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In her incisive March 16 column,
The Slaughter On The Southern Border,
Michelle Malkin again asks why both President Bush
and Obama supported the failed Merida policy of
subsidizing Mexican law enforcement. She writes:
"With bipartisan support, the Bush administration
handed over $1.6 billion to help Mexico control its
border chaos in 2008. The crime-fighting package known
as the "Merida
Initiative"
funded helicopters, surveillance equipment, computer
infrastructure, the expansion of intelligence databases,
anti-corruption initiatives, human rights education and
training, and an anti-money laundering program for our
southern neighbors.
"President Obama
accelerated the release of Merida Initiative cash to
Mexico and tossed even more taxpayer funding into the
mix. All of this while our own
measly border
enforcement initiatives
have been shortchanged,
demagogued
or completely abandoned.
"Critics of the Merida
Initiative (including
yours truly)
warned that lax oversight would lead to inevitable
plundering of the money by corrupt Mexican government
officials and more unabated bloodshed. Calderon cried
'racist!' and demanded that the aid be forked over with no strings
attached:
'Give it to me. And give it to me without
conditions,'
he told Congress."
One of my friends, when we were discussing this
deplorable situation, said:
"I guess we will have to invade Mexico." Talk about adding another
bad idea
to the Merida Initiative!
The
murder and mayhem
on our Southern Border increases. And we still lack the
guts to implement the obvious answer:
Legalize all drugs now.
Perhaps the most important or doing so: is that if drugs
were cheap, the addicts
would not have to steal to get their fixes.
Imagine! If you want to ruin your life on drugs, do it!
On the cheap. So long as you don't
drive a car
or
commit other felonies,
getting blotto on your own time and place is OK!
Not only that, but one of America's leading social
commentators, Nobel economist, the late Milton Friedman
once noted that present policy causes drugs of the worst
quality to be sold to the users. [Prohibition
and Drugs,
by Milton Friedman,
Newsweek, May 1, 1972] American manufacturers could satisfy the
demand we created and get better quality for it, drugs
that can be taxed like Jim Beam and cigarettes at a time
when we need the money.
Why do we persist in thinking that drug busts or
attacking the powerful cartels mean progress? We, the
USA users, have created the market. But we won't take
responsibility for this reality.
When will we gain the wisdom of our grandparents, who
finally in 1933 realized that Prohibition wasn't going
to work?
We repealed, with the
21st Amendment
the ill-fated 18th Amendment to the US Constitution,
which had been
ratified in January, 1919.
It was the only US Constitutional Amendment ever to be
repealed by Congress.
Maybe as we get a bit
farther down in our depressed economy,
we will be smart enough to do the same with drugs.
Repealing all the dangerous drugs prohibitions will take
the huge cash flow away from all the present marketers
of those drugs, not only Mexico but the
Taliban
and other drug selling criminals. Today's Prohibition
equivalent of the
Al Capone Mafia,
the
MS 13
gangs and others, would be crippled without this money.
And don't forget, the main pushers in America are 14-17
year old kids, often killed in the street-sale melee
that our present laws create.
If you really want to get the truth about this sensitive
issue, go to the web page of
LEAP - Law Enforcement Against Prohibition
(motto: Cops Say Legalize Drugs)
and learn about this 10,000-member nonprofit
organization, composed mainly of law enforcement
officials, ex-cops and judges. (Milton Friedman was,
prior to his death
a member of LEAP.)
In their YouTube presentations, they will powerfully and
eloquently tell you about why this idiot War On Drugs
initiated under President Nixon in the early 1970s must
be ended.
How lousy is the US Drug Enforcement Administration
(DEA) record: Per Wikipedia:
"In
2005, the
DEA seized a reported $1.4 billion
in drug trade related assets and $477 million worth of
drugs."
"However, according to the
White House's Office of Drug Control Policy, the
total value of all of the drugs sold in the U.S. is as
much as
$64 billion a year,
making the DEA's efforts to intercept the flow of drugs
into and within the U.S. less than 1% effective. DEA
maintains 21 domestic field divisions with 227 field
offices and 86 foreign offices in 62 countries. With a
budget exceeding 2.415 billion dollars, DEA employs over
10,800 people, including over 5,500 special agents".".
[Wikipedia: Drug
Enforcement Administration--
Impact on the drug trade,
accessed March
24, 2010]
LESS THAN 1% EFFECTIVE.
We spend $2 or $3
billion a year to stop $64 billion, which by the way
represents just about the annual sales of one large S&P
500 company, but only stop ONE PERCENT of $64 billion.
Taxable drugs, less cost, less crime. What's the down
side?
Oh, sure, there is always a downside. Less profits for
the drug sellers, less graft for those officials on the
take on both sides of the border, and less business for
teen age inner city drug dealers.
But this would not mean that a person using drugs who
commits a vehicular homicide for example would not be
prosecuted.
The legalization of marijuana is in the process of
happening in many US jurisdictions.
As the Wall Street
Journal's front page story on March 19 reports:
"Medical marijuana is now legal in 15 states for
patients suffering certain conditions, including, in
Colorado, chronic pain. More than 60,000 Coloradans have
doctor recommendations allowing them to buy marijuana;
physicians are approving about 400 new patients a day.
Pot shops have popped up all over, including at least
230 here in the Mile High City."
[In
Mile High City, Weed Sparks Up A Counterculture Clash]
So why not opt for the full legalization of all drugs
now? It's what the money-fat so-called drug
"king pins"
fear most
Donald A. Collins [email him], is a freelance writer living in Washington DC and a former long time member of the board of FAIR, the Federation for American Immigration Reform. His views are his own.