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Drug WarRant
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Friday, June 13, 2008 |
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Thursday, June 12, 2008 |
Award one point to the AP While the headline and overall tone of this AP article -- Study: Marijuana potency increases in 2007 -- is typical fear mongering and parroting of Drug Czar press releases, the Associated Press gets a point for at least talking about marijuana use titration and mild withdrawal of pot in the article through interviewing Dr. Mitch Earleywine.
While the drug's potency may be rising, marijuana users generally adjust to the level of potency and smoke it accordingly, said Dr. Mitch Earleywine, who teaches psychology at the State University of New York in Albany and serves as an adviser for marijuana advocacy groups. "Stronger cannabis leads to less inhaled smoke," he said. [...]
But there's no data showing that a higher potency in marijuana leads to more addiction, Earleywine said, and marijuana's withdrawal symptoms are mild at best. "Mild irritability, craving for marijuana and decreased appetite -- I mean those are laughable when you talk about withdrawal from a drug. Caffeine is worse."
[Thanks, John]
6:51:01 AM | drug policy | Related | permalink |
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Wednesday, June 11, 2008 |
Aaarrgghhh! Bloomin' Idiot of the day: Alan Lupo in the Boston Herald.
Look at this -- he has it. It almost appears that he understands it...
"It doesn't matter how many millions the government pours in here to stop drugs," a Mexican lawyer told a New York Times [NYT] reporter.
"As long as Americans keep buying them, this business is never going to stop."
The fellow said that in 1986.
One need not have majored in economics to understand that if a market exists for a product, entrepreneurs will show up to sell to and profit from that market. Al Capone, after all, used to insist that he was nothing more than a businessman as he peddled illegal hooch to willing buyers.
Even if Mexican drug dealers were somehow stopped at our southwestern borders, they and others would find a way into our lucrative market, just as, during Prohibition, Irish, Jewish and Italian mobsters shipped and trucked in booze, and the Scotch-Irish of Appalachia cooked it up in back country stills.
Exactly, you've got it! It's the same issues as alcohol prohibition. So...
So...
Come on, you can do it...
And the very next paragraph is:
If we Americans were serious about the drug war, we'd be fighting it not only aggressively at our borders and beyond, as we do, but also at home by treating our addicts with every manner of medical, psychological and social program we could invent.
What a moron.
11:42:38 PM | drug policy | Related | permalink |
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Are you a death enabler? If you support drug prohibition policies that make black market drug sales profitable, then you are encouraging violent behavior by criminals and supporting the funding of terrorists. This directly results in the deaths of thousands.
You are a death enabler.
If you support drug war enforcement, you are giving your government a green light to use military tactics against its own citizens, resulting in the deaths of both cops and citizens, often in the name of the impossible eradication of a drug that has harmed nobody.
You are a death enabler.
If you support the criminalization of pain medicines and medical marijuana patients, you are preventing doctors from doing their jobs, you are shortening lives, and sometimes, you are driving people in pain to suicide.
You are a death enabler.
If you support the stigmatization of drug users through criminal laws, then you deny people the information they need to make safe choices about drugs, and you scare people from getting help when they need it, which may result in overdose death or fatal disease.
You are a death enabler.
7:37:36 PM | drug policy | Related | permalink |
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Quotable Over at ACLU blog, Jag Davies talks about George Soros' speech at the ACLU Membership Conference this week. Soros is, of course, a lightning rod for hatred from some on the neocon right -- but he understands freedom better than they do.
Here are a couple of quotes from Soros' speech:
The War on Terror exploited a combination of the War on Drugs and the fear of death.
The War on Drugs is one of the most repressive aspects in American life.
7:22:40 AM | drug policy | Related | permalink |
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Barr and the drug war Bob Barr gives a rare (for a poliician) public mea culpa in I Was Wrong About The War On Drugs -- It's A Failure over at the Huffington Post.
I'll admit it, just five years ago I was "Public Enemy Number 1" in the eyes of the Libertarian Party. In my 2002 congressional race for Georgia's Seventh District, the Libertarian Party ran scathing attack ads against my stand on Medical Marijuana. [...]
For years, I served as a federal prosecutor and member of the House of Representatives defending the federal pursuit of the drug prohibition.
Today, I can reflect on my efforts and see no progress in stopping the widespread use of drugs. I'll even argue that America's drug problem is larger today than it was when Richard Nixon first coined the phrase, "War on Drugs," in 1972.
America's drug problem is only compounded by the vast amounts of money directed at this ongoing battle. In 2005, more than $12 billion dollars was spent on federal drug enforcement efforts while another $30 billion was spent to incarcerate non-violent drug offenders.
The result of spending all of those taxpayer's dollars? We now have a huge incarceration tab for non-violent drug offenders and, at most, a 30% interception rate of hard drugs. We are also now plagued with the meth labs that are popping up like poisonous mushrooms across the country.
While it is clear the War on Drugs has been a failure, it is not enough to simply acknowledge that reality. We need to look for solutions that deal with the drug problem without costly and intrusive government agencies, and instead allow for private industry and organizations to put forward solutions that address the real problems.
It's a conversion, all right, but the rest of the article is anecdotal and doesn't really say anything about where he would go specifically. In fact, the anecdotal example he uses is about private industry implementing tougher drug policies.
It's an important admission by Barr that he has changed his views, but so far it seems weak, especially compared to what we heard from Ron Paul (not that we've heard any better from Obama, and particularly not from McCain).
I'm not one of those who feels that Barr has to somehow make up for every past mistake before he's given any support, but I'd like to have some clear sense that he's not just "looking for a better way to handle prohibition."
I'll be curious to see how much the drug war factors in the Barr campaign (I'm sure Daniel will help with that) and how that translates into a national discussion. That would be welcome no matter what.
7:19:59 AM | drug policy | Related | permalink |
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Tuesday, June 10, 2008 |
Fraud A good editorial: Drug war squabble an ongoing fraud at the Santa Fe New Mexican.
Seems no one on Capitol Hill wants to confront a reality: Drug trafficking, in Mexico and everywhere else illicit narcotics are grown, processed and moved in America's direction, continues to thrive because this is where the stuff is consumed -- at whatever cost a protected market will bear.
Keep drugs illegal, make them more expensive by busting the occasional shipment, and the price goes up. Those controlling the supply grow richer; all the more capable of bribing everyone outside and inside our boundaries, from street cops to prosecutors. And those who can't be bought can be assassinated. [...]
Neither Mexico's government nor ours can buy enough cannon-fodder for this bogus war.
What Congress can do is invest in education, counseling and treatment -- to catch up with, then head off, drug use. When those things are in place, de-criminalize drug possession; make the stuff available, free or cheap, at clinics. De-glamorize it -- and take away the profit motive so many vested interests have in drugs.
Who in Congress dares do such a thing?
Who, indeed?
10:47:21 PM | drug policy | Related | permalink |
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Putting lipstick on a pig Here's another example of lawmakers trying to add extra pile-on charges in the drug war.
Baltimore Councilman William Cole IV has introduced legislation adding a civil fine of $1,000 to anyone caught buying drugs if they live out of town.
What the people need to see is that when legislators come up with these odd little laws, it is essentially an admission that prohibition is a failure. But instead of fixing it, they just try to add some cosmetics. Their constituents need to reach the point where they say "OK, you passed all these laws -- did any of them do any good?"
In the article, drug counselor Michael Hayes was quoted:
"I appreciate that they mean well, but it's much ado about nothing," Hayes said. "They love to do something that looks good and sounds good, but have no substance to them."
Except for the part about it looking and sounding good, I agree.
8:45:20 AM | drug policy | Related | permalink |
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Monday, June 9, 2008 |
They sneer at us... Here's an article that really helps show the poverty of the drug prohibitionists' line.
Cartels driven by desire for big payoff
We have our drug czar with the old smoke-a-joint-assassinate-a-Mexican nonsense.
"The largest single source of their revenue is marijuana," said John P. Walters, Office of National Drug Control Policy director. "These killers (cartel bosses) pay assassins with dollars from marijuana users in the United States and it needs to stop.
"It's not a victimless activity. It's blood money. And every time somebody buys a joint, they need to remember they're contributing to the assassination and murder in Mexico."
Now the author of the article points out that there are some of us with an actual idea.
An alternate solution proposed by some critics of the drug war is to legalize drugs -- marijuana in particular. They say the demand for the illegal supply would drop dramatically. The drug could be regulated to keep it out of the hands of youth, they say, and taxed to fund prevention and treatment.
Yep. That's right. And how do you counter such a reasoned, logical, and evidence-supported argument? With nonsensical ridicule, of course.
The country's top counter-drug officials sneer at the idea.
"It's a silly argument put forth by people who have a hidden agenda to legalize drugs," said Rafael Lemaitre, a spokesman for the Office of National Drug Control Policy in Washington, D.C. "It's not a responsible health policy to make marijuana more available in society."
Let me see if I can get this straight -- People who call for legalization of drugs have a hidden agenda to... legalize drugs.
7:44:59 PM | drug policy | Related | permalink |
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Sunday, June 8, 2008 |
Clueless I've long considered the American Family Association to be one of those annoying, hateful and un-Christian organizations that we must tolerate as a free society. Now I add "clueless" to the list.
I don't watch any prime-time TV, so I haven't seen CBS's Swingtown, but the American Family Association sure had some things to say about the show's "offensive" content. That's nothing new. But in the list of outrages, I was bemused by their helpful translation of drug slang...
· At a party in a neighbor's home, one woman continues to ask the host and another guest for "coke" (heroin).
They must be on "crack" (laxatives).
11:08:52 AM | drug policy | Related | permalink |
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Meddling? Bizarre headline: Mexico accuses U.S. of meddling in drug war
Meddling? Don't they know that the drug war is a wholly owned subsidiary of the U.S. Government? It's ours, baby.
Sure, we license out some franchises -- some directly, some through the UNODC -- but it's our war. We're McDonald's and if you want your own drug war, you gotta sell our fries. That's the way it is.
Meddling. Just who do they think they are?
1:54:18 AM | drug policy | Related | permalink |
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