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Legalizing Marijuana: Why Joe Biden Should Listen to Latin America’s Case
TIME.com ^ | 03/06/12 | Tim Padgett

Posted on 03/07/2012 12:16:09 PM PST by AnTiw1

It started last summer, when it seemed that Mexican President Felipe Calderón had understandably reached the end of his rope. After 52 innocent people were massacred in August by drug gangsters who set fire to a Monterrey casino – 52 added to the almost 50,000 drug-related murders in Mexico since 2006 – an angry Calderón said that if Americans were so “determined and resigned to consume drugs, then they should seek market alternatives in order to cancel the stratospheric profits” fueling the ghastly narco-bloodshed. Everyone agreed that by “market alternatives,” Calderón meant some sort of drug legalization.

(Excerpt) Read more at globalspin.blogs.time.com ...


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Government
KEYWORDS: cannabis; dope; drugs; drugwar; legalization; marijuana; warondrugs; wod; wodlist; wosd
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To: Responsibility2nd

RJR is bigger than all the drug cartels in Mexico, already has distribution set to hit every single convenience store in this country, and understands how to make quality control work for plant products so every pack tastes the same with the same effect. The cartels will have no choice but to roll over, because 10 minutes after pot gets legalized RJR will have pot cigarettes in every single business in America that already sell Camels, and they’ll be sitting along side Phillip Morris’ Potboro, and they’ll all be cheaper and easier to buy than anything the cartels can put up.

It’ll be the same as when Prohibition ended. Budweiser and Jack Daniel took over and the bootleggers had to find a new market, which we gifted them with when we started the WOD. Because the black market always has a larger markup per distribution step than a white market, and more distribution steps, and less ready access to public space black markets can’t compete with white markets. The only way the cartels “win” a legalized drug fight is if we screw up the tax situation to the point where the white market isn’t cheaper than the black market, which is a definite threat.

The WOD was a mistake. It was a stupid mistake that costs us trillions a year and has been used to completely shred the Constitution. We either “surrender” the WOD or surrender the country. The WOD doesn’t stop anybody from doing drugs, all it does is send the money to scum bag criminals, and give the cops the right to no knock raid my 80 year old mother-in-law because a “reliable tip” said somebody was dealing drugs out of her home with a warrant that incorrectly describes the home but she couldn’t point that out because they refused to let her see it until they were done with her search (actually happened, last week, less than a month after her husband died). That’s your WOD, no knock raids on 80 year old widows of war heroes.


21 posted on 03/07/2012 1:25:35 PM PST by discostu (I did it 35 minutes ago)
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To: VU4G10
a 1994 article in the New England Journal of Medicine stated that it was probable, that if cocaine were legalized, the number of cocaine addicts in America would increase from 2 million to at least 20 million.

And below is the entirety of the "evidence" (I use the term loosely) for that claim. Drug Warriors are aghast when liberty-lovers compare Prohibition to the war on drugs, falsely saying this "equates" alcohol with other drugs - but when it suits their purposes, they're eager to genuinely do such equating.

"There are over 50 million nicotine addicts, 18 million alcoholics or problem drinkers, and fewer than 2 million cocaine addicts in the United States. If cocaine were legally available, it is projected that the number of users would rival that of the other two substances."

22 posted on 03/07/2012 1:32:41 PM PST by JustSayNoToNannies (A free society's default policy: it's none of government's business.)
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To: VU4G10
Drug Warriors are aghast when liberty-lovers compare Prohibition to the war on drugs, falsely saying this "equates" alcohol with other drugs

For an example, see post #14.

23 posted on 03/07/2012 1:35:33 PM PST by JustSayNoToNannies (A free society's default policy: it's none of government's business.)
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To: Responsibility2nd
Next you’ll try and convince us that the WOD is as wrong as Prohibition.

After all, there is no difference between alcohol and crack or meth, huh?

The WOD, like Prohibition, is failing to demonstrably reduce drug use - and the WOD, like Prohibition, is enriching criminals, with all the negative consequences that entails.

24 posted on 03/07/2012 1:40:14 PM PST by JustSayNoToNannies (A free society's default policy: it's none of government's business.)
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To: Responsibility2nd
Sweden is your brain on drugs...Venezuela is you brain on socialism.

Pick your poison.

25 posted on 03/07/2012 1:40:28 PM PST by Aevery_Freeman (Typed using <FONT STYLE=SARCASM> unless otherwise noted)
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To: Responsibility2nd
" The Mexican cartels run a trillion dollar industry. They run Mexico for that matter. Do you think they will just roll over and let go of their cash cow if America legalized dope? The only way a complete surrender in the WOD would work would be to allow the Cartels to become successful legitimate US corporations. Is that what you want? "

what a false straw man that is

we're taking away their income, so we have no choice but to make MS13 a US corporation, that's your story

my story is taking weed away from them takes away half their income, takes weed offenders off the LEO watch and gives us more personnel and funds to secure our borders

difference being, my story actually makes sense

26 posted on 03/07/2012 1:43:22 PM PST by AnTiw1 (Franklin: "where Liberty is, there is my country"...so I'm getting the sailboat ready to look for it)
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To: discostu

At one time Americans understood the limitations imposed upon the federal government. The ratification of the 18th Amendment shows that the people understood that the federal government had no authority whatsoever to prohibit alcohol without going through the lengthy process of actually amending the Constitution.

Now, the “socons” are fine ignoring the Constitution and expanding the role of the federal government beyond its limits when it suits their purpose. Who else does this? Democrats. No difference between them, really. They just want to ignore the Constitution for different reasons, each side advancing their own moral/immoral agenda, the law be damned.

You want to give the federal government the power to ban a funny looking weed? Amend the Constitution so that We the People grant that power to the federal government. Eventually you will learn that even a Constituitonal Amendment will not change the habits and behaviors of people — how is that Prohibition thing working out these days?


27 posted on 03/07/2012 1:45:07 PM PST by FerociousRabbit
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To: FerociousRabbit

All gone now. Now we erect boogiemen and beg the government to fix it. Now the 4th Amendment is completely meaningless, we have no knock raids where the resident isn’t allowed to see the warrant and any allergy sufferer gives evidence against themselves every time they buy perfectly legal medicine. And meanwhile drug use remains the same before the WOD started.


28 posted on 03/07/2012 1:49:29 PM PST by discostu (I did it 35 minutes ago)
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To: Responsibility2nd
The Mexican cartels run a trillion dollar industry. They run Mexico for that matter. Do you think they will just roll over and let go of their cash cow if America legalized dope?

That's what the Mafia did when Prohibition ended:

"The lush traffic in alcohol beverages during the violent years of 1920 to 1933 had laid the base of organization for a number of criminal gangs. The termination of the ban on liquor deprived these gangs of their most lucrative source of money and they were obliged to turn to some other avenue of activity." - Special Committee to Investigate Organized Crime in Interstate Commerce

29 posted on 03/07/2012 2:03:05 PM PST by JustSayNoToNannies (A free society's default policy: it's none of government's business.)
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To: USFRIENDINVICTORIA

Well said, I’m with you on this one. So many people (here on FR) criticize the left for wanting to regulate and control many aspects of our lives yet turn around and do the same thing. Marijuana can be bad and it can also have some positives. When taken/used in moderation the effects are pleasant just as a bottle or two of Lienenkugal beer seem to hit the spot. It’s all about responsibility. I drink too much I’m a menace to society, same with pot (although, not as bad (unless you consider cleaning the fridge out, Ill behavior)).
If you use your morality to judge others, that’s fine. If you use your morality to dictate what others can and can’t do, does society benefit? There are a lot of benefits that society gains from Christian values but where do you draw the line? Some so called Christians I’ve observed are a little wacky (I’m sure you’ve seen them on the corner holding signs up). Would you really like some of the more intense church’s dictating how we live our lives?
I have many friends, that I grew up with, that smoke pot and maintain their lives just fine. Most of them started in high school. We all got a little crazy with it (what high school kid doesn’t get a little frisky) but learned how to maintain. Same as with alcohol, a few nights passed out in the forest with pine needles in every crack teaches us about over indulgence.
As with alcohol, the people that have real problems are the ones that are restricted from using it, then all of a sudden are told go for it. Kids turn 21 and binge drink themselves into oblivion. Other kids move out of their parents’ house into a place with a few friends and go a little crazy.
I, for one would like pot to become legal and drugs should be seen as more of a medical/mental problem than a criminal issue. Yes, they all have the potential to ruin lives but it is the individual’s responsibility to keep their shit together, not yours.


30 posted on 03/07/2012 3:51:57 PM PST by Captain PJ
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To: Responsibility2nd

If you were literate you would have realised that I mentioned harder drugs that should obviously be illegal due to their harmful nature.
But yes, the war on marijuana which causes rougly 700,000 arrests for posession and contributes to 50% of all arrests, clearly is like the prohibition.

Sheesh!


31 posted on 03/07/2012 4:30:51 PM PST by hannibaal
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To: Captain PJ

The Arabs have been a Cannabis based people for thousands of years, their culture looks different from Western culture, which has been alcohol based for thousands of years.

You seem to go into the anti-conservative agenda of libertarian ism, does that apply to homosexual marriage and polygamy as well?


32 posted on 03/07/2012 4:36:01 PM PST by ansel12 (Santorum-Catholic and "I was basically pro-choice all my life, until I ran for Congress" he said))
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To: ansel12
The Arabs have been a Cannabis based people for thousands of years,

Evidence?

their culture looks different from Western culture, which has been alcohol based for thousands of years.

That difference in drug basis (if it exist - for which no evidence has been offered) is far from the only difference, so it doesn't logically follow that any society in which cannabis is permitted will become like Arab society.

33 posted on 03/08/2012 8:33:19 AM PST by JustSayNoToNannies (A free society's default policy: it's none of government's business.)
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To: Captain PJ
I have many friends, that I grew up with, that smoke pot and maintain their lives just fine.

Thanks for your thoughts, Captain! It's good to be reminded how reality contradicts the Chicken Little fantasies of the Drug Warriors.

34 posted on 03/08/2012 8:37:25 AM PST by JustSayNoToNannies (A free society's default policy: it's none of government's business.)
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To: JustSayNoToNannies

You never noticed how Arabs and others in that part of the world or any other place where Cannabis becomes accepted as ‘normal’ resemble ‘pot-heads’, and the Western world looks like clean, productive ‘straights’ ?

“The first known reference to marijuana in India is to be found in the Atharva Veda, which may date as far back as the second millennium B.C. 2 Another quite early reference appears on certain cuneiform tablets unearthed in the Royal Library of Ashurbanipal, an Assyrian king. Ashurbanipal lived about 650 B.C.; but the cuneiform descriptions of marijuana in his library “are generally regarded as obvious copies of much older texts,” 3 says Dr. Robert P. Walton, an American physician and authority on marijuana who assembled much of the historical data here reviewed. This evidence “serves to project the origin of hashish back to the earliest beginnings of history.” References to marijuana can also be found, Dr. Walton adds, in the Rh-Ya [sic], a Chinese compendium dating from the period 1200-500 B.C.; in the Susruta, an Indian treatise originating before 400 A.D.; and in the Persian Zend-Avesta, originating several centuries before Christ. 4

The ancient Greeks used alcohol rather than marijuana as an intoxicant; but they traded with marijuana-eating and marijuana-inhaling peoples. Hence some of the references to drugs in Homer may be to marijuana, including Homer’s reference to the drug which Helen brought to Troy from Egyptian Thebes. 5 Certainly Herodotus was referring to marijuana when he wrote in the fifth century B.C. that the Scythians cultivated a plant that was much like flax but grew thicker and taller; this hemp they deposited upon red-hot stones in a closed room–– producing a vapor, Herodotus noted, “that no Grecian vapor-bath can surpass. The Scythians, transported with the vapor, shout aloud.” 6

Herodotus also described people living on islands in the Araxes River, who “meet together in companies,” throw marijuana on a fire, then “sit around in a circle; and by inhaling the fruit that has been thrown on, they become intoxicated by the odor, just as the Greeks do by wine; and the more fruit is thrown on, the more intoxicated they become, until they rise up and dance and betake themselves to singing.”
Like the ancient Greeks, the Old Testament Israelites were surrounded by marijuana-using peoples. A British physician, Dr. C. Creighton, concluded in 1903 that several references to marijuana can be found in the Old Testament. 9 Examples are the “honeycomb” referred to in the Song of Solomon, 5:1, and the “honeywood” in I Samuel 14: 25-45. (Others have suggested that the “calamus” in the Song of Solomon was in fact cannabis.) 10

The date on which marijuana was introduced into western Europe is not known; but it must have been very early. An urn containing marijuana leaves and seeds, unearthed near Berlin, Germany, is believed to date from 500 B.C. 11

Cloth made from hemp (cannabis), we are told, “became common in central and southern Europe in the thirteenth century” and remained popular through the succeeding generations; fine Italian linen, for example, was made from hemp as well as flax” and in many cases the two fibers are mixed in the same material.” 12 Nor were Europeans ignorant of the intoxicating properties of the plant; François Rabelais (1490-1553) gave a full account of what he called “the herb Pantagruelion.” 13

The use of marijuana as an intoxicant also spread quite early to Africa. In South Africa, Dr. Frances Ames of the University of Cape Town reports, marijuana “was in use for many years before Europeans settled in the country and was smoked by all the non-European races, i.e. Bushmen, Hottentots and Africans. It was probably brought to the Mozambique coast from India by Arab traders and the habit, once established, spread inland....”

http://www.druglibrary.org/schaffer/library/studies/cu/cu53.html


35 posted on 03/08/2012 3:46:10 PM PST by ansel12
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To: ansel12
that part of the world or any other place where Cannabis becomes accepted as ‘normal’

Your evidence shows only that cannabis was sometimes used, not that it was the basis of the culture or accepted as ‘normal.’

A British physician, Dr. C. Creighton, concluded in 1903 that several references to marijuana can be found in the Old Testament. 9 Examples are the “honeycomb” referred to in the Song of Solomon, 5:1, and the “honeywood” in I Samuel 14: 25-45. (Others have suggested that the “calamus” in the Song of Solomon was in fact cannabis.) 10

So according to you cannabis is biblical. Interesting.

The date on which marijuana was introduced into western Europe is not known; but it must have been very early. An urn containing marijuana leaves and seeds, unearthed near Berlin, Germany, is believed to date from 500 B.C. 11

Cloth made from hemp (cannabis), we are told, “became common in central and southern Europe in the thirteenth century” and remained popular through the succeeding generations; fine Italian linen, for example, was made from hemp as well as flax” and in many cases the two fibers are mixed in the same material.” 12 Nor were Europeans ignorant of the intoxicating properties of the plant; François Rabelais (1490-1553) gave a full account of what he called “the herb Pantagruelion.” 13

So Europe is not much different than the Arab world when it comes to cannabis.

36 posted on 03/08/2012 8:38:55 PM PST by JustSayNoToNannies (A free society's default policy: it's none of government's business.)
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To: AnTiw1

Screw Latin America. He needs to listen to Clarence Thomas.


37 posted on 03/08/2012 8:40:46 PM PST by tacticalogic ("Oh, bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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To: JustSayNoToNannies

Cannabis never became an intoxicant in the alcohol based of Western Civilization, but it has been the intoxicant of choice in the Middle East and parts of Asia for thousands of years, it predates Islam. Europe was not drenched in Cannabis use and then somehow erased that memory and history.
The Middle East has always been know to be Cannabis based, even the word assassin comes from Hashish.

“The three religions of the Book, Judaism, Christianity and Islam, are not well known for having drug cultures associated with them, so it comes as something as a surprise to learn that Islam, perhaps the most puritanical of the three, has a strong undercurrent of marijuana use throughout its long history.

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/ID11Ak03.html


38 posted on 03/08/2012 8:59:05 PM PST by ansel12
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To: ansel12
it has been the intoxicant of choice in the Middle East and parts of Asia for thousands of years

Your evidence shows only that cannabis was sometimes used, not that it was the intoxicant of choice. \

Islam, perhaps the most puritanical of the three, has a strong undercurrent of marijuana use throughout its long history.

Look up the word "undercurrent." This statement does not support your "intoxicant of choice" claim.

39 posted on 03/09/2012 8:15:58 AM PST by JustSayNoToNannies (A free society's default policy: it's none of government's business.)
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To: JustSayNoToNannies
Scotch and beer never really caught on to the Arabs, just as Cannabis never caught on to Westerners.

One of those cultures looks and lives like spaced out stoners, the other looks like and lives like productive straights.

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40 posted on 03/09/2012 12:26:53 PM PST by ansel12
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