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Poppy field in Afghanistan 20.02.2011, 03:13 1 comment

International synergy needed to win war on drugs

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Afghanistan: Afghan drug addicts smoke heroin in the city of Herat. (AFP Photo / Shah Marai) 29.03.2011, 16:01

Russia’s war on Afghan heroin heats up

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Medvedev-Obama
Mexican President Felipe Calderon 03.03.2011, 19:56 3 comments

Calderon to Obama: Get your S**T together!

Mexican President Felipe Calderon and US President Barack Obama meet to discuss cracking down on US illegal drug consumption and arms sales as they try to iron out the details of an ongoing drug war alliance.

06.01.2011, 22:40 14 comments

CIA funnels drugs into poor US neighborhoods

There is a long and expanding history of American tax payer dollars being used to help certain people get rich off of illicit drug sales.

13.01.2011, 09:55 1 comment

“American government allowed Nicaraguan drug-flow into US” – ex-drug dealer

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Activists throw water-proof red dye into drug pushers' faces 24.05.2011, 09:02 8 comments

A scarlet letter for drug dealers

Although Russian authorities are stepping up the war on drugs – for some progress has been lagging. Activists have taken the fight into their own hands – marking “sellers of death” with scarlet paint to serve as a warning to drug dealers.

AFP Photo / Shah Marai 09.12.2010, 09:49 6 comments

“If we destroy opium poppy fields, farmers will join the Taliban”

The battle against drug production in Afghanistan is intensifying, as a new player – the Central-Asian Drugs Quartet has been founded in Moscow, with Russia, Pakistan and Tajikistan pledging to support Kabul.

25.12.2010, 07:47 6 comments

Afghanistan’s export of mass destruction

Afghanistan, the world's largest producer of heroin, does not only make other states suffer from its deadly export – the country itself is flooded with cheap drugs.

Patients in a cafeteria of the City Without Drugs rehabilitation center in the Russian city of Ekaterinburg (RIA Novosti / Pavel Lisicin) 28.04.2011, 20:57 2 comments

Drug addicts should not be treated like animals - social worker

Russian society needs more tolerance and social acceptance, says Tatyana Zadirako, the head of United Way of Russia charity, adding that the presidential drug initiative will not work without the involvement of the entire population.

Report: Drug war failed, legalize Marijuana

Published: 02 June, 2011, 19:26

Drug war failed, legalize Marijuana

Drug war failed, legalize Marijuana

TAGS: Crime, Health, Politics, Drugs, Law


A report by the Global Commission on Drug Policy concluded the global war on drugs has been an abysmal failure and that governments should consider legalizing marijuana and other controlled substances.

The commission, made up of experts, former heads of state, a former UN secretary-general, and business moguls, found that the drug war has done more harm than good.

"[The] global war on drugs has failed, with devastating consequences for individuals and societies around the world," the report said. “Political leaders and public figures should have the courage to articulate publicly what many of them acknowledge privately: that the evidence overwhelmingly demonstrates that repressive strategies will not solve the drug problem, and that the war on drugs has not, and cannot, be won.”

The commission is made up of 19 members, boasting such individuals as former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan and Ronald Reagan administration and Richard Nixon administration official George P. Schultz. Others include former US Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volcker, and former presidents of Mexico, Brazil and Colombia, business mogul Richard Branson and George Papandreou, the current prime minister of Greece.

The report argued that governments should end the criminalization of some substances and/or decriminalize them as opposed to punishing those who use controlled substances at no harm to others. Nations should experiment with legal models that undermine organized crime, but legalize drugs and allow for health and treatment services for drug-users in need of such services. It argued that legalization would hurt crime and helping users as opposed to criminalizing them is the better methodology.

The overall position of the report was for governments to seek new approaches to drug usage that cuts down on crime but improves overall societal health and economic wellbeing – legalization options, they found, were the best way forward. Much of the report targeted the United States, citing America’s anti-drug policies are particularly harmful. The US must lead the change in global policy by changing it’s own laws, the commission report indicated.

"We hope this country [the US] at least starts to think there are alternatives," former Colombian president Cesar Gaviria told The Associated Press. "We don't see the U.S. evolving in a way that is compatible with our [countries'] long-term interests."

The White House has already scoffed at the report, ruling out its recommendations. Gil Kerlikowske, the Obama administrations drug czar called the report ‘misguided’.

"Drug addiction is a disease that can be successfully prevented and treated. Making drugs more available – as this report suggests – will make it harder to keep our communities healthy and safe," Rafael Lemaitre, spokesperson for the US Office of National Drug Control Policy, reiterated.

The US Office of National Drug Control Policy claimed current US laws and drug policy approaches are working, regardless of what the report shows. Lemaitre argued that US drug use is down compared to 30 years ago – a sign the office cites as success – even though the report was on global drug use and the US backed global war on drugs, not merely US consumption.

The commission report found that global opiate usage rose 34.5 percent, with cocaine up by 27 percent. The use of cannabis or marijuana climbed 8.5 percent.

+14 (14 votes)
 
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RT vs. the mainstream media 02.06.2011, 02:14 13 comments

RT vs. the mainstream media

In an interview on NPR a guest from Globalmediawars.com, Nathanael Massey, described RT's coverage for on "On the Media," as entertainment news without substance.

A Ku Klux Klan (KKK) robe (AFP Photo / Getty Images) 02.06.2011, 19:55 11 comments

KKK running for Congress

Montana Republican congressional candidate John Abarr was a former organizer for the Ku Klux Klan.

US Election 2012
dc March 03, 2012, 16:55
+1

Mike Bonventre alcohol has the exact same outcome in the industries you describe, But legal and taxed, We're intelligent enough to avoid work intoxicated as with 'are you ready' with WEED!. legalize it create employment, revenue and save billions in a system that locks up a person with weed, a system that creates gangs , drug cartells and certainly will prevent weapons and marijuana border crossing that have wreaked havoc on the south west and many Cities across America. Wake up it's a freedom our forfathers had no problems with, At what point do we accept or not accept the loss of our freedoms.

Mike (unregistered) March 02, 2012, 21:01
+4

For Mike Bonventre it seems to me as though you think your job is in jeopardy if it becomes legal. Businesses can still make an antidrug policy as many have done for cigarette smokers and cigarettes are legal. What it all really compares to is when alchohol was illegal. Gangs formed to aquire and distribute, same as now. Gangs that trifficked and distributed dispersed after it became legal. If was made legal many lives would be saved. Our children no longer being forced into ganglife. Most violence comes because drug dealers can't call cops if they got robbed or assaulted. So what do they do? They get a gun or some other weapon to protect themselves. So would you rather people getting killed or take away the need to be that way?

Mike Bonventre September 14, 2011, 19:52
-2

Drug Testing Exposed Now at CreateSpace eStore: https://www.createspace.com/3639885 and Amazon.com. Soon Kindle will be activated