Pubdate: Thu, 20 Dec 2012
Source: Kamloops Daily News (CN BC)
Copyright: 2012 Kamloops Daily News
Contact:  http://www.kamloopsnews.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/679
Author: David Charbonneau

LEGALIZE MORE DRUGS TO PROTECT THE PLANET

We can grow some drugs locally and fair-trade drugs can supply the
rest.

Following the principles of the 100-mile diet, medical marijuana is
best grown close to home to reduce transportation costs and support
local growers. Kamloops' city council is sensibly looking at zoning of
industrial land for marijuana crops and the federal government wants
to reduce small grow ops in favour of larger facilities.

However, it's not practical to grow drugs such as coca and poppies
close to home. And practicality aside, many of these growers could
benefit from fair trade and legalization.

Coca leaf growers in Colombia now receive only a small fraction of the
value of their produce and worse, they are forced to grow in an
environmentally destructive way.

The U.S. war on drugs has done nothing to reduce drug use but it has
destroyed huge swathes of arable land.

The so-called U.S. aid for Colombia has is a boon to helicopter
manufacturers like Sikorsky and private security forces such as
Blackwater but the effect on forests is devastating.

In an attempt to destroy coca crops, herbicides have been applied to 
800,000 hectares of Colombia says Tom Feiling, author of The Candy 
Machine: How Cocaine Took Over the World, in his article for New 
Internationalist magazine.

Fair-trade drugs would result in sustainable agricultural practices
and reduce harm to the environment.

Legalization of the coca leaf would stop the war on forests. Fair
trade would improve wages for growers and economies of countries.
Billions of dollars are now transferred out of countries by drug lords.

Profits are moved through banks to the very countries where the
refined and concentrated drugs end up. Last week, the U.S. Department
of Justice fined Britain's biggest bank $1.9 billion for money
laundering. HSBC had moved $881 million for two drug cartels in Mexico
and Colombia and accepted $15 billion in unexplained "bulk cash"
across the bank's counters in Mexico, Russia and other countries. In
some branches the boxes of cash being deposited were so big the
tellers' windows had to be enlarged.

Once the war on small growers stops, legalization will mean that more
of the profits from the sale of coca will remain in countries that
need it most.

Criminal drug-trade fuels the war machines of terrorists. The Taliban
and Al Qaeda of Afghanistan are funded by drug money from the growth
of poppies, and the weapons purchased are used to kill Canadian soldiers.

"Legalization would open the way for the popularization of less
intoxicating drugs, such as the coca tea and wine to be found in any
Bolivian marketplace," says Feiling.

The principles of fair trade would not only reduce the toxicity and
addictive properties of coca products but ensure that the growers are
receiving a fair return. Fair trade would eliminate the middle men and
increase government revenues. Legalization would eliminate the
criminal element that suppresses wages for growers and fuels the drug
wars between rival gangs who profit from the trade of concentrated and
dangerous coca and poppy products. 
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D