Drug Policy
Related: About this forumThe War on Drugs is Immoral and Ineffective
The biggest success in the war on drugs has been the protection of drug cartels profits. In a standard legalized business, there are countless importers and exporters of a particular good. However, due to drug raids and seizures, the price of maintaining an operation has been driven up, forcing out small time distributors. This allows the only viable distributors to be those with enough money and resources to avoid interdiction efforts. These are the highly violent drug cartels that are flush with cash. By keeping goods out and arresting local distributors, the government keeps the price of these drugs up. What else could a monopolist want?
According to the international organization Human Rights Watch, over 25.4 million Americans have been detained for drug offenses since 1980; almost one third of those arrested were African-Americans. Furthermore, although African-American men comprise only 12 percent of the U.S. population, they represent 62 percent of drug offenders sent to state prisons. Black men are sentenced to state penitentiaries for drug-related crimes at an astonishing 13 times the rate of Caucasian men. The discrepancies are preposterously amplified in individual states where black men are sentenced to federal incarceration on drug offenses 57 times the rate of white men.
This is blatant racial discrimination of which our government should be ashamed. The United States imprisons people at the highest rate in the world. America contains only five percent of the worlds population, yet holds almost one-fourth of the earths inmates. It is despicable to ruin peoples lives for victimless crimes...
http://www.timessquaregossip.com/2013/02/legalize-all-drugs-is-only-sane-answer.html#more
Warpy
(113,131 posts)because they knew people of color would get the book thrown at them while white kids "from nice families" would largely skate. That's exactly what has happened in the last 40 years.
The drug war is also unconstitutional. They had to base it all on tax law.
The whole body of law that's come about due to the drug war, including massive abuses like no-knock warrants and property forfeiture, should be stricken from the books en masse.
The whole notion of the "victimless crime" is incompatible with any society that dares to call itself free.
msongs
(70,210 posts)Phlem
(6,323 posts)an ever flowing cornucopia of cash.
Hey I know, lets privatize all of the police and prison establishments yea. That'll cut costs and make jobs!
So sick of this shiot!
-p
duhneece
(4,250 posts)I am more vocal about the failed war on drugs.
I suggest anyone seriously opposed & wanting to do more, attend the International Drug Policy Reform Conference. I'm poor, but applied for a scholarship, saved for over a year & went. Of course, you can watch all of break-out sessions on video.
The next one is in Denver Oct 2013 & scholarship info hasn't been announced yet.
http://www.reformconference.org/
It is SO worth it.
pgallahue
(16 posts)Fortunately the movement for reform seems increasingly inevitable! It's hard to know exactly what kind of reform we'll we'll get, but the debate has begun.