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Friday, July 28, 2006

Prohibition and the destruction of Mexico

Norm Stamper has an outstanding piece at Alternet: How Legalizing Drugs Will End the Violence
... Virtually every analysis of the Mexican "drug problem" points to the themes raised here: the inducements of big money and wide fame; the crushing poverty of those exploited by drug dealers; the entrepreneurial frenzy of expanding and protecting one's markets; the large, unquenchable American demand for drugs; and the complicity of many in law enforcement.

But something's missing from the analysis: the role of prohibition.

Illegal drugs are expensive precisely because they are illegal. The products themselves are worthless weeds -- cannabis (marijuana), poppies (heroin), coca (cocaine) -- or dirt-cheap pharmaceuticals and "precursors" used, for example, in the manufacture of methamphetamine. Yet today, marijuana is worth as much as gold, heroin more than uranium, cocaine somewhere in between. It is the U.S.'s prohibition of these drugs that has spawned an ever-expanding international industry of torture, murder and corruption. In other words, we are the source of Mexico's "drug problem."

The remedy is as obvious as it is urgent: legalization. [...]

If you want to read more about the failure of prohibition and its impact on Mexico...

The Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA) last month released a major report by Laurie Freeman: State of Siege: Drug-Related Violence and Corruption in Mexico -- Unintended Consequences of the War on Drugs (pdf)

Drug prohibition as enacted and enforced by the United States may be intended to keep drug use low, but there can be no doubt that it also stimulates and nourishes organized crime, both within and beyond U.S. borders. The consequences -- richer, more powerful criminal organizations that create mayhem and flout the rule of law -- are no less real for being unintended. [...]
(I would have used the word "instead" rather than "also.")
Drug-related violence in Mexico is largely a consequence of the drug trade's illegality. [...]

Like violence, drug-related corruption is a product of the black market.



5:21:32 PM |  | Related  | permalink | comment []


Trolling for people to search

A picture named druggun.jpgCDEX is developing a "drug gun" that is expected to be available in March 2007, that uses ultraviolet light to detect trace residue of meth, heroin, cocaine, and marijuana on clothing, skin, cars, houses...

Wow! Pretty smart ultraviolet light, eh? How much you want to bet that there are 10 times as many legal substances that it also detects (as if they were illegal drugs), and that CDEX won't be advertising that fact to the general public?

Now police won't have to even bother with the pretense of getting a dog to point at you. Simply get the ultraviolet light excited about the detergent you used and they'll be able to search to their heart's content.

Soon, the police will achieve the ability to search anyone they want, anytime, anywhere, for any reason, and that pesky fourth amendment will be finally be dispensed with completely.

Won't that be fun.

[Thanks, Mirjan]


9:12:23 AM |  | Related  | permalink | comment []





There's a war going on. It destroys lives and families, spawns violence, suspends civil liberties, tramples on the infirm, locks up millions of peaceful citizens, costs billions, and subjugates reason with fear. This blog looks at the front lines of the drug war, with news, analysis, and the occasional rant.

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