Pubdate: Wed, 01 Apr 2009 Source: Georgian (CN NF) Copyright: 2009 Georgian Contact: http://www.thegeorgian.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3492 Author: Cass Carter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) IT'S TIME TO LEGALIZE DRUGS AND BAN POLITICIANS Imagine a system where in order to save you from the potential danger posed by crossing the street, someone will throw you off a tall building. This is the current insanity of drug policy. In order to 'protect citizens from the danger of drugs', we throw people in prison. Drugs are dangerous; I am smart enough to grant that. You can overdose easily on most drugs, and that includes alcohol. I've had enough booze in me until I hallucinated pirates and such and probably could've died from it. Do I think alcohol should be illegal? No. Because when taken responsibly, alcohol isn't that dangerous; the same is true for the bulk of the drugs out there now. Indeed, much of the danger of drugs today lies in the illegality of it-buying drugs of unknown potency from shady characters raises the risk, for certain. But ask anyone who has been to prison for a substantial amount of time and they will tell you that prison is a dangerous place where you are almost ensured that you will come out of it worse for having been there. In addition to the constant danger of prison violence, an inscrutable 'convict code' and the fact that many prisons in the US date back to the Civil War and have substandard electrical wiring and other problems, one has to consider that it is a place of intense psychological damage-of deprivation and squalor meant as pure punishment for having done something harmful to others. Prison is designed not to be a place that is safe or comfortable or helpful. Drugs have dangerous potential, but prison has dangerous certainty. And that, at the end of the day, is the truth of drug policy; we trade the potential danger to a citizen for a certain danger. To top it all off, we buy this trade off at a significant markup. According to the Office of National Drug Control Policy, the federal government spends roughly $600 every second enforcing drug laws. That's $600 of taxpayer money every second to increase the profit margins of dangerous drug cartels in Mexico. This year, state and federal governments have already spent more than $12.5 billion to make drugs more lucrative and to warehouse mostly non-violent drug offenders, roughly half of whom are arrested for marijuana. You know, though, that marijuana's never jumped up and taken a percentage of my paycheck every two weeks. DMT, LSD, PCP or mushrooms haven't spent that percentage of my paycheck on stupid programs like building a $2 million outhouse in a national park with a relatively small number of visitors each year or some such. Politicians, though, have. Politicians will spend your tax dollars on a crappy little button that's supposed to say "reset", but instead says "overcharge" because the translator they paid too much to do the job couldn't be bothered to, you know, do the job right. And certainly couldn't bother to render Russian in Cyrillic. Politicians will spend your tax dollars on giving another nation's politicians region-specific DVDs, so they can't be watched by the recipient (who doesn't even like movies that much, anyway). Politicians will spend your tax dollars on a War on Drugs to send stoners to jail, all while they themselves have admitted to smoking the stuff themselves, and having not only survived since having done it, but thrived. Indeed, some notable pot smokers and coke-snorters have become the leaders of the free world. And yet, they'll tell us proles that if we ever even touch the stuff, we'll end up in a gutter offering sexual favors in exchange for an ounce of weed, and that's if we're lucky! However, most importantly there is a quote from Terrence McKenna (noted author, philosopher, ethnobotanist, and originator of novelty theory): "Psychedelics are not illegal because a loving government is concerned you will jump from a third story window, psychedelics are illegal because they dissolve opinion structures and culturally laid down models of behavior and thought processes. They open you up to the possibility that everything you know is wrong, and government and society spend a lot of money educating you into being a loyal worker, consumer, debt payer and citizen." At the end of the day, the real danger of politicians is their need for control of the population. That is their drug. They're high on control, they have a fetish for doing so with massive populations, fusing polyamory and domination into a sick game they play with us on a daily basis. They aren't motivated to raise tons of money to accept what is for most of them a gigantic pay cut just so they can protect you. They do it because they are addicts-control junkies, and they're constantly strung out and looking for their next fix. So, how about we do a little trial run for the next couple decades and flip it around? Legalize drugs, ban politicians. We've tried it the current way, and we're seeing where it's gotten us. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin