The Candy Machine, how cocaine took over the world.
Beginning of reading; 22-07-2023
End of reading: 28-07-2023
Tom Feiling's approach of this book is very interesting, compiling the necessary information and showing us the statistics, names, places, reasons, causes and consequences of what was and is the cocaine market up to the present.
This review may sound repetitive to many readers, but it is certainly a way of understanding the writer, his concerns, and other narratives that allow us to understand why drugs are used, their causes, and effects on the world population.
Tom Feiling handles his narrative in a very academic way almost achieving his goals. His journalistic work is methodical, managing to interview police officers and ex-police officers, politicians, ambassadors, drug traffickers, consumers and other smugglers in the field. "The Candy Machine" is divided into three parts;
The first part: talks about the historical and cultural part of the coca leaf, its distribution, uses and initial consumption, comparing it with other drugs on the market (Crack, amphetamines, LSD, etc.), the cultural beginnings of use in community to its commercial distribution, since the coca leaf began to be used, which could be from Guatemala to Peru with dates and details to create a debate. Tom tells us about the Coca-Cola company and its use of coca leaves in its drinks and the company sales in the market, about Rockefeller and his drug laws, about other presidents like Reagan, Bush and Clinton, each one of them showing their own drug policies.
In the second part, Feeling tells us about the smuggling that originates in Latin America from where the coca leaf harvest is generated, the chemistry is carried out and it is exported abroad. Consequently, there is talk of corruption, vendettas, foreign policy and its criminalization.
The third part tells us about the demand for drugs, the possible alternatives (pros and cons) of legalization, what possible alternatives there are to face the problem. The text analysis level comes with an introduction, acknowledgments, and reference notes as direct reporting and in-depth, critical investigation of the writing.
In "The Candy Machine" Tom Feiling does a long geographical and demographic tour of his travels and lists;
Colombia (politics, he talks about Álvaro Uribe, Farc, gangs, vendors and consumers)
United States (historical processes, talks on distribution, drugs and alcohol)
From Miami to New York.
Mexico (gangs, drug traffickers, "corridos" songs, presidential periods where drug trafficking takes place) including Tijuana
Jamaica (History and statistics on the use of marijuana), let's add other regions of Europe such as Spain, Holland to the United Kingdom. Once again, Tom's statements are to be read and thus understand why the drug market exists and its repercussions on the world population, A must read.