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Ending the Futile War on Drugs

vta

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Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia)


Author: Fernando Henrique Cardoso
Note: Fernando Henrique Cardoso, a former president of Brazil (1995-2002), is co-chairman of the Latin American Commission on Drugs and Democracy, and convener of the Global Commission on Drug Policy.


ENDING THE FUTILE WAR ON DRUGS

Prohibition has failed and we must redirect our efforts to the harm caused by drugs, and to reducing consumption.

The war on drugs is a lost war, and 2011 is the time to move away from a punitive approach in order to pursue a new set of policies based on public health, human rights, and commonsense. These were the core findings of the Latin American Commission on Drugs and Democracy that I convened, together with former presidents Ernesto Zedillo of Mexico and Cesar Gaviria of Colombia.

We became involved with this issue for a compelling reason: the violence and corruption associated with drug trafficking represents a major threat to democracy in our region. This sense of urgency led us to evaluate current policies and look for viable alternatives. The evidence is overwhelming. The prohibitionist approach, based on repression of production and criminalisation of consumption, has clearly failed.

After 30 years of massive effort, all prohibition has achieved is to shift areas of cultivation and drug cartels from one country to another ( the so-called balloon effect ). Latin America remains the world's largest exporter of cocaine and marijuana. Thousands of young people continue to lose their lives in gang wars. Drug lords rule by fear over entire communities.

We ended our report with a call for a paradigm shift. The illicit drug trade will continue as long as there is demand for drugs. Instead of sticking to failed policies that do not reduce the profitability of the drug trade - and thus its power - we must redirect our efforts to the harm caused by drugs to people and societies, and to reducing consumption.

Some kind of drug consumption has existed throughout history in the most diverse cultures. Today, drug use occurs throughout society. All kinds of people use drugs for all kinds of reasons: to relieve pain or experience pleasure, to escape reality or enhance their perception of it.

But the approach recommended in the commission's statement does not imply complacency. Drugs are harmful to health. They undermine users' decision-making capacity. Needle-sharing spreads HIV/AIDS and other diseases. Addiction can lead to financial ruin and domestic abuse, especially of children.

Cutting consumption as much as possible must, therefore, be the main goal. But this requires treating drug users not as criminals to be incarcerated, but as patients to be cared for. Several countries are pursuing policies that emphasise prevention and treatment rather than repression - and refocusing their repressive measures on fighting the real enemy: organised crime.

The crack in the global consensus around the prohibitionist approach is widening. A growing number of countries in Europe and Latin America are moving away from a purely repressive model.

Portugal and Switzerland are compelling examples of the positive impact of policies centred on prevention, treatment, and harm reduction. Both countries have decriminalised drug possession for personal use. Instead of leading to an explosion of drug consumption, as many feared, the number of people seeking treatment increased and overall drug use fell.

When the policy approach shifts from criminal repression to public health, drug users are more open to seeking treatment. Decriminalisation of consumption also reduces dealers' power to influence and control consumers' behaviour.

In our report, we recommend evaluating from a public-health standpoint - - and on the basis of the most advanced medical science - the merits of decriminalising possession of cannabis for personal use.

Marijuana is by far the most widely used drug. There is a growing body of evidence suggesting that the harm it causes is at worst similar to the harm caused by alcohol or tobacco. Moreover, most of the damage associated with marijuana use - from the indiscriminate incarceration of consumers to the violence and corruption associated with the drug trade - is the result of current prohibitionist policies.

Decriminalisation of cannabis would thus be an important step forward in approaching drug use as a health problem and not as a matter for the criminal justice system.

To be credible and effective, decriminalisation must be combined with robust prevention campaigns. The steep and sustained drop in tobacco consumption in recent decades shows that public information and prevention campaigns can work when based on messages that are consistent with the experience of those whom they target. Tobacco was deglamorised, taxed, and regulated; it has not been banned.

No country has devised a comprehensive solution to the drug problem. But a solution need not require a stark choice between prohibition and legalisation. The worst prohibition is the prohibition to think. Now, at last, the taboo that prevented debate has been broken. Alternative approaches are being tested and must be carefully reviewed.

At the end of the day, the capacity of people to evaluate risks and make informed choices will be as important to regulating the use of drugs as more humane and efficient laws and policies. Yes, drugs erode people's freedom. But it is time to recognise that repressive policies towards drug users, rooted as they are in prejudice, fear, and ideology, may be no less a threat to liberty.
 

BrainSellz

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:good:....there should be two slogans...."end the war on weed" and "end the war on drugs"....ending both needs to be done however it just sounds better when the weed is spoken by itself and not categorized with crack and heroin etc etc....mo
 

David762

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Futility is in the eye of the beholder ...

Futility is in the eye of the beholder ...

and it would seem that the Powers That Be don't see any futility in the War of Drugs. It gives them jobs, nay, careers. It gives them an opportunity to run roughshod over other people's civil rights, to steal whatever they want through asset forfeiture laws, to build their own gangster organizations with the approval of the government, and boost those private for-profit industries that have been allies of prohibition.

http://www.fear.org
http://www.jackherer.com/thebook/

For the Powers That Be and their minions, there is no downside to their War of Drugs -- taxpayer funds continue to roll in, Federal intel and LEO's are more unified than ever even to the point of intimidating lawmakers, seized assets continue to flow into their coffers and private off-shore bank accounts. The Powers That Be get immense bribes from the narco-traffickers, the TBTF banks get $Billions in drug money to launder. The private for-profit prisons are doing well, the court-mandated private for-profit treatment programs are doing well, and with new Federal DUID regulations, even the private for-profit testing|detection industries are doing well. The "game" is rigged in their favor, both coming and going -- what's not to like about this scenario, just so long as you are on the inside of the "game"?

http://www.leap.cc

To the Powers That Be, terms like "harm reduction" apply to their profit stream, and nothing else. The Powers That Be have been involved in this "game" for over 70 years, and over that period of time Prohibition 2.0 has only become more and more profitable, to them. The War of Drugs and the War of Terror have officially merged -- the same intel pool, militarized enforcement, attacks on privacy, freedoms, liberties, & the rule of law -- when criminal misdemeanors including victimless drug possession fell under the guise of "suspected acts of terrorism". That has already happened, and such re-classifications are placed at the discretion of the District Attorneys. Writs of habeas corpus are no longer assured -- the Constitution has been shredded. The era of rolling Federal roadblocks, civilian detention facilities, and the absolute end of the rule of law are on the way.

The only way that this "game of empire" can be overturned is with a paradigm shift in the attitudes of the subjugated peoples, IMHO. The actions of Portugal and Switzerland in turning illicit drug use from a criminal concern into a medical issue, through a realistic view of harm reduction is a start, but expect some wavering of purpose from these countries legislatures -- the Powers That Be have great influence through treaty obligations if not outright bribery. I have somewhat less hope of change through the ballot box, especially in provinces|states where laws cannot be changed through Propositions -- where only politicians hold the power of changing laws. The most basic power of the people is jury nullification, which must be used to its fullest extent. Civil lawsuits against public officials and the geographic entities that they represent must be pressed, publicly and often. The attack against the Powers That Be that will be most effective is the one that chips away at their profits from this War.
 

BiG H3rB Tr3E

"No problem can be solved from the same level of c
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The problem is so many of these fucking "conservative" republicans/teabaggers are so fucking lost to the reality of the situation they will never support harm reduction in the drug game. Too many of them have come to the conclusion the only way to combat drug users is to "lock em all up and throw away the key". It fucking disgusts me that people would treat thier own citizens suffering from addicition like prisoners of war. When did our country become so ignorant? Hopefully the younger population will soon outnumber these ignorant fucking fools of the JUST SAY NO generation and vote out all these lying coniving scumbag politicians who campaign on a war aimed at its own citizens.
 

David762

Member
not just "conservative" republicans/teabaggers ...

not just "conservative" republicans/teabaggers ...

The problem is so many of these fucking "conservative" republicans/teabaggers are so fucking lost to the reality of the situation they will never support harm reduction in the drug game. Too many of them have come to the conclusion the only way to combat drug users is to "lock em all up and throw away the key". It fucking disgusts me that people would treat thier own citizens suffering from addicition like prisoners of war. When did our country become so ignorant? Hopefully the younger population will soon outnumber these ignorant fucking fools of the JUST SAY NO generation and vote out all these lying coniving scumbag politicians who campaign on a war aimed at its own citizens.

not just "conservative" republicans/teabaggers ...

IIRC, it was Obama's Drug Czar Gil Kerlikowske who stated that the administration was "ending the (drug) war on people" at the very same time that Obama was formalizing his selection of Michele Leonhart as his new head of the DEA. Obama's Attorney General Eric Holder promised that the DEA would not go after compliant State MMJ, and yet those raids continue. The new Federal DUID regulations are aimed directly at MMJ users, since prescription drugs are not tested for, and other illicit drugs like cocaine and meth have metabolites that quickly pass through the body.

The Obama regime is not really any more friendly to cannabis users than the GW Bush regime that preceded it. To face reality, no mainstream politician of either the Democratic or Republican Parties are willing to go out on a policy "limb" and call for the re-legalization of cannabis, let alone its de-criminalization, at the Federal level. We are going to be forced to battle State by State until an overwhelming majority of States are more cannabis-friendly. It may even take a Constitutional Amendment to force the Federal government to give up on their failed "War of Drugs" against their own citizens. There are powerful entrenched economic forces at work against our liberation.
 

vta

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Source: Aurora Sentinel (CO)


US NEEDS NEW WEAPONS IN THE WAR ON DRUGS

Americans have bought themselves a trillion dollars worth of nothing over the past few decades.

An Associated Press story this week pointed out that the disastrously expensive and ineffective war on drugs has been one of the biggest losing battles in American history.

The story estimates that the country has thrown away an impossible amount of money in trying to keep drugs from being imported into the country, and to prevent Americans from using them, only to bolster a pricey criminal justice system that promises to cost U.S. taxpayers even more.

The story focused on Portugal, where the country was dealing with an overabundance of drug addicts. Portuguese lawmakers essentially decriminalized drug use and possession 10 years ago. Despite dire warnings by critics, there was no surge in drug use. In fact, there was a decrease in the number of teenagers and many others using drugs.

One of the most promising results of the experiment was that the number of drug-related HIV cases dropped 75 percent. But the most important change was that the bulk of drug-related cases moved from courts and jails, which are exorbitantly expensive to process, to treatment and rehab centers, where thousands more got off drugs for good, rather than moving their habits to prison cells at taxpayer expense.

Congress and state lawmakers should consider similar changes. Incarcerating drug users is a colossal waste of taxpayer money, clearly doing little to persuade a user to stop. Since the drug trade is like any other, governed by supply and demand, the threat of legal action has done little to curb Americans' appetite for illegal, recreational drugs.

It doesn't mean that the United States should just give up in an effort to persuade Americans to turn away from drugs to lead more healthy and productive lives, but what this country has done locally and nationally has been painfully expensive and blatantly ineffective. It's past time to try something new.

Besides the misery we create for our own citizens, criminalizing drug supply and production has nearly destroyed some communities south of the border, where murderous gangs kill thousands each year as part of the illegal drug trade.

By treating drug use and trafficking like we do with alcohol, Americans could spend far more resources on drug education and treatment programs, which have provenly gone much further in reducing drug use and addiction.

It means a huge change in the perception of drug use and a great deal of courage in letting go of notions and stigmas that have done nothing to improve the safety of drug users or the rest of the community.

The time for those changes are now as new lawmakers meet to address the endless challenge of drug abuse.
 

idiit

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major media is constantly bring up the subject of legalizing weed. it's like the powers that really run the country are gently socializing the sheeple that the anti marijuana era is gliding to a close and they are preparing the public for it.
 

BiG H3rB Tr3E

"No problem can be solved from the same level of c
Veteran
not just "conservative" republicans/teabaggers ...


The Obama regime is not really any more friendly to cannabis users than the GW Bush regime that preceded it. To face reality, no mainstream politician of either the Democratic or Republican Parties are willing to go out on a policy "limb" and call for the re-legalization of cannabis, let alone its de-criminalization, at the Federal level.

I disagree. The large majority of anti-drug zealot voters always seem to fall much farther right on the scale then the left. Obama's adminstration has not been nearly as hell-bent on mmj raids as Bush was...and the majority of opposition on a political level is almost ALWAYS courtesy of a republican.

I dont want to make this a republican v. democrat battle because I think they have both failed miserably, but it's not hard to recognize that most of this battle is against the republican and teabagger politicians. They are the ones who continue to fight tooth and nail to lock up any and every drug user, regardless of the social harm and economic hardships their actions cause.
 
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