China Gets Its Money’s Worth From America’s Elites
Foreigners have been buying off – or at least renting – America’s ruling class probably since the Republic was founded. In modern times, Saudis, Japanese, South Koreans, and Israelis – to name a few – have all managed to purchase influence. One might shrug it off as “the way things work.”
But suppose a country helps pour illicit drugs into America that kill tens of thousands of Americans a year.
Now THAT is influence.
The country? The People’s Republic of China (PRC).
The numbers are staggering. In 2017, 28,000 Americans died of overdoses involving the synthetic drug, fentanyl. Nearly all of it originating in the PRC.
In a 2018 meeting with President Trump, Chinese President Xi Jinping pledged to restrict all fentanyl-like substances. Trump declared this a “game changer.” Not surprisingly, the drugs kept coming.
In 2019, over 37,000 Americans died from fentanyl overdoses. That’s nearly five times the number of American troops killed in the post 9/11 war in Iraq and Afghanistan. The Covid-19 lockdowns have helped bump up the death totals. In the state of Georgia, fentanyl deaths have increased 60% since March 2020.
Yet, even as the death toll mounts U.S. business and financial titans never mention it. The think-tanks are mostly silent. Academia? Can’t be bothered. And on Capitol Hill there’s bold talk about taking on the PRC, but when it comes to fentanyl and the American “butcher’s bill,” one hears little. Even the Trump administration – the best ever in standing up to China – has not made much of the fentanyl issue – which should in fact be a casus belli.
Until recently, the U.S. media too often – downplayed or ignored the fentanyl bloodbath – seemingly afraid to mention the ‘C’ word – China.
American elites make plenty of excuses for why the Chinese government can’t (or better said, won’t) stop the drug flow.
Some claim Chinese local governments are to blame – not Beijing. The locals, it’s said, won’t stop fentanyl production since they want tax revenues and employment – and are also thoroughly corrupt. True enough. But local officials are also frightened of being caught crossing Beijing. Thus, one concludes that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) leadership has no objections.
Others explain that the PRC government is in a legal bind as fentanyl producers keep jiggering the formula to avoid the ‘illegal list’ – and therefore the producers are always one-step ahead of the government that can’t revise laws fast enough – try as it might.
A nice excuse, but In China, the law is what Xi Xinping and the Communist Party say it is. If they want to shut down fentanyl producers the ‘law’ is no obstacle – as it would be in the United States. The fact the PRC doesn’t ban fentanyl in its entirety – much less go after producers the way it goes after Uighurs, Christians, and Falun Gong – or Hong Kongers trying to preserve their freedom, once again suggest the CCP is glad America is awash in fentanyl.
But maybe the Chinese cops have a different approach to policing that ties their hands? Not quite. The PRC police can do whatever they want. ‘Disappear’ people, arrest starlets, kidnap billionaires and booksellers….no problem. The only restraints come from Zhongnanhai – the very top of the CCP.
But the biggest whopper of all is the claim that Chinese authorities can’t locate the illegal drug producers. China is a big place, you know. The CCP is creating a surveillance state Orwell couldn’t have imagined. Deface a poster of President Xi and see how long it takes to be arrested and imprisoned or inside a mental hospital – being pumped with mind-altering drugs.
Fentanyl is ravaging all parts of American society – even in good neighborhoods. And about half of the deaths attributed to fentanyl are young people of military age. As one former U.S. government official notes, this is the equivalent of removing two or three divisions of Army or Marines off the rolls every year. And don’t forget the “battlefield casualties” who survive but can’t function as productive members of society, and the burden and expense of caring for them.