Pubdate: Tue, 21 Nov 2006
Source: Chicago Maroon (U of Chicago, IL Edu)
Contact:  2006 Chicago Maroon
Website: http://maroon.uchicago.edu
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4353
Author: Gabriel Grossman

A WAR ON TWO FRONTS

In recent weeks, it has come to my attention that the Pentagon is 
drastically changing its strategy in the war on terror and the war on 
drugs. Apparently, the Pentagon seems to be consolidating the two.

The current policy regarding both wars is an apparent failure. The 
war on terror relies on drawing out the war, straining the armed 
forces, leaving the army weak and striving for more forces. The 
situation has become hopeless enough that a draft has been proposed 
by a leading Democratic congressman, and will likely be voted upon 
come January. (You're off to a great start, guys.)

The war on drugs, similarly, is just as inefficient. It is based on 
the false premise that drugs can be wiped out, that by raiding one 
meth lab at a time, one pot dealer at a time, the drugs will slowly 
but surely be weeded out of our near-perfect society.

The focal point of this shocking discovery lies in a recent article 
published by the beacon of hope in our heathen society: Fox News. The 
article's title is self-explanatory: "Taliban Smoked Out of Pot 
Forest: Troops Burn Towering Afghan Pot Forest, Get Goofy." This 
could potentially become the most daring foreign policy decisions of 
the Bush administration. It is just so ridiculous it could possibly 
work. The logic is there, as are undoubtedly the skeptics.

The plan is based on the idea that by burning enemies' pot forests, 
both the war on terror and the war on drugs can meet a grandiose-and 
goofy-conclusion. The strategy works as follows:

First, burning marijuana forests would handicap the growers, and it 
would discourage other growers.

Second, those in the vicinity of the burning pot forests would be 
susceptible to the toxic fumes of the plants, creating a large 
atmosphere of goofiness.

Third, the enemies, after breathing in so much marijuana smoke, would 
lose the will to fight and, if anything, would get a raving appetite. 
Time to export Olive Garden.

Fourth, it is common for those under the influence of marijuana to 
become more carefree, friendlier. Assuming that this is true, the 
terrorists and the soldiers would, even after getting goofy, possibly 
even get along. Just as the Allies and the Axis Powers shared 
Christmas peacefully in December of 1914, the terrorists and 
coalition soldiers could share a bag of Funyuns, or whatever it is 
they have to quench the munchies over there.

This can work-given the right timing, the right planning, and the 
right marijuana, the Pentagon can hit two birds with one stone. If 
anything, it would be more effective than the current policies. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake