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The Silent Coup of the 1990s: How Privatization, ADR, and Drug Cartels Rewired American Power

The 1990s, often viewed as a prosperous decade, actually concealed significant systemic corruption characterized by privatization of justice and prisons, alongside the emergence of corporate cartels. These changes, fueled by political interests and military-industrial complex dynamics, blurred the lines between government, corporations, and crime, undermining democracy and public accountability.

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The Silent Convergence: How the 1990s Saw Cartel Expansion and Legal System Vulnerabilities Rise Together

In the 1990s, the rise of Mexican drug cartels and the adoption of Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) in the U.S. legal system created dangerous overlaps. While cartels expanded their criminal enterprises, ADR prioritized secrecy over transparency, inadvertently enabling exploitation and corruption. This legacy continues to affect justice delivery and societal trust today.

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