Troll Kingdom

This is a sample guest message. Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

War on Drugs

SuN

.:~**~.~**~.~**~:.
http://www.theage.com.au/opinion/politics/ending-the-futile-war-on-drugs-20101226-197v8.html

Ending the futile war on drugs
Fernando Henrique Cardoso
December 27, 2010


Prohibition has failed and we must redirect our efforts to the harm caused by drugs, and to reducing consumption.

The war on drugs is a lost war, and 2011 is the time to move away from a punitive approach in order to pursue a new set of policies based on public health, human rights, and commonsense. These were the core findings of the Latin American Commission on Drugs and Democracy that I convened, together with former presidents Ernesto Zedillo of Mexico and Cesar Gaviria of Colombia.

We became involved with this issue for a compelling reason: the violence and corruption associated with drug trafficking represents a major threat to democracy in our region. This sense of urgency led us to evaluate current policies and look for viable alternatives. The evidence is overwhelming. The prohibitionist approach, based on repression of production and criminalisation of consumption, has clearly failed.

After 30 years of massive effort, all prohibition has achieved is to shift areas of cultivation and drug cartels from one country to another (the so-called balloon effect). Latin America remains the world's largest exporter of cocaine and marijuana. Thousands of young people continue to lose their lives in gang wars. Drug lords rule by fear over entire communities.

We ended our report with a call for a paradigm shift. The illicit drug trade will continue as long as there is demand for drugs. Instead of sticking to failed policies that do not reduce the profitability of the drug trade - and thus its power - we must redirect our efforts to the harm caused by drugs to people and societies, and to reducing consumption.

Some kind of drug consumption has existed throughout history in the most diverse cultures. Today, drug use occurs throughout society. All kinds of people use drugs for all kinds of reasons: to relieve pain or experience pleasure, to escape reality or enhance their perception of it.

But the approach recommended in the commission's statement does not imply complacency. Drugs are harmful to health. They undermine users' decision-making capacity. Needle-sharing spreads HIV/AIDS and other diseases. Addiction can lead to financial ruin and domestic abuse, especially of children.

Cutting consumption as much as possible must, therefore, be the main goal. But this requires treating drug users not as criminals to be incarcerated, but as patients to be cared for. Several countries are pursuing policies that emphasise prevention and treatment rather than repression - and refocusing their repressive measures on fighting the real enemy: organised crime.

The crack in the global consensus around the prohibitionist approach is widening. A growing number of countries in Europe and Latin America are moving away from a purely repressive model.

Portugal and Switzerland are compelling examples of the positive impact of policies centred on prevention, treatment, and harm reduction. Both countries have decriminalised drug possession for personal use. Instead of leading to an explosion of drug consumption, as many feared, the number of people seeking treatment increased and overall drug use fell.

When the policy approach shifts from criminal repression to public health, drug users are more open to seeking treatment. Decriminalisation of consumption also reduces dealers' power to influence and control consumers' behaviour.

In our report, we recommend evaluating from a public-health standpoint - and on the basis of the most advanced medical science - the merits of decriminalising possession of cannabis for personal use.

Marijuana is by far the most widely used drug. There is a growing body of evidence suggesting that the harm it causes is at worst similar to the harm caused by alcohol or tobacco. Moreover, most of the damage associated with marijuana use - from the indiscriminate incarceration of consumers to the violence and corruption associated with the drug trade - is the result of current prohibitionist policies.

Decriminalisation of cannabis would thus be an important step forward in approaching drug use as a health problem and not as a matter for the criminal justice system.

To be credible and effective, decriminalisation must be combined with robust prevention campaigns. The steep and sustained drop in tobacco consumption in recent decades shows that public information and prevention campaigns can work when based on messages that are consistent with the experience of those whom they target. Tobacco was deglamorised, taxed, and regulated; it has not been banned.

No country has devised a comprehensive solution to the drug problem. But a solution need not require a stark choice between prohibition and legalisation. The worst prohibition is the prohibition to think. Now, at last, the taboo that prevented debate has been broken. Alternative approaches are being tested and must be carefully reviewed.

At the end of the day, the capacity of people to evaluate risks and make informed choices will be as important to regulating the use of drugs as more humane and efficient laws and policies. Yes, drugs erode people's freedom. But it is time to recognise that repressive policies towards drug users, rooted as they are in prejudice, fear, and ideology, may be no less a threat to liberty.

Fernando Henrique Cardoso, a former president of Brazil (1995-2002), is co-chairman of the Latin American Commission on Drugs and Democracy, and convener of the Global Commission on Drug Policy. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2010.
 
A good article Fernando. Unfortunately, the bible bashers and the moral zealots have the inability to see it your way. With my experience from many years ago, I can certainly agree with you. It is the illegality of drugs that's causing the major problems, not the health risks. When Nixon first 'discovered' drug use in Vietnam vets, their first response was to treat it as a health problem and it worked. That was until he was losing the '72 election, he turned it around to be an enforcement issue and the 'war' was lost. Heroin was available on prescription in the UK until 1973 when it was banned by the UK government under pressure from Nixon.

It is time we had a wide ranging debate about drug use in this country and one that is untainted bu a moralistic viewpoint. Let the Productivity Commission look into the costs to the community of the illegality of drugs without any 'moral' angle in the terms of reference. You could see the corruption, violence, illegal profits, health issues, prostitution, burglaries and all the other ill effects of illegal drugs have a value put on them. Then we can see if the moral standpoint is worth taking in regards to the cost of it.
 
At last, some common sense from an influential leader. Areas which have become dependent for income on drug production are universally miserable, lawless places, where the drug income does not filter down to the local producers, but is retained by the thug leaders of the cartels. Laissez faire economics in its logical outcome of total lack of regulation.

As for the users themselves, if addicts they should be treated with compassion and medical help, it has been proven that drug abuse changes the pathways in the brain, so it's not a simple matter of willpower or morals to overcome addiction. If social uses, tax the drugs and treat them the same as alcohol ie do not operate heavy machinery or drive.

We will all live in a more peaceful and productive society.
 
LOL

After being involved in the "PsyTrance Scene" The biggest consumers of LSD, Meth, MDMA, THC, one thing I have realised is the drugs, don't do any immediate harm. (More people died from GHB or Asthma at big festivals) but the culture does.

You start to hang out with your new party friends. Nobody aspires to own a home, raise a family, and 10 years later you have not achieved anything. You are basically sucked into a cult of false friends and weekend fun.

Your old friends and family don't relate to you anymore, because the LSD has given you insights that make you feel like you are too intelligent for them. They just don't see the world the way you do.

They are fun times, but sometimes you have to get off the "Merry Go Round" Some people dont. These are the old hippies you see at festivals. Say hi to them.
Leave the Aliens alone
 
It isn't just the War On Drugs that is being lost.. the War On Terror, the War on Poverty, War on Alcohol (Prohibition) and so many other wars are being lost/have been lost. The wars in Iraq had no winners, Vietnam was lost long ago.. Afghanistan will be a no-win situation.

There is a pattern here...maybe we can learn something??

The common denominator in all this warmongering is the USA.

This country has been involved in foreign adventures, police actions, invasions, wars etc on average every 18-24 months since the country was founded.

No-one is saying that we decriminalise and make drugs freely available. Research over the decades shows that taking the crime out of self harm (drugs or alcohol!!) will produce a better outcome for society than the current `zero tolerance' approach.

To all the shockjock audience members out there frothing at the mouth about this tired article done a thousand times before do some research and get over your loony predetermined positions.
 
To extend Cardoso's logic, then, the prohibiton on murder, rapre, theft and genocide has also failed. It is a flawed argument to sugest that because a course of action has not been 100% successful (i.e., 'perfect') then it is a failure. The experiment with decriminalisation in Portugal over the last 10 years is less than convincing, with drug use continuing to rise- though they are now much cheaper!

Illicit drugs destroy lives and communities and we must increase the stigma and penalities for use. No one forces someone to take drugs and it is not the role of the governement to pick up the tab, and the pieces, once they have destroyed themselves. This is not a 'health issue', it is a moral issue: choose to take drugs, then pay the consequences.
 
Drugs have always been available and humans have always used them so it doesnt seem a war on drugs as an insurgancy against the norm, after the war, they'll still be around.
brew your own, grow your own if only they'd leave you alone..
 
Its time for the re-introduction of the death penalty.

"Yeah. I know what you mean. When I was last in Singapore there were junkies causing trouble on public transport, beggars in the streets, drug fuelled violence every night. I really felt unsafe on the streets."

Yeah, last time I was in Singapore, I too thought "Exactly, an overstrict justice system where many liberties are traded for a sense of security is always a good idea! And Zero tolerance policies are also great, because they remove that pesky need to think!"

And yes, bring back the death penalty, to long has this country attempted to solve problems in non-barbaric ways and through attempts at rehabilitation. It's time we go back in time, and just remove groups we don't like from the gene pool, so we can turn our backs and pretend everything is just swell!
 
The demonisation of cannabis was a well concerted campaign in the U.S. during the 30's that had nothing to do with the adverse consequences of marijuana on health.
To solve the issue once and for all, governments should openly admit that they have been lying to the people for the past 70 years - which it will surely happen as soon as pigs start flying.
These governments are still burning billions of (our) dollars without achieving even the tiniest of successes and are itching to find a plausible cock-and-bull story to reverse the situation so to stop or minimise wasting money and, at the same time, find a new source of revenue.
Furthermore, even creatures with the brain of a baby clam know that the more something is forbidden, the more it becomes sought - with the inevitable consequence of promoting criminality.
The use of cannabis has been with us for eons (I doubt that Indians put tobacco on their pipe-of-peace); it might be as harmful as tobacco (a heavily taxed and legal drug of addiction), but never as dangerous to the self and to Society as alcohol (another heavily taxed and legal drug) is.
This lack of coherence shows the extent of hypocrisy of politicians, moralists, religious bigots and all the rest of morons who, while trying to climb mirrors, dismiss the issue on grounds that we do not need another drug (then, how about removing alcohol or tobacco from the list ? )
Considering their obtusity, I'd prefer to be the judge of what I like and what I want.
 
Humanity has to have something to hang it's hatred on... as well as attract those hungering for the "thrill" that they seem unable to find from living. If it's not going to be "drugs" (whatever they are - given anything taken in large enough amounts will achieve similar outcomes to taking 'chemicals' considered illicit, and that the body even produces it's own opiates!!). The real war that needs to be fought is against ourselves by ourselves - against our own stupidity, our own blind irrationality, inanity and our own often expressed outright inability to use the one thing that's supposed to make our species 'superior' to every other species living on our planet... our intelligence. The so-called "war on drugs" is the perfect example of a totally emotive knee-jerk reaction by a small group of very loud vendetta minded individuals who feel driven or compelled to foist their hatred upon something amorphous enough that they don't have to look into their own inabilities and failings - either intellectually or as human beings. Democracy sucks when it is forced to travel down a path it'd rather not by such loud, grandstanding individuals who agitate and browbeat normally sane individuals into acquiescing to their vengeance driven irrationality... oh well: that's life! This particular problem hasn't been solved in over 3,000 years and it doesn't seem like it's going to be resolved any time soon. It's the sort of issue guaranteed to force one to some sort of drug just to cope with it's never ending nature!!!
 
Top