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DrugReporter

I Was Wrong About the War on Drugs -- It's a Failure

By Bob Barr, Huffington Post. Posted June 11, 2008.


America's drug problem is larger today than it was when Richard Nixon first coined the phrase, "War on Drugs," in 1972.
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I'll admit it, just five years ago I was "Public Enemy Number 1" in the eyes of the Libertarian Party. In my 2002 congressional race for Georgia's Seventh District, the Libertarian Party ran scathing attack ads against my stand on Medical Marijuana.

Today, I am their presidential nominee and will represent libertarians at the top of the ticket on November 4th.

Huh?

That's right, Bob Barr, formerly the War on Drugs loving, Wiccan mocking, Clinton impeaching Republican is the presidential nominee for the Libertarian Party.

Now, you may be asking how this happened and my answer is simple: "The libertarians won."

For more than three decades, the Libertarian Party and small "l" libertarians have done their part to prove to America that liberty is the answer to most of the problems that we face today. Over the past several years, I was one of the many people influenced by this small party.

Whether through the free market or by simply allowing families to make their own decisions regarding the education of their children, libertarians have taught us that liberty does truly work.

In stark contrast, when government attempts to solve our societal problems, it tends to create even more of them, often increasing the size and depth of the original problem. A perfect example of this is the federal War on Drugs.

For years, I served as a federal prosecutor and member of the House of Representatives defending the federal pursuit of the drug prohibition.

Today, I can reflect on my efforts and see no progress in stopping the widespread use of drugs. I'll even argue that America's drug problem is larger today than it was when Richard Nixon first coined the phrase, "War on Drugs," in 1972.

America's drug problem is only compounded by the vast amounts of money directed at this ongoing battle. In 2005, more than $12 billion dollars was spent on federal drug enforcement efforts while another $30 billion was spent to incarcerate non-violent drug offenders.

The result of spending all of those taxpayer's dollars? We now have a huge incarceration tab for non-violent drug offenders and, at most, a 30% interception rate of hard drugs. We are also now plagued with the meth labs that are popping up like poisonous mushrooms across the country.

While it is clear the War on Drugs has been a failure, it is not enough to simply acknowledge that reality. We need to look for solutions that deal with the drug problem without costly and intrusive government agencies, and instead allow for private industry and organizations to put forward solutions that address the real problems.

One such solution was presented to me recently by a libertarian friend and supporter, Glenn Jacobs.

Glenn is a very unique guy with a very unique job. To say Glenn is a "big guy" or "intimidating" is an understatement. He gives people nightmares ... literally.

Each week Glenn, who stands nearly seven feet tall, walks into a wrestling ring under the stage name "Kane" to beat other large men for sheer entertainment purposes.


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Bob Barr is the 2008 Libertarian nominee for President of the United States. Previously, he represented the 7th District of Georgia in the U. S. House of Representatives from 1995 to 2003.



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A Republican change his stripes?
Posted by: bornxeyed on Jun 11, 2008 2:13 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Has brain transplant technology been perfected while I was out of town?

How does one grow a soul, or conscience?

How do you spell "opportunist."

Pardon me while I disbelief every word that comes from your right-wing mouth.

Especially after an introductory paragraph that says the "drug PROBLEM is worse than under Nixon".

Who has a problem with drugs?

Oh yeah. The Republicans.

The rest of us are perfectly happy with our drugs. It's our drug laws and the price of our drugs that are the problem.

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War On Drugs is a failure?
Posted by: dgpdx on Jun 11, 2008 8:20 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How can something that has worked exactly as planned be called a failure? For 36 years, the War On Drugs has kept the fruits of illegal drug profits exactly where we want it, in the hands of the CIA and Wall Street. And latest estimates are that up to 70% of all drug profits are laundered through US banks.

Why would we want to lose all that business by shutting down a $500 billion a year industry. The only people hurt don't matter anyway, they're mere drug addicts.

Why is Afghan heroin poppy production, which was shut down by the Taliban, now more than double what it was before we invaded in 2002. Must be another of those coincidences that keep happening so regularly...

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PROHIBITION
Posted by: jsknow on Jun 12, 2008 12:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
PROHIBITION never works it just CAUSES CRIME & VIOLENCE. Illegal drugs are way easier for kids to get than legal ones. The USA spends $69 billion a year on the drug war, builds 900 new prison beds and hires 150 more correction officers every two weeks, arrests someone on a drug charge every 17 seconds, jails more people than any nation and has killed over 100,000 citizens because of the drug war. In 1914 when ALL DRUGS WERE LEGAL 1.3% of our population was addicted to drugs, today 1.3% of our population is STILL ADDICTED TO DRUGS. The only way to control drugs is to REGULATE THEM AND END THE PROFITS AVAILABLE TO CRIMINALS just like ending alcohol prohibition did. There’s only been one drug success story in history, tobacco, THE MOST DEADLY and one of the MOST ADDICTIVE drugs. Almost half the users quit because of REGULATION, ACCURATE INFORMATION AND MEDICAL TREATMENT. No one went to jail and no one got killed. JOIN EMAIL LIST, WATCH VIDEOS:
Internet Explorer: http://jsknow.angelfire.com/home
Other Browsers: http://jsknow.angelfire.com/index.html

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KeLeMi
Posted by: KeLe on Jun 12, 2008 7:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I remember Charles Goodell in 1970. A COnservative Republican, he was named to fill out the remainder of Bobby Kennedy's term. He became a liberal. if he were an opportunist, he should have remained a conservative. WQith Barr, it's wait and see.

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Back in the day...
Posted by: frantaylor on Jun 13, 2008 1:11 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Conservative" meant "reduce spending" and "Don't Tread On Me". Oh how the times have changed...

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The Drug War is an Howling Success
Posted by: Chris Herz on Jun 14, 2008 4:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The corruption that rules us uses drugs in our homeland to suppress an inconveniently liberal minority. Millions are addicted, millions are incarcerated. And vast militarized police forces have been raised.

Abroad the drug war provides a maskirovka for the necessary military moves to building empire.

Thus the drug war is really a success, and whilst in power Mr Barr was certainly one of its exploiters.

Chris Herz
vheadlinevenezuelanews.blogspot.com

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