The old adage, “You cannot bolt a door with a boiled carrot,” has a modern version: “You cannot protect people without well-funded law enforcement.” From Maine to Montana, as drug trafficking – Colombian, Mexican, Chinese – crests, police are in a troth. That has to change.
Much of rural America is suffering the collapse of local law enforcement presence, resources, personnel, and public safety. While 2020’s “defund police” activism crushed morale, recruiting, retention, and respect for the hardest job in America, triggering ambushes and suicides, things are getting worse.
In places like rural Maine, where one of the state’s 16 counties is the size of Delaware, getting officers to sign on, and ensure good pay, training, and equipment has always been a challenge.
These days, federal, state, and local budget cuts, together with a stunning spike in foreign-source drug trafficking – especially rising Chinese and Mexican fentanyl trafficking, high-potency Chinese marijuana grow houses, foreign cocaine, heroin, and synthetics, are putting the law itself at risk.
What was a contained forest fire … is becoming a runaway wildfire, with few constraints. In recent weeks alone, drug busts in Farmington, Rockland, Madison, Norridgewock, Kennebunk, Auburn, Gray, Hudson, Mexico, and other Maine towns drive home the mounting danger.
Maine is under siege, but so is all of rural and suburban America – West Virginia, Kentucky, and Tennessee to Georgia and Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Iowa to Massachusetts and New York.
What the traffickers have learned, as they flooded the country over the last three years – along with illegal aliens arrested and released, set free awaiting unvetted asylum claims, or just surging the southern and northern borders, is that rural America is largely unpoliced.
What does this mean in real terms? It means we are quietly under siege, seeing overdoses skyrocket – in Maine alone, overdoses are up hundreds of percent in a dozen years, even with Narcan available. We are seeing young people addicted and dying in record numbers.
Having sat with young Mainers addicted to fentanyl, polydrug addicted, and recently using fentanyl-laced with xylazine, the hopelessness is hard to bear, options for detox, effective treatment, and a change of circumstances to save their lives… limited.
This is the backside of the coin, what happens when a governor and president – yes, the Democrat Janet Mills and Biden-Harris Administrations – soft-shoe the hard drug problem. When traffickers from New York and Boston think they have free reign in Maine, police thin, kids pay the price.
With limited discussion of the issue in many counties, states, and nationally, as well as policies that elevate the vulnerability of kids, Maine saw 10,000 overdoses in 2022, 723 were deadly. The rise in use, addiction, related crime, and family dysfunction, can hardly be measured.
Notably, in 2013 – one year after the last Republican governor and legislature held power – Maine had one fentanyl death, and 176 overdose deaths total. In 2022, after a decade of Democrat governors and legislatures, Maine had 560 fentanyl deaths, and 723 overall drug deaths – a 560-fold increase in fentanyl deaths, a four-fold increase in overall deaths.
Sadly, on the record, Democrats in Maine spend more on solar farms, wind turbines, and housing illegal aliens than saving kids from drug overdoses.
For specifics, any state with a rural population – and most have expanses – is seeing an uptick in foreign drug trafficking, the presence of transnational organized crime, and the results. But some, like Maine, are struggling to keep any police within striking range of active trafficking crimes.
Ironically, there is nothing inevitable about victimization of rural Maine, or rural anywhere. In the 1970s and 1980s, as trafficking in cocaine, heroin, and meth expanded, Republican and Democrat leaders – including governors and attorneys general – stepped up, cooperated, and reversed the rise.
Today, Maine state police have cut or reduced patrols to multiple counties, Washington to Somerset, while nationally rural police lose officers faster than they can recruit them – at a time when drug traffickers, aided by a porous border, are pouring new traffickers into these areas.
So, from north to south, east to west – within rural Maine, and well beyond Maine – what is the answer in 2024? The answer is to seek leaders who appreciate police, fund them well, help them attract new and committed officers, honor those officers, and take back the lost ground.
Each year we fail to prioritize public safety, at state and federal levels, is a year closer to totally losing the rule of law. In places like Maine, and nationwide in rural America, that matters. Why? Because, as the old adage goes, “You cannot bolt a door with a boiled carrot.”
Robert Charles is a former Assistant Secretary of State under Colin Powell, former Reagan and Bush 41 White House staffer, attorney, and naval intelligence officer (USNR). He wrote “Narcotics and Terrorism” (2003), “Eagles and Evergreens” (2018), and is National Spokesman for AMAC.
This can seem mysterious but in fact its done on purpose. The dem party is now under marxist control. All existing social structures that used to define us must be erased in order to build an entirely new country. By shipping jobs to china and then inviting the cartels in the dems are creating crises that they will then offer to solve…by reducing our freedom.
I live in rural Southern Oregon. Several years ago, a law barely passed and now I have to lock up my guns. There are no children in my home, nor do any visit, and the nearest county sheriff office is 35 minutes away. So, I guess I have to ask the criminals to wait while I unlock my gun safe so at age 65 I can defend my own home, myself and my property. The anti-gun, anti-law enforcement liberals do NOT care about the people. I am my only form of defense, even my neighbors couldn’t get here fast enough. If Harris wins, self=protection will get a lot worse, with a LOT less law enforcement. Hard to blame them-they do their jobs and some get charged with a crime. Teachers will be next.
Reading this article and thinking about the situation that has the Country being. faced with deterioration because of illegal drug use and the defund the police policies , the word stability came to mind. If weight and balance or stability is off with an airplane it will not stay in the air very long – if a ship is not stable it will capsize. So if a society is out of balance, lacks stability there will be consequences that will be serious and will require measures to have things in proper balance. Police are vital in helping a society maintain stability. The illegal drug use ,I reckon it could be referred to as an epidemic, is an indication of a culture that is out of balance , lacking stability in several ways. So as you stated in the next to the last paragraph ,Robert leaders are needed who appreciate the police, help and honor the police .That will help to take back the lost ground , the ground lost to crime and the complex effects due to illegal drug use. There sure is plenty to do, to make the needed improvements ,but with the right spirit , and the right efforts from American citizens who care , have the values of Faith, family and freedom in mind , who are diligent in working toward the betterment of the Nation there should be victory for good and stability will be maintained . Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness will be realized . Well done with this writing Robert .
It’s not just in Maine. Rural residents across the country have been forced to become their own law enforcement. My advice to Leslie is to protect yourself, and NOT the law that prevents you from doing so. Also, a backhoe will come in very handy.
We are a banana republic and it will only get worse with Democrat rule.
Could all the drugs coming in with the blessings of our own government be compared to gas chambers?. So is our own government a mass murderer ?I doubt there be a trial The fact that people are planning to vote for Harris says it all.
Many rural areas have armed citizens. The situation may lead to vigilante justice, where the credo is “shoot, shovel, and shut up.” That would be sad, but not unexpected.
The police are the people I call after I shoot the MF trying to break in…
Good article.