URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v15/n526/a06.html
Newshawk: http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm
Votes: 0
Pubdate: Sun, 20 Sep 2015
Source: Standard-Speaker (Hazleton, PA)
Copyright: 2015 The Standard-Speaker
Contact:
Website: http://www.standardspeaker.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1085
Author: John Stossel, Creators Syndicate
Note: John Stossel is host of "Stossel" on Fox News and author of
"No, They Can't! Why Government Fails - But Individuals Succeed." For
other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit
www.creators.com. Copyright 2015 By JFS Productions Inc. Distributed by Creat
LAW AND BORDER
How many wars can we fight? Our presidential candidates demand
"stronger action" against both illegal immigration and illegal drugs.
But those goals conflict. The War on Drugs makes border enforcement
much harder!
America's 44-year-long Drug War hasn't made a dent in American drug
use or the supply of illegal drugs. If it had some positive effect,
prices of drugs would have increased, but they haven't. American
authorities say drugs are more available than ever.
Drug prohibition, like alcohol prohibition, creates fat profits that
invite law-breaking.
Cato's Ted Galen Carpenter says, "Economists estimate that about 90
percent of the retail price of illicit drugs is due to this black
market premium." Ninety-percent profits inspire lots of criminal risk-taking.
"Washington's policy empowers the most ruthless traffickers - those
willing to use violence, intimidation and exploitation of the
vulnerable to gain market share." Continues Carpenter: "When drugs
are outlawed, only outlaws will sell drugs."
Since the drug gangs can't settle disputes in court, they settle them
with guns. In Latin America, they've killed thousands of people.
"Honduras has been living in an emergency," says Honduran President
Juan Hernandez. "The root cause is that the United States and
Colombia carried out big operations in the fight against drugs."
Mexico's former president, Vicente Fox, now supports legalization.
Leaders of Guatemala, Colombia, Costa Rica and Bolivia have begun to
object to the militaristic antidrug tactics pushed by the United States.
Yet Hillary Clinton called taxpayer money spent on counter-narcotics
efforts in Central America "money well spent."
She's closed-minded and wrong. Our Drug War creates the carnage that
drives poor Latin Americans to abandon their villages and move north.
That increases resentment against immigrants, as expressed by Donald
Trump, who said, "They're bringing drugs, they're bringing crime."
Some do bring drugs, but most wouldn't bring crime if they could
legally do business with us.
Our crazy, failed policy turns our neighbors to the south into a deadly menace.
"Coyotes," who help impoverished refugees escape, often require even
the children to become drug mules - to smuggle small amounts of
drugs. The children obey, since many fled places where they'd be shot
at or tortured by gangs. They know the drug gangs and coyotes are
their only hope for reaching a better life.
Drug profits give smugglers the money to do what poverty-stricken
immigrants can't: dig long, high-tech tunnels with lighting and
ventilation systems. A border fence doesn't secure the border when
immigrants - and criminals - can tunnel underneath it.
U.S. Attorney Laura Duffy recently bragged to reporters about "the
fifth supertunnel we've intercepted."
Immigrations and Customs Enforcement agent Derek Benner claimed that
the interception dealt "a stunning blow to the Mexican cartel who built it."
But that's absurd. Benner admitted they'd done the same thing two
years before "in virtually the same scenario." They found five of how
many? Hundreds? With a border almost 2,000 miles long, they're
unlikely to find them all.
Drug prohibition, by making drug cartels rich, enables them to build
a literal underground railroad to the north. The whole process - dig,
build, raid, destroy, repeat - is just one more pointless activity
that happens when government tries to suppress popular activities
such as drug use.
Other countries are wising up. Argentina, Peru, Mexico and Portugal
decriminalized small amounts of drugs. Uruguay legalized marijuana
entirely, as have Colorado and Washington State.
The Center for Investigative Reporting says 90 percent of the drugs
seized on the U.S.-Mexico border are some form of marijuana, meaning
almost every time the Border Patrol makes a drug bust, it confiscates
a drug that's legal in Colorado. This is crazy. We keep trying to do
things the hard way - spending over $1 trillion on the Drug War. If
there were a clear benefit, you might say it was worth it. Instead,
it yields death, dislocation of populations and enrichment of
murderous cartels, without reducing drug abuse. Why do we put up with this?
Government's attempts to prohibit what people want tend to fail. The
wars on immigration and drugs are two more wars we won't win.
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom
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