Pablo escobar, born on december 1, 1949, in antioquia, colombia, entered the cocaine trade in the early 1970s. He collaborated with other criminals to form the medellin cartel. He was killed in 1993.Escobar built his drug trafficking industry to such an extent that he eventually controlled over 80% of the cocaine sent to america. With his own factories and an entire fleet of aeroplanes and ships, including two radio-controlled submarines, it has been estimated that escobar smuggled 70 to 80 tonnes of cocaine from colombia to america per month, and as much as 11 tonnes in each flight. In order to launder the drug money, the medellin cartel controlled a large amount of crooked white-collar workers, such as bankers, lawyers and extended family.You’ll discover:•How escobar rose from street hustler to billionaire kingpin of the medellín cartel•The bloody cartel wars that left thousands dead in his quest for dominance•Escobar’s secret political ambitions and his manipulative grip on colombian society•His daring escapes, hidden fortunes, and the ingenious smuggling routes that kept his empire thriving•The relentless manhunt that pushed governments to their limits and brought the king of cocaine to his downfall•The myths, legends, and dark truths behind one of history’s most infamous criminalsin this groundbreaking exposé, narco-socialism unveils the insidious fusion of drug cartels and socialist regimes—a toxic alliance that spreads chaos, undermines nations, and destabilizes global order. from cuba's ideological incubation to venezuela's catastrophic collapse, from mexico's violent epidemic to the tren de aragua's alarming expansion into the u.s., this book dissects how narco-socialism operates as a contagion, infecting societies through corruption, crime, and geopolitical manipulation.