POPULARITY
Justin Holz talks about peer effects in police use of force. “Peer Effects in Police Use of Force” by Justin E. Holz, Roman G. Rivera, and Bocar A. Ba. *** Probable Causation is part of Doleac Initiatives, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit. If you enjoy the show, please consider making a tax-deductible contribution. Thank you for supporting our work! *** OTHER RESEARCH WE DISCUSS IN THIS EPISODE: “The Effect of Field Training Officers on Police Use of Force” by Chandon Adger, Mathew Ross, and CarlyWill Sloan. Probable Causation Episode 90: Matthew Ross. “Does Race Matter for Police Use of Force? Evidence from 911 Calls” by Mark Hoekstra and CarlyWill Sloan. Probable Causation Episode 38: CarlyWill Sloan. “An Empirical Analysis of Racial Differences in Police Use of Force” by Roland G. Fryer Jr. “An Empirical Analysis of Racial Differences in Police Use of Force: A Comment” by Steven N. Durlauf and James J. Heckman. “Wearing Body Cameras Increases Assaults Against Officers and Does Not Reduce Police Use of Force: Results from a Global Multi-site Experiment” By Barak Ariel, Alex Sutherland, Darren Penstock, Josh Young, Paul Drove, Jayne Sykes, Simon Megicks, and Ryan Henderson. “The “Less-Than-Lethal Weapons Effect”- Introducing TASERs to Routine Operations in England and Wales: A Randomized Controlled Trial” by Barak Ariel, David Lawes, Cristobal Weinborn, Ron Henry, Kevin Chen, and Hagit Brants Sabo. “American Policing and the Danger Imperative” by Michael Sierra-Arevalo. “Racial Profiling and Use of Force in Police Stops: How Local Events Trigger Periods of Increased Discrimination” by Joscha Legewie. “Violence and Risk Preference: Experimental Evidence from Afghanistan” by Michael Callen, Mohammad Isaqzadeh, James D. Long, and Charles Sprenger. “Exposure to Violence Predicts Impulsivity in Time Preferences: Evidence from The Democratic Republic of Congo” by Alex Imas, Michael Kuhn, and Vera Mironova. [Working Paper]. “Violence, Psychological Trauma, and Risk Attitudes: Evidence from Victims of Violence in Colombia” by Andrés Moya. “Impact of Violent Crime on Risk Aversion: Evidence from the Mexican Drug War” by Ryan Brown, Verónica Montalva, Duncan Thomas, and Andrea Velásquez. Probable Causation Episode 42: Andrea Velásquez. “Family Violence and Football: The Effect of Unexpected Emotional Cues on Violence Behavior” by David Card and Gordon B. Dahl. “Frustration, Euphoria, and Violent Crime” by Ignacio Munyo and Martin A. Rossi. “Emotional Judges and Unlucky Juveniles” by Ozkan Eren and Naci Mocan. “Nonfatal Injuries to Law Enforcement Officers: A Rise in Assaults” by Hope M. Tiesman, Melody Gwilliam, Srinivas Konda, Jeff Rojek, and Suzanne Marsh. “Emotional Reactivity and Police Expertise in Use-of-Force Decision-Making” by Vivian Ta, Brian Lande, and Joel Suss. “Do Police Make Too Many Arrests?: The Effect of Enforcement Pullbacks on Crime” by Sungwoo Cho, Felipe Conclaves, and Emily Weisburst. “The Effect of Minority Peers on Future Arrests Quantity and Quality” by Roman Rivera. “Police Officer Assignment and Neighborhood Crime” by Bocar Ba, Patrick Bayer, Nayoung Rim, Roman Rivera, and Modibo Sidibé. “Strengthening Police Oversight: Impacts of Misconduct Investigators on Police Officer Behavior” by Andrew Jordan and Taeho Kim. “Does Black and Blue Matter? An Experimental Investigation of Race and Perceptions of Police, and Legal Compliance” by Mackenzie Alston and Emily Owens. “High-Frequency Location Data Shows that Race Affects the Likelihood of Being Stopped and Fined for Speeding” by Pradhi Aggarwal, Alec Brandon, Ariel Goldszmidt, Justin Holz, John A. List, Ian Muir, Greg Sun, and Thomas Yu.
Issa López's 2017 haunting Mexican crime-fantasy movie Tigers Are Not Afraid made a big impression on horror royalty and on us. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week we talk about Yemen, Syria, and Ethiopia. We also discuss the Mexican Drug War, Myanmar, and Ukraine. Support the show: patreon.com/letsknowthings & letsknowthings.com/support Show notes/transcript: letsknowthings.com Check out my other shows & publications: understandary.com
This week we talk about Yemen, Syria, and Ethiopia.We also discuss the Mexican Drug War, Myanmar, and Ukraine.Show notes / transcript: https://letsknowthings.com/episode326 This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit letsknowthings.substack.com/subscribe
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: Ending The War on Drugs - A New Cause For Effective Altruists?, published by MichaelPlant on the Effective Altruism Forum This is a linkpost for Peter Singer and I argue for drug legalisation in an article that was published in the New Statesman earlier this week (link to my tweet). In short, we argue 'War on Drugs' has failed and it's time that governments, not gangsters, run the drug market. I posted what follows below in the EA facebook group and was encouraged to do so here too (as the discussion is often better). The aim of the article wasn't to make an argument in 'EA terms': we merely claimed that moving from drug prohibition to drug legalisation would be a good thing, not that putting money or time put towards this would be (for someone) the most good they could do. However, I would like to elaborate on the article and say why effective altruists might be interested in this cause area - not least because it's not really been discussed before, conversations about psychedelics and my 2017 EA forum posts on the topic aside, and it seems important to 'keep EA weird' and continue to keep the proverbial eyes peeled for ways to, well, do good better! The thrust of the article is that drug legalisation would do quite a bit of good. I suspect the largest part of this is that those in drug-producing and trafficking countries would no longer be affected by the corruption and violence that drug cartels, and the War of Drugs, bring. One well-known example is the Mexican Drug War where over 100,000 are estimated to have died since 2006. Such conflict is destabilising and hinders the economic development of many of the world's poorer citizens. Hence, it might look good solely as a poverty alleviation policy. It would also benefit those people who are currently criminalised for drug offenses - in the US, 1/5th of the prison population - as well as reduce harms to users, raise money states could spend elsewhere, and some other things besides. Determining the scale of the problem isn't straightforward and I haven't yet really tried, but my hot take is that, on a global scale, it's not trivial. Certainly, it's not so trivial it should be dismissed out of hand. As one indication, the UN estimates the illicit drug trade is worth 1.5% of world GDP. The natural EA question is "okay, but how cost-effective is it vs other things?" If you're thinking as a citizen, this question isn't so relevant: it doesn't really cost you anything to support this policy change, talk to your friends about it, etc., and it's not as if supporting this would take public money from anything else you might value - indeed, it's a revenue raiser. I leave it open how valuable it is to spend extra 'citizen time' on this vs some other policy. Drug policy reform could be one item in a potential basket of 'no-cost' policies an effective altruist might support alongside, say, improved animal welfare. (I previously posted about a policy platform back in 2019, but nothing much happened.) If you're thinking as a donor, then you really would wonder how drug policy reform efforts, e.g. advocacy organisations, compare to other things. This is pretty complicated as both the scale of the problem is unclear (as noted) and it's really tricky to model the effectiveness of systemic change interventions anyway. I don't have the capacity to look at this anytime soon, nor will it be a priority for the Happier Lives Institute, but I would be really enthusiastic for someone else to take a stab at this and would be happy to chat to them about it. If you're wondering what to do with your career, I think it's very possible, given the importance of personal fit, that this could be a priority path for someone with suitable skills and interests. At least, it's worth considering. Finally, it's worth noting that, if someone objects to the...
Most people know about the Mexican Drug War, but not too many people know the current state of the conflict. We did the research and were pretty surprised by what we found.
"All videos are for educational purposes & as a journalist my mission is to prevent our youth from falling into a criminal life of lies with them ending up in prison, death, or in bad health." - OG Shadow OG Shadow YT Channel - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtdmZ0HTmxf9UPNhfsDgD9Q OG Shadow Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/user/posts?u=30777704 OG Shadow PayPal: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=JHW9YQBWTCWCE OG Shaun Attwood - https://www.youtube.com/user/derickatt https://www.addyadds.one/ Telegram: https://www.t.me/oneaddyadds YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCR8UoUPvixzHTDPv_qkF7wg FACEBOOK: HTTPS://WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/ONEADDYADDS TWITTER: HTTPS://TWITTER.COM/ONEADDYADDS BITCHUTE: HTTPS://WWW.BITCHUTE.COM/CHANNEL/BGELNAOKAOII/ PAYPAL: HTTPS://PAYPAL.ME/ONEADDYADDS PATREON: HTTPS://WWW.PATREON.COM/ADDYADDS VENMO: HTTPS://VENMO.COM/ADDYADDS SUBSCRIBESTAR: https://www.subscribestar.com/AddyAdds UGE TUBE: HTTPS://UGETUBE.COM/@ADDYADDS BRANDNEWTUBE: HTTPS://BRANDNEWTUBE.COM/@ADDYADDS RUMBLE: HTTPS://RUMBLE.COM/C/ADDYADDS Streamyard Referral Link: https://streamyard.com?pal=6421268531249152 Free 4K Youtube Video Downloader: https://www.4kdownload.com/?ref=adakinolsen Rumble Video Referral Link: https://rumble.com/register/AddyAdds/ Melon App Referral Link (Like Streamyard but cheaper!) https://melonapp.com?ref=addyadds https://cash.app/$AddyAdds B T C : 19LZoqmcHjxTnxs5tHv5qpgo971iD3vXVH Google Podcasts: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkLnBvZGJlYW4uY29tL2FkZHlhZGRzL2ZlZWQueG1s iTunes Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/public-intelligence/id1550864343 Player FM: https://player.fm/series/public-intelligence ListenNotes : https://www.listennotes.com/podcasts/public-intelligence-addy-adds-4BmbwFsXaHK/ iHeartRadio Podcasts: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/269-one-mind-one-world-77149739/ Amazon Podcasts: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts The Epstein Files PodBean : https://theepsteinfiles.podbean.com Epstein Files Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/7c9pTus7Frsd8IOvJ2jQlr Epstein Files Amazon Podcasts: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/39ddfdf0-5757-4f44-94b0-efe73abf8542
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In this episode of The Mag Life Podcast, Daniel visits with Ed Calderon, a former Mexican police agent with extensive experience and understanding of border control issues, drug cartels, and the complexities that exist between the US and Mexico. Born in Tijuana, Mexico in the 80s, Ed decided to go into police work when he was 21. For over a decade he worked in counter-narcotics, investigation of organized crime, executive protection, and public safety along the northern border of Mexico. Later, he came to the US and is now recognized as one of the world's most preeminent researchers and personal security trainers, offering security consulting, seminars, and private training in anti-abduction, escape and evasion, unarmed combat, unconventional edged-weapon work, and region-specific executive protection. Together, Daniel and Ed discuss complex issues about the escalation of the Mexican Drug War, foreign gun-running, US intervention, issues of governance and firearms ownership in Mexico (and the parallels in the US), human trafficking, and more. https://media.blubrry.com/gunfightercast/s/content.blubrry.com/gunfightercast/187_Ed_Calderon_Things_Most_People_Don_t_Know.mp3 Host: Daniel Shaw Guest: Ed Calderon Introduction/Timeline: Eric Huh Ed Calderon is recognized as one of the world's preeminent researchers and trainers in the field of personal security.02:22 Imparting Valuable Skills to Others Daniel inquiries about the life-saving skills Ed learned on the job while he was active in Latin America and Mexico. Ed's extensive background in counter-narcotics work has covered escape and evasion—namely, how to: escape from handcuffs, manufacture tools for survival, be armed in non-permissive environments, look for early warning signs of an ambush in an urban setting, and understand the social norms in Mexico. He has brought his in-depth, hands-on experience in the undercover narcotics world to other law enforcement agencies in the United States (FBI, Secret Service, among others) so that they may be better equipped for threats across the border. 06:05 What scares you? Daniel asks Ed what genuinely scares him. Ed replies that his one fear is to not live without a purpose. Having faced a great many near-death experiences, Ed has become numb to the idea of physical danger. Rather, it is the concept of having gone through what he did and not being able to bring meaning to his experiences. “You know, people think ‘Hey aren't you afraid of the cartels coming after you and shit like that?' If I was I wouldn't have gone into this line of work when I was 21. So that specific thing doesn't really… make me lose sleep. What does make me lose sleep is having gone through that whole experience and not making it worth it. Or not giving it some sort of purpose.” Ed Calderon, counter custody expert. 07:22 What should scare the American public? Daniel flips the question: “Based on everything you know… what should WE be scared about?” Ed feels that American public scrutiny immensely neglects the sheer amount of Chinese government influence with Mexican drug cartels, and how their activities are increasingly becoming a threat to national security. He cites that the Chinese have a direct hand in fentanyl supply to cartels, a strong influence in major American industries. He further adds that this is occurring with full knowledge of the Communist Party in China. The Jalisco New Generation Cartel (Cártel de Jalisco Nueva Generación or CJNG) actually managed to grow in size and in influence during the COVID epidemic when all other organizations and institutions halted, due to being able to receive fentanyl shipments. They were able to do so because they had supreme control of the ports that faced the Pacific Ocean. Meanwhile, the Sinaloa Cartel has been smuggling fentanyl from the US, processing this into their product, then smuggling it to be sold into the US. In essence,
Ioan Grillo is a journalist who has reported on the Mexican Drug War and cartel violence for the last 20 years. His books include "El Narco: Inside Mexico's Criminal Insurgency,” "Gangster Warlords: Drug Dollars, Killing Fields, and the New Politics of Latin America,” and "Blood Gun Money: How America Arms Gangs and Cartels.” In this episode we discuss his newest book, Blood Gun Money, which is a look at how the illegal gun and drug trades are intertwined, and how U.S. gun laws result in firearms making their way into black market in Mexico and Latin America, including into the hands of drug cartels. Co-hosts: Brian Normand, David Nickles, Russell Hausfeld. Editor: Matt Payne If you like the show please support us on Patreon or make a tax-deductible donation. **Thank you to our Patreon podcast and video supporters: Reliable Spores, Houston Puck, Dave Hodges, Jon Hanna, James Hubbard, Lindsay Munson, Evan Freimuth, Abigail Bianchi, Meghan Kennedy, Dave Ayers, Darrell Duane, Tehseen Noorani, Tariqul Islam, Clifford Hudson, Daniel McQueen, Maryann Kehoe, Ben Yono, Nathan Espinosa, Annick McIntosh, Starbuck, Aaron Williams, Jenine Innes, Julia A, Jesse Liberty, Christian Dawley, Leon Boroditsky, Samy Tammam, Amanda Alexander, Jason Gross, Paige Hausfeld, John Bannon, Clifford Hudson
Ioan Grillo is a journalist who has reported on the Mexican Drug War and cartel violence for the last 20 years. His books include "El Narco: Inside Mexico's Criminal Insurgency,” "Gangster Warlords: Drug Dollars, Killing Fields, and the New Politics of Latin America,” and "Blood Gun Money: How America Arms Gangs and Cartels.” In this episode we discuss his newest book, Blood Gun Money, which is a look at how the illegal gun and drug trades are intertwined, and how U.S. gun laws result in firearms making their way into black market in Mexico and Latin America, including into the hands of drug cartels. Co-hosts: Brian Normand, David Nickles, Russell Hausfeld. Editor: Matt Payne If you like the show please support us on Patreon or make a tax-deductible donation. **Thank you to our Patreon podcast and video supporters: Reliable Spores, Houston Puck, Dave Hodges, Jon Hanna, James Hubbard, Lindsay Munson, Evan Freimuth, Abigail Bianchi, Meghan Kennedy, Dave Ayers, Darrell Duane, Tehseen Noorani, Tariqul Islam, Clifford Hudson, Daniel McQueen, Maryann Kehoe, Ben Yono, Nathan Espinosa, Annick McIntosh, Starbuck, Aaron Williams, Jenine Innes, Julia A, Jesse Liberty, Christian Dawley, Leon Boroditsky, Samy Tammam, Amanda Alexander, Jason Gross, Paige Hausfeld, John Bannon, Clifford Hudson
The evolution over time of the Mexican Drug Cartel and the Mexican Drug War through the 1930s, 1960s, 1980s and 2000s
Gareth and Olly return to Mexico to look at how the Mexican Drug Cartels have defied the restrictions Covid-19 has imposed on most of the world, as they continue to make massive profits and kill each other at an alarming rate. Join us on Patreon for extra stupid political news, political analysis and Gareth's blog. www.patreon.com/politicsovercoffee www.politicsovercoffee.com
This week the Informed crew is back with a deep and dark episode discussing the Mexican Drug War. We talk about the rise of cartels and drug lords such as El Chapo and the Sinaloa Cartel as well as the rise of paramilitary drug organizations. We also talk about the deep rooted social issues plaguing Mexico such as poverty, corruption, and weak law enforcement. We hope you enjoy this episode and makes people think about the violence happening in our neighbor country of Mexico. Thank you and stay informed. Follow our Twitter: @InformedShowFollow our Instagram: @theinformedpopBecome a Patron: www.patreon.com/theinformedpop
Matthew Heineman's doco about the Mexican Drug War, was one of the finest of the whole decade and almost a companion piece to the movie Sicario. Incredible, almost unbelievable footage and stories but also cinematography you would sing about if it were in a normal film.
Today we’re diving back into a war that has touched all our lives – the Mexican Drug War. It’s the deaths behind so many parties across the length and breadth of North America – the sin behind the fun – the endless pain that birthed endless euphoria. It’s a war that lays bare our true… Continue reading El Narco: The Mexican Drug War /// 41
How is it that a reclusive Mormon community in Northern Mexico became the victim of cartel violence? This week, we look at the Mexican Drug War and consider some of the wider causes of a conflict that has grown exponentially in the past three years. This time we are joined by Social Media Correspondent Jessica Kuang who questions the approach of previous governments hardline approach to cartels and advocates for addressing some of the deep structural issues in Mexican society. Music provided by Ketsa and Zagi.
In this episode we visit Colorado and cover a story that is a sad reality.What hastens when it snows on your bud? The mMexican drug war at its finest, and the true story of the Florida sheriff that tells a 911 caller to please stop reporting his weed stolen! Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/theDAP)
A dark fairy tale about a gang of five children trying to survive the horrific violence of the cartels and the ghosts created every day by the drug war. On this week’s episode… Join the crew as we discuss the Mexican Drug War, Guillermo Del Toro, and Issa Lopez’ Tigers Are Not Afraid. Connect with us: Support us on Patreon Website Facebook Instagram Twitter YouTube Shop
In this episode we look at news from: the UK, Greece, Japan, Pakistan, India, Greenland and Thailand. We delve into very positive developments in HIV vaccines and take an in depth look at the Mexican Drug War and ask, how can it be ended? As always, thank you for letting us in to your busy lives. http://www.politicsovercoffee.com
Radio Labyrinth Episode 24 We begin this week by discussing the new, online reality show (for adults!), “Sex Factor”, available at XVideos. Tim gets Mr. French (Family Affair) mixed up with Uncle Charlie (My Three Sons) while Ira gets inquisitive about the voicemail at the end of this week’s intro. Return of the Red Box Troll! Free of charge synopsis of “Flirting With Disaster”. Got a pencil? Giada at Home with her big ass teeth. R.I.P. Hodor. Tim is very passionate about Stephen King’s “The Dark Tower” series, but can accept the film because, ‘There are other worlds than these’. Hobnob my nob, Bob. Here the uncensored and 100% truthful account of Tim’s most-recent place of employment. Ageism? Check. Snootery? Check. No apologies. STAFF PICKS: Tim: Sex Factor - XVideos new reality show. http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/tv/news/porn-site-xhamster-debuts-its-first-original-series-reality-show-the-sex-factor-a7039111.html Steph-Netflix-Cartel Land-Documentary about Mexican Drug War & her friend Shalewa Sharpe’s new comedy album - Stay Eating Cookies http://www.imdb.com/title/tt4126304/ http://atlantacomedy.tumblr.com/ ***Tim rants about why Mexicans don’t want to live in Mexico and thinks you should all shut the hell up and respect your police officers. Jeff: Outcast (Friday June 3, Cinemax) Already renewed for season 2 http://www.cinemablend.com/television/Walking-Dead-Creator-Show-Outcast-Already-Renewed-Season-2-124837.html Ira: The Startup Podcast https://soundcloud.com/hearstartup Before we wrapped we had one more visit with the RBT (Red Box Troll) with breakdowns of “Deadpool” and “The Breakfast Club” and discussed the Elijah Wood #pedowood story circulating this week. Do yourself a favor - rent (if you can find it) “An Open Secret”.
· Mexican Journalist Marcela Turati takes risks reporting on the drug wars.
 The author of El Narco: Inside Mexico's Criminal Insurgency joins the show. We discuss the Mexican Drug War, the stunning levels of violence from the cartels, and how some world leaders are reacting to the drug trade. Â
'Reportero,' a new documentary that examines how journalists at a Tijuana-based news weekly risk their lives to report on Mexico's deadly drug war airs Jan. 7 on PBS. When you think of drones, the military may come to mind at first, but a couple of entrepreneurs want them to become part of everyone's daily life.
Funny Discussion about Ethics, Cuture, Sex and Social Society. This week we discuss the Mexican Drug War, Problems with the Gold Coast, teenage parties, pedestrian ettiquette and much much more..... featuring J Dot, Pheonix ppardoshe and Fred Nations. @highhorseradio on twitter & High Horse Radio @ iTunes to download & subscribe (@frednations, @jdotgater, @phoenixppardoshe)
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Mark shares his reaction to media coverage stemming from the Tucson Tragedy. Are there too many media outlets creating too much noise? Michelle Malkin joins to discus the aftermath in Arizona, and former drug Czar Barry McCaffrey joins to discuss the Mexican Drug War. Listen now!
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