Showing posts with label drug crime. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drug crime. Show all posts

Sunday, April 20, 2014

15 Reasons to Legalize Marijuana

Written on June 17th, 2011



1. Reduction of marijuana prices by 90%.
2. More expendable income for pot-heads.
3. More white-market spending.
4. Less hunger and poverty.
5. Less violent crime.
6. Less expensive criminal justice system.
7. More reasonable criminal justice system.
8. Less crowding in jails and prisons.
9. More government tax revenue.
10. Less border violence.
11. More rational immigration policy.
12. More positive public perception of immigrants.
13. More available sources of fuel.
14. More available sources of fiber.
15. More medical science research on glaucoma, nerve cancer, autism,
            Asperger’s, Alzhemer’s, Parkinson’s, and Tourette’s




http://www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2014/05/the-food-and-drug-administration.html
For more entries on justice, crime, and punishment, please visit:
http://www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2010/10/thrasymachus-support-for-justice-being.html

On Legalizing Heroin

Written on May 16th, 2011



   Keeping heroin illegal (1) raises its price, causing an increase in violent crime – and of theft and other illegal means by which such money can be obtained (such as prostitution, mugging, bank robbery, etc.), (2) increases rates of blood-borne illnesses arising from infection due to needle-sharing, exacerbated by the occasional outlawing of needle purchases without prescriptions, and (3) makes it more difficult for heroin users to know the potency of their heroin, which can lead to overdoses.

   If states realize this, and begin to understand that legalizing heroin would lower prices, decrease violent crime, reduce infection rates, and allow government to sell and tax heroin as well as provide information to consumers about its potency, I say the federal government should let the states do it. The people will be safer, healthier, and they will have more money to spend on food and utilities.

   Cheaper drugs means less ostracism of drug use, and a better chance that drug users will be able to afford homes inside which they will be able to use drugs privately, rather than outdoors where they can endanger the health of (and be seen using by) others.

   Not only am I willing to defend Congressman Ron Paul's position that federal laws restricting the use, purchase, sale, and distribution should be struck down; I am also willing to recommend that state and local governments strike down similar laws.




http://www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2014/05/the-food-and-drug-administration.html

For more entries on justice, crime, and punishment, please visit:
http://www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2010/10/thrasymachus-support-for-justice-being.html

Sunday, January 5, 2014

The War on Drugs

Written in January 2012
Originally published 1-18-2012



The inhumane repression and prosecution of the peaceful, safe, responsible, and voluntary use of controlled substances is an immoral threat to our civil liberties and our personal freedoms, and represents an unnecessary financial burden on taxpayers.

If elected to the 113th Congress, I would vote to repeal all federal anti-drug legislation (as well as pursue the abolition of the Drug Enforcement Administration [DEA]); end the funding of foreign governments to combat the non-violent cultivation, manufacturing, distribution, sale, purchase, and consumption of drugs; and urge the president to pardon some 40,000 imprisoned non-violent federal drug offenders. To end the War on Drugs would eliminate 10,000 federal bureaucrats, and could save the federal government as much as $28 billion annually.

While I would vote to prevent the federal government from intervening in the illicit drug policies of the states (unless constitutional amendments against the prohibition of marijuana and other drugs were to appear as realistic and necessary prospects), I would urge the governors of the states to pardon some 200,000 imprisoned non-violent drug offenders, and to work with their legislatures to legalize the cultivation and manufacture of drugs (including hemp and drug precursors), as well as the medicinal and recreational use of illicit drugs. To end the War on Drugs could save the state and local governments as much as $16 billion annually.




http://www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2014/05/the-food-and-drug-administration.html

For more entries on justice, crime, and punishment, please visit:
http://www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2010/10/thrasymachus-support-for-justice-being.html


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