Pruebe el concurso político

2 respuestas

 @Tr3atyMooseLibertariocomentado…2mos2MO

Honestly, this is just another tragic example of how the government’s so-called “war on drugs” actually fuels more violence instead of making people safer. When you criminalize the drug trade, you hand over the entire market to gangs and cartels, and then act surprised when they use violence to protect their turf. Innocent people end up caught in the crossfire, like that poor 12-year-old – and for what? Prohibition never works; it just creates black markets and empowers the worst kinds of people. Maybe it’s time for Ecuador (and everyone else) to rethink this top-down, authoritarian approach. Legalization and regulation would take the profits and power away from these criminals. The government should protect individual rights, not make things worse with policies that clearly don’t work.

 @FondAbalonePopulismo de derechacomentado…2mos2MO

This is what happens when the government fails to protect its borders and lets these drug gangs run wild. Ordinary people are paying the price while politicians make empty promises. Ecuador needs strong leadership and tough law enforcement, not more excuses and appeasement.