Topic: Is the War on Drugs More Costly Than It's Worth? | |
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Is the War on Drugs More Costly Than It's Worth?
Some Law Enforcement Officials Support Decriminalization of Drugs By PATRIK JONSSON Sept. 19, 2009 Every 18 seconds, an American is busted for drug possession, according to Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) crime statistics released Monday. After years of fighting the war on drugs, some law enforcement officials think it may not be worth the cost. (Getty Images)The new statistics point to a continued emphasis on drug interdiction -- otherwise known as the "war on drugs" -- that more and more law enforcement officers are now questioning. While many experts hold the anti-drug campaign to be the key reason for the decline in the crime rate in the US, especially violent crime, since the 1990s, these police officers, as well as current and retired judges and prosecutors see, instead, thousands of American lives ruined for small drug infractions in a costly and possibly unwinnable "war." "Not only do these officers see the terrible results that their work has had on individuals' lives, but a lot of what I hear from beat officers and undercover narcotics agents is they've seen colleagues die in the line of fire trying to enforce laws that have no positive impacts," says Tom Angell, a spokesman for Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP) in Washington. "For a lot of them, this is about trying to keep good cops alive by repealing stupid prohibition laws." According to the latest FBI figures, 82.3 percent of all drug arrests in 2008 were for possession, and 44.3 percent of these for possession of marijuana. Arrests totaled more than 1.7 million. "You can get over an addiction, but you will never get over a conviction, said Jack Cole, a retired undercover narcotics agent and LEAP director, in a statement Tuesday about the "collateral consequences" of the war on drugs. Changing Attitudes The emergence of frontline officers speaking out against the war on drugs is helping to kindle a debate about legalization of drugs across the US, says Mr. Angell. It is even driving a Congressional bill written by Sen. Jim Webb, D-Virigina ,to establish a new Blue Ribbon justice system panel that would take a serious look at drug legalization. The US could gain $77 billion in revenue a year by legalizing -- and taxing -- marijuana, cocaine and heroin, says LEAP. Culturally, attitudes about drugs may be changing. A Zogby poll in May showed for that the first time a majority of Americans favor decriminalizing marijuana. States such as Massachusetts and California have already taken steps in that direction. "[Most] drugs are more readily available at lower prices today than when Nixon declared a war against it," says Norm Stamper, a former Seattle police chief and a staunch proponent of drug legalization, referring in part to the lower price of marijuana. However, White House "drug czar" Gil Kerlikowske recently said, "Legalization is not in the president's vocabulary and it's not in mine." Sending the Wrong Message? Pro-legalization groups are missing the forest for the trees, says Gregory D. Lee, a retired Drug Enforcement Administration agent. He says the dwindling crime rate across the US is directly correlated to the government's investment in border and street interdiction. "Legalization sends a message that it's okay to do drugs when in reality these drugs have a tremendous impact on the future of the people who take them," he says. "[Under legalization], the crime rate would rise because of crimes committed by people under the influence of these substances." Mr. Lee points to the rising price of cocaine in the US as a sign that domestic and international interdiction is working. "The war on drugs," he says, "is being won." |
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Yes. War on ANYTHING is expensive.
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The costs in currency pales in comparison to the costly effects on the lives this so called "war" touches.
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There is no real war on drugs.
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There is no real war on drugs. |
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Our own CIA is involved and making a lot of money providing drugs to the poor to sell to the rich. How messed up is that?
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Hey, someone else knows about that.
Any coincidence that since our invasion of Afghanistan, Herion has tripled? |
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Edited by
heavenlyboy34
on
Sun 09/20/09 02:23 PM
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Thanks for the post OP. Right on! Also good to see some sensible folks commenting in this thread.
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Have any of you seen american drug war?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6CyuBuT_7I4&feature=PlayList&p=CA4AB8E1F652FAD5&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=15 I think the prison industrial complex is the new military industrial complex. |
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Is the War on Drugs More Costly Than It's Worth? YES
The only thing it has accomplished is to put BIG $$$$$$$ into the wrong hands!!!!! |
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yessss
Is the War on Drugs More Costly Than It's Worth? |
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Sounds like a good ideal except when you, or anybody else, looks at countries who have already surrendered in the “War on Drugs”.
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