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Drug policy should focus on helping addicts, not jailing them
The Baltimore Sun ^ | June 28, 2006 | Taylor W. Buley

Posted on 07/04/2006 5:20:13 PM PDT by neverdem

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To: neverdem

Pot absolutely should be legal. It is ridiculous to criminalize it - it would be a lot more effective for pain that prescription drug addictions. We're spending too much money on this war on drugs - we should get rid of it.


21 posted on 07/04/2006 9:16:06 PM PDT by greccogirl
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To: neverdem

Drug policy should focus on helping addicts, not jailing them (unless they're Republicans).


22 posted on 07/04/2006 9:18:53 PM PDT by perfect stranger (I need new glasses.)
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To: neverdem

No way. To treat an addict rather than jail would be the humanitarian thing to do. Humanitarian responses are reserved for palestinian terrorists and parts of africa.

go figure


23 posted on 07/04/2006 9:23:18 PM PDT by takenoprisoner (Sorry Mr. Jefferson, we forfeited the God given rights you all put to pen. We have no excuse.)
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To: neverdem

Leave it to the Baltimore Sun to come up with meaningless tripe about how to deal with crimes related to addiction.

Answer is simple. Deal with both issues at the same time. Jail the offender and require (force) them to attend recovery meetings/programs while they're incarcerated. Happens all the time. It'll either be "a take" or it won't. Just like what happens in "real life."

There's a very old adage that contains more wisdom than any of the words written by so-called addiction specialists, and it's quite simple. Most good answers are. Here tis:
"Sobriety isn't for people who need it, it's for people who want it." That's a wrap, folks. Case closed.


24 posted on 07/04/2006 9:28:01 PM PDT by Rightfootforward
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To: LPM1888
The War On Drugs has become a cancer on America.

And the addiction to crack, coke, meth, etc......isn't?

25 posted on 07/05/2006 8:44:45 AM PDT by AxelPaulsenJr (Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.)
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To: neverdem

Jailing users of drugs is a huge waste of resources. I can understand jailing the sellers...kind of like jailing people who produce moonshine...it's a licnensing and commerce issue. How about we fine them...just like speeders.


26 posted on 07/05/2006 1:45:05 PM PDT by Katya (Homo Nosce Te Ipsum)
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To: AxelPaulsenJr
And the addiction to crack, coke, meth, etc......isn't?

What would you propose to do that hasn't been tried already? If it's just more of the same, that's not cutting it.

27 posted on 07/05/2006 3:29:43 PM PDT by neverdem (May you be in heaven a half hour before the devil knows that you're dead.)
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To: neverdem
What would you propose to do that hasn't been tried already? If it's just more of the same, that's not cutting it.

Are you saying legalize crack, cocaine, meth, pcp, lsd, etc? While we are at it, lets just do away with the entire judicial code, people ignore the laws anyway don't they?

28 posted on 07/06/2006 6:34:00 AM PDT by AxelPaulsenJr (Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.)
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To: AxelPaulsenJr
Are you saying legalize crack, cocaine, meth, pcp, lsd, etc? While we are at it, lets just do away with the entire judicial code, people ignore the laws anyway don't they?

As I wrote: "What would you propose to do that hasn't been tried already? If it's just more of the same, that's not cutting it."

I wouldn't write off the entire judicial code, just those parts that generate profits for organized crime, generate funds for our islamofascist enemies, create more hostility and foreign policy dilemmas from Afghanistan to Bolivia, with many countries in between, corrupt law enforcement and cause less respect for our Constitution with the rights that it is supposed to guarantee.

IMHO, if there was ever a fools errand, it's the war on drugs as it is currently constituted. It was promoting a nanny/police state even before September 11, 2001. It has corrupted enough branches of government, if not all of them, so thoroughly that physicians are now brought to court if they are arbitrarily deemed to prescribe too little or too much. The DEA now de facto practices medicine.

The current arrangement that permits law enforcement to do almost anything it wants to, especially because it's for the children, is nothing more than the alcohol prohibition on steroids and exponentially worse. It's a law enforcement full employment program with unconstitutional property seizures without due process and a simultaneous war on guns.

The discussion has become so distorted that folks can't see the forest for the trees. It's generally recognized that the prohibition of coca and opium led to the black market distribution of the more expensive and concentrated derivatives, i.e. cocaine and heroin. Hallucinogens were also available naturally. Chemistry is here to stay. All other things being equal including criminal penalties, criminals tend to maximize profits. There's more bang for the buck with a concentrated product.

IMHO, I think most would agree that their increased cost led to intravenous drug abuse which also happens to spread disease either directly by needle sharing or having sexual relations. Yet when any politician or public health advocate proposes needle exchange programs, which have routinely demonstrated decreased incidence in the spread of HIV/AIDS, they are routinely denounced by political opportunists of almost all stripes.

The Founding Fathers had the wisdom to recognize the folly that is human nature when they wrote the Constitution for a federal government with limited powers. IMHO, if they were here today, they would congratulate themselves for the foresight to have written the Second Amendment in order to secure the liberty that they originally sought when they affirmed to, "mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor," in the Declaration of Independence.

"Those who would sacrifice essential liberties for a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."- Benjamin Franklin

I can see sacrificing some liberties temporarily because we are at war, but not forever because fools might kill themselves by their own hands. Rant off.

29 posted on 07/06/2006 1:41:26 PM PDT by neverdem (May you be in heaven a half hour before the devil knows that you're dead.)
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To: neverdem
Wow, what a rant. LOL.

Do you have problems with city, state, local laws against opiate drug usage?

30 posted on 07/06/2006 1:54:53 PM PDT by AxelPaulsenJr (Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.)
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To: AxelPaulsenJr
Do you have problems with city, state, local laws against opiate drug usage?

Not as much, but I still think they cause about as much trouble and corruption as the harm they may prevent. I just don't think you can legislate morality with vice laws.

That said, I was disappointed with SCOTUS in the Lawrence v. Texas from a public health point of view re: HIV/AIDS. They didn't even look at it from that perspective, yet the gov't restricts liberties from the public health point of view even when the science is bogus, i.e. environmental tobacco smoke.

31 posted on 07/06/2006 2:18:28 PM PDT by neverdem (May you be in heaven a half hour before the devil knows that you're dead.)
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To: neverdem
.......I just don't think you can legislate morality with vice laws.

Well imho that leaves only the influence of religion on people. And with that influence steadily fading in our society, I fear the worst.

Shudder......I hate to think of a free, open and totally unfettered drug taking society. I wonder if anyone will work at all, other than to steal to satisfy their next fix?

32 posted on 07/07/2006 6:50:35 AM PDT by AxelPaulsenJr (Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.)
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To: neverdem

If someone wants to destroy their life with a controlled substance, what’s it to me? As long as they are adults, understand the consequences of their actions, and break no other laws I don’t think the state should directly interfere. It’s their body and they can do with it what they wish. Legalize hard drugs and treat them like Alcohol or Tobacco.

If someone chooses death over life – and let’s face it, that’s what a heroin addict does – I can lament that decision, but I can’t change it.


33 posted on 07/07/2006 7:21:46 AM PDT by Gerfang
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To: AxelPaulsenJr
Well imho that leaves only the influence of religion on people. And with that influence steadily fading in our society, I fear the worst.

Every time I hear or read stories, they say the U.S. is one of the most religious countries in the entire world.

Here's a Google of polls united states believe belief in God

Recent polling by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press and the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life found that 96% of the public says they believe in God or some form of Supreme Being, roughly the same number as in a 1965 survey cited in the Time piece.

Take heart! Don't be discouraged because the left and the aetheists still get the lion's share of media attention. They can't help but give doom and gloom, not to mention treason.

34 posted on 07/07/2006 11:47:29 AM PDT by neverdem (May you be in heaven a half hour before the devil knows that you're dead.)
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