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The Drug War Has Failed -- What Comes Next?

By Sanho Tree, AlterNet. Posted October 2, 2009.


Talking sensibly about drug policy begins with smashing the radioactive rhetoric of "legal/illegal."
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President Barack Obama’s drug czar, Gil Kerlikowske, should be commended for initiating some basic reforms in U.S. drug policy. One of his first sensible acts was to drop the phrase "War on Drugs." "Regardless of how you try to explain to people that it’s a ‘war on drugs’ or a ‘war on a product,’ people see a war as a war on them," he explained. "We’re not at war with people in this country."

As the former chief of the Seattle Police, he lived under some of the most progressive drug laws in the nation. When it comes to addressing the basic premise of our failed drug policies, however, he’s trapped in a linguistic box.

When asked about the "L" word, his oft-repeated response is "Legalization is not in my vocabulary nor is it in the president’s vocabulary." That word isn’t in my political vocabulary either. It’s a clumsy term that polarizes the debate and bars the nuanced discussion we need to have.

The debate over illegal drugs today is cleaved into a false dichotomy of two polar extremes: prohibition versus legalization. That’s partly thanks to our laws. Title VII in the Office of National Drug Control Policy Reauthorization Act of 1998 says the office shall "take such actions as necessary to oppose any attempt to legalize" drugs currently deemed illicit. Drug czars who respond otherwise would be fired, in all likelihood. This is because drug warriors have spent years co-opting the term, making it so radioactive that many voters think legalization means "anything goes" free-market anarchy. To them, the term evokes images of selling heroin in candy machines to children.

What we need is regulation instead of prohibition, because we need to have more control over these substances, not less. Because we have witnessed the damage illicit drugs can cause, we have allowed ourselves to fall prey to one of the drug warriors’ great myths: Keeping drugs illegal will protect us. But drug prohibition doesn’t mean we control drugs; it means we give up the right to control them because we can't regulate an industry we drive underground. We have made a deliberate choice not to regulate these drugs and are paying the price for the chaos that followed. These are lessons we failed to learn from our disastrous attempt at alcohol prohibition in the 1920s.

The debate reminds me of the old story popularly attributed to Winston Churchill. At a dinner party one night, a drunken Churchill asked an aristocratic woman whether she would sleep with him for a million pounds. "Maybe," the woman said coyly. "Would you sleep with me for one pound?" Churchill then asked. "Of course not, what kind of woman do you think I am?" the woman responded indignantly. "Madam, we’ve already established what kind of woman you are," replied Churchill, "now we’re just negotiating the price."

Once we bring the drug debate into the broad spectrum of regulatory solutions, many options are back on the table and we can "negotiate the price." Some of us favor stricter regulation and others more liberal (depending on the drug). For instance, marijuana could be taxed and regulated, but meth would not. Legalization, on the other hand, is a term that fails to clarify the issue. Bazookas are legally produced, but I can’t simply go out and buy one. That’s because they’re regulated.

Here’s the question our policymakers should address: "Do you see the problem as a simple dichotomy between these two extremes or do you think there is a wide spectrum of regulatory options from which to choose?" In other words, should we bring these substances under the domain of the law or continue to let criminals control the market? I suspect Kerlikowske’s response would be nuanced and thoughtful.


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Yeah, but ...
Posted by: blackdog on Oct 2, 2009 12:24 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If this isn't a war against a partially armed civilian populace, then why do those lucky ones who survive in the streets and in suburbia end up in prisons and broken lives?
And why is there a narco-industrial complex behind it, from arms suppliers and tactical squads, to the whole economic ripples of it all? Think: From the federal level all the way down to the undercover operations in your city and the staffs at governmental offices all across this land to the prison towns otherwise in the middle of nowhere. There is money in the form of profits for private companies (that then fund the legislators) and various governmental budgets, tax rates, other fees and fines.
Oh, and they get to control us, too. All of it helped by a propaganda wing to run anti-drug messages in our media. (Yes, drug use is very bad and sadly fatal for far too many. But is it just me, or does the DARE program that does a lot of good also seem a little like groupthink and Big Brother in a way?)
All that contributes to some people getting distorted views of people who use drugs, from hardened attitudes to mocking stereotypes that only impede a real, logical discourse of how to regulate letting the drug use genie out just a little bit.

It not only funds jobs for all kinds of people in and out of law enforcement here, this narco-industrial complex also props up some governments and terrorists alike in our entire hemisphere, which gives us the right to assist our allies and extend our interests, if not our empire, beyond our shores - because there's money there, too.
(Meanwhile, here, they tweak the constitution a little here, a little there, to make it easier to detain citizens for otherwise non-threatening and even legal activities, get them into the system and stifle dissent.)
All this in the name of stopping the drug trade.
Even a little loosening of our drug laws is lost money for the system. Compare that with the money to be gained by legalizing and taxing and licensing it. That will raise a lot of money, sure, but (not enough to bail out California and) a mere fraction of what it costs to keep this whole scenario running.
That's why it won't happen soon. We're too far down the slippery slope already.
And what, really, do we have left to bargain with?

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» RE: Yeah, but ... Posted by: lesfrad
Playing by prohibitionist rules
Posted by: John Thomas on Oct 2, 2009 1:25 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bigdog is right about vested interests (corporate and government) profiting so much off prohibition, and the way they use it as a tool to thwart freedoms, rights and privacy to control the population. These interests are the biggest obstacle to reform.

Another problem with this article is it unwittingly plays into one of prohibitionists biggest, dishonest tactics - namely, lumping.

They lump marijuana in with the hard drugs to cast the shadow of their harms on pot. This has worked extremely well and has served to keep the public confused.

We don't have the same alcohol policy as we do tobacco policy as we do caffiene policy, and at no time during the debate over these "legal" drugs did I ever hear anyone talking about what we needed to do about "drugs."

Also, because every major government study has concluded marijuana is non-addictive, far less harmful than alcohol, and recommended it be regulated like alcohol, the issue is crystal clear to any objective observer. But, muddy the waters about the marijuana issue by throwing in the kitchen sink of hard drugs, and confusion reigns.

The absurdity of this approach if further demonstrated when you realize 85 percent of all "illegal" drug sales is in marijuana. Further, polls show most Americans now want an end to marijuana arrests.

Cleary, marijuana policy is an issue complete unto itself. Let's stop playing the prohibitionist lumping game and end 85 percent of the problem by doing the right thing and end the monstrous fraud of marijuana prohibition.

When the public realizes the sky didn't fall with re-legalizing marijuana, the propaganda-induced hysteria will vanish and we will be able to rationally deal with the exponentially smaller, but more problematic, problem of the hard drugs.

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"justice" and laws
Posted by: maremoto on Oct 2, 2009 7:05 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
i have no doubt whatsoever that these bitches created this black market with malice aforethought in order to enrich their good ole boys network of thugs, I mean cops (not all of course, see LEAP www.leap.cc

these fucking bastards are responsible for all the violence and all the wars funded with their black market... i am of course speaking about the congress of the u.s. and some warmongers that think they run it all

how cynical, how cheap... bush threatening Nicaragua for "being used as a transhipment point for cocaine to the us"... when he, Bush, was Escobar's boss, he was the one moving hundreds of tons in 1974-76 in Colombia )to panama where Noriega, the one he later invaded, would receive them ...with operation watchtower singlehandedly creating the industrial scale cocaine industry... targeting the blacks with crack to fund the contras... these fucking bitches who think we live in a medieval time and they, the princes of plutocracy, can do whatever they want.. lol we'll see about that

google "gary webb"

youtube "terry reed" mena cocaine

operations watchtower, pegasus etc


and then you have all of these mealymouthed demagogues talking shit while secretly knowingly sponsoring and profiting from their "moral values"

genocide, ethnic cleansing, crimes against the peace and humanity is what we're talking about here Mr. Sanho Tree

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» RE: "justice" and laws Posted by: lesfrad
the answer to the title is "more escalation"...
Posted by: Annapurna1 on Oct 2, 2009 10:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the drug war is not meant to be won.. it is meant to be continuous...

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The Fraud of Marijuana Still Exists Because.......
Posted by: John Thomas on Oct 2, 2009 11:33 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Because police, prosecutors, and politicians build their careers and empires on it. Because the alcohol and pharmaceutical industries fear safer marijuana as competition. Because the drug treatment/testing and prison industries depend on it for their life's blood. Because a small, but connected, portion of the population belongs to religious sects that believe they can impose their religious rules on everyone else. Because many corporations could not exist without the cartel money they are laundering, and because marijuana prohibition is used as a tool to control minorities, dissenters and the poor, and to destabilize countries that don't bow to U.S./corporate "interests."

There NEVER was a good reason for marijuana prohibition.

http://www.druglibrary.org/schaffer/History/whiteb1.htm

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Transform - After the War on Drugs
Posted by: DignityForAll on Oct 3, 2009 8:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The UK-based Transform Drug Policy Foundation has some excellent, detailed reports on future drug policy.

After the War on Drugs: Tools for the debate
After the War on Drugs - Options for Control

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FiddleMan
Posted by: FiddleMan on Oct 3, 2009 10:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
“Title VII in the Office of National Drug Control Policy Reauthorization Act of 1998 says the office shall “take such actions as necessary to oppose any attempt to legalize” drugs currently deemed illicit. Drug czars who respond otherwise would be fired, in all likelihood.”

Then who is in control of the ONDCP? Who is the Drug Czar’s Boss? Who is this person who can fire the Drug Czar? Why do we even bother speaking of/to the Drug Czar? If the Drug Czar is not allowed to speak out if his position does not conform to his “Job Description”, then he is a useless, powerless puppet who is completely owned by the person or group with the capacity to “Write His Job Description”! Who is this person (or group of persons) who write the Drug Czars job description? Shouldn’t we speak directly to them and bypass the puppet? Where is the Democracy?

If Title VII of the Drug Czars “Job Description” was written by former Presidents (like the one that we impeached for criminal behavior), then please President Obama, rewrite Title VII of the Drug Czars Job Description!

Cannabis has been proven as a very effective medicine, yet our government refuses to (not fails to - refuses to) acknowledge Cannabis as a medicine and therefore classifies Cannabis as a “Schedule I” drug. “Nixon’s War” forced this incorrect categorization, even after his appointed commission to study Cannabis (The Schaffer Commission) recommended that Cannabis be decriminalized. Science has proven that Cannabis IS a very effective medicine, and Science has proven that Cannabis is NOT highly addictive (less addictive that caffeine). Either one of these scientific facts invalidate Cannabis’ Schedule I Classification! Yet our government will not accept the findings of science.

As far as Gil Kerlikowske dropping the term “War on Drugs” - this is nothing to be commended for! What a truly useless change! Not using the term “War on Drugs” while continuing to wage a Very Real “War on the People” comes down to semantics. Who really cares what they call the “War on Drugs/War on Cannabis/War on the People” as they are dragging you to jail, taking away your right to vote, taking your education possibilities, taking away your job (as well as all future good job possibilities), taking away your children, taking away your car, house, etc. No, the “War on Drugs” is harming our country, and indeed the world. Yes, it really is a “War on the People”.

I am not sure whether the “War on Dangerous Drugs” should end. Meth, Heroin, Cocaine and the like are very dangerous substances... But the “War on Drugs” is mostly a FRONT for the “War on Cannabis” (Marijuana for those of you who still don’t know this). Cannabis is one of the safest drugs known to mankind – even safer than aspirin (aspirin kills about 7,600 people per year). Cannabis is illegal, yet the Legal Recreational Drugs are very deadly – Alcohol (that kills 100,000 Americans per year) and Tobacco (that kills 400,000 Americans per year). Cannabis has never killed anybody – EVER!

So I can live with the continued “War on Drugs” as long as Cannabis is taken OUT of the equation. I really don’t think that people should be thrown in jail even for doing the hard illegal drugs, but that is a totally different topic - hard drugs and Cannabis should NOT be discussed together! Cannabis should not be associated with those kinds of drugs. Put Cannabis over with Alcohol & Tobacco and treat it as such. Of course, Cannabis is NOT a deadly drug like Alcohol or Tobacco, but it still should be legalized anyway!

Legalize Cannabis Now!

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» RE: FiddleMan Posted by: lesfrad
» RE: FiddleMan Posted by: femtobeam
Drug Czar's Job Description Renders Him Useless
Posted by: FiddleMan on Oct 3, 2009 10:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I forgot to put a Title on my Comment above, so here it is:
Drug Czar's Job Description Renders Him Useless

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All Prohibition is Wrong!
Posted by: FiddleMan on Oct 3, 2009 2:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It has come to my attention that I should have thought of another way to say that the Hard Drugs/Soft Drugs arguments should be separated.

I believe that as long as Cannabis is grouped in with Hard Drugs there will be STRONG resistance to Legalization of Cannabis.

The reason that many will not speak of Legalization of Cannabis is because they fear Legalization of everything. I believe that the battle to end prohibition STARTS with the legalization of Cannabis. When Cannabis is legalized I am quite certain that a REAL discussion of ending ALL prohibition will occur. When the sky doesn’t fall, then we can work on the rest.

Prohibition is indeed BAD policy no matter how one looks at it!

Legalize Cannabis Now!

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Drugs, Moon, War, Black Ops, & Slavery
Posted by: femtobeam on Oct 5, 2009 4:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Drugs, controlled Worldwide by Moon's Forces are the money behind the Military Industrial Complex. The One Trillion dollars spent on Black Ops underground bases and Electronic Warfare capability are extending into remote medicine and mind control. Natural drugs, created by your brain, are stimulated electrically with embedded devices. So can emotions be. There is much more, but it's a secret... until it happens to you of course. It may or may not be a cross between the "Night of the living dead", "The Body Snatchers", "The Borg on Star Trek", with a little "Terminator" and "I Robot" mixed in. For some it is more like "One Flew over the Cuckoos Nest". For others it is like "The Others". It involves pre-empting thought, audio and visual brain function with really fast wireless.

The illegal drug trade and the jailing of innocent young people for marajuana is a National Tragedy. They are now slave laborers for private prisons, like those run by Cheney and Vanguard.

Even if it were legalized and taxed for corporate profit structures, who would of course control it, it would be traded for some industry that we all desperately need, as tobacco was traded for our lost future in electronics during the 1980's. Our new optical networking, electric car and bio-technology future was traded for methane production, pollution, beef, & chickens. The beef were moved to Mexico because they raised the price of corn to sell equipment for ethenol production, which in no way is competing "fairly" with oil and gas from any source.

That will come back to bite us, in more ways than one. The main problem with drugs is what happens to the money made from them, legal or not. It all goes into a way to further dominate society by Big Businesses, who chose the ones to live and die, breathe free or die in prison. Whatever they say about you must be true, otherwise you will be tortured to confess it is, legally detained as an "enemy combative".

It all relates to how well you behave, a definition which changes over time as sons die in one way or another and daughters fight against control. Behavioral engineering is done by separating love within the family so there is none. This way, everyone must worship the "True Father". "True Mother" just goes along with whatever he says, especially when he is speaking for God.

The old crew cut right wing used to fight against the hippies. The new right wing who were raised by mind control fight against the hippies kids. They were all created by Moons forces for a drug commerce. He funded both sides. Without this commerce, they cannot operate in secret to continue the New World Order World Takeover. Worse, they are not the ones being empowered, Asia is.

Drugs are not more powerful than communications technology. The next black ops commerce is not drugs, but people. How much are you worth to the masters? Probably not worth feeding a finite amount of food in a finite resource World.

The current plans to vaccinate the population by force with what may have been an engineered flu will be accompanied by an electronic bracelet and embedded devices. We are about to experience a new reality. It is called Virtual Reality.

Without identity and automated systems to enforce the law, you will be left to the mind controllers. Which way will you choose? Whoopsie Daisy, you don't have a choice. You will do as you are told.

Long live the Internet!

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Not Legalization, Decriminalization
Posted by: LHB on Oct 6, 2009 12:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I debate this topic frequently at the University where I teach, and I've found that basing my argument on the term "decriminalization" lays the groundwork for much more reasonable and constructive discussion than using the term "legalization."

The main reason is that it turns the focus of the debate away from the "substance" in question, toward the person using it, and makes it clear to my audience that my opponents advocate creating "criminals" out of otherwise peaceful, law abiding people simply because of the plants, powders and pills they choose to ingest. Once the focus turns away from the dreaded "substances" in question, to the people who use them (or may have used them in the past), and the person with whom you're arguing has to advance the proposition that he advocates using state sanctioned violence against many of the people in the room, as well as theit parents, brothers, sisters and friends, you'd be surprised how uncomfortable supporting continued prohibition can be to even the most committed drug warrior.

In short, I agree with the major points raised by the author, but the term "decrimilization" also suggests gradations toward legalization and regulation, but also puts the burden on advocates of continuation of the drug war to clearly state that they advocate the persecution of PEOPLE, as opposed to the herbal or chemical compounds we call pot, dope, coke, etc.

It's a lot easier to let it rip with the "warrior" jargon when it sounds like you're fighting an army of advancing, menacing, sci-fi chemicals; it's a lot harder to advocate opening fire on your own people. Michael Douglas's character made much the same point in the movie "Traffic" when he resigned his fictional position as Drug Czar.

It sounds too subtle to matter, but try it sometime.

I might also gently suggest backing away from the "cannibo-centric" argument that marijuana is a life enhancing panacea for just about everything, but it's perfectly OK to advocate continued use of violence against those who derive pleasure, insight, or simply the ability to make it through the day through the use of other herbal or chemical substances. Criminalization = violence, period.

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Dr. T
Posted by: Dr T on Oct 6, 2009 8:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As an addiction psychiatrist for over three decades, I can see that the continuing prohibition of certain psychoactive substances is a costly failure. The only thing prohibition ensures is zero tolerance for sensible regulations.

We should immediately end the drugs prohibition and regulate all substances based on their harm to public health. For example, cocaine should continue to be legal and tightly regulated to the medical profession as no country has ever figured out a way to lightly regulate a concentrated stimulant. That being said, we should immediately remove all penalties for possession of small amounts of psychoactive substances for personal use.

The quickest and simplest way to change our drug policies would be to immediately abolish the ban on DEA schedule I compounds (marijuana, heroin, MDMA, etc.) and move all these compounds, with one exception, down to schedule II status (available for prescription and/or research). The exception is marijuana, which is an herbal substance, not a single drug. This should not be on any DEA schedule and should be able to be grown and used with minimal regulation.

The public health community can take care of the side effects of this change and work with (not for!) the criminal justice system for certain categories, e.g, driving while intoxicated.

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» RE: Dr. T Posted by: lesfrad
legal or illegal?
Posted by: sounwel on Oct 7, 2009 5:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obviously--drug policy legal or illegal.VOB Converter

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» RE: legal or illegal? Posted by: lesfrad
Top Ten Myths of the Corporate Matrix That Amerikans Buy Into Everyday
Posted by: stellabloo on Oct 7, 2009 2:46 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes, I've commented at length on all of these on various recent posts and now I’m just repeating myself. Ask me for a link if you want one or do your own damn research.

10. There’s some kind of energy crisis going on and that’s why we need more oil reserves and corn-based ethanol.

No – we were force-fed the lucrative market for oil and gasoline. The original Model T ran on hemp ethanol. John D Rockefeller, the world’s richest man at the turn of the last century, got to be the world’s richest man because his company, Standard Oil, developed a new use for what was previously a waste product of oil refining – gasoline.

9. Alcohol prohibition had something to do with public health and morality.

No – Rockefeller (did I mention he was the world’s richest man?) was a teetotaler. Why have drunken redneck farmers brew up their own tractor fuel (and a few bottles of special reserve) when you could just sell them your product instead? And preserve public morality while you’re at it?

8. Corporate interests had nothing to do with public policy before Bush/Clinton/Reagan, if they ever do or did.

No – Theodore Roosevelt had already broken up Standard Oil in 1911 because it was “too big to exist” but it survived as 30-some different companies, all controlled by Rockefeller and then his son. One of those companies is now called Exxon-Mobil, the biggest corporate earner on the planet in 2008. Standard Oil was founded in 1870 during the “age of the robber barons” – they didn’t call it “age of the robber barons for nothing”.

7. There is no such thing as a government conspiracy.

No - there was actually a conspiracy to involve the US in WWI (if you define “conspiracy” as a covert plan, which most people do). The Creel Commission was created to change public opinion – in a country whose constitution emphasized international neutrality! – in favor of involvement in a meaningless war overseas. To this end, they hired Dr. Edward Bernays, nephew and prodigy of Sigmund Freud.

6. “Mass mind control” is a term for the tinfoil-hat crowd.

No – history shows us that Dr. Bernays was quite successful with his campaign depicting of the “evil hun”. He went on to convince women that smoking was a sign of spirit and independence (his most famous accomplishment) but his services were retained by the government until his retirement in the JFK years. “Mass mind control” is the term used by Bernays himself. Goebbels was a great admirer of Bernays, who was also the first to use the term “propaganda”, giving it its present-day meaning.

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Top Ten Myths of the Corporate Matrix, Part II
Posted by: stellabloo on Oct 7, 2009 2:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
5. Regulation of food and drugs has something to do with public health.

No – you really have to wear a tinfoil hat to believe this one. Look at Bovine Growth Hormone. The US government was browbeating the Canadian government over this one. Three senior Agriculture Canada scientists complaining about lack of positive data represented a threat to Monsanto’s right to make money. In response, the 3 scientists were fired but fortunately for Canadians, they blew the whistle.

4. The medical establishment has something to do with public health.

No – while there still are noble and dedicated professionals slogging away quietly in developing countries, the sad truth is that we could save millions of lives with a few pennies worth of existing medication, but we don't. New patents can mean big profits and big profits drive EVERYTHING. Dr Blake-Tracey, expert witness on SSRI anti-depressants, has written extensively about their negative side effects and the fact that they should never ever be prescribed for simple depression (the sort caused when depressing things happen, like post-traumatic stress disorder), but the AMA lobbied successfully for years to keep the black-box warning off pill bottles.

3. Prisons keep society safe from violent criminals.

No – right now, most people are in amerikan jails for the non-violent crime of drug possession. Jails not only create a permanent non-voting underclass (something Dr Bernays would have approved of) but also serve as a source of cheap prison labor. In fact, prison labor is so cheap that companies like Nike are pulling out of places like the Philippines and outsourcing to amerikan prisons.

2. Slavery was abolished after the Civil War.

No – immediately after the Civil War, things like “vagrancy” (having no proof of steady employment) became a crime and thousands of blacks were sentenced in kangaroo courts and literally sold into chain gangs and coal mines. If you google “prison labor big business” you will see that forced labor with no pay or hope of escape (most people’s definition of slavery) is still very much in vogue.

1. Attitudes toward drug laws are changing and a more common-sense approach is prevailing, just like it says in this article.

No – a Canadian politician is sitting in jail right now, awaiting extradition to the States to face 5 years jail for a “crime” not only committed in Canada but not worthy of a jail term under Canadian law. This is happening right now. Obama hasn’t “changed” his mind on the Bush administration’s extradition order, either.

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.
Posted by: sharonrdgz on Oct 13, 2009 11:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is hard to conceive that progression hasn't been made. California is having so much economical problems that they really need to push legalization legislation. I think that decriminalizing drugs such as weed will only have a good effect economically. Legal weed has many positive aspects that county governments and state governments could gain from.

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hi
Posted by: Blackpool Hotels on Oct 31, 2009 5:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have just read this story and I recently stayed at a Blackpool hotel the Norbreck Castle Hotel and enjoyed my hotel stay in Blackpool. Norbreck Castle is part of Britannia Hotels which has many popular hotel accommodation such as the Britannia Hotel Manchester.

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