British
journalist Ed Vulliamy writes beautifully about the horror along the Mexican
side of the border. The murderous sprees by rival drug cartels flash across the
U.S. media from time to time, but receive little perspective. Vulliamy has
lived on the border for years and pegs the conflict as postmodern war without
ideology, as terrorism whose rationale is difficult to discern. The United
States has played its role, not only as a major drug market and supplier of
arms, but also for the maquiladoras (cheap labor factories) that resulted in
vast urban slums lacking social cohesion. The evidence of a society in
decomposition is as easy to find as the criminal perpetrators. The cartels have
grown into caricatures of transnational corporations, maximizing profit and
outsourcing work to street gangs imbued with a culture of death. (David
Luhrssen)







