Pubdate: Fri, 25 Apr 2008
Source: DrugSense Weekly (DSW)
Section: Feature Article
Website: http://www.drugsense.org
Author: Mary Jane Borden
Note: Mary Jane Borden is a writer, artist, and activist in drug 
policy from Westerville, Ohio.  She serves as Business 
Manager/Fundraising Specialist for DrugSense.

YOUR TAX DOLLARS AT WORK IN 2007

If you're like most citizens, you've recently computed the amount of 
tax you owe both Federal and local governments. Perhaps you're 
getting a refund, or maybe you wrote a big check. Whether you're 
wealthy, middle class, or poor, what you pay for is what you get, 
including the War on Drugs. From the archives of the Media Awareness 
Project, here are some things YOU bought with your tax dollars in 2007:

$42,000,000,000 for cannabis prohibition. "Why $42 billion? Because 
that's what our current marijuana laws cost American taxpayers each 
year, according to a new study by researcher Jon Gettman, Ph.D. -- 
$10.7 billion in direct law enforcement costs, and $31.1 billion in 
lost tax revenues. Basing his calculations mainly on U.S. government 
statistics, Gettman concludes that marijuana in the U.S. is a $113 
billion dollar business. That's a huge chunk of economic activity 
that is unregulated and untaxed because it's almost entirely off the 
books." http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v07/n1157/a08.html

$1,400,000,000 for Mexican drug enforcement. "President Bush asked 
Congress on Monday to approve a $1.4 billion aid package over the 
next three years to help the Mexican government fight narcotics 
traffickers. An additional $50 million would go to Central American 
countries for the same purposes." 
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v07/n1228/a09.html

$590,000,000 for Colombian drug enforcement and crop spraying. "About 
three-quarters of the military aid is dedicated to supporting the 
aerial crop spraying program, which uses an enhanced form of Roundup 
weed killer, containing the chemical defoliant glyphosate. What's 
next -- the 2008 budget. The Bush administration has asked Congress 
for $590-million for Colombia in the Foreign Aid Bill. As in previous 
years the majority of this money -- $450-million -- would be 
dedicated to military support." 
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v07/n780/a09.html

$158,000,000 for marijuana enforcement in Michigan. "Marijuana is 
Michigan's third most valuable cash crop with an annual value of $350 
million. Tax free. At the same time, we're spending $158 million to 
enforce marijuana prohibition and make criminals out of people like 
the Johnson's." http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v07/n1388/a02.html

$100,000,000 for expanded prisons in Connecticut. A study by the Drug 
Policy Alliance, "recommended the state turn down the so-called 
three-strikes law mandating automatic life sentences for defendants 
convicted of a third violent felony . [such] proposals could cost the 
state at least $100 million in annual prison expenses." 
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08/n398/a06.html

$10,450,000 for a wrongful death in New York. "The mother of an 
unarmed man killed by an undercover police officer seven years ago 
called on the Bronx district attorney's office yesterday to reopen a 
criminal investigation after a jury awarded her $10.45 million for 
the wrongful death of her son . including $7 million in punitive 
damages and $3 million for pain and suffering." 
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v07/n698/a06.html

$84,000 for drug dogs in Wisconsin. "It costs about $12,000 to buy 
each dog and to train it and its handler. These are only seven dogs, 
spread across 72 counties." http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08/n406/a04.html

$50,000 for tracking devices and dogs in Indiana.  Tippecanoe County, 
IN. "About $50,000 has been brought in this year under prosecutor Pat 
Harrington, who took office in January. 'We've now got a bomb dog and 
four other canines,' Lendermon said of the sheriff's department. 
About $6,300 was used in March and April to buy GPS tracking devices 
for the state police and the Indiana Department of Natural Resources 
for use in their vehicles." http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v07/n1431/a05.html

$5,900 or the return of marijuana seized from a California medical 
patient. "At least one victory for medical marijuana was won over the 
past year when Grover Beach police returned 20 grams of marijuana to 
Ken Parson in January. Parson's prescription was allowed under state 
law. Grover Beach police were required to return the marijuana to 
Parsons or pay a $5,900 fee." http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v07/n1494/a02.html

The numbers and references above come from actual 2007 newspaper 
reports that are stored permanently by volunteer activists in the 
DrugSense DrugNews Archive ( http://www.drugnews.org/ ). This 
information is available for FREE, but it isn't free to produce. 
DrugSense, too, incurs Internet storage, bandwidth, and technical 
support charges that must be covered so that we can bring the truth 
about the cost of the War on Drugs to the media and public.

If you think that your tax dollars can be better spent, then you know 
it's time to change drug policy. Won't you please devote just a few 
of the equivalent dollars you pay in taxes to help end the drug war 
once and for all time?

It's easy, fast, and secure. Just visit 
http://www.drugsense.org/donate. You can also spread your donation 
over the course of a year by automatically repeating it every month, 
quarter, or half year.

Checks can also be made payable to DrugSense and mailed to:

DrugSense

14252 Culver Dr #328

Irvine, CA 92604-0326

Please note that DrugSense is a 501(c)(3) educational non-profit 
dedicated to accuracy in the media concerning drug policy topics. 
Your donation is tax deductible to the extent provided by law. ( 
http://www.drugsense.org/donate/ )

Help save tax dollars by ending the War on Drugs. Support sensible 
drug policies by supporting DrugSense.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake