8/20/2006 12:13:00 PM|W|P|Doc|W|P|Here's a living education of why "decriminalization of cannabis possession" is worthless waste of time and, actually, is not any sort of policy change at all. The evidence of inefficacy is found in this NYT article: Cannabis Cafes Get Nudge to Fringes of a Dutch City
The multimillion-dollar trade has spawned a supply chain of illicit growers and underground traders. "People who come from far away don't just come for the 5 grams you can buy legally over the counter," said Piet Tans, a police spokesman. "They think pounds and kilos; they go to dealers who operate in the shadows." The police regularly destroy indoor nurseries, often detected because of the high electricity bills run up by the grow lights, he said. But new nurseries, hidden in attics and basements, keep springing up to feed the international clientele. Tans said the flourishing drug tourism had also attracted pushers of harder drugs from Amsterdam, who often harass people on the streets. Residents complain of traffic problems, petty crime, loitering and public urinating. There have been shoot-outs between Balkan gangs. Maastricht's small police force says it cannot cope and is already spending one-third of its time on drug-related problems.
Ahh...but wait: ya can't please everybody, can ya? The plan
has met with mayors from a dozen nearby Belgian and German towns and villages, explaining his ideas and pleading for cross-border solidarity and greater collaboration. Some have signed a cooperation plan, but others have protested. Huub Broers, mayor of the nearby Belgian town of Voeren, is one who objected to getting the new outlets on his doorstep. The Dutch brought on the problem themselves, he said: if there were no sales in Maastricht, the French and the Belgians would not go there to stock up. But Mayor Leers argues that Maastricht has merely borne the brunt of a general problem the mayors would otherwise find at home. Several other Dutch border cities intend to relocate their cannabis outlets. “We have already moved two cafes close to the frontier with Germany, where most clients come from,” said Rick van Druten, a town official in Venlo. “They buy and turn around,” he added. “It solved a lot of congestion and loitering.”
All of these issues - every single last one of them, are related to the continued prohibition of cannabis. Were cannabis legal it would not have the same value it holds due to black market dynamics and all the people offending these Dutch folk would be growing and consuming their herb in their homes and their countries. Those drugs gangs would more or less have to develop new activities as the demand for illegal weed dissapers just as the need for illegal alcohol has abated in the last few decades. The same dynamics are at work as Colombia’s Coca Survives U.S. Plan to Uproot It
The latest chapter in America’s long war on drugs — a six-year, $4.7 billion effort to slash Colombia’s coca crop — has left the price, quality and availability of cocaine on American streets virtually unchanged.
The idea ofprohibition sounds good to the oppressor mentality and looks good on paper. But, such if Life, the best-laid plans are all-too-often at a variance with Reality and doomed to failure in the real world.
The plan seemed simple enough. “The closer we can attack to the source, the greater the likelihood of halting the flow of drugs altogether,” a State Department report said soon after Plan Colombia began. “If we destroy crops or force them to remain unharvested, no drugs will enter the system.” Yet recent data show the following results: ¶As much coca is cultivated today in Colombia as was grown at the start of the large-scale aerial fumigation effort in 2000, according to State Department figures. ¶Colombia, Peru and Bolivia, the leading sources of coca and cocaine, produce more than enough cocaine to satisfy world demand, and possibly as much as in the mid-1990’s, the United Nations says. ¶In the United States, the government’s tracking over the past quarter century shows that the price of cocaine has tumbled and that purity remains high, signs that the drug is as available as ever.
I brought up Plan Colombia's failure to highlight the failure of cannabis prohibition. The unavoidable, irreducable, inescapable reality is that prohibition is more than a failure - it exacerbates, inflames and intensifies the issue it purports to quell. It's not particularly difficult to understand - it is not mystical. In fact it is a reinfocement of the concept of the so-called "Free Market" : plain old supply and demand. Mnay people in the US government lament the Netherlands drug policies as too soft, too lenient and point to that as the failure of prohibition and blame the effects of prohibtion on the cannabis. All those complaints from the mayors in the Dutch article are artifacts of prohibition cannabis. But even using military force and BILLIONS of Ameriocan tax dollars over ten years has produced no change in the availability of cocaine in America and has arguably strengthened the criminal elements that are still able to produce and transport. So the attempt to maintain "decriminalized" cannabis in inarguably doomed to fail becasue as long as touching cannabis is illegal, there will be a black market feeding illegal activity. Only full legalization and regulation (as you see with alcohol, tobacco, firearms and gasoline) will provide for the "greater good of all".|W|P|115609060719471540|W|P|Decriminalization of Cannabis is a Complete Failure|W|P|xxdr_zombiexx@yahoo.com8/07/2006 07:10:00 AM|W|P|Doc|W|P|Found this at BUZZFLASH this morning: Legalizing Marijuana - A New Republican Strategy?
The Republican Party has a new voter registration project in Fresno. It involves luring people to sign a LEGALIZE MARIJUANA petition and then re-registering them as Republicans.
by Mike Rhodes | INDYBAY | Thursday Aug 3rd, 2006 6:06 PM
The attractive young woman says to me, "would you sign our petition to legalize marijuana?" I don’t have to think twice and say "sure, where do I sign?" That is when it got interesting. She says, "Do you have your ID with you?" "Well, yes I do, but what does that have to do with..." I say as she responds with "oh, we just have to verify your ID." Thinking that this has something to do with making sure they have valid names for a ballot initiative I comply. As I’m filling out my name and address on the petition I notice that the young lady is filling out a very official looking form. Probably just the ballot initiative form, I think to myself. Then, she says "is it OK if I register you as a Republican?" "What?!?" I say "yes, I do mind! What are you doing?" She says that if I register Republican she will get an extra 10 cents. But, I complain, "I don’t want to re-register." She explains that this is just to update the records for the County Clerks office. I repeat that "I do not want or need to update my records." I am repeatedly told that it is OK and that they just want to update my voter registration records. She also tells me that she is working for the Republican party, being paid hourly, and that the ploy about the "10 cent bonus" was not accurate. This Republican party employee goes on to tell me that she is there to attract people to the table that is set up in Fresno’s Courthouse Park, and that the legalize marijuana petition is just a prop. She confirmed that there is no ballot initiative to legalize marijuana. She said that the petition will be given to an elected official in Sacramento. I have my doubts about that. At this point in the conversation, she called over her "boss" who was talking with someone a short distance away. I introduced myself as the editor of the Community Alliance newspaper and said I was interested in writing a story about the petition campaign and their registering people with the Republican party. I guess that wasn’t the right approach to get him to open up to me. The "boss" gave me no information. He even refused to give me a copy of the marijuana legalization petition I had just signed. Later that day I called Victor Salazar, the Fresno County Clerk. Salazar said that the process sounded deceptive and that I might want to call the Secretary of State fraud investigation unit. I called the number for the fraud investigation unit repeatedly today. Apparently, nobody was in the office today and all I got was an answering machine. I will continue to call. I also went back to Courthouse Park today to see the Republican Party project was again in full operation. They seemed to have different approaches to different groups. To white men that looked like they might be attorneys, they asked if they were registered to vote. When Latinos walked by they would throw out the legalize marijuana angle.
[zombienote: Pix of the form and one or two people involved in this sham at the link above.]|W|P|115494920214800674|W|P|Legalizing Marijuana - A New Republican Strategy?|W|P|xxdr_zombiexx@yahoo.com