January 21, 2013

Ten Ways the War on Drugs is a Wild Success

For all the evidence of how the War on Drugs has failed society, there’s equally as much evidence of how it is a great success to those who continue to support it. The drug war has many advantages if you wish to control society and expand your empire. It also enriches several industries that would otherwise have a very difficult time staying solvent without it.

Here are ten ways the War on Drugs is a wild success:

Military-Industrial Profits: As the Vietnam War came to an end, it struck fear into the military-industrial machine that enjoyed great profits from that conflict. In a world where contrived enemies were needed to keep a constant funding of weapons, Richard Nixon declared drugs “Public Enemy Number 1″. Thus, domestic armies were erected to combat the illegal drug trade, delivering consistent cash flow to weapons manufacturers. These companies make money, not just from the needs of the DEA, border patrol, and local police forces, but also from drug traffickers. Win-win and profits all around.

Huge Boon to Private Prisons: The private prison industry thrives off long sentences for drug offenders. At least 25% of their profits come from these nonviolent criminals. A great number more are held on “drug related” charges that may have resulted in drug violence. However, the current trend shows that three-quarters of new inmates admitted to state prisons are nonviolent offenders. Private prisons clearly depend on arresting pot smokers and addicts of more severe drugs.

Prevents Higher Unemployment Rates: Imagine if the millions of American currently jailed on drug charges were released into a job market already suffering from real unemployment numbers over 20%. Additionally, if it wasn’t for drugs being illegal, countless people like DEA agents, court staff, prison guards, parole officers, drug dealers, etc would otherwise be unemployed. Thank goodness for the war on drugs, or the U.S. economy would look even worse.

Suppresses Minority Populations: It’s often said that the drug war is a war on minorities: “According to the ACLU, African Americans make up an estimated 15% of drug users, but they account for 37% of those arrested on drug charges, 59% of those convicted and 74% of all drug offenders sentenced to prison. Or consider this: The U.S. has 260,000 people in state prisons on nonviolent drug charges; 183,200 (more than 70%) of them are black or Latino.” So it is a huge success for those who wish to suppress minority populations.

Drives Up Prices: Making any substance illegal will result in much higher prices than a free market would dictate. Especially when there’s a high demand for that substance. In the case of the cannabis plant, which grows like a weed and requires very little value added, the dried flower would virtually be free if it wasn’t for the harsh restrictions and dangers involved in producing and distributing it. These high prices are terrific for drug dealers and even medical marijuana growers opposed legalization in California because it threatened their profits.

Drug Violence Justifies Tough Gun Laws: The violence generated from the prohibition of drugs is reminiscent of the extreme mob violence during the prohibition of alcohol. Prohibition of anything will always create black markets which require firearms to protect banned products. Recently, the U.S. government itself was caught red-handed supplying guns to Mexican drug cartels in their “Fast and Furious” scandal. It’s now proven that the ATF plotted to use Fast and Furious to push for new gun control regulations. Indeed, most street violence is due to turf wars over the drug trade, and tougher gun laws are proposed as the war escalates. It’s wonderful for those who blame violence on guns and wish to restrict them from law-abiding citizens.

Protects Big Pharma Monopolies: No one is happier about the war on drugs than Big Pharma. Their control over the FDA and monopoly of “controlled substances” would be threatened if all drugs were legalized. They want you addicted to their FDA-approved versions of heroin and cocaine, not something you can get on the black market. In turn, they also benefit greatly when the prices of street drugs increase, as they can then inflate the cost of their products. They love the drug war so much they’ve lobbied to extend it to vitamins and supplements.

Allows Proxy Armies: If you want to create an empire by force, but it’s politically disadvantageous to base your army in certain countries, then the global war on drugs is your ticket to supplying troops or creating proxy armies. One of the most recent examples is Costa Rica, a peaceful country in Central America without an army, where the U.S. bribed the government to allow the Navy and Marines to be stationed off the Caribbean coast to fight the war on drugs. In other nations where even this won’t be allowed, the CIA funds and arms one of the drug cartels who then act as their hired enforcers, or they’re used as an excuse for governments to accept U.S. help to combat the enemy they created. In either case, the U.S. sells more arms and trains soldiers to be used upon command.

Keeps Big Banks Flush with Cash: It has long been known that big banks happily launder money for the big drug cartels. According to The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), “Up to 1.5 trillion dollars in drug money are laundered through legal enterprises, accounting for 5% of global GDP.” Take just this year and one bank, Wachovia; who had to pay a slap-on-the-wrist fine for laundering more than $420 billion for Mexican drug cartels. Imagine where the big banks would be without this money, given that they also needed a bailout of over $23 trillion for lack of sufficient deposits to pay for their gambling habits.

Funds CIA Black Ops: Do you ever wonder where the U.S. government gets all that money for their secret “Black Ops” like underground bases, secret wars, corporate takeovers and seed money, etc? It’s been proven over and over that the CIA (and Pentagon) controls a large majority of the illicit drug trade either directly or indirectly through proxies mentioned above. They’ve been caught in the act of shipping in massive amounts of cocaine, while the CIA now openly admits to protecting and facilitating the opium trade in Afghanistan. If it wasn’t for this tremendous profit, the CIA would not be able to build their secret shadow government.

So, as you can see, there are great benefits to the War on Drugs depending what side of the coin you’re on. If you’re a poor pot smoker, well, you’re out of luck. But if you’re the biggest heroin and cocaine dealer in the world and desire a monopoly . . . well, you’ve got the world right where you want it.

 

Source: http://www.activistpost.com/2011/12/10-ways-war-on-drugs-is-wild-success.html

Comments

  1. no comments visible- this is some site!

  2. Yet when I leave a real comment it is not visible

  3. Daniel Whelan says:

    I don’t Doug, perhaps your ‘real comment’ fails to offer anything productive to the discussion.

    This is an interesting article, and I believe it does indeed provide a completely valid explanation for what the decriminalization effort is up against.

    You see a lot of talk about how much the drug war costs us as tax payers, but it’s rare to see the private benefits laid out so clearly.

    Thanks!

    By the way, I don’t think any of this spells doom for decrim efforts, but I do think we have to factor these obvious truths into our strategies.

  4. Jake says:

    Justifying a high prison population by saying it employs prison staff by locking up guys for smoking weed is one thing, but then to gloat about how 3/4 of them are “non-violent offenders”? Of course they are - they’ve done nothing wrong!
    Also, it’s entirely false to say that drugs become more expensive when they’re illegal. If weed was legal, they’d be making a higher quality and they’d be taxing it - people would pay more but wouldn’t mind.

    I’m tired of people lumping marijuana under the same heading as heroin and cocaine. Huge difference, guys. Attitudes like these are the reasons it’s still illegal.

  5. nedmorlef says:

    The wars on drugs and terror both specify marijuana users as terrorists deserving of none of the Constitutional or even civil rights afforded other americans. These ppl are targeted by local police and violated repeatedly. If you even casually smoke and the police want your home ,all they have to do is catch you burning one with a k-9 drive by that open window. They can do anything they want to you after that. Accuse you of growing or trafficking. It’s easy to prove with no burden of proof courts. 85% of americans garden ,many use sandwich baggies and own mail scales as well. You have all of the equipment to grow and distribute drugs right in your home. That’s the benefit to calling a plant…an herb at that, a drug. It’s not a drug. Drugs is synthesized in a lab not grown in a field. It’s called a drug to justify your destruction,incarceration or execution.

  6. Anonymous says:

    Any who with this article, I hope is the next victim of the suppressed minority or the new tenant of the private prison. A crime against yourself is no crime at all. You should not punished till you harm someone else. Is this George Orwell 1984, I think you are going to commit a crime because you do drugs so I’m going to lock you up.

  7. butters leopold stotch says:

    This article is disgusting, if I saw the author in real life I would punch him in the face, LEGALIZE IT

  8. mrg says:

    You forgot the textile and paper industires including plastics and all oil based products… they make a killing on their patented products which could all easily be obsoleted and replaced by bio-degradable hemp based products. Imagine if all the toxic oil based plastic floating around in our environment was bio-degradeable and non toxic. Trully a monumental crime against humanity and all life on this planet.
    Then there’s the fact that the 3rd worlds protien needs could easily be accounted for if they were allowed to grow hemp seed. But that would reduce the first worlds controling influences over them and we can’t have that now can we? The forces behind the Durg War trully are monumental in their power and influence. It’s all about control, ergo power and money and has nothing to do with what’s logical, fair and just. But hey, what can ya do?

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