TSB: proving why conservative ideology is forever doomed for failure.While we're baking drug dealers, we should also round up the homeless and churn them into soylent green.I mean, no point in addressing underlying social issues, right?
2/29/2008 5:02:02 PM
mmmmm reconstituted homeless **licks lips**
2/29/2008 7:04:50 PM
one wonders with those $385 million prisons kbr built a few years back that could house MILLIONSwhat will the ratio be in 20 years?
2/29/2008 8:14:43 PM
3/1/2008 12:44:51 AM
^ while that would work, and implementing even points 2-6 would be reasonable, it's not reasonable to execute large scale drug dealers. It's likely a lot of people doing to mass trafficking are also involved in a lot of violence that may warrant death row, but merely trafficking large amounts of drugs does not.There are lots of crimes we could greatly reduce by making the punishment execution, but it's not in the interest of the ideologies of our society to do so.
3/1/2008 1:03:02 AM
If the harsh mandatory minimum sentencing guidelines we have in effect now are not enough to deter crime, then what makes you think the death penalty will? Manufacturing of methamphetamine and MDMA carries a 10 year federal mandatory sentence BEFORE you tack on the adders for anything else that was going on, such as money laundering, tax evasion, guns on the premises, etc. Those are federal sentences too, which means the person will serve 85-90% of their sentence upon conviction. If taking away over a decade of a person's life can't even put a dent in the problem, I don't see how taking their entire life is going to be any different. Interstate trafficking carries similar sentencing guidelines.What will happen if you impose a death penalty is that you'll force dealers to be willing to shoot their way out of any situation. If you're going to be put to death for your crimes, you might as well take as many cops out with you as you can.
3/1/2008 10:50:53 AM
3/1/2008 1:07:24 PM
human sacrifice is awesome. i hear the aztecs were big fans[Edited on March 1, 2008 at 3:21 PM. Reason : .]
3/1/2008 3:20:56 PM
3/1/2008 5:27:50 PM
Prison populations are almost universally divided into factions, some of which represent these very organizations. They are rife with networks. They may not be selling drugs on the street or even in prison (you realize this happens, right?), but they are still part of their gang.If putting people in prison actually had a major impact on the ability of these organizations to function, they wouldn't be functioning so damn well.
3/1/2008 5:55:53 PM
you do realize that selling drugs in prison accounts for a very small fraction of a percent of the drug trade, don't you?the fact that putting these people in prison does almost nothing for stopping the drug problem indicates that your rationale of thinking is wrong. the people selling drugs are expendable; someone else will just take over in their place after they are dead or imprisoned.
3/2/2008 1:49:06 AM
3/3/2008 12:38:10 AM
3/3/2008 12:58:41 AM
Oh, you'll be able to get people to do it, but you'll have to compensate them more and more as the risks become more and more apparent. The idea is to get costs prohibitively high, not to physically exterminate everyone who is willing to sell drugs.
3/3/2008 11:56:53 AM
simplistic economic models don't work with highly addictive drugs like heroin, cocaine, and methamphetamine. if you drive up the cost of the drugs by a factor of ten, you'll just end up with habitual addicts commiting ten times as many crimes to fund their addiction.Besides, as long as our society remains reluctant to hire convicted felons into any worthwhile job, there will be people willing to take the risk of selling drugs to fund their lifestyles.
3/3/2008 6:47:19 PM
n/m I get it.[Edited on March 3, 2008 at 9:22 PM. Reason : 2]
3/3/2008 9:21:19 PM
3/3/2008 10:06:41 PM
Organized crime systems already have numerous hitmen on their rosters, and the death penalty doesn't seem to serve as much of a deterrent to them. Even after the ringleader of Murder Inc. was electrocuted at the hands of our government, we continue to see murders related to organized crime.Since heroin and crack demand are price inelastic, then dealers will always be able to find a price to make it worth their risk to sell drugs. The ONLY thing your plan will do is drive up the amount of taxes I'm currently paying to support the war on drugs, since we'd be required to fund a huge increase in the number of death row operations and appeals requests.[Edited on March 3, 2008 at 11:06 PM. Reason : the reason the War on Drugs is failing now is because we focus too much on supply models only.]
3/3/2008 11:03:48 PM
I'm pretty sure that his plan would reduce the supply of drugs and also the number of addicts, since a similar system (minus the legalization of marajuana part) has been very successful in Singapore.
3/3/2008 11:17:44 PM
3/3/2008 11:31:42 PM
Singapore has one of the lowest drug abuse rates in the world and has been falling for many years.http://www.drugfree.org.sg/Drugs/index.asp?name=Singapore%20Drug%20Situation%20in%202005
3/3/2008 11:40:49 PM
that site posted an identical copy of the Singapore CNB. It's not reliable at all, because it says the exact opposite of what peer-reviewed groups such as Blackwell-Synergy and the Accord Plan are reporting. Who are you honestly going to believe: a country that is trying to justify why they execute so many people, or the organizations around them who report that Singapore is seeing the exact same rise in abuse of methamphetamine that every other country in Asia is seeing?
3/3/2008 11:47:11 PM
If you think the information on executing drug dealers in Singapore is relevant, then you might want to go ahead and post the statistical drug abuse data on Bangladesh, Brunei, China, India, Indonesia, North Korea, South Korea, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand, and Viet Nam too. All of those countries have execution laws for drug offenses on their law books.You'll notice that China made that list. Want to take a guess as to which country is responsible for manufacturing and shipping over the majority of the methamphetamine and club drug precursors to this country and to Mexico to fuel illicit manufacturing? Do you want to guess what country is also responsible for the vast majority of the illicit steroids and growth hormone being sold in this country? The only reason China even offered any similance of cooperation with our DEA during Operation Raw Deal is because they were under heavy pressure worldwide to clean up their act prior to the Olympics this year being held in China. You can bet money that after this year, it will be back to business as usual.
3/4/2008 12:03:09 AM
3/4/2008 1:44:25 AM
3/4/2008 11:57:13 AM
The people towards the top of the organizational pyramid are making enough that it is worth the risk to them. The drug purchasing population cannot pay enough to make everyone in the chain equally well-off.
3/4/2008 12:35:35 PM
are you implying that the street corner dealers who get routinely murdered around Baltimore and Los Angeles are high enough on the drug pyramid money-wise to justify the risk of death? What about the Cuban mules who had a tendency to get chopped up during sales in Miami in the eighties?
3/4/2008 8:34:15 PM
3/4/2008 11:17:31 PM