End the Mexican Civil War (on drugs!)
August 17th 2010 12:48
The Mexican government reports that its War on Drugs has killed 28,000 people over the past four years. This ongoing tragedy is undermining Mexico's stability, which is bad news for the United States.
But that's not the only way drug prohibition is hurting us. I urge you to watch this interview with Neill Franklin, the Executive Director of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (under 9 minutes) Really Long Link
The video reveals that the Mexican drug cartels have expanded into 230 U.S. cities. Unsurprisingly, the overwhelming majority of police 911 calls are related to this illegal drug trade. And yet, as our police go from one drug-related 911 call to the next, most violent crimes go unsolved, including . . .
* 60% of rapes
* 73% of robberies
* 88% of auto thefts
* And 37% of murders
Whereas, in 1963, before the War on Drugs, only 9% of murders went unsolved!
Repealing drug prohibition would put an end to narcotics units and place more cops on the street to "do the work that is supposed to be done."
But unsolved crime is not the only danger caused by the Drug War. Our children are particularly at risk . . .
* Criminals don't ask for ID's to verify the age of their customers
* This means that powerful drugs are more available to kids than cigarettes and alcohol
* Criminals don't care about quality control, so the black market substances that lure our kids are more dangerous than they would be if prohibition didn't exist
* And urban, African-American children are at special risk. They are heavily recruited to the drug trade because juvenile offenders get lesser sentences
Whereas in Portugal, which legalized personal drug possession ten years ago . . .
* There was a double-digit drop in drug use by school-age children
* As well as a double-digit drop in AIDS cases
* The stigma has been removed for people seeking treatment
* And there is MORE MONEY for treatment
Even so, President Obama still wants to increase funding for the War on Drugs!
But the facts are clear. Drug prohibition doesn't work. Repeal the federal drug laws. Our communities will be safer and our children will be better off.
But that's not the only way drug prohibition is hurting us. I urge you to watch this interview with Neill Franklin, the Executive Director of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (under 9 minutes) Really Long Link
The video reveals that the Mexican drug cartels have expanded into 230 U.S. cities. Unsurprisingly, the overwhelming majority of police 911 calls are related to this illegal drug trade. And yet, as our police go from one drug-related 911 call to the next, most violent crimes go unsolved, including . . .
* 60% of rapes
* 73% of robberies
* 88% of auto thefts
* And 37% of murders
Whereas, in 1963, before the War on Drugs, only 9% of murders went unsolved!
Repealing drug prohibition would put an end to narcotics units and place more cops on the street to "do the work that is supposed to be done."
But unsolved crime is not the only danger caused by the Drug War. Our children are particularly at risk . . .
* Criminals don't ask for ID's to verify the age of their customers
* This means that powerful drugs are more available to kids than cigarettes and alcohol
* Criminals don't care about quality control, so the black market substances that lure our kids are more dangerous than they would be if prohibition didn't exist
* And urban, African-American children are at special risk. They are heavily recruited to the drug trade because juvenile offenders get lesser sentences
Whereas in Portugal, which legalized personal drug possession ten years ago . . .
* There was a double-digit drop in drug use by school-age children
* As well as a double-digit drop in AIDS cases
* The stigma has been removed for people seeking treatment
* And there is MORE MONEY for treatment
Even so, President Obama still wants to increase funding for the War on Drugs!
But the facts are clear. Drug prohibition doesn't work. Repeal the federal drug laws. Our communities will be safer and our children will be better off.
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