Guns, Desperate Migrants, and Dangerous Drugs
By Robert Reich
Even as
Republican members of Congress accuse Joe Biden of failing to secure the
nation’s southern border, Mexico is facing a growing problem of securing its
northern border. Guns from America are pouring into Mexico, arming violent drug
gangs.Karen Bleier/AFP via Getty Images
Mexico has tried
just about everything to stop the flow of firearms from the north – passing
strict gun control laws, imposing stiff penalties on traffickers, and pleading
with U.S. authorities to stop the trafficking – but nothing has worked. So now
it’s doing what any litigious American would do: it’s suing.
Mexico announced on August 4 it’s seeking at least $10 billion in compensation from America’s 11 major gun manufacturers for the havoc the guns have wrought south of the border.
It alleges America’s gunmakers know their products are being trafficked
to Mexico and are expressly marketing their weapons to Mexican criminal gangs –
designing guns to be “easily modified to fire automatically” and be “readily
transferable on the criminal market in Mexico.”
The deluge of firearms
from the United States to Mexico – on average, more than 500 every day – is
contributing to mayhem there. Killings have become a routine part of the
Mexican drug trade. In Mexico’s recent midterm election campaign, 30 candidates
were gunned down by criminal gangs. In 2019 alone, at least 17,000 homicides in
Mexico were linked to trafficked weapons.
Yet Mexico’s lawsuit is likely to face tough going in the United States, where the easy accessibility of guns is also wreaking havoc but where gun ownership is considered a constitutional right and gun purchases are skyrocketing.
In addition,
American gunmakers have erected a fortress of legal protections. In 2005, the
gun lobby got congressional Republicans to enact the Protection of Lawful
Commerce in Firearms Act, banning most lawsuits brought against gun
manufacturers for marketing and distributing their products.
At a more basic
level, American capitalism considers any market to be an opportunity to make a
profit. After all, a buck is a buck (or, more precisely, 19.98 pesos, at
today’s exchange rate). In America, buying and selling are hallmarks of
freedom. For government to prohibit a sale is to intrude on the “free market.”
For another government to bar its consumers from buying American goods is to violate
“free trade.”
Alejandro
Celorio, a legal advisor to Mexico’s foreign ministry, estimates the damage to
the Mexican economy caused by trafficked guns to total 1.7% to 2% of Mexico’s
gross domestic product. What’s left unsaid is that Mexico’s illicit drug
business is also a boon to the Mexican economy, adding billions of dollars each
year in foreign sales, mostly to American consumers eager to buy thousands of
kilos of methamphetamines, heroin, cocaine and fentanyl each year.
Freedom of
contract, it’s called. We sell them guns that kill them; they sell us drugs
that kill us.
But this isn’t
trade in goods. It’s trade in bads. There’s death on both sides.
The merchants of
such death – American gunmakers like Glock, Smith & Wesson, Beretta USA,
Barrett, Century International Arms and Colt; Mexican producers of
methamphetamines, heroin, and fentanyl; and the wholesalers and traffickers
connecting buyers with sellers on both sides of the border – are making piles
of money. Free market ideologues will argue that as long as everyone is getting
what they want, these trades are efficient. Yet vast numbers of people are
dying.
The Republicans
who protect gun manufacturers and who are criticizing Joe Biden for failing to
secure the southern border from migrants who are desperate to come to America
should take note of this tragic irony.
The flood of
guns from America into Mexico is helping fuel much of the crime, violence, and
corruption pushing thousands of Mexicans to seek a better life north of the
border.
It’s also
enabling the flow of dangerous drugs from Mexico to America that are killing
hundreds of thousands of Americans, many in states and congressional districts
represented by those same Republicans.
Guns, dangerous
drugs, and desperate migrants are inextricably connected. The answer to solving
one of these problems lies in responding to all three.
Robert Reich's latest book is "THE SYSTEM: Who Rigged
It, How To Fix It." He is Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the
University of California at Berkeley and Senior Fellow at the Blum Center. He
served as Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration, for which Time
Magazine named him one of the 10 most effective cabinet secretaries of the
twentieth century. He has written 17 other books, including the best sellers
"Aftershock," "The Work of Nations," "Beyond
Outrage," and "The Common Good." He is a founding editor of the
American Prospect magazine, founder of Inequality Media, a member of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and co-creator of the award-winning
documentaries "Inequality For All," streaming on YouTube, and
"Saving Capitalism," now streaming on Netflix.