7/10/2013

Fox, marijuana and big business


Utopia
 

 
Eduardo Ibarra Aguirre
 
Shively Jamen Vicente Fox announced the completion of the First International Symposium on the Legalization of Marijuana for Medical Use in the Fox Center, with the participation of 20 experts from the United States and Mexico, in equal parts.

The conference name is suggestive: Changing the paradigm, crime and violence and harmony legalization, the drug problem in the Americas, the medical use of marijuana in the treatment of cancer and other diseases ...

We have an initiative that will place the matter in the light of the day, pulling a little more than closet that is still, thanks to the policies of yesterday and today of Felipe Calderón and Enrique Pena, lip service rule by discussing the issue but not a single step while the country autocratically impose their particular conception of the complex problem, or your staff perception that too much to ask first.

But I have no doubt that Fox is, until now the main protagonist of the bid for the decriminalization of marijuana, the best person to host the debate, although of course it is in full and respectable right.

Fox is the same who on Sunday 7 regardless of the date and popular meaning, asked the colleagues who cover the issue must treat "without dodgy and in all seriousness, please." Just the creator of "I'll get the PRI from Los Pinos to kick", "Comes and go", "And I why", "In the end I beat Lopez Obrador" among a string of blunders and involuntary confessions, it being the mastermind of the trivialization of a subject not only touches heartstrings of drug lords and even the rulers, but of society.

The initiative plausible, for example, was presented by the founder and president of the company brand marijuana Diego Pellicer, Jamen Shively, who also will be responsible for the conclusions of the symposium along with the former president Fox, six years in which Joaquin Guzman left the prison without anyone to disturb him and during which, as Fox acknowledged, "we had to back down in the best sense of the word" (sic) to the demands of George W. Bush not to turn the initiative into law passed by Congress to liberalize a little drug prohibitionist policies.

Put another way, the husband of Martha Sahagun, the failed drive sighing Mexico no husband, no secret that goes after the business: "I'm ready to plant marijuana", as recognized in this way as to express his ambitions as a landowner come to champion "the debate of ideas", as she said she called Mr. Salinillas, but to who finished siding.
One of "Mexican experts" will be the talented Hector Aguilar Camin, who will present global experiences in the process of legalization of drugs, and Jorge Castaneda "coordinate the conference" on the State of the legalization of marijuana in Mexico. The same intellectual and systemic todólogos forever.

Certainly have no place in the symposium voices like his Mesa Francisco Rios, who warns of the risks of marijuana use in terms of metabolic alterations that stimulate cholesterol and diabetes sponsor, and will damage mental health among young people under 21 (La Jornada, 9-VII-13).

Of what it is to argue, not to shore only truths to be one more supporter to thoroughly militaristic strategy that was imposed by the White House to the United Nations for over four decades.

Acknowledgment of receipt

According to the updated report on the murders and disappearances of journalists in Mexico the first half of 2013, "So far the current federal administration, completed nine homicides with Cuauhtemoc Sanchez Arreola, press council chief PAN Ruiz, Nayarit, and the kidnapping and death of Angel Licona Humberto Marin, son of Antonio Marín Cardin, reporter and managing editor of Notiver of Veracruz ". He adds that "disappearances have occurred 3 2 humble workers of the press and radio colleague of Coahuila, Gerardo Padilla Blanquet". And that "from 2000 to date total 128 killings (...) 105 journalists, 10 media workers, 9 family and 3 friends communicators, and 1 civilian, also increased to 21 enforced disappearances to be clarified" ... In Parras, Coahuila, land Aguirre Doña Graciela Chavez, met two years to strike, on July 6, "The more than 300 workers affiliated with the Progressive Workers Union Star, jean factory mainly country (The Star, Today GFM Textiles Parras, owned by Grupo Minero Ferro) ". The workers defend "their source of employment and collective bargaining agreement, cultivated for 89 years as the sole heritage," reports the Center for Study and Action.

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