Alex Krainer
Even
as war rages in the Middle East, the Western world is under a
full-scale assault by multiple organized crime networks. Over the recent
weeks, I wrote about this here: the events in Minnesota in December
2025 and January of this year seemed to conform to the general playbook:
the government seeks to crack down on organized crime which is raking
in billions of dollars. Part of the money is shared with the political
class who are thus incentivized to allow the abuse to continue.
Similar
events took place in Mexico in 2016 after the Mexican government
started to inflict serious damage on the $65/year narco cartel networks.
To protect this lucrative industry from the government, armies of
well-meaning human rights/social justice warriors were mobilized. The
clarion call was human rights, which were under threat from police
brutality.
In Minnesota in January, the whole world learned the names of Renee Good and Alex Pretti.
In Mexico in 2016, the country erupted in protests over 11 school
teachers killed by the Federal police. But few, if any, among the social
justice warriors seemed to care about the thousands of nameless victims
of organized crime networks. The following chart provides perhaps the
best illustration of the results of the human rights campaigners’ good
deeds:

Road to hell is paved with good intentions
Correlation
may not indicate causation, but what we can read from the above chart
is that from 2012 onward, the government’s fight against organized crime
started to reduce gang-related violence. But the pushback on account of
human rights gave way to further deterioration of law and order in
Mexico. This would be a great example of good intentions paving the way
to hell on an industrial scale.
Of course, social justice warriors
never worry about these things. They’re barely aware of them. All they
know is that Alex Pretti was a wonderful man, the Renee Good was
completely innocent and that eleven Mexican school teachers were
unjustifiably killed by Mexican police. They spare no thought for the
thousands of nameless victims of organized crime. This is in itself very
strange.
Whose agenda?
If
they care about human rights, why not care about the human rights of
those robbed, beaten, tortured, kidnapped, raped, and killed by the
criminals? Why is only government violence a problem? My research
suggests that the reason could have to do with the way human
rights/social justice protests are organized and funded. Those who do
the funding and organizing have an agenda and that agenda might have a
lot to do with the billions of dollars in revenues that organized crime
generates.
But if that is the case, who has the power to mobilize
all those social justice warriors in their tens of thousands - and on a
worldwide basis? To make the long story short, the kingpins - those who
sit at the top of the command and control hierarchy behind organized
crime are the bankers. I’ve condensed my research in a 32-minute video
we uploaded yesterday:
Later today or tomorrow, I will post the full transcript of the report on my personal Substack
- I believe this danger is worth keeping on our radars as it indicates
that the organizations that we’re up against are extremely wealthy and
extremely powerful. All this should also ring very familiar to any
readers from the UK because the same is happening there - only the
errand boys at the bottom of the stack aren’t drug dealers but grooming
gang members.