If it works in the Phillipins should Mexico try the same?

No, it isn’t like that.

Cancer is a life-threatening disease. Treating cancer justifies surgery.

The situation in the Philippines is the opposite of this. The government has begun a program which is worse than the problem they are supposedly trying to fix.

Not only that, but it justifies surgery on the right parts of your body. If you have breast cancer, and you go in to the operating room, do you really have to take a gamble that you might come out with your leg and four fingers amputated?

It sure seems like what’s going on in the Philippines is that “doctors” are randomly cutting off body parts with the idea that cancer might be in some of them.

And they’re using machetes instead of scalpels, apparently thrown from a distance.

Lynchings work. They’re very good at producing corpses.

Is “producing corpses” the purpose of a justice system now?

If it works in the Phillipines. Ok, for grins I’ll go along with the concept. But first things first- when this is all said and done the important question will be: How well did this work out?

Because vigilante death squading is stressful work and you need to unwind somehow?

Organized crime was coopting the government and police officials responsible for trying to stop them. The “solution” involves giving those same untrustworthy organizations the power to kill people without checks and balances. On top of that they’ve started looking the other way when vigilantes kill people as long as they claim “drug dealer”. Again with no checks and balances to make sure it wasn’t because the target wasn’t just letting his dog shit in your yard. Call me dubious of the notion that the long term results will be good.

The Filipinos who don’t think it’s working probably keep their thoughts to themselves lest it be publically announced that they are a drug dealer. And let’s face it anyone who would go around suggesting that it’s wrong to shoot drug dealers is probably a drug dealer themselves, am I right?

There was a long list of judges and cops that Dutarte announced to be drug dealers or sympathisers or whatnot. I’m guessing not too many Dutarte supporters made that list.

The rule of law is already in tatters. They are not breaking something that ain’t already broken in the process of destroying the people who keep breaking it.

Based on the reporting, I would say that almost 1% of the population is turning themselves into the police. Its not like the Phillipines is a journalistic black hole, why wouldn’t you trust the journalism coming out of there?

Filipinos are pretty well armed. Otherwise the vigiliantes wouldn’t have much of a change against the criminals.

I don’t know about that. You seem to be saying that the murders are random rather than targetted at criminals.

I don’t know whether the cure is worse than the disease but just like chemotherapy might kill healthy cells along with cancerous ones, I suspect that some of the 1700 weren’t actually criminals.

One doesn’t need to suspect, it is reality.

The [del]in[/del]Justice Secretary of the Philippines claims that “Desperate times call for desperate measures.” And yet when one looks at the history of the war on drugs the “desperate” measure is the continuation of that failed war, now with even less justice.

I’m saying that it seems highly unlikely that 1% of the population are drug dealers. So who are these people that are turning themselves in out of fear of being killed? Do you think that is a successful program when seemingly innocent people are forced to choose prison over death?

NOT 600,000.

  1. Who said it? Duarte himself!

Turned themselves in out of fear of being killed as they were very overt in their drug dealings.

Our countries don’t suffer from the kind of endemic corruption that infects all of the justice/police/army/courts/politics systems of nations such as these. This us a very difficult train to knock off its tracks!

I don’t approve, I think it will lead to worse corruption. But, IF that’s avoided and corruption and drug dealing are near to eliminated, perhaps the people of this nation will feel it’s a price worth paying.

After all, the innocents that die from this corruption and drug trade, get no due process, and the numbers far, far exceed those so far killed as dealers.

I just think they alone will have to live with what they elected, and they alone will get to determine if this proves a gamble worth taking to wrestle power and return it to the people of this nation.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/08/23/world/asia/philippines-rodrigo-duterte.html?_r=0

However, I was wrong about them all the people turning themselves in being drug dealers. People who are users or suspected of being users are included in that 600,000 so my argument about 1 in 140 being dealers is wrong. You can ignore that part of the argument.

Are you trying to say that the 5 year old girl was the target of the attack? Because it really looks like her grandfather was the intended target.

You mean there are negative consequences to vigilante murder squads??? Who knew?

Why do these people seem innocent to you?

Wait. Are they killing drug USERS too?