Mea culpa S1E6x9

  • 2 months ago
Transcript
00:00Does this happen? That they are contacted in a bar, in the same street where they live?
00:06The usual thing is that they are contacted in traditional places,
00:09but there is a whole research behind it,
00:13to know if they have reservation conditions,
00:15which is what is of great interest to the organizers of the networks.
00:20When they pass this test, sometimes it lasts weeks and months,
00:23naturally they embark on this condition.
00:26In Chile, are there many young people or adults who act as border guards?
00:30Yes, and they are varied, young and women too.
00:33I would say that a large number of them, and they are also incipient,
00:37are precisely women, and not always young.
00:41Andres, the crime of drugs, of drug trafficking in our country,
00:45what severity do you assign to it?
00:47It is one of the most serious crimes of all.
00:49It is as serious as terrorism.
00:52Terrorism is more spectacular, but this is tremendously serious.
00:56And the people who handle this crime,
00:58appear as people of a very orderly life,
01:03very disciplined, and they do not participate in the consumption of drugs,
01:09but they poison society from an apparent very normal vision.
01:15In that sense, it was not appropriate to address these two types of problems in the consultation.
01:20We have seen both the organizer, as Andres explained,
01:23that in our study there is a very subgenre personality alteration.
01:29They are very, very intelligent people,
01:31and they do not measure the damage that they are going to do to society,
01:34but they consider this as one more business, and they consider it as legal.
01:37And when one analyzes it in more depth,
01:39the person is convinced that he is doing a good business, and that this is good.
01:43So there is again an alteration,
01:45which we have mentioned so many times in this program,
01:47with respect to values.
01:48They are psychopathic personalities with alterations,
01:50especially in the scale of values.
01:52And we have also seen some cases of this kind of ingenuity,
01:54as you pointed out, of the workers,
01:56who are people, deep down, who also have an ambition to make easy money,
02:01which is quite common, suddenly, in a certain sector of our society,
02:06in which this money can be easily earned with a quick transaction,
02:09and they do not measure the consequences,
02:10and they can even repeat it again until they are caught.
02:13And that is how they take the weight of what they are doing.
02:16Well, that is very important,
02:17because you previously pointed out, Deputy Commissioner,
02:20that the consequences are quite serious for those who work as workers.
02:25For example, there are people who cannot leave the business.
02:27Exactly.
02:28There are a number of workers who are fired at a certain time,
02:32and precisely because of an access to ambition.
02:34Because they start in this business, but they learn from it.
02:39And little by little, they want to take drugs,
02:43which are financed by themselves.
02:45When this happens to them,
02:46they are fired by the big international mafias,
02:49and they are literally handed over to the police.
02:5212 kilos, as this case deals with,
02:54is a low, medium, high amount?
02:58It is a medium amount conducive to the European and North American market.
03:02Above 5 kilos, it is already an acceptable amount, or profitable,
03:06for those who send it from Latin America to the big markets.
03:09So that people understand, what does that mean in silver, for example?
03:12The gram of cocaine chloride is traded in the international market
03:15for around 80 dollars.
03:17This is like the international dollar, or international finance.
03:22They have their metrics, right?
03:24Well, there is a sale of cocaine chloride at a similar price in Santiago de Chile,
03:29at around 27,000 pesos.
03:30The truth is that it is like that.
03:31And small loads of 1 or 2 kilos,
03:33well, they are simply accessed to the high-capitalist neighborhood.
03:37But above that amount, it is profitable,
03:40as long as you do not forget that cocaine chloride can be adulterated,
03:45and the amount is magnified, and also magnified.
03:49So far we have talked about what drug trafficking means, right?
03:51But what about the consequences of drug use?
03:53I would like to know how serious it is for a person, for example,
03:57to start by trying, for whatever reason, cocaine,
04:00the base paste, in short, products that at this moment
04:03are easily available in the national market.
04:06It is true.
04:06We look very seriously at what happens in the case of addiction.
04:12What happens in these cases?
04:13That the person who consumes cocaine,
04:16or consumes any of these heavy drugs,
04:18can initially do it out of curiosity.
04:21But very quickly, his organism already requires,
04:24his metabolism of his own organism already begins to require this substance.
04:28How quickly?
04:29It becomes dependent.
04:30I would say, practically, at the fifth or sixth consumption in a row,
04:34the person immediately requires a new consumption.
04:37In addition, it needs to be increased.
04:39But if he does it, for example, there are people who do it for a social reason, right?
04:43Like, who goes to a party and can have a drink, for example.
04:47They can consume cocaine.
04:48The difference with marijuana is that it produces a psychological dependence
04:53and it also produces physical damage, and it is good to point it out.
04:55Marijuana is not so innocent.
04:57In the case of these drugs, at a very fast consumption,
05:00at a very low consumption,
05:01then the organism is depending on it,
05:04it is really asking for a greater amount.