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Topic: Former Latin American leaders urge world to end war on drugs "disaster" (Read 340 times)

legendary
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Only the American's can really decide when the war ends as they are pumping all the money into it. They are slowly legalizing cannabis in some states, which will help break down some of the misconceptions but ultimately the high price of drugs like cocaine is driven by the legal penalties that come with getting caught with it. Some drugs are so nasty they must be restricted. It also happens to keep a lot of soldiers and border patrol staff in jobs, so there are all sorts of elements involved but it does need to stop.
legendary
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minds.com/Wilikon
Free drugs for all Americans, It is clear that the War on Drugs is an attack on a person's pursuit of happiness.


Too bad about all the kids used as mules to bring that happiness...

hero member
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Free drugs for all Americans, It is clear that the War on Drugs is an attack on a person's pursuit of happiness.
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South America has really not been able to get a foot hold with this drug war. The gangs are only powerful because there is little else in some of these areas. Which in turn makes no one set up shop to do business,knowing the gangs will shake them down. Its a endless loop that gets deeper each time it goes around.
Whole prison system is built on drug offenses,so we would need to break the prison guard union and the people making money off prisons to break the cycle. Sure there are tons of spin off businesses that are only around because of drug abuse.
legendary
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Former Latin American leaders urge world to end war on drugs "disaster"

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/mar/11/former-latin-american-leaders-urge-world-to-end-war-on-drug

<< Three former presidents of Latin American nations have urged the world to end the "unmitigated disaster" of the war on drugs, and denounced the United Nations for secrecy and shortsightedness ahead of the first special assembly on drugs in 18 years.

"Outdated drug policies around the world have resulted in soaring drug-related violence, overstretched criminal justice systems, runaway corruption and mangled democratic institutions", wrote Fernando Henrique Cardoso, César Gaviria and Ernesto Zedillo, respectively the former presidents of Brazil, Colombia and Mexico, in an op-ed in the Los Angeles Times. The former presidents said that experts, statistics and a review of their "own failures on this front while in office" led them to "an unavoidable conclusion: the 'war on drugs' is an unmitigated disaster".

While in office in the 1990s, the three leaders fought the drug trade by the usual, often violent, methods. Cardoso tried to eradicate marijuana production in Brazil, Zedillo began war against Mexican cartels that exploded in the second half of the decade, and Gaviria fought Pablo Escobar's cocaine empire. Escobar tried to assassinate Gaviria in a plane bombing, and the president's administration killed the drug lord in 1993, a killing that Gaviria called "a step toward the end of drug trafficking" and proof "it is possible to defeat evil".

But the three ex-presidents have spent the 2000s calling for decriminalization and regulation of drugs, and in 2009 Cardoso wrote for the Observer that decriminalization "breaks the silence about the drug problem". Drugs are "not first and foremost a matter for the criminal justice system", he wrote. "Repressive policies towards drug users are firmly rooted in prejudice, fear and ideological visions, rather than in cold and hard assessment of the realities of drug abuse."  >>
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