Mexico Signals It's Had Enough of America's Stupid War on Drugs

phr

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Even on his most homicidal of days, Al Pacino's character in Scarface couldn't even approach the level of drug trafficking-related brutality bleeding down Mexico's streets. It is no longer unusual for the Mexican news media to report on yet another, freshly decapitated head stuck atop a fencepost or a metal spike, or a garbage bag filled with body parts, usually with a hand-scrawled note or placard attached. That amounts to a cartel's calling card, and it's usually delivered in the form of a warning to a rival cartel, or for the Mexican authorities to stay away and stop seizing their drugs. Other times, it's just a chilling placard intended to strike terror into the hearts of the people who come across the gory scene and the text: "Ha Ha Ha." To be sure that their message is heard, cartels are known to send regular text messages to newspaper reporters, place newspaper advertisements, or to even upload their own killing videos (sometimes accompanied by narco-corridos as background music) to YouTube.

Mexican drug cartels are, rather effectively, fighting the government's War on Drugs with their own War of Terror, often swelling their ranks (and combat/terror tactics) with former members of law enforcement. The Zetas, for instance, are members of former Mexican counter-narcotics squads (some with U.S.-assisted training under their belts), who have become the self-proclaimed and much-feared hit men of the Gulf cartel.

So far this year, roughly 3,500 murders have been directly attributed to the drug war in Mexico, surpassing last year's estimate of 2,500. (These numbers include the murders of at least 500 soldiers, cops, judges, politicians -- and their family members -- in nearly two years. The drug war rages across Mexico's urban and (mostly) rural terrain, and murders are usually targeted toward pronounced rivals, but increasing numbers of victims are innocent bystanders, including women and children who were previously considered off-limits where acts of drug war-related retaliation were concerned.

Reports of attacks are rolling in daily, sometimes several times a day. This Sunday, unidentified gunmen shot up the United States consulate in the northern Mexican city of Monterrey. While no injuries were reported there because the consulate was closed, six young adults attending a private celebration were killed on Saturday in the violence-and-drug-plagued Mexican border state of Chihuahua, in Ciudad Juárez. Those murders, as yet unsolved, followed on the heels of 11 homicides in a Chihuahua bar, when a gunman opened fire on unsuspecting patrons, including a prominent journalist who may or may not have been a specific target.

It should be of note that much of the worst drug war violence is happening right at the border: Tijuana, adjacent to San Diego, saw nearly 40 people murdered in the last week of September alone, in addition to nearly 25 deaths of male and female prisoners the previous week due to two major riots at the vastly overcrowded Tijuana State Prison. (Prisoners alleged frequent incidents of torture and sexual violence, sometimes leading to death, at the hands of guards.)

American newspapers located in border cities and states tend to report some of the more gruesome events and mass killings, but the rest of this country seems remarkably in the dark about what's happening to our Mexican neighbors, much less the fact that the violence has increased dramatically since U.S. drug war dollars have increased in the form of support for Mexican President Felipe Calderón's militarily-minded crackdown on trafficking, with the goal of dismantling the cartels' leadership apparatus, as well as breaking apart close alliances between local authorities, cops, and drug traffickers. (Corruption in Mexican law enforcement and military is epidemic; consider that many police officers in Mexico make no more than $5,000 per year.)

Since President Calderón took office in December 2006, he has authorized large-scale troop deployments (roughly 30,000 troops), in an attempt to diminish the power lorded over Mexico and its citizens by rival Gulf and Sinaloa cartels, as well as affiliates like La Familia, which has earned a reputation for particularly memorable and gruesome acts, including the night that five decapitated heads were thrown onto a dance floor packed with people.

Seizures of illicit drugs, particularly cocaine, have indeed increased. But so has the bloodshed and the level of fear: a national poll published on October 4th indicated that more than 40% of Mexicans felt less secure since Calderón's drug war offensive began. Another poll published by the Mexico City daily, Reforma, showed that more than half of Mexicans believed that the cartels, not the government, were winning the drug war.

Still, as one would imagine, the Bush Administration has responded favorably to Calderón's crackdown on drug cartels, ushering in the three-year "Merida Initiative" to support counter-narcotics efforts in Mexico and Central America: "The Merida Initiative complements U.S. domestic efforts to reduce drug demand, stop the flow of arms and weapons, and confront gangs and criminal organizations," as the State Department explained in April 2008.

This past June, Bush struck a deal with Calderón to approve $400 million toward additional drug war assistance (representing a 20% increase in the Mexican anti-narcotics budget) -- for still more helicopters, military training, ion scanners, canine units, and surveillance technology.

Considering their close ties, President Calderón's announcement earlier this month must have come as a bit of an unwanted surprise to the Bush Administration. On October 2, Calderón proposed legislation that would decriminalize drug possession, ostensibly for personal use. Not just for marijuana, as one might have expected in a country where pot smoke has not been demonized to the same degree as in the U.S., but for cocaine, methamphetamine, and heroin, as well.

To be more specific, Calderón's proposed legislation, supported by the Mexican attorney general's office, is intended to address a different kind of drug crisis on Mexican soil: a growing number of addicts. Cocaine once solely destined from Colombia and other Andean nations toward the U.S. is still flowing in such great supply that it has ended up attracting more users -- and abusers. In addition, meth lab crackdowns in the U.S. have allowed narco-cartels to step in and fill the void, so that speed is now more readily available in Mexico, as well. The impact has been dramatic: according to the government's own statistics, the number of drug addicts in Mexico is estimated to have doubled in just six years to 307,000, while the number of people who have tried drugs at some point rose from 3.5 million to 4.5 million.

If passed, Calderón's legislation would decriminalize up to 2 grams of marijuana, 500 milligrams of cocaine, 40 milligrams of meth, and 50 milligrams of heroin. To qualify, any individual arrested with those drugs would have to agree to a drug treatment program to address admitted addiction or enter a prevention program designed for recreational users. Those who refused to attend one of these kinds of programs would be subject to a fine.

This proposal isn't the first of its kind in Mexican political history. In fact, former President Vicente Fox also supported limited decriminalization just over two years ago, but his efforts were quashed in the wake of unrelenting pressure from the White House and the Office of National Drug Control Policy. It's a safe bet that pressure of this kind has already started up where Calderón's proposal is concerned.

"President Calderón's proposal to decriminalize personal possession of illicit drugs is consistent with the broader trend throughout Western Europe, Canada, and other parts of Latin America to stop treating drug use and possession as a criminal problem," says Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, a national drug policy reform organization. But it contrasts sharply with [the approach taken in] the United States [the U.S. government] should think twice before criticizing a foreign government for its drug policy, much less holding out the U.S. as a model. Looking to the U.S. as a role model for drug control is like looking to apartheid South Africa for how to deal with race."

Or, for that matter, looking toward U.S. intervention in Colombia as a model for how to deal with Mexican drug cartels. In effect, the U.S. government waded into a long-running civil war when it started to throw money toward anti-narcotics military training, aviation training, weaponry, surveillance technology, and the availability of Monsanto's coca-killing herbicide, Round-Up. Ostensibly, all of this assistance was for the "good guys." American taxpayers, as always, were expected to overlook the death squad part of the equation, the part about the right-wing paramilitary leaders who took their U.S.-supplied training and weapons and turned them into family and local economy-displacing attacks akin to, or worse, than that of their sworn enemies, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).

The end result: Colombia's cities, towns, jungles, and streets were turned into even more militarized, more deadly versions of themselves. The U.S. government still declared victory when the leadership of the cocaine-producing Medellín Cartel was dismantled (or killed) from the 1980s to the early 1990s.

That particular cartel was brought down, and city streets are safer today than they were in the 80s and 90s, but Colombia's problems have hardly gone away. Blood still flows as a result of territorial battles between FARC and right-wing militias, often over the control over land suitable for growing plentiful coca crops. At this very moment, there are some 300,000 displaced Colombians, meaning the country has the second-worst internal refugee crisis in the world, right behind Sudan.

Since 2000, in fact, the U.S. has continued to pour huge sums of money into Colombia: over $5 billion since 2000, making it the biggest recipient of drug war funding (from the U.S. to a foreign country) in the 21st century. Has it paid off? Consider that in June, the United Nations released data indicated that coca cultivation actually increased nearly 30% in 2007 to 244,634 acres.

Colombia not only remains the world's largest coca producer, but its farmers have apparently succeeded in creating herbicide-resistant hybrid coca plants that defy Monsanto's poisons. Ninety percent of the cocaine consumed by Americans (half the cocaine consumed in the world goes up American noses) is now flowing this way from Colombia. And much of that cocaine is, indeed, passing through Mexico. (It is estimated that 80% of methamphetamine reaching the U.S. is coming from Mexico directly.)

Last week, the two-day security meeting of the Organization of American States kicked off with the frank admission that Mexico's narco-cartels are primarily buying their cocaine from FARC and right-wing paramilitary groups.

So, too, are Mexican cartels using what were once considered to be Colombian narco-terror tactics, including the use of "Colombian neckties" and the killing of innocent civilians. In fact, the drug war in Mexico is beginning to look, feel, and sound like the worst of the drug war in Colombia in the 1980s and 1990s. In late August, eleven headless, shirtless bodies were found handcuffed together in the Mérida suburb of Chichi Suarez, in Yucatan State. The nature of the as-yet-unsolved crime is considered to be one drug cartel's "warning sign" to a rival group.

Mexican civilians have even become the recent victims of explosives detonated in public spaces, something that had not previously been a concern. The use of larger-scale explosives as a method of terrorist attack started just two months after Calderón took office, leading up to last month's terrifying explosion in a crowded plaza in Morelia, the capital city of Michoacán. The attack in broad daylight was timed to coincide with Mexican Independence Day festivities: over 100 people, primarily working-class men and women who had gathered for the free celebration, were wounded in the attack. Eight people were killed, including a 13-year-old.

As was the case in Colombia, journalists are being increasingly targeted for exposing narco-cartels (or links with officials and law anforcement, as the case may be). The Chihuahua bar shooting last Thursday claimed the life of David Garcia Monroy, a well-respected columnist at the daily newspaper, El Diario de Chihuahua. That same day, the editor of La Noticia de Michoacán, Miguel Angel Villagomez, was kidnapped as he left work in the port city of Lazaro Cardenas. And, on September 23, a popular Mexican radio host, Alejandro Zenn Fonseca Estrada, was shot to death with AR-15 rifles, at close range, in Villahermosa, the capital of Tabasco. According to witnesses, a van pulled up alongside Fonseca as he was hanging anti-violence posters on a major street. (According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, one of the posters read, "No to Kidnappings"). The murder remains unsolved.

According to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), Mexico ranks 10th on CPJ's "Impunity Index," a list of countries where journalists are attacked or slain on a regular basis and those crimes consistently remain unsolved.

Calderón's call for decriminalization won't put a direct dent in this kind of violence, but former Seattle Police Chief Norm Stamper, author of Breaking Rank: A Top Cop's Exposé of the Dark Side of American Policing, says that it's a step in the right direction toward alleviating the overflow of non-violent drug offenders in Mexican courtrooms, jails, and prisons -- something that's beginning to resemble the criminal justice landscape of the United States. Stamper, an active member of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP), says that those comparisons need to be drawn. "Our drug policy, predicated on the prohibition model, has caused far more harm than good, locally and globally, " he says. "The results? The same as Mexico's: higher potency drugs, more readily available, and at cheaper prices than ever."

Statements like these, particularly coming from prominent members of law enforcement, would have been almost unheard of in the not-too-distant past. But these days, American public is sending strong signs that they, too, are ready for a truly different approach to drug and sentencing policies, as well as strategies on mental illness and/or substance abuse treatment. According to a nationwide Zogby poll released on October 2, three out of four U.S. voters believe that the war on drugs is failing, while over one-quarter agree that legalizing at least some drugs is the best alternative to the current strategy.

While Stamper supports Calderón's call for decriminalization, fellow LEAP activist and board member Terry Nelson says that he doesn't believe in "incremental steps," explaining that nothing short of complete legalization will bring an end to the profit-driven violence associated with the global drug trade, valued at around $500 billion per year. "To use a drug is not to abuse a drug," says Nelson. "Calderón is just trying to take some pressure off the court system with legalization, [most] of the actual crime and violence would be taken away, almost overnight."

A 32-year veteran of the military and various branches of law enforcement, Nelson's career took him on narco-traffic interdiction training and surveillance missions across Mexico, Central and South America. Nelson admits that he was involved in the Mexican Aviation Training Initiative, "designed to improve our counterparts in Mexico's professionalism in enforcing Mexican drug laws."

Some of the people Nelson helped to train ended up as Zetas, as he later found out.

Now retired and living in Fort Worth, Texas, Nelson served for five years as the Field Director of Surveillance Support Branch East (SSB East). During that time, he says, SSB East successfully seized of over 230,000 pounds of cocaine throughout Latin America. Nelson's biggest, personal drug trafficking bust happened off the coast of Ecuador, resulting in the seizure of 30,000 pounds of cocaine.

Much to his dismay, even such a large-scale bust yielded absolutely nothing by way of a drop in street supply -- or an increase in price. "If that big a bust doesn't affect the street trade," he muses, "what chances do you have doing it a gram or a kilo at a time?"

To put it another way, he asks, "if we hadn't called it a war to begin with, could we admit that we're not winning?"


As the Violence Soars, Mexico Signals It's Had Enough of America's Stupid War on Drugs
Silja J.A. Talvi
Alternet
10.14.08

Link!
 
The USA's "war on drugs" has done nothing but increase the power and influence of criminal elements that are finding HUGE profits because as long as there is demand, they WILL find a way to supply it. Not only that, but getting ripped off with inferior product, or product that contains cheaper, more dangerous fillers, does more harm than if the people were getting the real product. Things like X getting cut with things such as PMA, or worse, lsd being replaced with crappy DOC or even worse harmful chemicals, etc., are literally KILLING people.

The lack of education about the REAL facts about drugs such as lsd, mushrooms, pot, and ecstasy, have done far MORE harm to America than any perceived gains from this "war". The losers here are the common people. Someone gets into a car crash and kills themselves and/or another person(s) after the offender drank a 12 pack of beer and got behind the wheel, get blamed on things such as pot or x, when they find even traces of those sch.1 substances in the blood, makes the drug look bad, when in reality, that drug had NOTHING to do with the crash.

It's getting better, since they govt. can't blatantly lie as easily, with the average person becoming more aware of the reality behind the aforementioned drugs due to better science, and the internet helping people communicate better.

While the REALLY dangerous drugs such as alcohol, tobacco, and pharms are running rampant....

Yes, the "war on drugs" is counterproductive, and a blatant LIE, it's designed to do one thing mostly, to keep our prison systems filled with another meal ticket for someone, while honest, non-violent, hard working, tax paying, family type people are getting put behind bars because they wanted to enjoy a joint or a hit of x in the privacy of their own homes....
 
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hasnt calderon called for this before?? i thought he did and like, the US threatened to cut off all border trade.
 
The stupid dumb usa's war on drugs is more dumb and pathetic now than any other time before. God forbid another stupid republican gets in, get Obama in, maybe something smart will be realized. Come on stupid authorities or any dummy who supports the dumb war on drugs. The usa is in the worst recession since the great depression, everyone everyday I see and run across out there when I'm out and about in my area is depressed and pissed and just sick of life, SO LEGALIZE GETTING HIGH for christs sakes, at least it will make people happy again when things suck so bad in the us right now, recession, economy, floods, natural disasters, a current president everyone can't wait to see leave office so toke up, snort up and legalize opiates etc so people can be happy. I think the us just wants people to be depressed so they can push expensive crappy useless antidepressants that barely do anything compared to the glow of happiness a bag of H brings. Its all about money, that's all the us cares about, Hmmm I wonder why the cartels aren't shedding blood and massive violence against people in the us like shooting down a us anti drug helicopter or something, why is this only happening in Mexico? is the us too big for its boots and thats why the cartels are afraid to attack anything in the usa itself? such as dea offices or whatever they would do. I dont understand it but it seems like the whole thing is bullshit to me.
 
Well there should definitely be a difference in the way people are treated based on quantities and level of violence associated with it.

Clogging up the courts and overcrowding jails with non violent recreational users or addicts and then sending them to jail is wasting a chance to divert them to where they belong.....in the medical/addiction programs. At least they'll get exposure to recovery paths which I think would be more productive than just throwing them in jail. Especially for addicts. They (usually) don't stop using because they do some time in jail here or there, rather they make new (and often more dangerous) connections.

IME
 
Probably if not the overall "BEST," piece of up to date information I"ve ever read!! THANK GOD FOR LEAP, and thank god that we as gods creation do see, and can tell if something is not working for the good of the human race. THE UNITED STATES SOUNDS LIKE A MONSTER.... I mean whats in it for the United States for offering and giving BILLIONS of dollars to these countries to create more terrorist actions in these countries? What does the UNITED STATES get out of funding the war on drugs in these countries? I just think its wonderful how even with all the "BILLIONS," the United States throws at these countries, they still cannot be "BOUGHT" by the United States no matter how much money Bush throws at them.... There still are nations that do whats good for there "own," people, and not whats good for there currency. The united states would rather reck havoc on its own innocent freedom loving people for the old might dollar, than see there own people living in harmony with drugs in a way soon to be discovered.

The United States although the best country in the world to live, sounds like a HUGE PUSHER of Financed terror, and war on the innocent of countries that just so happen to produce medicine and drugs. I could just see it now, Mr. Bush has a few beers the night before and thinks about how can we push, sell, or corrupt these usually peaceful nations to directly start serious war with there own non violent citizens.... 5 billion $'s, yea well, that might be a good number to corupt these nations and begin a bloody holocaust of hell against the non violent self medicating citizens every country has and always will have. ITS A DEVILISH MOVE, and the United States with being "The Land of The Free," and helps to spread "FREEDOM," all across the globe, would be the Osama bin Laden of the movement of war against these countries. Its washingtons fault and I just hope that the Latin American leaders don't get blinded by the U.S dollar, and see threw and into the hearts of its people..... SHAME ON YOU AMERICA!!!!
 
chrisinabox said:
40mg of meth, 50mg of heroin??? thats like half a dime. it should AT LEAST be half a gram.
maybe that's for the substance only not factoring in the cuts. still it's a quite a low number (over here you can't get more than 6 months in jail for possession of 'a small amount' = under 3g of pure h [or a whopping 30g of pure mdma ;) ] )
 
Also SHAME ON FUCKING AMERICA for its corrupt shitty worthless healthcare industry, I live in a big city and the suburban hospitals suck just as bad if not worse. Why is the local hospital near me spending millions to make the place look like a mansion? to trick people into thinking "wow this place looks like it really cares about people just as their bulletin boards say" WELL FUCK YOU CENTRAL DUPAGE HOSPITAL YOU SUCK AND ARE CORRUPT AND TREAT PAIN PATIENTS LIKE SHIT ESPECIALLY IF THEY HAVE ADDICTION HISTORY THAT IS NOT THEIR FAULT IT STARTED IN THE FIRST PLACE

Dont judge a book by its cover or be fooled by their pathetic "good will sounding ads" they are full of bullshit and I am proven fact of that and will never have surgery at that pathetic fucking corrupt hospital again even if I'm going to die, they wont be getting a fucking grinding off a penny from me after they let me shake about to go into shock last time I woke up from a fairly major surgery and they would not do anything about my pain just because I'm a worthless junky to them.

Its time for people like me who have been through shit like this even who are not addicts to speak up on these boards if only they knew about them. I mean hell this pathetic hospital only gives MAX 2milligrams of morphine or dilaudid to someone in chronic pain, how pathetic is that? I myself even talked to a few nurses there who are on my side who said "yes this place is corrupt and I wish I could speak up but I'd lose my job, but I think some of us nurses will soon band together and do something about this place"

Well they better start doing something or soon people will just stop going there or be forced to copping on the streets in the city for true pain relief.

Yea america is better that other countries in some ways, but for me I am pissed and think alot sucks ass so bad in america that I dont have much respect for usa at all and think very little about the self centered useless people around me. Maybe its just chicagoland, but lucky for me, its worth a 4 hour drive to a REAL hospital that is compassionate and treats me well while in pain, guess what? they didn't waste money on rebuilding their hospital to look like a mansion, instead they spend it on careing for patients. So dont let the look of a healthcare place or hospital fool you. It could look not so great on the outside but be awesome on the inside.

Nuff said, now hopefully someone high up in this country will read this and believe the truth I'm speaking about healthcare in parts of america and how the stupid "war on drugs" even affects innocent people like me!
Screw war, let peace rule and drugs flow to patients in pain or people with treatment resistant depression.
 
Newmoonrecord said:
hasnt calderon called for this before?? i thought he did and like, the US threatened to cut off all border trade.

It was actually Vicente Fox who tried for it intially. It is mentioned in the articel, but Fox's paln was far better. However, one of the high ranking members of their legislature is calling for Amsterdam-style sale of weed, as well as personal growing of five plants. The Chicago Tribune had an article about it today, but I'm too lazy to look it up right now.
 
onlywant2nod said:
The stupid dumb usa's war on drugs is more dumb and pathetic now than any other time before. God forbid another stupid republican gets in, get Obama in, maybe something smart will be realized. Come on stupid authorities or any dummy who supports the dumb war on drugs.

I'm an American ex-pat and an Obama supporter, but don't get your hopes up about too many social and civil rights issues under an Obama administration. Like it or not, America as a whole still is more socially conservative than most other Western nations. A federal shift from the current war on drugs to a mandate of harm reduction/minimization is not on the event horizon, even under an Obama administration.

No matter any politician's personal stance on civil and social issues such as drug use, capital punishment, gay marriage, abortion, etc., the American public is far from ready to have serious debate and a social shift. The Democrats are not necessarily the social liberals that many would paint them to be and they have a tight rope to walk; anything too abrupt would be political suicide.
 
I think over the last 30 years that America is over due to face those issues. There all mature subjects which are absolutly "NORMAL," topics to discuss and they all have the same answer. If this is indeed "The Land Of The Free," then if the puplic votes on something and its voted in or voted out, as long as it one doesn't impact another citizen negativelly or violently in anyway, then it should absolutly be accepted. The governments job is to govern not play mommy. Let people be people, all they wana do is industialize every speck of land they can with another mcdonalds, yet when people finally "GET AWAY," either upstate or on vacation they become "HUMAN." I know OBAMA would decriminalize drug use, I know that the United States is more than ready to legalize marijuana and unclog our jail system with self medicating citizens who use marijuana or any other drug. Tell McCain and his proposed "SPENDING FREEZE," to use 5 BILLION DOLLARS of that money and help out every single school district in the entire united States of America... The gov't people are robots, I just don't get it, I bet if George Washington could see this now, I"d bet he'd knock out George Bush cold. "LAND OF THE FREE" "ALL MEN CREATED EQUAL" FUCK"N UNREAL..............
 
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maybe that's for the substance only not factoring in the cuts. still it's a quite a low number (over here you can't get more than 6 months in jail for possession of 'a small amount' = under 3g of pure h [or a whopping 30g of pure mdma ] )
Possession of 30g of MDMA is a mandatory minimum of at least 10 years in federal pound-me-in-the-ass prison in the USA, so consider yourself lucky. Perhaps the most obscene thing is the fact that possession of that much LSD--a chemical that has killed virtually no one, ever, has almost no dangerous physical effects, is cognition-enhancing and is a non-addictive (in the classical sense) chemical--would be a mandatory minimum life sentence without the possibility of parole.
 
This is gonna be very, verrry interesting to see how it turns out. Obviously, decriminalizing small amounts of drugs is the best, if not the only thing that Mexico can do to dramatically lower violence, but U.S. sure won't like that. It will be interesting if the opinion (or bullying) of U.S. will be held in the same regard as in all prior times. Times are changing!
 
^Actually, all out legalization is the best they could do. I don't see decrim impacting the actual narco wars one bit.
 
panic_the_digital said:
^Actually, all out legalization is the best they could do. I don't see decrim impacting the actual narco wars one bit.

True, I mean to add that it will have a positive effect on the current strain on the judicial and penitentiary systems in Mexico and a slight effect in lowering the violence. I'm not sure how to justify the lowering the of violence bit but it would somehow seem to be a possible consequence.
 
50mg's of pure h= enough to get off

40mg's of D amphetamine well 45 sense there 15mg pills= ALOT.

Now street drug users need so much more becuase it's cut way more then they know.

So basically it's kind of like if you comparing pure morphine to how much street H it wuold take you to get off. Although there slightly different.
 
Fuck Legalizing it, Look at all the fun that is to be had murdering and chopping up people if it stays illegal!
 
I'm all for MDMA pot etc, but cocaine heroin and meth have the power to destroy a country.
 
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