Drug War - DRUGS: A BUSINESS FOR OUR TIMES

Wednesday, September 17, 2008 at 9:48 PM

Posted in Drug War with Efficacy

by DCN

At the local, state and federal level we spend 50 billion and year to interdict drugs.
The drug enforcement agency readily admits that they capture less than ten
percent of all illegal drugs.  Does a 50 billion dollar investment for ninety percent
failure rate sound like a good investment to you?
 
This is the number one problem black, Latino and poor whites face in this
country.  Mark my words--it is going to get exceedingly worse.
 
With the financial crisis that will have far reaching affects,
look at one business that is not affected at all.
DRUGS: A BUSINESS FOR OUR TIMES
 
Sam Smith, Progressive Review - Since there is so much bad financial news
these days, we thought this might cheer you up. The drug business is doing
extremely well, thanks in large part to years of de facto subsidy by the
perversely misnamed "war on drugs."
 
A recent CNN report said the Coast Guard had seized $4.7 billion worth of
cocaine last year. That's only the amount the Coast Guard seized and it's
only the value of cocaine, not all the other drugs.
 
The value is just shy of the $4.83 billion Google earned in the last quarter
of last year. At the time Google had about 16,000 employees.
 
When you are able to lose $4.7 billion a year in just one product line and
still keep growing, you've got an impressive business.
 
Back in 1997, I interviewed Billy Bear Bottoms, the pilot for one of the
biggest drug importers of the time, Barry Seal. Bottoms told me that Seal
had made about 50 trips of 300 kilos each, or approximately 16 tons total.
 
The Coast Guard recently seized one vessel - a self propelled
semi-submersible that costs up to a million bucks to build - and found seven
tons on the craft or 21 times as much as the notorious Seal was able to
transport on one trip. Another of this year's seizures amount to more than
Seal was able to import on 50 flights.
 
One day, and sadly far too late, we will finally learn that the biggest
driver of the drug trade is US law enforcement.

Cliff
 
Efficacy
PO Box 1234
860 657 8438
Hartford, CT 06143
efficacy@msn.com
www.Efficacy-online.org
 
"THE DRUG WAR IS MEANT TO BE WAGED NOT WON"
 
Working to end race and class drug war injustice, Efficacy is a non profit
501 (c) 3 organization founded in 1997. Your gifts and donations are tax
deductible

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Drug War - What if the U.S. legalized all drugs?

Saturday, September 6, 2008 at 10:46 AM

Posted in Drug War with Efficacy

by DCN

This article neglects another important part of "drug related" charges such
as assalt, buglary, and murder to get drugs.  My organization Efficacy
puts this figure at seventy percent of people in our criminal justice
system, some prison wardens and judges put this figure at eighty
or ninety percent.  Remember, there are over seven point three million
people that are in our criminal justice system
in this country that are either on probation, parole, halfway
houses, prison or jail, costing untold ten's of billions of dollars.
 
Understand this, legalization is a highly conservative concept in that
it looks to limit access and tax given product.  Legalization is
not what the author explains.  Most people and I mean lawyers,
policemen and legislators don't know the difference between legalization, medicalization
and decriminalization. What we have  now is a very liberal public policy
in that anyone and I mean anyone can obtain given illegal substance.
 
As far as the numbers are concerned they are very conservative.
When one looks at Connecticut alone.  We have eithteen thousand
in prison, another fifty two thousand that are either on probation,
parol, not counting our jails.  We have a prison budget of over six
hundred million.  The state has a population of 3.5 million--look at
how we could have health care for everyone in the state if only
half of the people on drug charges were released.  Smart, yes,
but it just makes to much sense.  Are we cowards, incompetents
or both?
 
Another "what if" article about drug legalization that neglects to
mention the salient fact that drugs were once entirely legal.   Thus
we have a historical model of what a legal drug market might be like.
Yes, there are a lot more psychoactive chemicals to play with now
than there were under the legal market a century ago.  On the other
hand, many poisonous ingredient that were common in 19th century
patent medicines are no longer sold (and wouldn't be on a legal
market because of product liability concerns).
       Americans have been brainwashed into accepting that there is no
alternative but for the government to prohibit dangerous drugs.  They
have forgotten how well their ancestors coped with a legal drug
market.
     

http://finance.sympatico.msn.ca/investing/insight/article.aspx?cp-documentID=10008372---------------------------------------------------------------------------
What if the U.S. legalized all drugs?

How does a $50 billion boost to the U.S. economy sound? Not bad? Well, what
about all the new addicts that could pop up on the streets? Theoretically,
it's all possible.

By Shirley Skeel
September 04, 2008

Every year, about two million people in the U.S. are arrested for drug
offenses, including using or selling marijuana, heroin, cocaine or
methamphetamine. About a third of America's prisoners are held on drug
charges or for crimes attributed to drug abuse.

But what if all street drugs were legalized?

More kids would decide to try drugs "just once," and more would get hooked.
Some lives would be ruined. But other lives would be saved. Gang murders
would fall sharply. Thousands of people now in jail would be free to find
work and feed their families. We'd save billions on the war on drugs, and a
new drug industry would create jobs and loads of taxable revenue.

Of course, it may sound like madness. And the gut feeling among many people
is that it would be disastrous.

Don Semesky, the former chief of financial operations for the Drug
Enforcement Administration in Washington, D.C., asks: "Have you ever seen a
meth addict, with all those sores and rotten teeth? And what they do to
their kids? Do you want the (U.S.) government to be responsible for that?"

Yet some economists, including American Nobel laureate Milton Friedman, have
supported the idea of legalizing drugs. Friedman believed America's war on
drugs was at the root of police corruption and caused thousands of
unnecessary deaths, with few gains for ordinary citizens.

So just how would legalized drugs affect the U.S. economy and Americans'
standard of life?

Running some numbers

Let's look at two scenarios: if marijuana alone were legalized and if all
street drugs were legalized. Either way, assume there'd be strict regulation
similar to that for alcohol and cigarettes, including age limits, licensing,
quality control, high taxes and limits on advertising.

At first glance, on a "strictly numbers" basis, the effect on America's
pocketbook looks promising. It's possible to see:

* Savings on drug-related law enforcement -- FBI, police, courts and prisons
-- of $2 billion to $10 billion a year if marijuana were legalized, based on
various estimates, or up to $40 billion a year if all drugs were legalized,
based on enforcement costs from the White House's Office of National Drug
Control Policy. That's before the cost of overseeing the new drug
regulations.

* Increased productivity as fewer people were murdered, drug offenders were
freed to find work and those stripped of their criminal record found it
easier to get jobs (including running drug boutiques). However, how many of
those now in prison would turn away from crime is unknown.

* Tax gains. Drug prices would have to fall sharply in order to squeeze out
the black market. Still, Jeffrey Miron, a senior lecturer in economics for
Harvard University, calculates the $10 billion-plus U.S. marijuana market
could reap $6 billion in annual taxes. The $65 billion market for all
illicit drugs, he estimates, might bring in $10 billion to $15 billion in
taxes.

* A new legal drug industry would create jobs, farm crops, retail outlets
and a tiny notch up in gross domestic product as the black market money
turned clean. A 1994 study by the U.S. National Organization for the Reform
of Marijuana Laws in Washington, D.C., suggested 100,000 jobs and 60,000
retailers could emerge from a legal marijuana industry.

So, seemingly there'd be a shower of money for American government coffers
-- perhaps an initial $50 billion under the "all drugs" scenario -- and
gains for business and the community. But at what cost?

The answer is that it all depends, mostly on how many more people would use
drugs, which drugs and how much more they used.

Give me a latte and a joint

Currently, considering it can get you arrested (or kill you), drug use is
surprisingly common. A 2006 U.S. government study said 20% of Americans 18
to 25 had taken an illicit drug in the month prior to the survey.

So what if a Starbucks-style chain of drugstores that fulfilled Abbie
Hoffman's wildest dreams opened across the U.S.? What if one could sit on a
sofa, pick up a magazine and light up, or even shoot up, in a congenial
atmosphere?

Europe offers some clues. In 1976, the Netherlands decided to tolerate
(though not legalize) the selling of small amounts of cannabis in licensed
coffee shops. At first there was little change in usage. But between 1984
and 1992, as shops opened rapidly, smoking of the drug doubled among Dutch
18- to 20-year-olds.

"In that case, it looked like changing the legal status was of minor
importance, but opening commercial outlets mattered," says Mark Kleiman, the
director of the Drug Policy Analysis Program at the University of
California, Los Angeles.

Moreover, what if drugs were glamorously promoted via YouTube or Facebook,
or even big business? Peter Reuter, a professor of public policy and
criminology at the University of Maryland, says it would be hard to block
advertising because there's little proof that marijuana is harmful.

"I think we'd see a fair amount of promotion," he says. "Then you could have
large increases in use."

Kleiman adds, "Imagine what Philip Morris and MillerCoors could do if we
gave them cannabis to work with."

Would addiction increase?

One oddity that stands out in the research is that the Dutch are still only
midrange users of marijuana by European standards. By some measures, they
use marijuana far less than Americans, according to a recent World Health
Organization survey.

It's thought that this is due to differing social norms, which raises
another point. If drugs were legal in America, this could send a powerful
signal to kids that drugs are OK. Add this to the lower price, addictive
effects of some drugs and easy access, and drug use could rise quite a bit.
To offset this, we could run campaigns warning against the stuff. That might
work. It might not.

The response from marijuana reform advocates is: "So what if use increases?
It's harmless anyway." However, that remains unproved. Researchers worry
about the high tar content, the risk of personal injury while someone is
"high" and about any effects on students' work.

As for legalizing all drugs, Harvard's Miron argues that the increase in
drug abuse would likely be small. "Millions of people don't smoke
cigarettes. The same is true of alcohol . . . because they know that too
much of it is not good for you," he says. People who are prone to abuse
drugs are probably already abusing them, he adds.

That's hardly so, Reuter argues. Heroin and cocaine "are attractive drugs,"
he says. "Lots of kids would experiment, and maybe 3 or 4% would become
dependent. So the increase in addiction might be very substantial."

The added costs

Whichever case proved true, there could be extra costs to U.S. taxpayers for
abusers' medical treatment, family support, petty crime and lost worker
productivity.

Just how much is hard to say. And how these negative economic effects might
net out against the positive effects is virtually impossible to say. Data on
drug-use behaviour are thin and often contradictory.

Semesky says, "Nobody is going to be better off." The Office of National
Drug Control Policy puts the cost of drug abuse at $145 billion, including
medical expenses and lost productivity. That's more than the cost of cancer.
If drugs were legal, some of these costs would rise, some would fall.
Semesky believes the net effect would be highly negative.

Miron says a small rise in drug abuse would be far outweighed by the gains
from reduced violent crime, freed-up police resources, a more productive
citizenry and reduced illness from bad drugs and dirty needles.

Rosalie Pacula, the director of the Rand Drug Policy Research Center in
Santa Monica, Calif., says there are huge unknowns. But if you look at the
effects of alcohol and tobacco abuse, she says, legalizing drugs would be
"very, very risky."

Could this happen?

How likely is it that street drugs would be legalized?

The possession of small amounts of marijuana has been decriminalized in 12
U.S. states, meaning offenders might get fined but won't be jailed or given
a criminal record. Nonetheless, full legalization of marijuana is hardly
likely. In a 2002 CNN/Time Magazine poll, 59% of respondents opposed
legalizing marijuana, and 34% favoured it. Although attitudes are getting
more liberal, marijuana is not legal anywhere in the world.

As for other street drugs, don't even ask. The question of legalization is
no more than an interesting academic exercise.

--

Brett Stone
Legal Assistant
KROGER LAW GROUP
8888 Olympic Blvd.
Beverly Hills, CA 90211
Office- 323-655-5700
brett@laattorney.com

http://www.420attorney.com
http://www.laattorney.com

For the latest marijuana and medical marijuana news please visit
http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/mmjnews/ or send a blank email to
mmjnews-subscribe@yahoogroups.com to have the latest marijuana and medical
marijuana news delivered direct to your inbox.

Efficacy
PO Box 1234
860 657 8438
Hartford, CT 06143
efficacy@msn.com
www.Efficacy-online.org
 
"THE DRUG WAR IS MEANT TO BE WAGED NOT WON"
 
Working to end race and class drug war injustice, Efficacy is a non profit
501 (c) 3 organization founded in 1997. Your gifts and donations are tax
deductible

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Drug War - DRUG VIOLENCE ALTERS THE FLOW OF LIFE IN MEXICO

Sunday, August 31, 2008 at 11:26 AM

Posted in Drug War with Efficacy

by DCN

Newshawk: JimmyG
Pubdate: Sun, 31 Aug 2008
Source: New York Times (NY)
Page: A6
Copyright: 2008 The New York Times Company
Contact:
letters@nytimes.com
Website: http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Author: Marc Lacey
Bookmark:
http://www.mapinc.org/area/Mexico (Mexico)
Bookmark:
http://www.mapinc.org/people/Felipe+Calderon
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Tijuana

DRUG VIOLENCE ALTERS THE FLOW OF LIFE IN MEXICO

Mexico - With a bingo hall, a dog track and a vast room of slot
machines, Casino Caliente has a fair share of shrieks and groans any
night of the year. But when a team of heavily armed men dressed in
black barged in and ordered everyone to the floor on a Friday night
this month, the outbursts rose to an entirely different level.

"Everybody down!" the masked men shouted, adding expletives to make
their point and urgently directing their automatic weapons this way
and that. Panic filled the bingo hall, for no one knew what was to come next.

Gone are the days when Mexico's drug war was an abstraction for most
people, something they lamented over the morning papers as if it were
unfolding far away. Reminders are everywhere, like the radios
blasting drug ballads that romanticize the criminals and the giant
banners that drug cartels hang from overpasses to recruit killers and
threaten rivals.

The Mexico-based traffickers that ship narcotics from South America
to the United States are in a pitched battle with President Felipe
Calderon's government, which has sent the army to trouble spots
around the country to shut them down. Police agencies, infiltrated by
the drug traffickers and lacking training, have not shown themselves
to be up to the job. The results have been mixed: there have been
huge drug seizures and arrests of some kingpins, but also violent
retaliation by the heavily armed traffickers, who have been killing
law enforcement officers and many noncombatants as well.

Life in Mexico is changing in subtle ways as the possibility of that
violence lurks at every intersection, dance floor and town square.
With increasing frequency, child-size chalk outlines are drawn on the
asphalt at the latest homicide scene. Raids are carried out at
baptism parties, at fancy restaurants, at bingo halls like the
Caliente, where, it turned out, no shots were fired that night. The
armed men proved to be federal police officers, and they quickly left
with two men suspected of being traffickers in tow.

"Those who don't see the drug war going on around them have their
heads stuck in the sand," said Jeannette Anaya, a Tijuana actress who
is trying to mobilize the city's artistic community to rally for peace.

Two women and two girls were among the victims in an attack in
Guerrero in recent days. This month, 13 people were killed at a
family gathering in the mountains of Chihuahua, including several
teenagers, a 4-year-old and a 16-month-old. In all, 2,682 people have
been killed in the drug war this year, including elderly bystanders,
schoolchildren and pregnant women, according to a tally by a
newspaper, El Universal.

"The violent mass killings of people not connected to criminal
organized violence, their cowardly executions, is intolerable for
Mexico," said Jose Reyes Baeza, Chihuahua's governor, who has
criticized the federal government's approach to the violence. "The
trend is unacceptable and must be contained."

The wealthy bulletproof their vehicles, wear protective clothing and
move around flanked by burly men with earpieces. But others with
fewer resources resort to their own makeshift measures to stay alive.

Manuel, a businessman in his early 40s who lives in Tijuana, avoids
restaurants in the city, particularly those that serve food from
Sinaloa, which has produced more top cartel leaders than any other
state. His father is from Sinaloa and he loves the shrimp tamales and
other offerings from the region, but he fears that there is a bigger
chance that he might encounter thugs at restaurants that feature that food.

"Seafood is what they serve and it's the best," he said, refusing to
provide his last name because of the fear that his words might come
back to haunt him. "But I'd rather eat at home. How can I take my
wife and my children to a restaurant when I don't know who the people
are around? What happens if something goes wrong?"

He has reason to be rattled. His brother was grabbed from his Tijuana
home nearly a year ago by masked men and has not been heard from
since, one of numerous people who have disappeared in late-night
raids linked to the drug cartels.

"We all live in fear now," he said. "Any of us could be taken or
killed. I try to wear nothing and do nothing that attracts attention.
I wear T-shirts and a hat. I have no jewelry. I don't want to stand out."

In modern Mexico, a new way of cautious thinking is setting in. A
Hummer pulls beside one's vehicle at an intersection? Better keep
looking straight ahead. Or better yet, many recommend, do not stop at
red lights at all.

A big debate circulates over police checkpoints. Should one stop and
risk that the people dressed as police officers really are on the
side of the law?

Women should be careful how they shun a man's unwelcome attention.
Who knows what offense he might take and what weapons he might be
packing. Men should be careful that the woman they are eyeing is not
the girlfriend, wife or sister of someone who kills for a living.

"You have to be more careful with everything these days," said Jose
Carlos Vizcarra, who heads an advisory group on crime in the border
town of Mexicali. "If you go into a bar and there's a beautiful girl
standing alone, you have to think twice about going up to her. Who
knows if she's a drug dealer's girlfriend? If he walks in when you're
buying her a beer that could be the end of you."

And women are not just companions of narco-traffickers, said Howard
Campbell, an anthropologist at the University of Texas at El Paso who
has studied trafficking in Mexico. Some women are smugglers in their
own right, rising up in the male-dominated narco-trafficking world
and unleashing violence of their own.

Women are also deeply involved in the laundering of drug money, Mr.
Campbell wrote in a recent article in Anthropological Quarterly,
running businesses like day care centers, jewelry stores and clothing
boutiques that help keep drug gangs functioning. That necklace? That
dress? That nanny? All of them, in modern Mexico, might be financing
the drug trade.

"It's impossible to know exactly who is who these days," Mr. Campbell
said. "That can be dangerous."

Anything, in fact, can be dangerous. The father of another kidnapping
victim said courting had substantially changed these days. One of the
man's two sons had broken up with his girlfriend. Another boy, with
ties to traffickers, started dating her. One day last year, men
dressed in black arrived at the man's house and took one of his sons
away, grabbing the wrong son by mistake. He has not been heard from ever since.

All this is not to say that Mexicans are paralyzed with fear.
Thousands were scheduled to march through the streets of Mexico City
and numerous other cities on Saturday night to light candles and
reclaim the streets.

Still, many have become inured to things that once would have alarmed
them. They are doing things, like having chips inserted in their
forearms so they can be tracked if they are kidnapped, that they
never could have imagined during more sedate times.

The police have complained of onlookers gathering at crime scenes
with cameras to snap photos of the corpses.

"The worst thing that can happen is for us to become accustomed to
the dramatic daily count of deaths and kidnappings caused by
narcotics assassins," El Universal said in a recent editorial.

At the Tijuana bingo hall, once the federal officers escorted the two
men suspected of being traffickers out just after midnight that
Friday, some rattled gamblers rose from the ground, abandoned their
bingo cards and made a beeline for the exit. For them, the evening
had brought far more excitement than they had bargained for.

But others, as if nothing much had happened, got up from the floor,
readjusted their cards and continued trying their luck.
 
Efficacy
PO Box 1234
860 657 8438
Hartford, CT 06143
efficacy@msn.com
www.Efficacy-online.org
 
"THE DRUG WAR IS MEANT TO BE WAGED NOT WON"
 
Working to end race and class drug war injustice, Efficacy is a non profit
501 (c) 3 organization founded in 1997. Your gifts and donations are tax
deductible

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