I hoped I was implying that. It seems that some people are under the notion that we can control something by passing laws. The "war on drugs" has been a massive failure. Other than throwing more money, technology, and policing/incarceration, there has never been a serious look at legalizing.
In the US, it's political suicide to advocate any lessening of the drug laws.
As a tax paying salary guy, it perturbs me that a large amount of untaxed money is flowing to criminal organization both local, national, and international.
It also perturbs me to watch sanctimonious Cops episodes when they bust users caught in police sting operations. Especially the part when the cop preaches to the busted user, playing up to the camera.
Charlie (free the pot 10,000,000) Monoxide
I agree with you 100%, Charlie. The "war on drugs" has gone about as well as the "war on poverty," and the "war on terror." I amazes me that it never occurs to us NOT to declare war on anything - we might then win.
Here's a link to a site that pretty much tells it all:
In the early part of this century the moral majority tried the penal solution to the use of the drug alcohol; and fourteen years later that law was repealed. This lesson is being re-taught with horrible consequences. The War on Drugs: . . . .
1). Has reduced the U.S. industries of drug cultivation and manufacturing to a fraction of what they were in the 70s.
2). Billions of dollars now flow out of this country to purchase drugs at greatly inflated prices.
3). Approximately 1/2 of all organized crime’ s revenues come from drugs.
4). Drug profits turn ordinary citizens into criminals. People because of association, need, and drug usage have become involved in the drug trade, but whom are otherwise law abiding.
5). Increased enforcement has caused the replacement at the top of the non—violent middle-class entrepreneurial smugglers, dealers, and manufacturers with the more violent lower class participants. In the seventies those coming of good families dominated the top position in the United States drug business. By the 90’s that was no longer true.
6). During the 70s when enforcement was increased, smuggler began bring in huge quantities of cocaine, because measured in dollars it occupies one-hundredth the space of marijuana. With decreasing availability of pot and an increasing availability of cocaine, sales of cocaine, the far more pernicious drug, skyrocketed. Violence also rose as South American Cartels set up shop in this country."
http://skeptically.org/recdrugs/id9.html
____________
And another site discussing the economic problems:
Economic Consequences of the War on Drugs
Compiled by Anonymous, Drug Policy Alliance. 2002.
How much does the drug war cost American taxpayers?
$40 billion per year and climbing. In 2000, the National Drug Control budget exceeds $18 billion(1) and the states will spend upwards of $20 billion more.(2) This is a dramatic increase since 1980, when federal spending was roughly $1 billion and state spending just a few times that.(3) Between FY1991 and FY2000 more than $140 billion(4) has been spent at the federal level to curtail drug abuse, yet drugs remain cheap, easy to obtain and with higher purity levels than before the war on drugs was initiated.
What competes with the drug war for budget money?
Education. Because prisons and universities generally occupy the portion of a state's budget that is neither mandated by federal requirements nor driven by population, they often must "fight it out" for funding. As state governments sink millions into corrections to house America's exploding population of incarcerated drug law violators - now nearly 500,000 nationally(5) - education loses.
From 1987 to 1998 state spending on corrections increased by 30% while spending on higher education decreased by 18.2%.(6)
State prison budgets are growing twice as fast as spending on public colleges and universities.(7)
http://www.drugpolicy.org/library/factsheets/economiccons/fact_economic.cfm