There's something wrong with human nature.

Quote from William Rennick:

Rearden, I've been around here a while and by some of your posts always thought you were the creme of the ET crop. I have been reading through this legnthy thread, paying special attention to your posts.

I'm going to be frank here as this is pretty damned sad. You are such a smart guy, apparently too smart. Why in the hell do you need to stay fucked up, and then say that drugs are a victimless crime. TELL THAT TO YOUR LOVED ONES YOU SELFISH JACKASS. It's attitudes like yours that lure innocent little ones to think it's ok and cool to get high, always craving a new high as their addiction takes over. I agree that drug pushers and users don't belong in jail. Pushers should be executed, and users belong in boot camp for a year on first offense.

You being an atheist when there is so much evidence of a creator shows just how lost you are. This is America, and many have died to give you the freedom to make the choices you are promoting. I wish you well and hope that someday you find the Light.

Rennick out:cool:

why does the creator allow good people to get lost? HE could be a drug pusher himself...

"Religion is the opiate of the people"
Karl Shortie Marx Out :cool:
 
The problem with your entire argument is that the government is NOT profiting by any stretch in the war on drugs, it is infact one of the bigger drains to our economy that is out there.

If they were to legalise it, tax it, and quit wasting money prosecuting people for it we would be far better off.

Quote from kut2k2:

Unfortunately that may not be the case. During Prohibition (of drinking alcohol), the only people who profited were the bootleggers, mainly organized crime syndicates. But thanks to the "war on drugs", the guvmint has figured out how to profit through asset confiscation. Furthermore the prisons have become profit centers (Hi, Bob Barker!) so there is actually a money incentive to send drug users to prisons rather than rehabilitation centers.

Did you know there's a natural and rapid drug cure called ibogaine which isn't available here because the pharms won't be able to make huge profits from it?

Our justice system is fucked up. :mad:
 
<b>Has drug prohibition finally begun to collapse under the weight of its own stupidity? </b>

New Head of Pro-Legalization Police Group Praises Congressional Actions Against "War on Drugs"
July 28, 2010

Former Baltimore Cop Saw Colleagues Killed in "Drug War"

WASHINGTON, DC -- As the U.S. House passed separate bills this week to scale back penalties for crack cocaine and to create a <b>commission to reconsider the entire "war on drugs,"</b> a group of pro-legalization police officers, judges and prosecutors announced that it has hired a former Baltimore narcotics cop as its new executive director.

Neill Franklin, a 33-year police veteran who led multi-jurisdictional anti-narcotics task forces for the Maryland State Police and training for the Baltimore Police Department, officially took the helm of the legalization group, Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP), on July 1.

"The 'war on drugs' has done nothing to reduce drug use," said Franklin. "But this failed prohibition policy has achieved some results: far too many cops killed in action, billions of tax dollars wasted, powerful and well-funded drug cartels and out-of-control violence in our cities. It's great to see our elected representatives finally beginning to address these problems, but there's still a lot more work to be done."

The pro-legalization criminal justice professionals of LEAP are working to change the current debate about the "war on drugs" to help more people understand that current drug policies harm public safety and that only by legalizing and regulating drugs can we actually control them and thereby reduce death, disease, crime and addiction.

To that end, LEAP is actively organizing cops, judges and prosecutors who are campaigning for Proposition 19, the statewide marijuana legalization initiative on California's ballot this November. Representatives of the organization's 100-member speakers bureau have also testified for drug policy reform measures in recent months in places like the District of Columbia, Hawaii, Iowa, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Virginia and Washington.

"When my good friend Ed Toatley was killed in the line of fire during an undercover drug purchase, Maryland lost one of the best narcotics cops in our state's history," said Franklin. "It is in his honor, and in the names of all the good cops whose lives have needlessly been lost in this failed 'drug war,' that I will work with LEAP to change these deadly drug laws."

<b>On Tuesday the House passed H.R. 5143, which would create a blue ribbon commission to study the criminal justice system from top to bottom and recommend reforms. Sen. Jim Webb, sponsor of the Senate companion bill, said that the commission should study drug legalization.</b> On Wednesday, the House passed S. 1789, which would lower the disparity between sentences for crack cocaine and powder cocaine from it's current 100-to-1 ratio down to 18-to-1. That bill unanimously passed the Senate in March.

Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP) and its 30,000 supporters represent police, prosecutors, judges, FBI/DEA agents, US marshals and others from around the world who want to legalize and regulate all drugs after fighting on the front lines of the "war on drugs" and learning firsthand that prohibition only serves to worsen addiction and violence. More info at http://www.CopsSayLegalizeDrugs.com.

http://copssaylegalize.blogspot.com/2010/07/press-release-new-head-of-pro.html
 
Every day there are hundreds of stories in the newspaper – some of them are unusual stories about ordinary people. Sometimes those stories show us something about human nature, by which we mean ‘ways of behaving, thinking and feeling that are shared by most people and are considered to be normal'. Let's look at the stories here today from the point of view of human nature.
 
"...which would lower the disparity between sentences for crack cocaine and powder cocaine from it's current 100-to-1 ratio down to 18-to-1."

LOL at "18-to-1"
:(
 
Back
Top