Online Lib Lawyers: Dumb or Lying?
Hey, National Republicans, Should Look at How the TN GOP Handled Business
CNN Analyst Delivered a BIG Reality Check for Dems Yesterday
Dems Are Looking to Redistrict Delaware. There's Only One Problem.
John Thune Is Reminding Republican Voters Why He Sucks
A Louisiana Restaurant Shut Down Permanently Over What Lurked in Its Walk-in Freezer
South Carolina's State Senate Leader Said What Now About Why He's Against...
Bad Medicine Could Be in Store for MI's El-Sayed Over Issues Concerning His...
NBC News Tried Invoking 'Experts' to Fearmonger About Hantavirus and It Backfired
Oh, Look: Another Minneapolis Grocery Store Owner Has Been Busted for SNAP Fraud
We Just Learned More About the Man Hit by a Frontier Airlines Plane,...
TN State Rep. Justin Pearson Is Not Happy He Faced Consequences for His...
Scott Jennings Schools Dem Strategist on GOP Redistricting
The Greatest Time to Be Alive in America Is Right Now
Exclusive: Sen. Rick Scott to Introduce Bill Criminalizing the Doxxing of Federal Law...
OPINION

Mexicans to US: Stop Consuming Drugs

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Mexicans to US: Stop Consuming Drugs
(Newser) – A Mexican poet and hundreds of activists toured some of the most dangerous cities in Mexico last week on what he called a “trail of pain,” calling for an end to the violent drug war rocking the country. Javier Sicilia, whose 24-year-old son was killed in March by a narco gang, ended the trip across the border, asking local activists in El Paso, Texas, to take up his cause with the US government, urging it to do more to stem drug consumption and the transport of weapons to Mexico. "The United States and the silence of its citizens have imposed a war on us to stop something you consume, drugs," he said.
Advertisement

Since Sicilia’s son’s death, the 54-year-old has become the leader of a growing popular movement against the militarized drug war he believes has been doomed by a corrupt system. Forty thousand have been killed and another 10,000 gone missing since the drug war was launched in 2006, and the violence is spreading to previously quiet areas. Sicilia’s “Citizens Caravan for Peace with Justice and Dignity” aims to publicize victims’ pain, with many openly weeping at rallies. Ultimately, the coalition wants the drug war demilitarized, and discussions opened about legalizing drugs and halting US assistance to the Mexican military. Read more on the campaign in the Atlantic.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement