6/10/2007 4:33:56 PM
I do not believe in the war on drugs. I do believe in a war on crime. Drug crimes, just like any other crime should be punished. This notion that if we stop enforcing drug laws, the problems with drugs will disappear is hogwash.
6/10/2007 4:37:57 PM
yeah a great argument for the war on drugs . A soldier down and out of luck handed over a package containing drugs (omg think of the children) doing his cousin's dirty work after borrowing $700. That REALLY deserves a 5 year sentence [/sarcasm]. I am sure there are people that have gotten lesser sentences for assault, sex crimes, stealing, and embezzlement. Crimes that actually do hurt people. The war on drugs is so stupid
6/10/2007 4:45:45 PM
let's get beyond the myth that selling drugs does not hurt someone.
6/10/2007 4:51:57 PM
^^^ yeah, that's more or less my takebut mandatory minimum sentences do more harm than good, from what i've seen.[Edited on June 10, 2007 at 4:55 PM. Reason : sdfasdfa]
6/10/2007 4:55:04 PM
the war on drugs does nothing but keep jails full, gun crimes up, and causes violence in inner cities and rural areasoh yeah... it also makes people rich
6/10/2007 6:15:09 PM
6/10/2007 6:59:13 PM
I am pretty sure that after all that shit was made OTC eventually people would learn not to try it. At least the smart ones. Kind of like natural selection.
6/10/2007 7:04:06 PM
^
6/10/2007 7:12:51 PM
^^And I suppose selling napalm to someone doesn't hurt anyone either?I'm not sure what type of utopian world you live in, but legalization of drugs will create more problems than the current system.fact of the matter is, we cannot allow for these products, which have no redemptive value to be sold openly on the markets.just because there is a black market for something doesn't mean we just give up.
6/10/2007 7:24:09 PM
^Give up?[Edited on June 10, 2007 at 7:32 PM. Reason : ]
6/10/2007 7:32:34 PM
6/10/2007 7:57:28 PM
6/10/2007 8:01:12 PM
6/10/2007 9:21:53 PM
It costs 25-40 THOUSAND dollars a year to keep someone incarcerated. ]
6/10/2007 9:32:29 PM
The illicit drug market is in no way comparable to prohibition and anyone who says otherwise is engaging in intellectual dishonesty.Drugs should and will remain illegal, now, marijuana on one hand should be legalized. But the notion that cocaine, crack, meth, etc. should become legal is bullshit. Those substances have absolutely no cultural, or redemptive value.
6/10/2007 10:34:43 PM
6/10/2007 10:47:31 PM
^^ I agree.Opium was made illegal in 1729 in China, because it had a negative effect on society... something like 30-40% of the Chinese became addicted to opium, which is a less potent progenitor of heroin. Cocaine and other types of drugs are in this class.Heroin was made illegal throughout the US 13 years before marijuana for the same reasons (except was not as commonly used).
6/10/2007 10:54:34 PM
No doubt that drugs such as crack and meth should remain illegal or very tightly controlled. However, the "war on drugs" hasn't done anything except consume vast quantities of tax payer money and overfill our prisons. And all for what? Are our streets any safer? Do the drug gangs and cartels possess any less powerful of a presence than they did when this all started? As soon as one gang is shut down, another one rises to take its place. No matter how many borders and check points are set up, drug dealers and pushers don't seem to have any trouble getting their product onto the street. The truth of the matter is that drugs bring far too much money for crime to ever look the other way, no matter how risky it becomes due to law enforcement.Nobody's saying that legalizing drugs will cause all problems to evaporate over night. What people are saying is that legalizing them will allow people to buy them from trust-worthy, legitimate places such as a pharmaceutical center, instead of from shady pusher on the corner. When people don't have to buy it from the big bad scary gangsters, that gang's revenue eventually dries up, and soon it becomes economically unviable for crime to continue running the business. That's not to say that nobody will ever try to peddle drugs on the black market, because even legal goods will be exchanged on the black market (cigarettes being sold on the New York black market, for instance, but that's mainly because it's cheaper to do so because of all the taxes placed upon them up there). But the majority of people will choose to buy their stash from a legal, safe and cheap place. And since drugs are no longer so illegal and taboo, we don't have to send somebody to jail for five years simply because they were caught with possession (but not use) of dope. So prisions become less crowded and the penal system requires less money to run.Now I do agree that weed should be fully legalized, albeit restrictions should be placed upon it that are similar to alcohol, mainly that you not operate a vehicle while you are high. You get caught driving while you're high, you should receive the same penalty for driving while drunk. You hit somebody and/or kill somebody while high, you should lose your license and possibly have your vehicle impounded.[Edited on June 10, 2007 at 11:12 PM. Reason : blah]
6/10/2007 11:09:03 PM
^ This guy for president
6/10/2007 11:40:32 PM
I've no problem with smoking weed except that it is illegal and I hate smoking in general, well modulo that tasty cherry cigar smoke... Anyway, in terms of societal harm I think there is possibly just as much damage being done by legal drugs applied illegally. Between parents and teachers unnecessarily medicating misbehaving kids and hypochondriacal moms hopped up on depression meds and of course the narco addicts, there is plenty of abuse to go around. Sure most of the time nobody dies, but lives are dulled and twisted by the destructive influences of these addictions. On the other hand there are many cases where these legal drugs are procured through illegal activity, violence, theft etc... Likewise, surely not every one who uses cocaine ends up being a carjacker, look even the exalted Obama did it, right? There is a minority of hard core addicts who can't control themselves, yet then we blame the drug. Its odd we only seem to do that with the illegal drugs, why can't we see the same with legal drugs ? Is this all just the Ad. Council's brainwashing effect through there ever so clever and hip commercials?[Edited on June 11, 2007 at 12:03 AM. Reason : .]
6/11/2007 12:01:09 AM
6/11/2007 12:34:48 AM
the war on drugs isn't necessarily a bad thing, but its totally misused and poorly focused as it is now......I think we need to take the approach of weed being decriminalized (or close to it) and much stiffer penalties on dealing synthetic drugs such as heroin or coke. Focus funds and efforts on harder drugs and increase punishment for dealing them.
6/11/2007 10:16:30 AM
i really feel that we should end the war on drugs and use all the money that is pumped into it and direct that money into our schools. also i believe that money from legalized drug revenue should go towards the school system, development for arts and music, and possibly even health care.
6/12/2007 9:41:32 AM
if certain "drugs" were available like cigs are, it would reduce the amount of people that fall into the "gateway drug" trapif peopel bought their pot at a "store" as opposed to the guy in the trailer park thats also flipping rocks on the side, they may be less likely to venture into other drugsprohibition is stupid and does nothing but increase crime
6/12/2007 9:49:13 AM
6/12/2007 9:59:07 AM
yeah... I hope people understood thatit would reduce the problems in the inner cities and in the rural areas... where it's needed most
6/12/2007 10:04:16 AM
fuck that shit - he dealt, he goes to jail. he's lucky he wasn't in the military at the time or 5 years in state prison would look like a cake-walk. he got to have a civilian court and judge. his ass would be breaking rocks in levenworth right now. he needs to man up and stop being a punk bitch crybaby. he's just pissed he left 2 years before retirment...what kind of stupid fuck does that?
6/12/2007 10:10:40 AM
^^I agree to a point......but hard stuff like heroine should never be readily available for recreational use. I do think legalizing weed would have far reaching benefits tho.
6/12/2007 10:17:58 AM
6/12/2007 10:38:57 AM
so true. plus most people try alcohol before they try any of the other drugs. so really alcohol is the gateway. but it honestly boils down to some people are more experimental and willing to try some drugs while others aren't, and some of those who try them are less disciplined and allow it to become the center point of their life. me, por ejemplo i've tried mushrooms, pot, and opium. thats all. i'd never touch coke not in a million years. i'd never touch acid, not in a million years. i tried opium and mushrooms both just because i was curious about what they were like and woudl have tried them even if i wasn't already smoking pot. i haven't touched opium in years, nor have i touched mushrooms in years, and its not because of lacking availability.
6/12/2007 11:12:11 AM
wellI agree for the most partbut lets be realmany of the places a young person buys pot from also has other things available... at least it did back when i was youngerI've smoked pot in plenty of houses with dealers that had much more than pot around, I just chose not to really mess with the other stuffalcohol and cigs are a gateway afaic alsoif you eliminate the middle man, you can cut down on some of the other drug abuseand DARE needs to just be honest with kids, so they don't think EVERYTHING is a lie[Edited on June 12, 2007 at 11:14 AM. Reason : .]
6/12/2007 11:13:01 AM
^i agree somewhat. i've been to dealers that have had other stuff available, but most of the people i deal with only deal and do pot, so it keeps a much less creepy clientèle. but i do agree that taking out the middle man could reduce many other types of abuse. if the drug isn't at the dealers house and him suggesting you should try it (in the same fashion a pharm sales rep would) then you're going to be less likely to bite and move on to that harder more dangerous drug. also, DARE does more harm than good.
6/12/2007 11:31:12 AM
Legalizing drugs won't work. Lemme explain why and this is coming from someone who was very much in support of legalizing marijuana. I have no interest what so ever in pot, smoking or otherwise. Never have. Here's a life lesson. most people that "need" the drugs shouldn't be doing them in the first place. The same goes for alcohol. Sure many of us would able to manage ourselves just like drinking but a good percentage would not. A normal person would not do drugs just because they know the negative effects. Those that choose to do them are looking for an escape/fun of some kind and don't care enough about those negative effects. Add to the mix making it easily available, people who shouldn't be doing them, that otherwise would not be, are now. Lets expand on this idea. Now we have a market for this substance. It has to follow the same drug laws as any other pharmaceudical. You cannot possibly make these over the counter so a doctor has to be involved to perscribe it. Lets expand on this more. Now we have a market where there is a manufacturer who is required to meet certain standards. If they fail in this situation someone can die. Maybe not with pot, but with coke, or heroin etc. Now you have to deal with people overdosing, not taking correctly, abusing... etc except in this situation it's so much EASIER for it to occur. Lets expand even more. The user may develop a dependency on this substance just like alcoholism. If it's over the counter how does one stop them from taking it? How are they identified. Why would a business WANT someone who uses this. Now the legal aspects come into play about how someone who's a coke head can sue a business for not wanting them to be employed. What rights should drug users have? What rights should businesses have. Right now a business cannot fire someone for smoking, but they can for alcoholism. Lets expand on this idea yet again. What makes a person want to do these things? What societal problems cause them to need this "way out". What changes to society can be done to resolve this? So now you see that it's a circular arguement. There is absolutely NOTHING positive about legalizing any drug besides making it easier for people who shouldn't be doing these things, access to them. Look at any drug user. Maybe 1% of those users are successful in society long term and those are the users who rarely dabble into that. This opens the debate to what defines a successful member of society. I'm not talking job, or what they own etc. As far as this guy... I think he should be required to do a shitload of community service. The whole point of punishment is to teach a lesson. He obviously learned it long before the law caught up to him, however, the law also should strike fear into those who would consider committing the crime. Seeing a method to do the crime and not have to pay for it is not good. I think he should be given 5000 hours of community service focusing around drugs and the community.
6/12/2007 12:12:11 PM
can we say obtuse.
6/12/2007 12:31:17 PM
6/12/2007 12:45:23 PM
^It would take him 250 weeks to complete that sentence of community service at 20 hours a week. He would also have to be working a job obviously to support himself. That would take him 5 years as well, but I guess he would at least not be in prison. ]
6/12/2007 1:00:38 PM
6/12/2007 1:34:14 PM
6/12/2007 1:35:51 PM
http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/06/12/cheese.heroin/index.html
6/12/2007 2:52:55 PM
6/12/2007 3:05:57 PM
we're number 1!
6/12/2007 3:23:22 PM
if drugs were legalized Cheesy foods would have a whole new meaing.
6/12/2007 3:36:51 PM
6/12/2007 3:42:32 PM
yeah that was kinda my whole point
6/12/2007 4:00:23 PM
just wanted to drive it home.
6/12/2007 4:03:29 PM
thanks bro, positive reinforcement is key
6/12/2007 4:06:22 PM
Try this method used by the DEA:http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2007/06/appeals_court_r.htmlAppeals Court Rules Cops Can Steal Cars and Lie to Victims To Conduct a Warrantless SearchClick to read in full.
6/13/2007 3:21:00 AM
That is some fucked up shit. I am glad we have decided in this day in time that we can follow the constitution only "some of the time". The founding fathers put all the safeguards in it for a reason. I am somewhat hesitant about circumventing the constitution to combat terrorism. But when it comes the "Drug War" shit has gone to far. Lets hijack a car and drop a small bag of coke into this womans purse, oh shit arrest those two for drug dealing. I doubt the DEA planted evidence in this case but power corrupts.We should all not forget why this country originally came to exist...
6/13/2007 11:11:59 AM
http://www.newsobserver.com/news/crime_safety/story/673610.html
8/17/2007 2:42:13 PM