Very scary article.http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/8319249.stm
10/21/2009 9:51:26 PM
Sounds like we should legalize opium, or at the very least legalize its various substitutes. That would bankrupt the terrorists in no time, as I seriously doubt they can compete against Walmart.
10/21/2009 11:44:20 PM
yeah, but Wal-mart would be much harder to control than Afghan terrorists.
10/21/2009 11:46:58 PM
People have floated the idea of creating greater pathways for Afghan farmers to reach legal opium markets. That way, you can control production in a regulated environment without resorting to eradication programs. However, I've also heard the counter argument that the current legal opium trade is already on the brink of oversaturation, and that the introduction of yet another large supplier would undermine similar programs in nations like Turkey and Thailand by driving down prices to levels where black market prices become attractive again. Another argument says that while there are theoretically emerging markets in the developing world for medical morphine, the health infrastructure in those nations would be unable to absorb the newly produced product.Does anyone have any data on this one way or the other?
10/22/2009 11:27:31 AM
10/22/2009 6:10:06 PM
I've smoked opium...its nice...the problem is that its a precursor for drugs like heroinI read a story a few days ago that said that heroin overdoses had tripled in Charlotte NC from 2008 to 2009. Fuck legalizing opium. Lets just find their biggest fields and napalm the bitchesps: bitches = fields[Edited on October 22, 2009 at 6:50 PM. Reason : and no, i didnt have that red crayon shit...i had some black crystal]
10/22/2009 6:42:26 PM
if you reduce the supply of opium and heroin, the supply of synthetics like oxycontin and fentanyl analogs shoot up. unfortunately, the latter two have more abuse potential and are harder to track down their black market suppliers.
10/22/2009 10:05:13 PM
10/23/2009 6:22:23 AM
10/23/2009 7:17:32 AM
the article posted about Russia doesn't mention the Country's huge unemployment rate, homeless population, broken families and similar problems. I'm not sure if anyone could say for sure that those problems have led to the heroin epidemic or that the heroin epidemic caused those problems (most likely they feed off each other). It just seems like some misplaced anger on the farmers of Afghanistan when they have a lot of work to do at home.
10/23/2009 11:25:03 AM
^ Agreed, and I bet vodka plays into that equation 100 times as much as heroin.
10/23/2009 11:54:15 AM
10/23/2009 8:48:57 PM
If I didn't know it was such an absolute life-ruiner I would definitely do an opiate of some kind. I've had a pretty substantial amount of morphine injected into me over my life and if I didn't know how dependent it makes you and how terrible abuse is to your long term health I'd be all over that shit.Legal prescription pain killers are very tempting, stuff like morphine (and presumably heroin though I've never done it) is just a total mindbender. It's easy to see how people get hooked, but it's also pretty easy to not get hooked by not starting down that path to begin with.I'm still for drug legalization, but I know how many people would completely fuck themselves up with it. However, most people who would have already found another avenue like prescription narcotics, meth, alcohol, etc. to do it so I don't think there would be a jump in the number of addicts, just a swing in what kind of addict.
10/24/2009 2:50:01 AM