a lot of them don't use drugs. if you sell drugs, you have more of a chance of getting caught if you use the drugs you sell. stupid dealers use their own stock. you would never know a smart dealer if you saw him on the street. they're usually people you would never have guessed.
coain
Yes.
Timeline of the Mexican Drug War happened in 2008.
Yes. The root of the problem is the large segment of the American population taking illegal drugs.
cocaine, opium, marijuana, cannabis, methamphetamine, heroin
It IS in a war right now. It is the Mexican War on Drugs, paid for by the United States but fought by the Mexican police and army to fight several drug cartels trying to smuggle illegal drugs into the United States. Since December 2006, when this war was declared by Mexican president Francisco Calderon, more than 60,000 people have died due to the conflict.
The Mexican federal government against the operatives of the various drug cartels located there.
They were involved in the Mexican War.
It IS an ongoing conflict between the federal, state and local police and the Mexican armed forces against several drug cartels trying to smuggle illegal drugs - marijuana, crack, methamphetamines - into the United States. since the Mexico's Drug War was proclaimed by former Mexican President Felipe Calderon Hinojosa on December 11, 2006, more than 90,000 people (2013) have been killed by confrontations between federal, state and local police forces against drug cartel members.
Both Lee and Grant, but there were numerous Mexican American War Vetrans involved in the US Civil War..
mexican-american war
The Mexican American War, the Indian Wars and it was also involved in the Mexican Revolution involving the cross border attacks by Pancho Villa.
Yes. It is called the Mexican War on Drugs, and is a low intensity conflict, meaning there is no overt war between different factions. This doesn't mean however, that there are no casualties: between 2006 and the end of 2011 there were more than 45,000 deaths related to confrontations between the different drug cartels and the municipal, state and federal Mexican police.