20 Ways the War on Drugs is Far Worse than the Actual Drugs

in #marijuana8 years ago (edited)

I don’t like drugs, but the drug war is worse. Here are 20 reasons why.

1. Most of the problems people associate with drugs are actually caused by the war on drugs.

2. Prohibition is not effective, addiction and drug abuse have stayed the same since the inception of the war on drugs.

Source: http://www.thewire.com/national/2012/10/chart-says-war-drugs-isnt-working/57913/

3. A basic understanding of economics will allow you to see that the supply is not going to be hindered if the demand never decreases, which it never does.

4. Prohibition opens the market for more dangerous synthetic drugs like flakka, spice and bath salts. People don’t want to pop on drug tests or be arrested so they use these drugs instead.

Source: http://bit.ly/2bBmyT4

5. Science shows that punishment is the worst thing for addicts and it drives the vast majority of people further into their addiction.

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mHMBJRShji4

6. There is a stronger connection between childhood abuse and addiction than there is with obesity and diabetes.

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iqex2BvRK18

7. Nearly every individual drug has been made illegal by the government demonizing a minority class of people. 

8. The words cannabis and hemp were changed to “marijuana” and reefer madness was born. The government colluded with media to build the public hysteria about killer blacks, Mexicans, and jazz musicians. It was later criminalized further to target black people and anti-war “hippies.”

Jazz musicians: http://bit.ly/1njPS4E

Hippies : http://bit.ly/1T6QaZS

9. Cocaine was made illegal to target blacks, and police started using more firepower, overnight, because of the “crazed negro” propaganda. 

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C-dS8Ogx37Q

10. Ecstasy was blamed on homosexuals in the 80’s and made illegal without any scientific evidence of its harmful effects. 

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ambhaX86cc

11. From the beginning, the drug laws have benefitted the cartels and gangs more than anyone.

Source: http://bit.ly/1nmfIVA

12. The nation's first drug laws were bought and paid for by the cartels.

Source: https://www.facebook.com/endthedrugwarprotest/videos/2057780601114073/

13. The government has been caught on all levels (CIA, DEA, state & local law enforcement) working with the drug cartels and gangs.

CIA - https://theintercept.com/2014/09/25/managing-nightmare-cia-media-destruction-gary-webb/ 

DEA - http://www.businessinsider.com/the-us-government-and-the-sinaloa-cartel-2014-1

State & Local: http://thefreethoughtproject.com/officer-year-sentenced-30-years-prison-providing-guns-drug-cartel/

14. The drug war is the main source of corruption in law enforcement as a whole. Civil asset forfeiture is a racket, and police now steal more property and cash than all the criminals combined.

Source: http://bit.ly/210t6Pc 

15. There are more people incarcerated for drugs today than all prisoners in America in 1980. 

Source: http://sentencingproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/Trends-in-US-Corrections.pdf

16. Having a non-violent drug offense on your record can keep you from getting a job, a place to live, or even keep you from getting college financial assistance.

17. Blacks and whites use drugs at about the same rate, yet African-Americans are 4-5 times more likely to be convicted of drug possession.

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WiyvNIn6Zbc

18. Homicide clearance rates (solved murders) are near all-time lows. This is likely due to the incentives the drug war creates for individual cops to go after low-level drug offenders in order to receive promotions. These incentives placed by federal grants to state and local police departments makes busting drug users priority over spending time solving violent crimes. Due to the hyper-violent, state-sanctioned war on drugs, the average member of the community increasingly sees their local law enforcers as their potential persecutors and punishers, which closes the conversation between the community and police, making it more difficult to solve homicide cases. 

Source:

19. Law enforcement says they need expanding militarized SWAT units so they can be used for active shooter/hostage/barricade scenarios. In reality, the majority of SWAT deployments are used to combat the drug war. SWAT is deployed for the reasons named above only 7% of the time. 

Source: http://bit.ly/1jRe8Df

20. Other countries have experimented with decriminalization and legalization techniques that work much more effectively than the punishment-based war on drugs. This “do no harm” approach other countries are using is much more effective and much cheaper. 

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wJUXLqNHCaI

Sort:  

There are some people in this world that would find all kind of pretexts just to initiate a war.

The "war" on drugs costs billions with spending on Police, courts, prisons and not forgetting medical due to dirty/mixed drugs due to greedy dealers and "Legal" highs.
Yet if the coin was flipped, Governments would not only "save" the above, but would now make millions through taxes and freeing up police and courts to deal with "real" criminals. (Start with Bankers)
And not forgetting Governments would now have funds to "help" the hardened drug addict who wanted help with walk-in centres, where they could book themselfs in for a few weeks to get the help they need.
All in all a lot more winners in Legalizing drugs, and don't forget the youngsters out there who have criminal records for just having a few spliffs.

Governments control drugs. Why do we have soldiers guarding poppy fields? Dare I ask, oh yes I do! When they are illegal they are more valuable. This is good for dealers.

Don't forget that non violent drug offenders get thrown in prison with real criminals and come out of prison a criminal. It would be better to stick them in a rehab clinic.

That is what the "do no harm" approach is about.

We need to stand in solidarity against these victimless crimes that are ruining our lives and degrading our neighborhoods. We only seem to want to empower the cartels, and that has to make you wonder.

The war on drugs is the problem. It is responsible for so much of the police state, violence, and corruption. Until it ends...nothing will change. Sadly, BLM, and others in the so-called police accountability movement refuse to even address it.

Let's stop criminals stealing money from you by having other criminals steal money from you. -- What could go wrong?

Recently a federal court of appeals also upheld laws that would ban the ownership of firearms for medical marijuana card holders. I have put together an informative piece describing how to continue enjoying your 2nd Amendment rights regardless of the draconian drug laws the federal government continues to enforce, which can be read here.

This post has been linked to from another place on Steem.

Learn more about linkback bot v0.3

Upvote if you want the bot to continue posting linkbacks for your posts. Flag if otherwise. Built by @ontofractal

This is so true, it is sad that our governments around the world are so closed minded that they can't see that some substances they have prohibited have medicinal/therapeutic values and that the drug war is a conflict against chemicals which will never be won.

The government has to help people addicted to drugs. We should not convict somebody who is addicted. We should help. That could save so many lives.