @@batpoolzilla3200 nah I've been to Zapatista held territory , it's literally like a different country

    • @musicaccount8349
      @musicaccount8349 2 года назад +1

      @@deusgamer4922 where’s the quasi state at

    • @trueblueclue
      @trueblueclue 2 года назад

      Who cares. They were socialist trash.

  • @PhenomResurrections08
    @PhenomResurrections08 2 года назад +38

    My poor Mexico. The people there have some of the kindest hearts I've ever encountered. Hell it feels like home whenever I visit my parent's birthplace. But damn is this isn't one of the most vile governments in existence... it's bled into so much of the youth and culture i don't know there's ever any coming back from this.

    • @charmyzard
      @charmyzard Год назад +3

      The current administration's doing all it can to actually stop the problems. Sure, it will not be a solution one morning to the next, but keep in mind these problems have 30+ years in the making, not something you can solve in 1 administration.

    • @PhenomResurrections08
      @PhenomResurrections08 Год назад

      @@charmyzard they've had over 70 years to actually address the real problems and have chosen not to because this is the normal they want to keep. Journalists keep dying, and the national guard has been given control to the military. It's clear they don't give a fuck and would kill everyone who isn't an elite if they didn't need us for slave labor or spare parts. Sad, but true. The administration ain't doing shit but protecting their drug business.

    • @charmyzard
      @charmyzard Год назад

      @@PhenomResurrections08 Are you implying Obrador's administration is the same as the past 70 years? If so, how blindsighter by the pro-neolib media's manufactured scandals and slanders? (No, the country is NOT Being militarized. France, a liberal hellscape, has a national guard and look at them.)
      Also, funny how more caches and narco merch has been seized so far, infinitely more than the PRI and PAN's administrations by raw numbers. Saying Obrador's current govt is but the same as the others is a straight up fallacy propped up by a media controlled by 8 pro-neolib families.

    • @AngelloDelNorte
      @AngelloDelNorte Год назад

      As a Mexican-American, I'm worried about the US, especially southwest usa, in not turning into a Mexico-like region more than it already is.
      In southwest usa, it has many cartels, mostly violent Meexecan gangs, countless rundown communities/cities, and lots of shootouts.

  • @Cami-ec9gz
    @Cami-ec9gz 2 года назад +22

    there are areas in mexico that are under the control of drug cartels, recently a video circulated on social networks where more than a dozen vans full of armed bandits can be seen walking with total impunity in front of the army itself, the army is already accused of corruption and their reputation for being blameless is stained, there are events like the culiacanazo where the army lost a battle against drug traffickers but many say that the Mexican government itself in the company of criminals agreed to do it

  • @Amantducafe
    @Amantducafe 2 года назад +72

    "But the GDP is going up that's good", honestly using GDP to describe the social, political and economical situation of a nation has to be one of the most deceiving and disingenuous way to describe a country.

    • @eduardogutierrez4698
      @eduardogutierrez4698 2 года назад

      Yeah, I saw many Mexicans on facebook bragging about their economy and trying to show their GDP off to Hispanics from South and Central America. But the truth is while the GDP of Mexico may be the highest in Latin America , it doesnt tell the whole truth as countries like Argentina , Chile, Panama or Paraguay have better quallity of life and are safer than Mexico dspite the fact that their GDP is inferior to that of Mexico. That is no to say that those countries have no issues but the GDP is not the right measure to handle those issues.

    • @fuzzydunlop7928
      @fuzzydunlop7928 2 года назад +2

      Word.

    • @ericktellez7632
      @ericktellez7632 2 года назад +8

      Exactly. It’s not an indication of the economy of most people

    • @PhenomResurrections08
      @PhenomResurrections08 2 года назад +3

      It's pretty much reinforcing that as long as you have money... you can do no wrong. It truly is the root of all evil.

    • @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana
      @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana Год назад

      So is measuring citizen happiness. By that logic, Rome was at its height of power when it was constantly collapsing 💔.

  • @miguelgrohmannhernandez2224
    @miguelgrohmannhernandez2224 2 года назад +164

    great video as always, but there is one point I think you amy have missed, which is that of the illegal weapons smuggling from America to Mexico. This dates back as far back as the mexican civil war (some argue earlier to the Texan war), and involves the trading of half a million firearms annually. It got so ba dthat the Mexican goverment is suing the various American gun manufacturers for 10 billion USD.

    • @novalectiointernational
      @novalectiointernational  2 года назад +51

      True that, i read that news on reuters. I wrote it in the script and i should have mentioned it but i totally forgot it in the speech. Thanks for the clarification.
      - Jacopo -

    • @miguelgrohmannhernandez2224
      @miguelgrohmannhernandez2224 2 года назад +5

      @@novalectiointernational no problem, keep up the great work!

    • @yes1958
      @yes1958 2 года назад +18

      @@miguelgrohmannhernandez2224 Should've mentioned the part where American/European banks money launder for the cartels. American Government/officials were also caught in the past cutting deals with the cartels .

    • @Denise-eb7vg
      @Denise-eb7vg 2 года назад

      Very true !!!!

    • @2jsanc681
      @2jsanc681 2 года назад +5

      It goes both ways 😂 we give them illegal guns, they give us illegal drugs.

  • @deusgamer4922
    @deusgamer4922 2 года назад +79

    One point I feel you could have emphasised more is the efforts by civilians to combat (figuratively AND literally) corruption and cartel terror in the nation. From the Zapatistas (a quasi-state formed by anarcho-communist rebels in Chiapas) who actively save communities and fight against the cartels, to the story of Cheran (where citizens, tired of a useless govt and violent crimes, rose up and have effectively created their own free city-state), to the legendary tale of Don Alejo, who fought to the death against an entire squad of cartel members in a last stand for the ages. Mexico might be a narco-state under the thumb of the USA, the influence of cartels, and the idiocy of corrupt officials; but the citizens don’t want it to be - and they’re fighting back hard.

    • @Charis-d5k
      @Charis-d5k 2 года назад +5

      Not communist, they are zapatismo anarchist

    • @batpoolzilla3200
      @batpoolzilla3200 2 года назад

      @@Charis-d5k either way EZLN is useless

    • @galvatk2194
      @galvatk2194 2 года назад +7

      Ah yes, the old "poor Mexico, so far from the grace of god and so close to the United States"

    • @BonaldDrump
      @BonaldDrump 2 года назад

      ^ it's true still

    • @lilfoward1832
      @lilfoward1832 2 года назад +1

      Also the story of el marino loco. Which is very interesting to look into

  • @waifubreaks1572
    @waifubreaks1572 2 года назад +4

    Those migrants aren't Mexican, they're usually from Central America or Africa or India or God knows where..,

  • @flonkplonk1649
    @flonkplonk1649 2 года назад +8

    What about the CIA involvement in the Camarena case? It's proven that a CIA agent was present when he was tortured and killed.

  • @U.F.O_0908
    @U.F.O_0908 2 года назад +3

    You guys should do a documentary on my country: South Africa. It's a sad political joke at this point. But it's a reality we have to face. 20 years after apartheid ended and poverty, violence, racism, inequality, and unemployment are higher than ever. We're stuck without electricity for up to 12 hours per day on some days. It's a country going back to the dark ages.

  •  2 года назад +12

    Do you have other sources regarding the political system of Mexico? It seems that all you say was: "I cannot believe Mexico is a democratic nation because my American (US) sources apparently says that". I mean, having just US and Italian sources to talk about the political system but not Mexican, is not exactly objective. Flawed democracy as it is, was not born in the seventies in Mexico.

  • @axelcastillo4903
    @axelcastillo4903 2 года назад +12

    Change the guy in thumbnail ,not really Mexican

  • @rejvaik00
    @rejvaik00 2 года назад +10

    That guy I'd say is more a salvadoran than mexican in the video thumbnail

  • @aberrybear7891
    @aberrybear7891 2 года назад +6

    Sadly, it's mostly like that for a bunch of Latin America (being someone who is a native there and lives there). Would love to see a video about corruption and other nasty stuff in Latin America, it's a whole bundle tbh.

  • @fundamentos3439
    @fundamentos3439 2 года назад +36

    Thank you for your video. Half truths, however. Mexico is a little more complicated , and the drug cartels , plus the violence are one part of a much broader picture , mainly a country of hardworking people , a very dynamic and diversified economy , a very sophisticated elite , a very intelligent and crafty middle class , and an underprivileged class that has finally had a saying in the country's affairs.
    The ' Drug Cartels ' and their criminal influence would suffer a devastating blow , if drugs were to be legalized.

    • @vaclevsta
      @vaclevsta Год назад

      This video is specifically about the political power of drug cartels, not about Mexican society as a whole. That being said, he does point out at the beginning of the video that there is a thriving economy and that the country has transitioned from a one party dictatorship to a representative democracy.

    • @fundamentos3439
      @fundamentos3439 Год назад +1

      @@vaclevsta
      The drug cartels are part of a broader picture .
      As long as drugs remain illegal , and in never ending demand north of the ' Bravo ' , they will be hard to erradicate.

    • @vaclevsta
      @vaclevsta Год назад

      @@fundamentos3439 You are correct, but again the video mentions this exact point, so I am not sure who you are arguing with

    • @lloydgush
      @lloydgush Год назад

      As we see in Cali, no, not necessarily.
      Cali pot growers are such good people, growing good pot for the cartels for free, lol, and giving a lot of free money to the feds as well.

    • @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana
      @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana Год назад +1

      Mexico is a strong, diversified, resilient, regenerative, growing nation 🏛.
      Though that is mostly by its ability to tolerate mass carnage on a regular basis like this, without institution 🏛 damage. It is like its unique, cool 😎 adaptation you see for animals in nature documentaries.

  • @cumcrip7582
    @cumcrip7582 2 года назад +13

    Idk if you read this but this should be series called: "countrys that got a drug cartels installed by the US" also Jamaica is a good one

  • @ffffff52
    @ffffff52 2 года назад +43

    2:54 México doesn't have a Right-Left division, if the traditional political compass serves as a guide all the major political parties are and often dance around the top right corner following "normal characteristics" of that area depending on current needs.
    The only clear division we have is how populist the parties are.
    EDIT: Also the "school" from Ayotzinapa is nowhere near as "pure" as described here, for years it has been known as a prolific incubator of radicalized activists with heavy Communist influences that often clash with local governments and other power groups (that's what got the 43 killed, the attempted to steal busses and well someone didn't like it)

    • @imperiumgrim4717
      @imperiumgrim4717 2 года назад

      There's a far right political opposition group tho "National Frontier of Mexico" but they're the small minority group tho

    • @ffffff52
      @ffffff52 2 года назад +20

      @@imperiumgrim4717 again, there is no Right nor Left in México, even parties that sound and look like "left" leaning end up voting or joining coalitions with their opposites, the PT(Workers party) and the Greens (Partido Verde) are clear examples of this acts of "lets align with the winning party, screw politics". Our "left/right" division cold be said to be how populist a party is, and even then its not clear.

    • @andreaflores554
      @andreaflores554 2 года назад +7

      Nobody outside Mexico know really about Ayotzinapa and it shows, a really well keep picture I guess

    • @imperiumgrim4717
      @imperiumgrim4717 2 года назад +3

      @@ffffff52 false

    • @ffffff52
      @ffffff52 2 года назад +1

      @@imperiumgrim4717 lmao you are going to need more than that to prove something as false, lets put it this way: either you are a random punk that thinks they know more than a Mexican about their country or the extend of your political categorization doesnt go further than YT videos and somehow think those concepts are universal

  • @mr.stepdaddy2259
    @mr.stepdaddy2259 2 года назад +12

    The picture of the thumbnail is a Salvadori guy with tattoos bro !

  • @JPJ432
    @JPJ432 2 года назад +28

    After the Mexican American War in 1848 I believe President Polk was very close to buying the northern part of Mexico which Mexico was willing to sell but at the last minute was turned down by the Republicans at the time. Wonder how that would have effected history if it did go through.

    • @Bryan-Arriaga
      @Bryan-Arriaga 2 года назад +1

      Less violence that’s what will happen

    • @richbandicoot
      @richbandicoot 2 года назад

      @@Bryan-Arriaga says the texan who just had a school schooting lmao, violence will happen regardless

    • @pasofino9583
      @pasofino9583 2 года назад +7

      @@Bryan-Arriaga Uvalde wants a word with you.

    • @Bryan-Arriaga
      @Bryan-Arriaga 2 года назад +3

      @@pasofino9583 well you can’t compare one shooting from the zetas to Cartel de noreste

    • @pasofino9583
      @pasofino9583 2 года назад +1

      @@Bryan-Arriaga one shooting? One shooting a week lol

  • @orboakin8074
    @orboakin8074 2 года назад +40

    Another well presented, objective and well researched video. Seriously, your channel is going places! Kudos for being one of the few objective historical/geopolitical channels out there!

    • @gustavobarajas5877
      @gustavobarajas5877 2 года назад

      He is not well informed. He has a lot of misinformation about Mexico.

    • @sgcnca
      @sgcnca 2 года назад

      Yes

  • @thinadlamini4671
    @thinadlamini4671 2 года назад +4

    The way I love Mexico i only wish for the best for them. They have so much potential. 🥺🥺🥺🥺

  • @elephantguy1990
    @elephantguy1990 2 года назад +11

    I love how you used "Chinese Ox" from ADVChina as the face of the PRC :)

  • @ryanh3635
    @ryanh3635 2 года назад +3

    Mexican Narcos are international, their cooks even get arrested here in The Netherlands

  • @FenriZzShortz
    @FenriZzShortz 2 года назад +2

    México has a similar problem with Colombia except we beat the biggest threat now we have to clean sweep the small factions cause they're aren't much cases of kidnapping or killing compared to the 80's.

  • @zazaza903
    @zazaza903 2 года назад +2

    You mentioned container ship ports in Mexico.. No idea how anything passing control.. l am sailor 7 years.. going with ship to Mexico all the time and provide on arrival its always.. special police with dog going in ship and completely researching the ship and cargo.. also all containers exiting the port area been scanned with giant scanner..

  • @juliancho3229
    @juliancho3229 2 года назад +4

    Have you ever read about the drug consumption in europe and the usa? Believe me if people in usa and europe stop consuming drugs the way they do, this will help latin america a lot

    • @Joshua-dt5vi
      @Joshua-dt5vi 2 года назад

      Blaming developed countries will never fix your problems it never has. Your beef is with your corrupt politicians. How do you think the US defeated the Italian Mafia.

    • @juliancho3229
      @juliancho3229 2 года назад +1

      @@Joshua-dt5vi I am not lying, in fact the USA us by far the largest drug user of the planet, it is impossible to fight against 40 million drug users in the USA. I am giving you facts not opinions. Developed countries need to control their noses. Thats the way it is whether you like it or not.

    • @Joshua-dt5vi
      @Joshua-dt5vi 2 года назад +1

      @@juliancho3229 During the times of the prohibition Americans and Canadians were more alchoholics and drug addicts back then and the Italian mafia found that very profitable and yet the US government defeated them and now they only operate in Italy.

    • @juliancho3229
      @juliancho3229 2 года назад +1

      @@Joshua-dt5vi Ohhhhh good "during the times of prohibition" good so let's legalize all drugs that would be fantastic ,but imagine what would happen if Mexico legalizes unilaterally all drugs, the USA would be angry at that so your argument is totally invalid.

    • @Joshua-dt5vi
      @Joshua-dt5vi 2 года назад

      @@juliancho3229 I mean California legalized Mariuana and now people consume it less.🤷‍♂️

  • @vikalmarentes4376
    @vikalmarentes4376 2 года назад +30

    México has serious cartel violence problems but to say it's a narco state is quite a stretch. México is in the top 15 economies in the world. clearly not everyone is involved in drug trafficking. i wonder if this guy has lived in Mexico enough to really understand the situation or just watches a lot of tv shows 🤔

    • @magnero2749
      @magnero2749 2 года назад +21

      I wonder if you have watched the video "México is in the top 15 economies" and "clearly not everyone is involved in drug trafficking" are really poor arguments that dont undue any of the multiple examples given.

    • @vikalmarentes4376
      @vikalmarentes4376 2 года назад +12

      @@magnero2749 I did watch the video. My arguments are also facts. Mexico is a big country. Just like the USA is the biggest illigal drug market by country doesn't mean the USA is a junky country does it?

    • @magnero2749
      @magnero2749 2 года назад +9

      @@vikalmarentes4376 They are indeed 'facts' but they hardly constitute 'arguments' beyond extremely fallacious ones
      Also if the U.S is not a junky country then what is one ?
      You could argued instead that such statement could be couched in a different language for the purpose of not offending people and you'd have a point. But if your standard is that 'every single person in a country has to fall under the category for the statement to be true' , Then it is you who either doesn't understand what it was meant or is being deliberately thick.
      Your 'logic' could also be applied to an individual case to defend the position that the worst cocaine abuser is not really an addict because even the worst cocaine abuser doesn't spend most of the day snorting.

    • @vikalmarentes4376
      @vikalmarentes4376 2 года назад +1

      @@magnero2749 I don't know what you were smoking when you wrote that but let me explain something. What makes a drug addict an addict is the uncontrollable dependency to take the drug. Nowhere no one said only if consumed all day. Learn the definitions first then argue

    • @magnero2749
      @magnero2749 2 года назад +7

      @@vikalmarentes4376 Well, that point went completely over your head so let me try to explain again.
      That was a hypothetical argument deliberately intended to lead into a wrong conclusion in order to highlight the faulty logic used in your previous arguments. That faulty logic being that unless something X is completely and utterly dominated by property Y then it is wrong to say X is a Y like thing. Applying that to the "definition" of an addict somebody could say they dont have uncontrollable dependency because most of the day they are not using it.

  • @gatoloco1873
    @gatoloco1873 2 года назад +6

    Mexico is really poor. 90% of the population are living like in africa but the goverment hide the statistics, we are really a backward third world country ruled by narcos, basically we are a banana republic. I hope some day we can escape from this misery.

    • @ahuzel
      @ahuzel 2 года назад

      More like 50% ish.

    • @ARES-zf5fz
      @ARES-zf5fz 2 года назад +4

      Creeme, no estamos ni cerca de africa. No quieres saber que pasa alla.

    • @ahuzel
      @ahuzel 2 года назад +3

      @@ARES-zf5fz South congo esta de la verga, ningun lugar de mexico esta así. entiendo la hiperbole de gato loco pero, si podriamos estar mucho peor.

    • @GoldenBoyDims
      @GoldenBoyDims 2 года назад +2

      Africa is a whole ass continent bruh why does everybody talk about Africa like it’s one big country you have to be specific on the place in Africa cause some countries in Africa are doing better than Mexico economically

    • @gatoloco1873
      @gatoloco1873 2 года назад

      @@GoldenBoyDims For sure maybe countries in africa are doing better than mexico. At least are more safe. Becouse in mexico the narco war and crime is killing more people than in Afaganistan

  • @ivanThaOoze
    @ivanThaOoze 2 года назад +15

    I wonder if you’ve actually been to Mexico.

    • @ericktellez7632
      @ericktellez7632 2 года назад +10

      They haven’t nor do they have good sources for the most part, most of the stuff that is actually good is in Spanish but these people can barely speak one language let alone another.

    • @pasofino9583
      @pasofino9583 2 года назад +5

      He’s got a map from 2015 there’s that for starters.

    • @masterjunky863
      @masterjunky863 2 года назад +2

      You don't need to go to a country if you have sources for study it.

    • @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana
      @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana Год назад

      Mexico 🌮🌯 not living up to expectations is a stupid political theory problem, not the sources describing the country being wrong problem.

  • @ARES-zf5fz
    @ARES-zf5fz 2 года назад +2

    Lesson of the video, stop watching Hollywood movies

  • @juliaanfloress
    @juliaanfloress 2 года назад +1

    the guy in thumbnail is a Mara, and is from El Salvador. don't misinform

  • @TNOBasedBatov
    @TNOBasedBatov 2 года назад +4

    Can you please make a video about Suriname?

  • @lilfoward1832
    @lilfoward1832 2 года назад +1

    This video is very one sided with not much nuance. Which I get bc you clarified in the title that it was about the beginning of the narco state.

  • @markusthoreneyus8711
    @markusthoreneyus8711 2 года назад +1

    you guys should watch 'The Last Narc' it explains a lot

  • @circleancopan7748
    @circleancopan7748 8 месяцев назад

    Don't mention Cartels either negatively or positively, either in public or in social media, in Mexico.
    Or else, either you end up in a Cartel video (negative) or hit up by every vigilante (positive).

  • @humo1rojo
    @humo1rojo 2 года назад +5

    Too many movies lol!

  • @Lebensfreude
    @Lebensfreude Год назад

    About this subject, i highly recommend a book called Red Cocaine by Joseph Douglass

  • @callywally3760
    @callywally3760 2 года назад

    The Ghost Recon music in the background suits this video very well considering the topic is Cartels.

  • @imperiumgrim4717
    @imperiumgrim4717 2 года назад +12

    image Mexico becoming a Parliamentary constitutional monarchy tho 👌🏾

    • @badezour
      @badezour 2 года назад +2

      Habría sido lo mejor

    • @raycom201
      @raycom201 2 года назад +1

      Do Mexicans use guillotines.

    • @imperiumgrim4717
      @imperiumgrim4717 2 года назад +2

      @@raycom201 we use the firing squad

    • @badezour
      @badezour 2 года назад

      @@imperiumgrim4717
      Tendríamos húsares como caballería

    • @raycom201
      @raycom201 2 года назад

      @@imperiumgrim4717 are they as fun to use though?

  • @CenTexMex101
    @CenTexMex101 2 года назад +1

    I thought they got rid of el DF

  • @joseolivarra7791
    @joseolivarra7791 2 года назад +1

    Maybe if enough of us agree Americans mexicans south Americans anyone we should start a legion and fight the cartel but then would we take over the drug trade will America and mexico stand in our way to keep the status quo

    • @JaKingScomez
      @JaKingScomez 2 года назад +1

      I been saying the US And Spain hell nato should form a coalition and occupy Mexico for a couple years up to a a decade or two

    • @joseolivarra7791
      @joseolivarra7791 2 года назад

      @@JaKingScomez atleast the border states

    • @joseolivarra7791
      @joseolivarra7791 2 года назад

      @@JaKingScomez I actually think we would be killed because I'm tired of my fellow native americans being belittled by americans I would stop all my people and anyone from crossing the border after years usa will be low on migrant workers that make a big part of the economy and I would make demands of more integration with the usa only if we can stop all drugs entering Mexico and usa

    • @JaKingScomez
      @JaKingScomez 2 года назад

      @@joseolivarra7791 anything is better then nothing. Mexico has proven they cant handle it. They proved they are a failed state. They are allowing their problems to effect others so much so the Sinola cartel is now in Spain. Then the Mexican president has the nerve to tell Spanish police to treat then right they are good people.

  • @CCMqueretaro
    @CCMqueretaro 2 года назад

    Good video.

  • @More_Row
    @More_Row 2 года назад +3

    Nooo, what happened to the stylish glasses. 😭

    • @novalectiointernational
      @novalectiointernational  2 года назад +4

      he's Jacopo, while the one who's writing now is Simone (I'm still wearing the glasses) ;)

  • @breaktide251
    @breaktide251 2 года назад

    12:00 unfortunately yup

  • @rebeccaweil1
    @rebeccaweil1 Год назад

    I love the warm Mexicans. I want to move there.

  • @fonsalvarado
    @fonsalvarado 2 года назад +9

    You are really misinformed, tbh

    • @PhenomResurrections08
      @PhenomResurrections08 2 года назад +1

      How about you inform us then? Leave a counter point so some of us can cross reference... don't just be like "you're wrong bruh" and then just leave

    • @fonsalvarado
      @fonsalvarado 2 года назад

      @@PhenomResurrections08 i will no debunk a political video in one comment, but can answer any question you have.

    • @PhenomResurrections08
      @PhenomResurrections08 2 года назад

      @@fonsalvarado don't need you to. I already know this guy is spot on, and you're just offended at something he said.

    • @fonsalvarado
      @fonsalvarado 2 года назад

      @@PhenomResurrections08 Again, ask and i shall clear all your questions. Or remain sit on your stiff ignorance.

    • @nararanaraiii2022
      @nararanaraiii2022 2 года назад +2

      @@PhenomResurrections08 he's really missinformed tho, mexico is insecure in some very specific states yeah, it has cartels yeah, but they're nowhere as rampant as this guys makes it sound to be. If you travel to a certain corner of a certain state in the middle of fucks knows where u might encounter narcos.
      This guy makes it sound like theyre running the country and walking on the street with guns and that every city on the country is rampant violence every second of the day.
      Calling it a narco-state is a very missinformed posture. Which isnt surprising because that's what the media wants it to be.

  • @hardlo7146
    @hardlo7146 2 года назад +2

    You're making Mexico sound like Libya, Syria, or Yemen... Pretty misinformed video tbh

  • @glenselenselvs
    @glenselenselvs 2 года назад +1

    Isn't funny that Mexico( poorest nation) borders THE ONE most powerful developed rich country on earth?
    Somebpdy or somethings its preventing Mexico for being as powerful too.
    (People's laziness? Or the fact that tje Army and Narcos held most of the weapons)

    • @el_bizcocho6916
      @el_bizcocho6916 2 года назад

      It's the US (DEA, CIA) man it's not profitable for your country if his neighbor is fine they just need corrupt officials so that they can sell all natural resources

    • @ARES-zf5fz
      @ARES-zf5fz 2 года назад

      How can somebody make a paragraph so extended yet so misinformed. I usually dont like stereotypes but you americans pretty much do it yourselves.

    • @danielarvizu7477
      @danielarvizu7477 2 года назад +5

      1. Mexico is not even close to be the poorest nation in the world, not even in Latin America.
      2. The U.S. Is the richest but not the most developed nation in the world.
      3. Mexico Is the country where people works the most hours per week in the OECD. Many people works journeys of 10 hours on average, but the problem is that the work is usually and somehow not productive.
      4. A nation's richness is not measured by guns.

    • @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana
      @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana Год назад +1

      1. Mexico 🌯🌮 is not the poorest.
      2. Mexico is not weak. Mexico's citizen's are weak. If you gave a blood donation, it wouldn't magically cause you to collapse, or even be majorly weakened would it?
      It has a pretty good power level and power projection.

  • @TheZINGularity
    @TheZINGularity 2 года назад +8

    Aw yeah this is the shit 🔥🔥🤘
    Hails from 🇫🇮

  • @kennethblachlyjr3040
    @kennethblachlyjr3040 Год назад

    I think you liberal and it's obvious so I see how you approach stuff but you do good research and your videos are entertaining and informative

  • @svihl666
    @svihl666 6 месяцев назад

    3:36 / 16:56

  • @Greg-jq1co
    @Greg-jq1co 2 года назад +1

    I know one thing I never want to go to Mexico.

  • @fv101
    @fv101 2 года назад +1

    Nice

  • @Mr1121628
    @Mr1121628 Год назад +1

    I think at this point, most people view Mexico as a lost cause. Still beneficial for trade and tourism, but not worthwhile for much else.

    • @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana
      @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana Год назад

      Lost cause just means it has more selection pressure for future booms 🤑💰💰💰💰💰.

    • @AngelloDelNorte
      @AngelloDelNorte Год назад

      That's basically how it is for Mexico in terms of geopolitics and tourism opinions.

  • @fv101
    @fv101 2 года назад +1

    New vid!

  • @cristian15154
    @cristian15154 2 года назад +1

    Matarife Capítulo 4 Parte 1 - Temporada 3 El Origen

  • @theswedishdude1
    @theswedishdude1 2 года назад +3

    11:43 that number doesn't really mean anything without a comparison to the male death numbers, is this more then the male deaths? is it less? is it twice as many? is it 10x as many? for all we know this is just equal to the male deaths which would be extremely disingenuous. great video though

  • @nhujhhhjoouyytr
    @nhujhhhjoouyytr 2 года назад +2

    shoutout serpentza

  • @constancio2306
    @constancio2306 2 года назад

    Bellissimo video come sempre !

  • @ellismeah8110
    @ellismeah8110 Год назад

    Shame they''re is so much coruption

  • @urielleon9243
    @urielleon9243 2 года назад +9

    This guy need to get his facts correct he at least knows where mexico is at

  • @abisaibautista763
    @abisaibautista763 2 года назад

    pon susbtitulos en español, nose ingles

    • @masterjunky863
      @masterjunky863 2 года назад

      Il video originale è in italiano, prova a guardare quello

  • @dradamlomas2100
    @dradamlomas2100 2 года назад +4

    It may be a narco-state but, as an American, it is my favorite narco-state!

  • @madcat789
    @madcat789 2 года назад +3

    Mexico considered itself part of North America? We were taught in Geography Class that it was part of Central America.

    • @SteviaSweetenedFlan
      @SteviaSweetenedFlan 2 года назад +6

      People who are taught that America is 2 continents are also taught that all of Central America is part of North America

    • @madcat789
      @madcat789 2 года назад

      @@SteviaSweetenedFlan How peculiar.

    • @davidmclane4145
      @davidmclane4145 2 года назад +2

      There are 35 countries that make up the Americas....3 of the 4 largest comprise North America....Canada, the USA and Mexico....7 countries make up Central America

  • @andreikilla
    @andreikilla Год назад

    Fox❤

  • @Casper50002
    @Casper50002 Год назад +3

    Mexico needs to ask the assistance of Russia military intelligence and from the Wagner group to defeat the drug cartels. Mexico, if they haven't figured it out yet, must understand that the US wants the cartels tearing up Mexico.

  • @andrewmartineau5445
    @andrewmartineau5445 Год назад +1

    Send US Army to Mexico to fight against the Drug Cartel directly and then lawyers from Justice Department teach Mexican officials to how resist corruption through a better judicial system.

  • @Baltimore_Hood_Vines_2014
    @Baltimore_Hood_Vines_2014 2 года назад

    Fax.

  • @humorbranco69
    @humorbranco69 2 года назад

    Funkytown

  • @Alexrocks1253
    @Alexrocks1253 2 года назад +9

    I wouldn't be surprised if the government collapsed and Mexico split up into warring states. It's sad, but the instability I have heard and seen from that country points towards that future.
    I wonder what would have happened if the US annexed all of it during the Mexican-American War instead of the top 3rd?
    Would it be more stable? Less stable? In a puzzling state like Puerto Rico?
    Edit: thanks for the corrections in the comments. I hope Mario Lecto International makes another video that’s more balanced. It’s hard to come up with unbiased things these days.

    • @ericktellez7632
      @ericktellez7632 2 года назад +24

      You are a prime example of biased, we are not some central african country, what you “heard” is what you saw in some movie about cartels, we are not unstable we are just poor.

    • @Alexrocks1253
      @Alexrocks1253 2 года назад +8

      @@ericktellez7632 how much of the country is under full government control? Just curious. I know some parts are safe, I’ve visited many times and even lived in Monterrey for 1.5 years, but some others I’ve heard are run by cartels.

    • @cachifli870
      @cachifli870 2 года назад +4

      @@Alexrocks1253 that's more in rural areas mostly in the northern region

    • @Alexrocks1253
      @Alexrocks1253 2 года назад

      @@cachifli870 ah ok. That makes sense since they smuggle drugs they grow over our border, it’d be easier to live right next to it.
      I really hope Mexico solves this cartel problem. It’s a beautiful country but this is giving them a bad reputation.

    • @cachifli870
      @cachifli870 2 года назад

      @@Alexrocks1253 the media makes the situation seem worse then it actually is. Iy's similar to the US gang violence it increased when economic conditions worsened(neoliberalism/NAFTA)during the late 80s 90s and 2000s Slowly recovering because of the economic policies this new government is doing during that whole period formers most were peasants were forced forced to migrate to the US or join the narcos and the war on drugs in 2006 made it worse that's when cartels started militarizing its going to take a few administrations to close this chapter of our history

  • @daemfbesity
    @daemfbesity 2 года назад +2

    ONLY FUEDAL STATE IN WORLD 💪💪💪💪🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽

  • @julioaltamirano
    @julioaltamirano 2 года назад

    Soooo wrong there are 32 states, Mexico City is also one...!!!

  • @bandadelsughero9093
    @bandadelsughero9093 2 года назад

    Si vuole in italiaanoooooo.bravi ragazzi

  • @othalabro8663
    @othalabro8663 2 года назад +8

    Send them home.

    • @othalabro8663
      @othalabro8663 2 года назад +2

      @@sdi87hhk Someone sure is clever.

    • @DBGames574
      @DBGames574 2 года назад

      @@othalabro8663 shush gringo. How about you go back to Europe? Where the whites came

    • @youngsavag666
      @youngsavag666 2 года назад +1

      Yes! Please help the Mexicans send all those migrants home! The Central Americans are taking over their country. The Mexicans have done their job recolonizing the American south west like their ancestors did before the 13 colonies. 😂

    • @mr.stepdaddy2259
      @mr.stepdaddy2259 2 года назад

      @@sdi87hhk look where full in North America and we don’t need Ukrainians so help your country because we shouldn’t be helping you.

    • @mr.stepdaddy2259
      @mr.stepdaddy2259 2 года назад +3

      @@sdi87hhk it’s sad that your not helping them 😂🤦

  • @grainmatter5368
    @grainmatter5368 2 года назад +4

    Need to build that wall!

    • @Rmon_34
      @Rmon_34 2 года назад +1

      It already has been

    • @stewart2589
      @stewart2589 2 года назад +21

      Ah yes Republicans living in medieval times when walls actually worked

    • @hallu4696
      @hallu4696 2 года назад +4

      @@stewart2589 many countries have border walls/barbed wire fences and they work just fine so please tell me why this somehow wouldn’t also help in America because clearly you know better than dozens of national governments

    • @blueciffer1653
      @blueciffer1653 2 года назад +3

      @@hallu4696 A wall wouldn't fix the issue. In parts of the US southern border where there is a wall, we've seen people climb over it and tunnel under it, easily. Plus a lot of drugs come by plane and boat too. Putting up a wall in the US/Mexico border is like putting a band-aid on a blown off leg.

    • @hallu4696
      @hallu4696 2 года назад +3

      @@blueciffer1653 It won’t solve the problem completely by itself but it does drastically reduce how many foreigners get in illegally. The reason so many get in despite such things is because of the intentional and unintentional incentives for foreigners to illegally enter that the federal government, some state governments, and corporations provide. Now before you say anything it is the establishment of both parties which are responsible for this not just the left even though they are certainly the most obvious punching bag. If we had a nation run by leaders who actually cared about the people then they would do more than just put up some glorified fences and occasionally allow ICE to deport those who cross but instead things are what they are.