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Cocaína No, Coca Sí

By Chellis Glendinning, AlterNet. Posted April 12, 2006.


A journey to Bolivia to explore the mystery of coca -- and launch a campaign to bring it to the United States -- has an unexpected conclusion.
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Cocaína No, Coca Sí
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Cocaine cuts close to the bone here in New Mexico. An addict lives on either side of me. To the south, it's the angry Chicano whose proclivities run to shooting off guns and starting fires that require three fire departments to quell; to the north, it's the waif of a blonde whose high school graduation may have been awaited with joy, but who, in the presence of the white temptation, deteriorated into confusion, loss of a job and ill health.

So when Tom Hayden suggested I travel to Bolivia for el transmito del mando of the coca farmer Evo Morales to the presidency of that country -- one of the top Latin American growers of the plant used in the production of the narcotic cocaína -- I slapped a few Levi shirts into my maletita and waited for the departure date.

To the average U.S. observer, Morales' campaign platform might have appeared odd, even contradictory. It included halting sales of the coca leaf to the burgeoning narco business, which anyone who has seen the “This Is Your Brain on Drugs” TV ads could go for. But it also called for stopping U.S.-backed eradication of coca fields and the legitimization of the plant as the ancient sacred herb that it is.

Tom's idea was in line with Morales' thinking. He wanted us to gather information and make contacts in Bolivia so that, upon return, we might launch a campaign to legalize sale of coca inside the United States. Mi compañero de viaje was jazzed by the potential medical application of the herb for heart and diabetes patients.

He himself, a heart attack survivor, had experienced its remarkable effects when, with leaves chocked into his cheek on a previous visit, his normal huffing and puffing had been miraculously replaced by an energetic mounting of the cobblestone streets of La Paz. His strategy was to put the herb through FDA hoops and make it a legal prescription drug for medical distribution.

I began to contemplate possible economic effects. The narcotraficantes are grossly in evidence in Colombia, Perú, Ecuador and Bolivia, where by military might and political manipulation they control the Andes' No. 1 commodity product: la coca, which is processed in laboratories for international distribution as cocaine. In some instances, the cartels kidnap farmers, sequestering them in wooden cages at night, forcing them to shout Wal-Mart-style pep chants and work the fields in double shifts. In others, village growers simply find it more remunerative to sell coca to drug dealers than to market pineapples at the local mercado. In still others, the crops are taxed, either by narcotraficantes themselves or by political groups amassing resources for military campaigns.

A thought -- which popped into my head not full-blown and solid as, let's face it, narcos are not ones to put up with competition -- was that a legitimate, collective-run venue for growers could provide uninterrupted income while upsetting the base of the illegal drug trade, a task that has thus far eluded every local, governmental and international effort ever attempted.

Sacred plant

La coca is the sacred plant of Bolivia, with 82 different species grown in the tropical Chapare, in the forests of Santa Cruz and on the altiplano of the Yungas de La Paz.

Why is it considered a "sacred” plant? The people value it above all else. They believe that its existence, like that of spirit, infuses every facet of life. When a couple marries, they plant a coca field; as their children grow, so the field matures, providing for all; when the children leave home, the field has passed its peak, producing now only for two. Coca is the gift that binds all social relations. It is the healer of humankind's ills. It is used to give thanks, to predict fortunes, to celebrate the season, to solidify the community, to experience the primeval space-time continuum of the gods.

And it has remarkable nutritional and medicinal attributes. Chock-full of protein, fiber, vitamins and minerals, it is reported to relax, invigorate and give strength. Hundreds of biological and medical studies propose it can aid digestion, combat arthritis, balance blood sugar, impede fungal and bacterial growth, heal ulcers, boost the immune system, augment oxygenation, act as a sedative, and -- of particular interest to Tom -- facilitate circulation and restore the cardiac muscle.

Coke. Snow. Flake. Blow. Tornado

Cocaine is a whole other story. Extracted as a lone alkaloid from a potpourri of nutrients in the coca plant, then processed with forty-some chemicals, including ether, acetone and methyl ketone -- it is a deadly drug. Snorted, injected or smoked, the white powder jacks the nervous system into a frenzy of extreme excitement, just as it interrupts the passage of nerve impulses, causing inhibition of pain sensations and failure of judgment.

And it is horrifically addictive. When laboratory rats are offered an endless supply of heroin, they ingest it constantly but also take time to eat and sleep; when they’re given an unending cache of cocaine, they do nothing but consume it. Complications can include heart attacks, respiratory failure, strokes, seizures and paranoid psychosis. According to the 2004 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, over 48 million Americans have used cocaine. Read: one in six. That's a lot of people. The business is bigger than that of McDonald's, Microsoft and Kellogg's rolled into one: $92 billion a year.

It can be no surprise that the kind of people running it are of the no-bullshit variety, the kind with personal zoological gardens, personal body guards, personal hit men, personal telecommunications systems and personal techno-armies. To go up against them, the primary cocaine-consuming nation in the world -- the United States -- has likewise amassed techno-armies. Fighter jets. Black Hawk helicopters. Ground-to-ground missiles. Rocket launchers.

Since 2000 the "war on drugs" has laid out $7.5 billion to the Andes region, ostensibly to eradicate cartel-grown coca and opium fields. But, in fact, wanton spraying of toxic chemicals onto innocent coca farmers, their families, and the fields producing their daily food has predominated -- while the bulk of the money has been funneled toward military actions aimed at securing Latin America's oil, natural gas, water, gold, etc., for unfettered corporate exploitation.

Talking revolution

People in Bolivia talk politics. Well, truth be told, they talk revolution. This is a place where both classical and current colonization have taken brutish forms: genocide, slavery, resource robbery, military juntas -- and almost every family has a member who has been arrested, tortured and/or desaparecido. Bolivia has endured 192 changes of government in 178 years of existence as a republic, 100 of them by revolution.

Consider what this means: You have to keep up.

The waiter at my hotel in La Paz, a supporter of Morales' Movimiento al Socialismo (MAS), brightens at the thought I have come all this way for the inauguration -- and our mutual enthusiasm for conversation, as he serves mangos and trucha a lo macho, revolves around la liberación of his country.

A 20-year-old cab driver tells me that Evo is like a loaf of bread fresh from the oven: We'll find out how he tastes. In a village west of Cochabamba, a doctor lays out the shape of the new Latin America. Venezuela's president is socialist Hugo Chavez. Chile has just elected former torture victim and single mother Michelle Bachelet. Left-of-center Néstor Kirchner heads Argentina, while Luiz "Lulu" da Silva is president of Brazil. Uruguay's Tabaré Vazquez's initial act is to open diplomatic relations with Cuba.

Inauguration day

22 Enero. Plaza de los Héroes.

Thousands of people are overflowing the heart of La Paz where large gatherings have historically taken the form of pitched battles against the military. This is something different. The official state inauguration is taking place several blocks away in the Congress. The presidents of Venezuela, Chile, Colombia, Argentina, Panama, Peru, Brazil and Paraguay are in attendance, and out here uncountable crowds are awaiting the arrival of their new leaders.

Smiling Aymara women in felt bowler hats. The street kids rehabilitated by El Teatro Trono atop stilts made of scrapwood, gyrating to the thunder of homemade drums. Quecha women in their flat-topped straw monteras. Miss Bolivia Universo. Bigger-than-life flying eagle puppets. Dance groups in feather headdresses. Bolivia's glorious trícolor, impressive blue MAS banners, the emblematic multicolored wiphala flags -- all flapping like foam caps atop a sea of humanity.

Rather than one mass leaning, lunging, looking toward one stage as would be done in the United States, the crowd organizes itself into circles resembling village clans. I am jammed into one, and an infant wrapped in a shawl grasps to hold my finger. An Aymara woman admires the artistry of the poncho I am wearing with a gold-toothed grin. To the emphatic toots of zampoña music, a cholito in red helmet hat dances with an African-American girl in dreadlocks, a willowy blond boy spins a laughing indígena. A serpent of miners in hardhats presses through, and every now and again the crowd lets roar a mass chant: "!EVO! !EVO! !EVO!"

It is 5 o'clock. Many have been waiting for Morales' appearance for six hours. Suddenly the distinguished Uruguayan writer Eduardo Galeano steps onto the stage and, with his gravely poetic voice, announces that Evo's presidency marks the death of la dictadura del miedo (the dictatorship of fear).

Next comes the handsome vicepresidente Álvaro García Linera. At last Evo steps to the microphone. The crowd stills. The coca farmer now festooned in the national medallion of liberator Simón Bolívar pledges obedience to the people and unprecedented striving for justice. The sky opens to its seasonal downpour, and thousands of people are drenched in hope.

Tears of Evo

One memorable thing about Morales is that, on both occasions of receiving his mandate -- the spiritual transmission at the sacred site Tiwanaku, for which he prepared with rituals of purification, and the official inauguration in Congress -- he burst into tears.

The 46-year-old Evo Morales Aima was born Aymara and poor in the department of Oruro. During a drought in 1983, his family was forced to move to the tropical Chapare to survive by coca farming. Before making his way through the ranks of local unions there, finally emerging as the president of El Comité de Coordinación de las Seis Federaciones, he had worked as a baker, a brick layer, a farmworker, a trumpet player and a soldier. In the mid-1990s he rose to lead MAS and, along the way, harshly derided the U.S.-backed Free Trade Area of the Americas as "an agreement to legalize the colonization of the Americas"; be thrown in jail for standing up for the cocaleros; and proclaim ”Cocaína no, coca sí,” (Cocaine no, coca yes), with emphasis on solving the cocaine problem not at the campesino end, but at the consumption end.

Morales is known for two distinguishing characteristics: (1) his Beatle-like, bowl-cut hairdo (read: he's an indígeno through and through); and (2) the ratty old red and blue alpaca sweater he would not take off during his world tour to meet the leaders of China, Spain and France (read: he doesn't compromise).

Because Morales is romantically unattached -- and now asserts that, by vote of the people, he is married to Bolivia -- la primera dama is his sister, Esther Morales Aima. She is a 54-year-old vegetable vendor.

Morales' politics are touted to be an unfolding of socialista and indígena. The MAS platform has 10 points, which include the nationalization of resources (read: profits go to the country, not to multinational corporations); decentralization of decision making back to the pueblos indígenas, municipalities and regions; eradication of rampant government corruption; the creation of a national health system and, for our purposes, decriminalization of traditional coca growing; routing out the narcotraficantes; and the return of land to the campesinos who work it.

At Tiwanaku, in reference to Che Guevara, who was executed in Bolivia in 1967 at the hands of the military and the CIA, Morales proclaims, "La lucha que dejó Che Guevara, vamos a cumplir nosotros" (We will finish the fight Che Guevara began).

In the garden of the activists

I arrive in the village of Totorcahua craving a good night's sleep. I get it on a three-acre piece of permacultured paradise. The German-Bolivian doctor José Carlos Ramirez Voltaire, veteran of Physicians for Social Responsibility International, is my host, and I am sharing the walled gardens of lime, lemon, plantain, comfrey, carrots and nasturtium with Bolivian activist Malena Vida, Spanish healer Ignacio Ballesteros and Quecha gardener Irgidio Torres.

The fact that they are activists working for worldwide legalization -- or, at least, removal from the United Nations’ controlled substances list -- is sheer synchronicity. What it means is I am privy to almost nonstop discussion on the meaning of coca and the means by which it might overcome the taint it suffers from its unfortunate association with cocaine.

The first guest to a political meeting on coca filters through the plantain leaves to the house around 4 o'clock. He is Guido Capcha whose dedication is finding health care for the villagers in the Chapare. Next comes Gabriel Yawar Nina dressed in disheveled khaki jungle gear, a camera artisan who brings his photo creations of indígenas printed on brown-bag paper. He is accompanied by writer-activist Malena Tuta Larama. Carmen Cárdenas, along with Grober and Alexia Loredo from Teatro Trono, arrives toting a suitcase full of colorful puppets. The painter Valentina Campos carries her two-month-old in a red and pink shawl. While José, Ignacio and Malena are laying out cheese and cakes, Appalachian folksinger Ricardo Jack Herrenan picks a tune he has written linking the struggles of coal miners in West Virginia with that of gold and silver miners in Bolivia's Potosí.

We talk politics. There are as many years of movement sweat under the bougainvillea as there are years since the arrival of Cristobál Colón. We are talking about a possible worldwide campaign to legalize coca. A major theme is la liberación de los pueblos. Another is the holism that is second nature to communities not yet totally wrenched from the land: coca is not separate from people, family, ancestors, nutrition, music, art or spirituality. La coca es sagrada, as is so often said, and everyone's cheeks are bulging with leaves meshed with the characteristic bolus of licorice that glues it all together.

Then Juan Carlos Escalera, the dedicated agronomist in the corduroy beret, puts it to me eyeball to eyeball. How can coca be forged into a product separate from origins, place and traditions? Wouldn't the demand from worldwide consumers transform its historic small-scale village production into technology-based corporate agribusiness? And wouldn't such an endeavor signal yet another assault on Bolivia's waning biodiversity?

Just that morning, while downing our daily mate de coca, jam and bread, José has expounded yet again on the possibilities of coca despenalización, and a question has niggled its way into my mind. Wait a minute -- it flies in like a bird seeking a nest -- we're talking about the creation of ... a global commodity. A beneficent global commodity, perhaps, but a global commodity nonetheless -- complete with its potential for wrenching community from tradition, entry into the wage economy, devolution to mass transportation and telecommunications technologies, imposition of economic inequities and individualism, etc.

I answer Juan Carlos eyeball to eyeball, relaying my own progression of thought. I begin by describing mi compañero's desire to legalize coca and put it through FDA standards to make it available to U.S. heart and diabetes patients. I hear a collective gasp of anguish and witness a row of black-haired heads drop into despairing hands.

I move on to describe my conversion to the softer notion of coca sold in U.S. health food stores like yerba mate or chamomile. The same gasp erupts, the same dropping of heads. Last I tell of the thought that has entered my mind just that morning: Selling coca in mass quantities could signify entry into the global economy with perilous consequences for people, culture and the natural world. There is no gasp and no dropping of heads.

The plant stays

Juan Carlos escorts Jack and me to the farming village of El Paso. Its claim to fame is chicha, a homemade corn drink akin to moonshine, and the chicherría is a cavernous adobe barn with chickens and roosters strutting freely among the tables.

We take our first round of chicha from a dried gourd cup, making sure to offer the first sip to Pachamama who, in this case, appears as the earthen floor of the barn. Juan Carlos launches into a lecture on Bolivia's ecological cosmology. Illustrating his thoughts on a piece of blue-lined paper, he overlays a ladderlike configuration depicting the four altitude zones over a birds-eye view of the country.

His drawing becomes ever more elaborate, like a labyrinth, as he adds seasonal charts revealing farming and festival schedules; statistics on loss of biological diversity since 1930; etchings of sun, land and people. We are into our third round of chicha, a black cow is ruminating at the barn door, and Juan Carlos and Jack are simultaneously putting away the coca. Juan Carlos' conclusion is as simple and complicated as a leaf.

"La planta no sale fuera" (The plant doesn't leave here), he states. It is dusk. Against the darkening valley splayed out beneath the Cordillera Cochabamba, I have clarity. It all comes down to a politic of la soberanía. Respect for other peoples' self-determination implies that my business stops at the boundary where theirs begins; it does not extend inside another's territory, community, body or psyche.

That understood, there can only be two possible responses on my part. The first is to take responsibility for what my own government is doing to Bolivia: to stop the military/political arm of the U.S. war on drugs. In the interest of not imposing a plan that I posit would be useful to me, my second task becomes respectful communication: to listen, learn and respond in cooperation.

Needless to say, the age-old question raises its tangled head. Who is the legitimate spokesperson for la soberanía? What if, in response to pressures to amass capital that press in on any government in a global economy, Morales himself negotiates a deal for mass coca production with a multinational pharmaceutical? Or a consortium of health food companies? Or even a group of left-leaning "free trade" collectives? Juan Carlos stares into me with those eyes.

He says nothing, and I suddenly laugh at my own doubt. "OK. I get it. The origin of sovereignty precedes government and always, always always resides with the people."

I return home to New Mexico -- as before, sandwiched between the vato and the sad blonde, whose lives are forever marked by a drug derived from leaves grown somewhere in the Andes, perhaps in the Bolivian Chapare. It is time: I, too, must work to finish the fight that Che Guevara began.

Diccionario

el transmito del mando: the inauguration; literally, the transfer of command
cocaína: cocaine, the narcotic
maletita: little suitcase
compañero de viaje: traveling partner
narcotraficantes: drug traffickers, cartels
altiplano: the high, temperate plateau of Bolivia
desaparecido: a "disappeared" or kidnapped person, possibly tortured and killed
trucha a lo macho: trout from Lake Titicaca served with garlic and onions
trícolor: national flag
wiphala: flag of MAS, representing all indigenous peoples of Bolivia
zampoña: a flute made of reeds strapped together
cholito: a term used to refer to an indigenous man
indígena: indigenous woman
cocaleros: coca farmers
la primera dama: the first lady
pueblos indígenas: indigenous peoples or communities
la liberación de los pueblos: the liberation of peoples or communities
sagrada: sacred
mate de coca: coca tea
despenalización: decriminalization
chicherría: neighborhood bar that serves chicha
la soberanía: sovereignty
vato: homeboy

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Chellis Glendinning is the author of five books, including "Chiva: A Village Takes On the Global Heroin Trade." She is currently finishing an opera on the contemporary arrival of Mexican immigrants into the U.S., De Un Lado Al Otro, and beginning a book on coca in Bolivia.

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Commodity
Posted by: Davideo on Apr 12, 2006 2:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great article!
But;
we're talking about the creation of ... a global commodity.

How is cocaine not a global commodity now? Will the spread of Coka really put that much extra strain on the suply chain?

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» RE: Commodity Posted by: gazooks
» RE: Commodity Posted by: John Rice
» RE: Commodity Posted by: BsAs light
» RE: Commodity Posted by: Elmowilcox
» RE: Commodity Posted by: BsAs light
» RE: Commodity Posted by: John Rice
» RE: Commodity Posted by: cerveny1
» RE: Commodity Posted by: John Rice
Great article! But you have to include narco-economics too.
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Apr 12, 2006 6:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is a very illuminating article. Consider this, however: Cocaine is cocaine hydrochloride. To produce this, cocaine sulfate is first made from coca leaves using using sulfuric acid and acetone-type solvents (widely available). The next stage involves use of an unusual chemical, potassium permanganate - which is shipped into clandestine labs in huge quantities. So, you see the chemical industry is involved in this business as well.

What about the money? Cocaine is smuggled into the United States, but cash is smuggled out - why? International investments are taxed at ~20% while domestic investments are taxed at ~40%; so the cash moves out in duffles full of $100 bills, and comes back in via the offshore banks like the Caymans. Major US investment banks are happy to discretely handle these transaction.

In contast to this, we have native peoples using a traditional herbal remedy that they have relied on for centuries. Imagine a nice cup of coffee, and then imagine snorting a line of crushed 'No-Doze' (purified caffeine) up your nose, and you get an idea of the difference. I also like yerba mate. I can see why the locals are distrustful of any outside 'entrepreneur' coming in. If they did export the raw coca leaf, perhaps they could look to the Global Exchange Fair Trade In Coffee Program.

The fundamental problem here is the American thirst for drugs, and an economic system that relies heavily on peddling legal (alcohol, tobacco, caffeine), pharmaceutical (patented opiates, diet pills, valium, Prozac, etc.) and illegal drugs (cocaine and heroin) to American 'consumers'. Cannabis sativa , by the way, is in the same category as Erythroxylum coca: a benevolent plant when used appropriately.

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Los Andes
Posted by: brasilaron on Apr 12, 2006 6:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While i appreciate the article, i used to live in Bolivia and chew coca on a regular basis, i hesitate at the author's over-exhuberance in the description of the people's reaction to coca. Not everyone in Bolivia believes in coca as a spiritual healer, maybe most of the campesinos, but certainly not most of the city dwellers. Many people view it as they would an impish child, something that can be tolerated but they would not glorify coca to such extremes. There are many however who do, but they are a distinct minority those who are so fervent about the powers of coca as the author describes. I would say most campesinos appreciate it greatly and consume it in vast quantities more out of habit (NOT addiction) and utility (it is a great thirst/hunger suppressor as well as stimulant NOT a sedative as the author claims) than spriritual reverance. Most campesinos who chew coca DO feel a strong conection to coca and will talk to you about the spirituality and national identity connection, but it is not the hub of their spirituality as implied here.
just a couple of tidbits: the president of Brasil is "Lula" not "Lulu" & chicha is a corn alcohol of about 3% more akin to beer than moonshine

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» Thank you Posted by: Elmowilcox
bring back the cola
Posted by: schnoggi on Apr 12, 2006 7:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I hate caffeine. I've never tried coca leaves, but i do know that IF i could discipline myself (nope), cocaine would be a much better drug for me, and most likely if there were softdrinks made with a more unprocessed coca extract, I'm sure I'd prefer them. Caffeine is what makes this whole US economy possible, admit it. And more than we know, cocaine is a big part of that too. why not just admit it, face it, get real, and give us a better over the counter option than this jittery buggy crap.

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Contradictions betray myths
Posted by: ScottP on Apr 12, 2006 8:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
it is horrifically addictive... over 48 million Americans have used cocaine. Read: one in six
So is a horrific rate something like tobacco, 10% of those who try it end up as coke addicts at some point? 2% of the population are addicts, or even 1%? I suspect most of us know this is not true. In my whole life I never met a single addict amongst the hundreds of users, and only knew one person whom I'd even classify as an abuser (one who's use caused discernable detriment). At the same time I've known too many tobacco addicts to count and a few alcoholics. While the article provides a nice alternative to the usual hysteria in some regards, in this area it seems like just more of the same hype, which of course leads me to question the integrity of other parts.

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» RE: Contradictions betray myths Posted by: eringhorm
» RE: Contradictions betray myths Posted by: alterhead
» RE: Contradictions betray myths Posted by: famouspipeliner
» Meet the addicts Posted by: blueneck
grow your own
Posted by: mary-alias on Apr 12, 2006 8:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm sure there must be eco-systems in the US in which coca plants can grow. Rather than interfering with the self-determination desires of the Bolivians, could we not just grow our own coca here?

Could chewing coca leaves be a cure for cocaine addiction? Maybe even for nicotine addiction?

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Drug Prohibition Working Overtime...As Usual
Posted by: doneman2000 on Apr 12, 2006 9:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"what if we took the profits out of drugs?" This was uttered by Dan Burton while chairing a congressional committee meeting.....Although it wouldn't eliminate all the trouble associated with narcotics it would certainly reduce the problems. Now, the indiviuals most opposed to this would be, drug dealers and the people who catch, prosecute, and imprison, them. Follow the money, as it almost always leads to people, places, and things not talked about in the "liberal" media.

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BOLIVIA
Posted by: BsAs light on Apr 12, 2006 11:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My girlfriend and I live in Buenos Aires and recently returned from a trip through Bolivia. It was a dusty, desolate and incredibly impoverished country – that much is no secret. What surprised me was the extent to which the cultivation of hoja de coca, or coca leaves, fuels that otherwise dour economy. I never chewed the leaves while I was there but I did have coca tea on several occasions and I found it to be an excellent digestive. Once we reached La Paz we befriended the doorman of our hotel who doubled as a guide. He shuttled us up to Lake Titicaca in his early model Toyota Tercel and along the way explained the finer points of coca production right down to the harvest cycle of the coca tree. They actually defoliate 2-6 times a year with 3 cycles being the average in Bolivia.

Upon my return to the bustling megalopolis of BsAs, I began giving Bolivia a lot of thought. Traveling through the country by bus and train gave me an excellent vantage point from which to view the economic potential of that country of approximately 9 million. The majority of the country is high desert – almost entirely unsuitable for most forms of agriculture. There is little timber available for construction so the majority of homes in Bolivia are constructed with something akin to adobe but of even poorer quality. Bolivia is very rich in gas – that is also no secret. Brazil is at this very moment trying to get into Morales’s knickers by bargaining with gas extraction technology that makes current extraction processes look antiquated by comparison. The deal would normally be a good one for both countries except Brazil is almost certainly seeking to take advantage of Morales’ precarious position. At some point he must rely on someone to extract that gas, but even fellow poor boy made good Lula is apparently not willing to cut his Socialist brother a break.

What it all boils down to is this: Bolivia needs Coca production as well as cocaine production if it is to lift any of its 9 million inhabitants out of dire straits. My guide explained that many of the problems associated with cocaine production are obviously closely related to its illegal status. For instance, children are most often used to process the coca paste which, as the author stated, is processed with many toxic and carcinogenic chemicals. The children are not afforded adequate protection from the dangerous compounds and fumes, doing most of the work barefoot. That children are doing this kind of work is an absolute disgrace to all humans but that they are not even afforded adequate protection because the industry is not regulated is appalling. An even better solution is to regulate the industry so that SCUMBAG adults can do their own dirty work outfitted with chemical suits and more advanced processing technology that would help to eliminate the primitive chemistry going on in parts of Peru, Bolivia and Colombia.

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CONT.
Posted by: BsAs light on Apr 12, 2006 11:03 AM   
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Drugs must be legalized – period. Coke is still reaching its intended market with amazing supply/demand efficiency and people are still dying from heart failure every day so why not take the profit out of its illegal production and distribution and rather try and turn a profit from its legal production and distribution? Once cocaine is legalized we can start to deal with the problems above board instead of driving them below the surface. Let’s remove the stigma from drug addiction so people can get help if they choose and if they don’t elect to do so then unfortunately they have chosen poorly and must suffer the consequences. When all is said and done, I am more concerned for the well being of the 8 year old Bolivian boy who is making cocaine by stomping around barefoot in kerosene than the 35 year-old stock broker who drives the $120,000 Porsche home to his 8 bedroom home every night. The funny thing is most Bolivians don’t use cocaine yet they are being punished for producing a marketable commodity consumed primarily in the US, Europe and even here in Argentina and Brazil.

I wonder why the legalization of drugs is never openly discussed! Could it be that taking the “illegal status” based profit margin out of the equation would be tantamount to taking money out of the hands of the CIA or “respectable” bankers who launder billions every year? After all, it is impossible to launder the quantities of money we are talking about here without “legitimate” and even federal banks having some knowledge of what is going on. “Hi, I would like to deposit 75 million dollars in $100 denominations into my account please . . . “ Give us a fucking break.

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» RE: CONT. Posted by: John Rice
» RE: CONT. Posted by: brasilaron
comment
Posted by: Provencalkid on Apr 12, 2006 1:49 PM   
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Wonderful, highly informative and interesting article, and the same goes for many of the comments! I was in Bolivia a year ago and knew then that Morales was a shoo-in for the Presidency; this writer has written an article that I would have been proud and delighted to have written. Congratulations!

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Cocaine is already in prescription form
Posted by: pure_genius on May 4, 2006 4:53 AM   
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For over thirteen years, the U.S. Government has granted an exclusive license to the Mallinckrodt Group. The license permits them to import raw coca and process it. It is then sold to various manufacturers at over $40,000 a kilo, far more than the black market price. These manufacturers turn the cocaine into FDA approved pharmaceuticals like Xylocaine. At this time its only approved use is as an anesthetic.

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FYI
Posted by: venezuelan truth on Feb 14, 2007 12:15 PM   
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I just want to let you know that Hugo Chavez in high levels of the Venezuelan government is known as "La Aspiradora" (the vacum cleaner), because of his high compsumption of cocaine on a daily basis. I thought that would add an interesting twist to the story.

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FYI
Posted by: venezuelan truth on Feb 14, 2007 12:17 PM   
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I just want to let you know that Hugo Chavez in high levels of the Venezuelan government is known as "La Aspiradora" (the vacum cleaner), because of his high compsumption of cocaine on a daily basis. I thought that would add an interesting twist to the story. In Venezuela we have a head of state (dictator) that is also a coke head.

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