Tuesday, 24 February 2026

The "War on Drugs" is a misnomer. According to source archives, what we are actually witnessing is the "Modern Opium War," and the headquarters isn't in Medellín or Sinaloa—it's in the City of London.

 https://x.com/observerfiles/status/2026095179526979617

The Observer
The "War on Drugs" is a misnomer. According to source archives, what we are actually witnessing is the "Modern Opium War," and the headquarters isn't in Medellín or Sinaloa—it's in the City of London. The data reveals a cynical transition from the overt military force of the 1800s to a sophisticated system of covert financial control. Latin American cartels are not the masters of their own fate; they are proxy foot soldiers for a British oligarchy that manages global narcotics through offshore banking and corporate "cutouts." While the public focuses on kingpins, the real infrastructure is found in British-linked Canadian banks and unregulated havens in the Caymans and Bahamas. This isn't just a theory of negligence; it’s a strategy of active participation. When the Royal Bank of Canada coerces a bankrupt government into marijuana production, or United Brands facilitates drug transport alongside fruit cargo, the mask of "legitimate business" slips. The British-sponsored system, utilizing syndicates like the Bronfmans and Meyer Lansky, created the very retail and laundering networks (Resorts International) that fueled the U.S. drug crisis. This is a multi-billion-dollar financial empire that reaps the rewards of societal decay to maintain global hegemony. We don't have a drug problem; we have a colonial banking problem.

https://x.com/observerfiles/status/2026095179526979617

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