Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán has long insisted that the drug trade is far bigger than any one man, including himself. In interviews and court testimony, he downplayed his personal role, saying the business would continue unchanged with or without him. He described the narcotics game as a global enterprise—an industry built on demand, corruption, and networks that reach far beyond cartel leaders. His view was that removing him from the picture wouldn’t stop anything, because the machinery of the trade runs on deep systemic forces rather than one figurehead.
This perspective reflects a reality analysts often point out: the cartels are resilient, decentralized, and structured to survive leadership changes. The money, power, and connections driving the trade extend into politics, finance, and law enforcement, ensuring that the flow continues even when a kingpin falls. By his own words, El Chapo reinforced the idea that the drug trade is not controlled by a single person at the top, but by a sprawling system that adapts, evolves, and keeps moving regardless of who’s in charge.
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Published on 2 months, 2 weeks ago
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