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An A.M. Costa Rica guest editorial
Wrong-headed approach to sex trade obscures the real problems
By Ken Morris*
Special to A.M. Costa Rica

The collaboration between Costa Rica’s immigration police and the non-profit organization Fundación Rehab in recent raids of San Jose nightclubs with reputations for prostitution, chiefly Hotel Del Rey and Key Largo, was a misguided response to a serious problem.

No, the problem isn’t sex trafficking — the combating of which was the pretext for the raids — at least in the nightclubs targeted.  Genuine victims of sex trafficking (as opposed to voluntary immigrants) are more apt to be found in the downscale brothels, which despite being illegal according to the spirit of both Costa Rican and international law, operate with impunity under the auspices of pensión licenses issued with winks and giggles by the authorities.

The problem is sex tourism.  At any one time, upwards of 5,000 women and girls in Costa Rica work as prostitutes, often with foreign clients, and over time tens of thousands of Ticas are involved in the industry.  Indeed, the combined demand by locals and tourists for commercial sex forces Costa Rica to import about half of its prostitutes (a pattern of women’s voluntary labor migration that Fundación Rehab calls “sex trafficking”).  The roughly 200,000 North American sex tourists that visit the country annually, coupled with perhaps a tenth as many sexpats who live here permanently, are a large portion of that demand.

But Fundación Rehab is not the group to combat sex tourism — much less one that deserves a police escort to raid private businesses and detain customers without a warrant.  The non-profit simply doesn’t understand the sex industry, sex trafficking, or even prostitution.

According to Fundación Rehab’s Web site, prostitution is an extension of male domination to the point where men use women’s bodies for their prurient pleasure.  This, however, is stale ideology that doesn’t fit the facts and isn’t even accepted by most feminist sex researchers.

While male dominance is often a component of female prostitution, the relevant domination usually occurs long before a woman turns her first trick.  By the time she does, she frequently views prostitution as empowering retaliation for earlier exploitation.  Her thinking is:  If men will do this to me anyway, I might as well take charge and get paid for it!

To assume therefore that women in a nightclub looking for men who will pay them for sex are being exploited by those men is simply mistaken.  On the contrary, by then the women often feel that they are the exploiters, while the men are frequently remarkably kind and generous.

Fundación Rehab’s ideology of male domination also conveniently ignores that mothers in Costa Rica often initiate their daughters’ into prostitution — and then live off the proceeds.  Likewise, their ideology ignores male prostitution.  Not only is there a thriving gay sex trade throughout the country, but there is also a documented female sex tourist industry centered in Limón.

Fundación Rehab’s emphasis on the exploitation of women’s “bodies” further betrays their sophomoric ideology.  In reality, prostitution mainly involves “emotional labor” — smiling, listening, feigning affection, etc. — while the sex acts take only a few minutes.  In fact, the prostitutes’ main physical complaint is that their feet hurt from hours of trolling in high heels.

Most disturbingly, Fundación Rehab makes essentialist assumptions about who is and who isn’t a prostitute.  Research on sex tourism by the feminist scholar Amalia Cabezas shows that women’s identities are typically more fluid than labeling them “prostitutes” captures.  A few are looking for love, more for a stable mistress-like arrangement,   

 

and most at least for friends.  At both Hotel Del Rey and the Key Largo, the women don’t necessarily accept all offers — they exercise choice — and it is not uncommon for them to construe money they receive as “help” rather than a “fee.”

With what moralistic audacity does Fundación Rehab assume that the mere presence of a woman in one of these nightclubs brands her a prostitute?  Isn’t the non-profit — backed by police power — the one foisting the demeaning puta identity onto them?

The real problem is that Costa Rica’s bloated tourism industry entices women who would otherwise finish school, get a job, and get married into the more lucrative sex trade.  Again, these enticements are so powerful that thousands of foreign women are attracted to the country by them.

Beneath this problem though lurks a deeper one:  The entrenched economic interests of the tourism industry — interest that include an entire government ministry and government tax collectors along with thousands of private business — most of whom profit more from sex tourism than the prostitutes.

Unfortunately, these recent raids show that neither Costa Rica nor the international community (Fundación Rehab receives grants from the U.S. Embassy) is prepared to confront the country’s festering sex tourism industry at its root — or even wants to.

Indeed, raids of safely middle-class nightclubs, where all of the women enter voluntarily, smack of a showy spectacle designed to appease the grant-giving international community rather than a sensible engagement with a serious problem.

Meanwhile, the only ones victimized by this showy spectacle were the women, who were illegally detained and stigmatized.  But no one in Costa Rica has ever really cared about putas.  They have after all been offered up as enticements to tourists for decades.


*Ken Morris is an expat living in San Pedro.  He taught in the women’s studies program at the University of Georgia and published what Tammy Wynette’s biographer considers the definitive interpretation ofStand By Your Man.  

TSE files complaint against 90 PLN leaders
Published in La Nacion

The Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE) has filed a compliant with the Attorney General against 90 PLN leaders, accusing them of collectively billing their campaigns for ¢400 million ($796,812) in fake care rental expenses. The TSE is asking the Attorney General to investigate whether these party members committed an act of fraud against the state. The complex details of the case are explained in the full article in La Nacion.


2012-05-04, 12:00:00

 

Electronic invoice coming in December
Published in La Nacion

The new finance minister, Edgar Ayales is hoping to see broad use of a digital invoicing system by the end of this year. It is hoped that the system will more accurately track the income of independent professionals, who on average paid just ¢35,574 ($70) in income tax for 2010. The Comptroller General of the Republic is also working to develop systems that will analyze public records on real estate in an effort to track tax evasion.


2012-05-04, 12:00:00

 

U.S. students work in recycling project
Published in crhoy.com

Students from the New York Institute of Technology (NYIT) are working to design a recycling center from a tourist community in ​​Nosara, Guanacaste. Recycling is seen as a way to reduce the 60 percent of 2,400 tons of waste deposited daily in unregulated dumps across the country.


2012-05-04, 12:00:00

 

CCSS to charge private insurance companies
Published in Diario Extra

As part of the opening of the insurance market to private competition the national Social Security Fund (CCSS) will reevaluate its relationship with the National Insurance Institute (INS). Regulators are looking for each insurer to sign a deal with the national fund so as to ensure nationwide coverage for policy holders.


2012-05-04, 12:00:00

 

OIJ arrests two men accused of ¢ 5 million theft
Published in La Nacion

Judicial police arrested two individuals on Thursday for suspicion of robbing a business owner of a ¢5 million ($9,960) bank deposit in Cartago on February 23rd. The robbery was executed quickly by two armed men on a motorcycle.


2012-05-04, 12:00:00

 

Ministry of health on strike in Quepos
Published in Diario Extra

Area residents and employees from the ministry of health have united together in protest against the expected reinstatement of Dr. Alejandra Quesada as the regional director. Quesada had been separated from her post five months ago after a mob of 3,000 people gathered at the regional office and threatened to lynch her. The director is unpopular because she closed local businesses and had attempted to cancel the annual New Year celebration.


2012-05-03, 12:00:00

 

Students denounce teachers for extortion
Published in crhoy.com

High school students enrolled at the Colegio Técnico Profesional de Flores (CTP) have complained of threats on the part of teachers and substandard education at the public school. According to students, a group of teachers, unhappy about being posted to the school have demanded payments in return for good grades while failing to teach the required material.


2012-05-03, 12:00:00

 

Court rejects action to allow homosexuals to insure partners
Published in La Nacion

The constitutional court rejected an appeal for homosexual couples to extend state health insurance to their partners. Plaintiffs in the case plan to take their case to the Interamerican Court of Human Rights.


2012-05-03, 12:00:00

 

GOLLO Turrucares: ONLY GOOD FOR thieves
Published in Diario Extra

On Tuesday night, six armed men entered Gollo store in Turrúcares, Alajuela and robbed both the customers and the business. This is the second assault committed against the same place in less than a month.


2012-05-03, 12:00:00

 

Expat and tico missing for more than a year
Published in La Nacion

The judicial police are searching for Costa Rican Rishi Jeoshua Vaccari Mora, 23 of Tibás and Chandra H. Breathwaite, 24 of Tilarán who both went missing from different locations over a year ago.


2012-05-03, 12:00:00

A wave of plastic
A local environmental organization is beginning an awareness campaign about the great amount of plastic in the oceans.
2012-05-04, 03:33:56

July 4 bash returning to beer company grounds
The American Colony Committee is returning to the Cervercería Costa Rica picnic grounds for the July 4 bash this year.
2012-05-04, 03:33:35

Another moderate quake in Nicoya hot spot
Tuesday saw a flurry of moderate earthquakes in Costa Rica including one at the sensitive mouth of the Gulf of Nicoya. In the Pacific offshore from Chiapas, México, monitoring stations recorded a 5.8 to 6.3 quake at 4:43 p.m. Costa Rica time.
2012-05-03, 03:06:09

President seeks a committee to study government functions
President Laura Chinchilla said Tuesday that she soon would set up a committee of experts to improve the functioning and quality of the country's democracy. She said she is seeking a discussion with practical consequences.
2012-05-03, 03:05:48

Cement firm makes a disgruntled exit
A cement producer that spent five years wrapped in red tape has called it quits. The firm, Comercializadora de Concretos y Asfaltos S.A., took out full page ads in Spanish-language newspapers Monday to say that Costa Rica does not have a favorable climate for investment. The firm operated here as Cementos David.
2012-05-02, 03:58:21

Costa Rican convicted of massive fraud in U.S.
A federal jury in Virginia found Minor Vargas Calvo guilty Monday in a massive fraud scheme that has thousands of victims worldwide.
2012-05-02, 03:57:58

Research suggests humans could smell an earthquake coming
Costa Rica's earthquake experts ares suggesting more study of the theory that one might be able to smell a coming earthquake. The Red Sismológica Nacional took note of a study that says the level of ozone in the air increases dramatically in the processes leading up to an earthquake.
2012-05-01, 03:30:18

Escazú expat kills home invader in shootout
A long-time Escazú expat faced down a gang of masked robbers Friday night and killed one of the intruders in a shootout.
2012-05-01, 03:29:58

May Day means another parade and politics
Tuesday is the Día Internacional de Trabajo or international worker's day, sometimes called May Day. In Costa Rica, the day is a legal holiday, and the big event is a march by workers and others up Avenida 2 to the legislative complex.
2012-04-30, 04:11:10

Costa Rica-bound birders witnessed tragedy at sea
Passengers on a Costa Rican-bound cruise ship sighted what appeared to be a drifting fishing boat in waters about 100 miles south of Panamá, and were surprised to see the ship continue even after they informed a uniformed crew member of the situation. The ship is the Star Princess operated by Carnival cruise lines.
2012-04-30, 04:10:51

 

Yes the American workers want to leave the United States of America searching for work in foreign countries and are willing make less money taking these low paying jobs, The problem is like in Costa Rica, American Corporations employ 10,s of thousands of workers but it is illegal for a American to work at an American corporation in Costa Rica, if caught working in Costa Rica at a American Corporation that American is deported on the spot he can not go back to his apartment of house to retrieve any of his belongings,  computers, money or even make arrangements for his dog or car.

 

 

The reason that an American would try to go to a foreign country and work for less money is because the cost of living in these foreign countries is much lower and he can enjoy a stile of middle class living on much less money. All the American worker wants is food on the table and a roof over his head and it is getting harder and harder for the American worker to archive this in the United States with all the jobs being sent overseas and American Corporations bringing in cheaper labor and cheaper workers to take jobs away jobs from Americans. These workers are aloud to work in the United states and are not being deported like American Workers in Costa Rica and other foreign countries.

I have a sugestion for the American Government in Washington D.C. and this is to pass a law through congress Taxing every American Corporation that is sending jobs overseas to foreign countries or employing foreign workers on American soil.  

Here is a tax plan to help all Americans rich and poor alike and put  Americans back to work in the United States.
 This is a one dollar ($1.00) per hour tax on every worker that an American Corporation pays a foreign workers overseas or foreign workers working on American soil. With these Trillions of dollars coming in from this tax the United States Government should be able to give all American Corporation employing Americans in the United States a tax break and also give all the American workers working on American soil a tax break. 

Both Republicans and democrats should like this plan even the Tea Party!

Panama Jack is not a member of any political party or any religious group I pray only to God direct, I have cut out all the middle men, those child molesting money grabbing priest and cleric’s, the people that think the fastest way to make a million dollars is through religion   September 21 2011 (AP) News of the World by Panama Jack in exile in Costa Rica

The reason that an American would try to go to a foreign country and work for less money is because the cost of living in these foreign countries is much lower and he can enjoy a stile of middle class living on much less money. All the American worker wants is food on the table and a roof over his head and it is getting harder and harder for the American worker to archive this in the United States with all the jobs being sent overseas and American Corporations bringing in cheaper labor and cheaper workers to take jobs away jobs from Americans. These workers are aloud to work in the United states and are not being deported like American Workers in Costa Rica and other foreign countries.

I have a sugestion for the American Government in Washington D.C. and this is to pass a law through congress Taxing every American Corporation that is sending jobs overseas to foreign countries or employing foreign workers on American soil.  

Here is a tax plan to help all Americans rich and poor alike and put  Americans back to work in the United States.
 This is a one dollar ($1.00) per hour tax on every worker that an American Corporation pays a foreign workers overseas or foreign workers working on American soil. With these Trillions of dollars coming in from this tax the United States Government should be able to give all American Corporation employing Americans in the United States a tax break and also give all the American workers working on American soil a tax break. 

Both Republicans and democrats should like this plan even the Tea Party!

Panama Jack is not a member of any political party or any religious group I pray only to God direct, I have cut out all the middle men, those child molesting money grabbing priest and cleric’s, the people that think the fastest way to make a million dollars is through religion   September 21 2011 (AP) News of the World by Panama Jack in exile in Costa Rica

Presidents of Costa Rica, Guatemala, El Salvador, Colombia and Mexico, all grappling with the extremely violent fallout of a failing drug war, have said in recent weeks they'd like to open up the discussion of legalizing drugs. Argentina, Uruguay, Peru and Mexico already allow the use of small amounts of marijuana for personal consumption, while political leaders from Brazil and Colombia are discussing alternatives to locking up drug users.
Business leaders are weighing in as well: in February, a group of banking, medical and legal experts sponsored a drug policy conference in Mexico City which concluded that current drug control policies aren't working and need reform.
"It's a different moment when you have actual heads of state talking about the need for a thorough debate on this," said John Walsh, a drug policy expert at the Washington Office on Latin America, an independent think tank. "It's certainly different for sitting presidents to be uttering those words. You wouldn't have thought it possible just a few years ago."
Dan Restrepo, the top Latin America official in the White House, briefing reporters about Biden's upcoming trip, said the vice president does expect a "robust conversation" about the security problems Latin American countries face as drug traffickers battle to control the lucrative U.S. sales. But he said Latin American leaders shouldn't expect a shift in policy.
"The Obama administration has been quite clear in our opposition to decriminalization or legalization of illicit drugs," said Restrepo.
Biden is scheduled to arrive in Mexico City on Sunday to discuss economic and security issues with Mexican President Felipe Calderon. He also plans to meet Monday with the three top Mexican presidential candidates running for a six-year term to replace Calderon this year.
On Tuesday Biden is slated to travel to Honduras to meet President Porfirio Lobo, along with the presidents of El Salvador, Panama, Costa Rica and Guatemala, all countries struggling with the sweeping consequences of expanding drug cartels. Drug gangs have killed tens of thousands, overcrowded prisons are overflowing with accused drug users while powerful cartels fuel corruption — influencing elections, weakening democracies and threatening fragile economies.
"I do think that the issue of legalization will be raised by the leaders to Biden, but in private," said Walter McKay, a policing expert on security issues in Mexico, where more than 47,500 people have been killed in drug gang violence since 2006.
Two weeks ago, Guatemala's president Otto Perez Molina, a right wing conservative and former army general, stunned observers when he declared the U.S. inability to cut illegal drug consumption leaves his country with no option but to consider legalizing the use and transport of drugs. He vowed to galvanize regional support.
Since then, Costa Rican President Laura Chinchilla and Funes have said they're open to the discussion, while Panama's leaders say they do not agree with decriminalizing drugs.
For decades Latin Americans leaders and the U.S. have cooperated on a war on drugs, with more than a trillion dollars spent by the U.S. to support enforcement and eradication in Latin America, as well as promises to reduce cocaine, marijuana and methamphetamine use in the U.S. that generates an estimated $25 billion in profits each year.
But during that time, demand for drugs has increased, fueling violent competition between dealers.
In 2009, former presidents of Mexico, Brazil and Colombia blasted the war on drugs and said it was time to consider the decriminalization of marijuana. Last summer they were joined by more than a dozen high level international leaders including former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan and former U.S. officials George P. Shultz and Paul Volcker, again slamming the war on drugs as a failure and calling on governments to undertake experiments to decriminalize the use of drugs, especially marijuana, to undermine the power of organized crime.
But while it's one thing for former presidents to suggest decriminalizing drugs, it is another thing entirely when sitting presidents do so, said retired Brazilian judge Maria Lucia Karam in an email to The Associated Press.
Karam said that while Latin American leaders at first may have been willing to give the "get tough" strategy time to work, they've been worn down by the drug war's relentless toll.
"The public comments we are seeing are a sign of deep frustration and anger that is now prevalent in Latin America due to the U.S. and U.N.'s seeming unwillingness to engage in a serious debate about implementing effective drug policies that respect human rights and truly protect health," she said.
Danny Kushlick, who heads the London-based Transform Drug Policy Foundation, said the region is "on the verge of a tipping point that will begin when the Latin Americans raise the issue within earshot and in full view of the Americans. Ultimately this is about allowing democratic conversations to take place without being leaned upon by the U.S."
But former U.S. drug czar John Walters said those who are calling for a debate on legalization are taking a dangerous and misguided step.
"I would note to them that the kind of dangerous people they face would welcome that change, to become more powerful," he said. "Legalizing is not a solution, it's an excuse."
___
Associated Press writers Marcos Aleman in El Salvador, Romina

 

 

Yes the American workers wants to leave the United States of America searching for work in foreign countries and are willing make less money taking these low paying jobs, The problem is like in Costa Rica, American Corporations employ 10,s of thousands of workers but it is illegal for a American to work at an American corporation in Costa Rica, if caught working in Costa Rica at a American Corporation that American is deported on the spot he can not go back to his apartment of house to retrieve any of his belongings,  computers, money or even make arrangements for his dog or car.

The reason that an American would try to go to a foreign country and work for less money is because the cost of living in these foreign countries is much lower and he can enjoy a stile of middle class living on much less money. All the American worker wants is food on the table and a roof over his head and it is getting harder and harder for the American worker to archive this in the United States with all the jobs being sent overseas and American Corporations bringing in cheaper labor and cheaper workers to take jobs away jobs from Americans. These workers are aloud to work in the United states and are not being deported like American Workers in Costa Rica and other foreign countries.

I have a sugestion for the American Government in Washington D.C. and this is to pass a law through congress Taxing every American Corporation that is sending jobs overseas to foreign countries or employing foreign workers on American soil.  

Here is a tax plan to help all Americans rich and poor alike and put  Americans back to work in the United States.
 This is a one dollar ($1.00) per hour tax on every worker that an American Corporation pays a foreign workers overseas or foreign workers working on American soil. With these Trillions of dollars coming in from this tax the United States Government should be able to give all American Corporation employing Americans in the United States a tax break and also give all the American workers working on American soil a tax break. 

 

 

Yes the American workers wants to leave the United States of America searching for work in foreign countries and are willing make less money taking these low paying jobs, The problem is like in Costa Rica, American Corporations employ 10,s of thousands of workers but it is illegal for a American to work at an American corporation in Costa Rica, if caught working in Costa Rica at a American Corporation that American is deported on the spot he can not go back to his apartment of house to retrieve any of his belongings,  computers, money or even make arrangements for his dog or car.

The reason that an American would try to go to a foreign country and work for less money is because the cost of living in these foreign countries is much lower and he can enjoy a stile of middle class living on much less money. All the American worker wants is food on the table and a roof over his head and it is getting harder and harder for the American worker to archive this in the United States with all the jobs being sent overseas and American Corporations bringing in cheaper labor and cheaper workers to take jobs away jobs from Americans. These workers are aloud to work in the United states and are not being deported like American Workers in Costa Rica and other foreign countries.

I have a sugestion for the American Government in Washington D.C. and this is to pass a law through congress Taxing every American Corporation that is sending jobs overseas to foreign countries or employing foreign workers on American soil.  

Here is a tax plan to help all Americans rich and poor alike and put  Americans back to work in the United States.
 This is a one dollar ($1.00) per hour tax on every worker that an American Corporation pays a foreign workers overseas or foreign workers working on American soil. With these Trillions of dollars coming in from this tax the United States Government should be able to give all American Corporation employing Americans in the United States a tax break and also give all the American workers working on American soil a tax break. 

Both Republicans and democrats should like this plan even the Tea Party!

Panama Jack is not a member of any political party or any religious group I pray only to God direct, I have cut out all the middle men, those child molesting money grabbing priest and cleric’s, the people that think the fastest way to make a million dollars is through religion   September 21 2011 (AP) News of the World by Panama Jack in exile in Costa Rica

 

Yes the American workers wants to leave the United States of America searching for work in foreign countries and are willing make less money taking these low paying jobs, The problem is like in Costa Rica, American Corporations employ 10,s of thousands of workers but it is illegal for a American to work at an American corporation in Costa Rica, if caught working in Costa Rica at a American Corporation that American is deported on the spot he can not go back to his apartment of house to retrieve any of his belongings,  computers, money or even make arrangements for his dog or car.

The reason that an American would try to go to a foreign country and work for less money is because the cost of living in these foreign countries is much lower and he can enjoy a stile of middle class living on much less money. All the American worker wants is food on the table and a roof over his head and it is getting harder and harder for the American worker to archive this in the United States with all the jobs being sent overseas and American Corporations bringing in cheaper labor and cheaper workers to take jobs away jobs from Americans. These workers are aloud to work in the United states and are not being deported like American Workers in Costa Rica and other foreign countries.

I have a sugestion for the American Government in Washington D.C. and this is to pass a law through congress Taxing every American Corporation that is sending jobs overseas to foreign countries or employing foreign workers on American soil.  

Here is a tax plan to help all Americans rich and poor alike and put  Americans back to work in the United States.
 This is a one dollar ($1.00) per hour tax on every worker that an American Corporation pays a foreign workers overseas or foreign workers working on American soil. With these Trillions of dollars coming in from this tax the United States Government should be able to give all American Corporation employing Americans in the United States a tax break and also give all the American workers working on American soil a tax break. 

Both Republicans and democrats should like this plan even the Tea Party!

Panama Jack is not a member of any political party or any religious group I pray only to God direct, I have cut out all the middle men, those child molesting money grabbing priest and cleric’s, the people that think the fastest way to make a million dollars is through religion   September 21 2011 (AP) News of the World by Panama Jack in exile in Costa Rica

The reason that an American would try to go to a foreign country and work for less money is because the cost of living in these foreign countries is much lower and he can enjoy a stile of middle class living on much less money. All the American worker wants is food on the table and a roof over his head and it is getting harder and harder for the American worker to archive this in the United States with all the jobs being sent overseas and American Corporations bringing in cheaper labor and cheaper workers to take jobs away jobs from Americans. These workers are aloud to work in the United states and are not being deported like American Workers in Costa Rica and other foreign countries.

I have a sugestion for the American Government in Washington D.C. and this is to pass a law through congress Taxing every American Corporation that is sending jobs overseas to foreign countries or employing foreign workers on American soil.  

Here is a tax plan to help all Americans rich and poor alike and put  Americans back to work in the United States.
 This is a one dollar ($1.00) per hour tax on every worker that an American Corporation pays a foreign workers overseas or foreign workers working on American soil. With these Trillions of dollars coming in from this tax the United States Government should be able to give all American Corporation employing Americans in the United States a tax break and also give all the American workers working on American soil a tax break. 

Both Republicans and democrats should like this plan even the Tea Party!

Panama Jack is not a member of any political party or any religious group I pray only to God direct, I have cut out all the middle men, those child molesting money grabbing priest and cleric’s, the people that think the fastest way to make a million dollars is through religion   September 21 2011 (AP) News of the World by Panama Jack in exile in Costa Rica

Presidents of Costa Rica, Guatemala, El Salvador, Colombia and Mexico, all grappling with the extremely violent fallout of a failing drug war, have said in recent weeks they'd like to open up the discussion of legalizing drugs. Argentina, Uruguay, Peru and Mexico already allow the use of small amounts of marijuana for personal consumption, while political leaders from Brazil and Colombia are discussing alternatives to locking up drug users.
Business leaders are weighing in as well: in February, a group of banking, medical and legal experts sponsored a drug policy conference in Mexico City which concluded that current drug control policies aren't working and need reform.
"It's a different moment when you have actual heads of state talking about the need for a thorough debate on this," said John Walsh, a drug policy expert at the Washington Office on Latin America, an independent think tank. "It's certainly different for sitting presidents to be uttering those words. You wouldn't have thought it possible just a few years ago."
Dan Restrepo, the top Latin America official in the White House, briefing reporters about Biden's upcoming trip, said the vice president does expect a "robust conversation" about the security problems Latin American countries face as drug traffickers battle to control the lucrative U.S. sales. But he said Latin American leaders shouldn't expect a shift in policy.
"The Obama administration has been quite clear in our opposition to decriminalization or legalization of illicit drugs," said Restrepo.
Biden is scheduled to arrive in Mexico City on Sunday to discuss economic and security issues with Mexican President Felipe Calderon. He also plans to meet Monday with the three top Mexican presidential candidates running for a six-year term to replace Calderon this year.
On Tuesday Biden is slated to travel to Honduras to meet President Porfirio Lobo, along with the presidents of El Salvador, Panama, Costa Rica and Guatemala, all countries struggling with the sweeping consequences of expanding drug cartels. Drug gangs have killed tens of thousands, overcrowded prisons are overflowing with accused drug users while powerful cartels fuel corruption — influencing elections, weakening democracies and threatening fragile economies.
"I do think that the issue of legalization will be raised by the leaders to Biden, but in private," said Walter McKay, a policing expert on security issues in Mexico, where more than 47,500 people have been killed in drug gang violence since 2006.
Two weeks ago, Guatemala's president Otto Perez Molina, a right wing conservative and former army general, stunned observers when he declared the U.S. inability to cut illegal drug consumption leaves his country with no option but to consider legalizing the use and transport of drugs. He vowed to galvanize regional support.
Since then, Costa Rican President Laura Chinchilla and Funes have said they're open to the discussion, while Panama's leaders say they do not agree with decriminalizing drugs.
For decades Latin Americans leaders and the U.S. have cooperated on a war on drugs, with more than a trillion dollars spent by the U.S. to support enforcement and eradication in Latin America, as well as promises to reduce cocaine, marijuana and methamphetamine use in the U.S. that generates an estimated $25 billion in profits each year.
But during that time, demand for drugs has increased, fueling violent competition between dealers.
In 2009, former presidents of Mexico, Brazil and Colombia blasted the war on drugs and said it was time to consider the decriminalization of marijuana. Last summer they were joined by more than a dozen high level international leaders including former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan and former U.S. officials George P. Shultz and Paul Volcker, again slamming the war on drugs as a failure and calling on governments to undertake experiments to decriminalize the use of drugs, especially marijuana, to undermine the power of organized crime.
But while it's one thing for former presidents to suggest decriminalizing drugs, it is another thing entirely when sitting presidents do so, said retired Brazilian judge Maria Lucia Karam in an email to The Associated Press.
Karam said that while Latin American leaders at first may have been willing to give the "get tough" strategy time to work, they've been worn down by the drug war's relentless toll.
"The public comments we are seeing are a sign of deep frustration and anger that is now prevalent in Latin America due to the U.S. and U.N.'s seeming unwillingness to engage in a serious debate about implementing effective drug policies that respect human rights and truly protect health," she said.
Danny Kushlick, who heads the London-based Transform Drug Policy Foundation, said the region is "on the verge of a tipping point that will begin when the Latin Americans raise the issue within earshot and in full view of the Americans. Ultimately this is about allowing democratic conversations to take place without being leaned upon by the U.S."
But former U.S. drug czar John Walters said those who are calling for a debate on legalization are taking a dangerous and misguided step.
"I would note to them that the kind of dangerous people they face would welcome that change, to become more powerful," he said. "Legalizing is not a solution, it's an excuse."
___
Associated Press writers Marcos Aleman in El Salvador, Romina

 

 

Yes the American workers wants to leave the United States of America searching for work in foreign countries and are willing make less money taking these low paying jobs, The problem is like in Costa Rica, American Corporations employ 10,s of thousands of workers but it is illegal for a American to work at an American corporation in Costa Rica, if caught working in Costa Rica at a American Corporation that American is deported on the spot he can not go back to his apartment of house to retrieve any of his belongings,  computers, money or even make arrangements for his dog or car.

The reason that an American would try to go to a foreign country and work for less money is because the cost of living in these foreign countries is much lower and he can enjoy a stile of middle class living on much less money. All the American worker wants is food on the table and a roof over his head and it is getting harder and harder for the American worker to archive this in the United States with all the jobs being sent overseas and American Corporations bringing in cheaper labor and cheaper workers to take jobs away jobs from Americans. These workers are aloud to work in the United states and are not being deported like American Workers in Costa Rica and other foreign countries.

I have a sugestion for the American Government in Washington D.C. and this is to pass a law through congress Taxing every American Corporation that is sending jobs overseas to foreign countries or employing foreign workers on American soil.  

Here is a tax plan to help all Americans rich and poor alike and put  Americans back to work in the United States.
 This is a one dollar ($1.00) per hour tax on every worker that an American Corporation pays a foreign workers overseas or foreign workers working on American soil. With these Trillions of dollars coming in from this tax the United States Government should be able to give all American Corporation employing Americans in the United States a tax break and also give all the American workers working on American soil a tax break. 

 

 

Yes the American workers wants to leave the United States of America searching for work in foreign countries and are willing make less money taking these low paying jobs, The problem is like in Costa Rica, American Corporations employ 10,s of thousands of workers but it is illegal for a American to work at an American corporation in Costa Rica, if caught working in Costa Rica at a American Corporation that American is deported on the spot he can not go back to his apartment of house to retrieve any of his belongings,  computers, money or even make arrangements for his dog or car.

The reason that an American would try to go to a foreign country and work for less money is because the cost of living in these foreign countries is much lower and he can enjoy a stile of middle class living on much less money. All the American worker wants is food on the table and a roof over his head and it is getting harder and harder for the American worker to archive this in the United States with all the jobs being sent overseas and American Corporations bringing in cheaper labor and cheaper workers to take jobs away jobs from Americans. These workers are aloud to work in the United states and are not being deported like American Workers in Costa Rica and other foreign countries.

I have a sugestion for the American Government in Washington D.C. and this is to pass a law through congress Taxing every American Corporation that is sending jobs overseas to foreign countries or employing foreign workers on American soil.  

Here is a tax plan to help all Americans rich and poor alike and put  Americans back to work in the United States.
 This is a one dollar ($1.00) per hour tax on every worker that an American Corporation pays a foreign workers overseas or foreign workers working on American soil. With these Trillions of dollars coming in from this tax the United States Government should be able to give all American Corporation employing Americans in the United States a tax break and also give all the American workers working on American soil a tax break. 

Both Republicans and democrats should like this plan even the Tea Party!

Panama Jack is not a member of any political party or any religious group I pray only to God direct, I have cut out all the middle men, those child molesting money grabbing priest and cleric’s, the people that think the fastest way to make a million dollars is through religion   September 21 2011 (AP) News of the World by Panama Jack in exile in Costa Rica

 

Yes the American workers wants to leave the United States of America searching for work in foreign countries and are willing make less money taking these low paying jobs, The problem is like in Costa Rica, American Corporations employ 10,s of thousands of workers but it is illegal for a American to work at an American corporation in Costa Rica, if caught working in Costa Rica at a American Corporation that American is deported on the spot he can not go back to his apartment of house to retrieve any of his belongings,  computers, money or even make arrangements for his dog or car.

The reason that an American would try to go to a foreign country and work for less money is because the cost of living in these foreign countries is much lower and he can enjoy a stile of middle class living on much less money. All the American worker wants is food on the table and a roof over his head and it is getting harder and harder for the American worker to archive this in the United States with all the jobs being sent overseas and American Corporations bringing in cheaper labor and cheaper workers to take jobs away jobs from Americans. These workers are aloud to work in the United states and are not being deported like American Workers in Costa Rica and other foreign countries.

I have a sugestion for the American Government in Washington D.C. and this is to pass a law through congress Taxing every American Corporation that is sending jobs overseas to foreign countries or employing foreign workers on American soil.  

Here is a tax plan to help all Americans rich and poor alike and put  Americans back to work in the United States.
 This is a one dollar ($1.00) per hour tax on every worker that an American Corporation pays a foreign workers overseas or foreign workers working on American soil. With these Trillions of dollars coming in from this tax the United States Government should be able to give all American Corporation employing Americans in the United States a tax break and also give all the American workers working on American soil a tax break. 

Both Republicans and democrats should like this plan even the Tea Party!

Panama Jack is not a member of any political party or any religious group I pray only to God direct, I have cut out all the middle men, those child molesting money grabbing priest and cleric’s, the people that think the fastest way to make a million dollars is through religion   September 21 2011 (AP) News of the World by Panama Jack in exile in Costa Rica

 
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