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tod evans
10-01-2013, 05:25 AM
From Drudge;

International 'war' on illegal drugs is failing to curb supply

http://medicalxpress.com/news/2013-09-international-war-illegal-drugs-curb.html

The international war on illegal drugs is failing to curb supply, despite the increasing amounts of resource being ploughed into law enforcement activities, finds research published in the online journal BMJ Open.
Since 1990, the street price of illegal drugs has fallen in real terms while the purity/potency of what's on offer has generally increased, both of which are indicators of availability.
The United Nations recently estimated that the illicit drug trade is worth at least US $350 billion every year. And needle sharing is one of the key drivers of blood borne infections, including HIV. The drug trade is also linked to high rates of violence.
Over the past several decades most national drug control strategies have focused on law enforcement to curb supply, despite calls to explore approaches, such as decriminalisation and strict legal regulation.
The researchers analysed data from seven international government-funded drug surveillance systems, which had at least 10 years of information on the price and purity of cannabis, cocaine and opiates, including heroin.
They also reviewed the number of seizures of illegal drugs in drug production regions and rates of consumption in markets where demand for illegal drugs is high.
Three of the seven surveillance systems reported on international data; three reported on US data; and one reported on data from Australia. In some cases the data went back as far as 1975, with the most recent data going back to 2001.
Three major trends emerged from the data analysis: the purity/potency of illegal drugs either generally remained stable or increased between 1990 and 2010; with few exceptions, the street price generally fell; and seizures of drugs increased in both the countries of major supply and demand.
In the US, after adjusting for inflation and purity, the average street price of heroin, cocaine and cannabis fell by 81%, 80%, and 86%, respectively, whereas the purity and/or potency of these drugs increased by 60%, 11%, and 161%, respectively.
Similar trends were observed in Europe where, during the same period, the average price of opiates and cocaine, adjusted for inflation and purity, decreased by 74% and 51%, respectively, and in Australia, where the price of cocaine fell by 14% and the price of heroin and cannabis dropped by 49%.
In the US seizures of cocaine roughly halved between 1990 and 2010, but those of cannabis and heroin rose by 465% and 29%, respectively; in Europe seizures of cocaine and cannabis fluctuated, but seizures of heroin had risen 380% by 2009.
On the basis of the data, the authors conclude, as previous studies have, "that the global supply of illicit drugs has likely not been reduced in the previous two decades."
They add: "In particular, the data presented in this study suggest that the supply of opiates and cannabis have increased, given the increasing potency and decreasing prices of these illegal commodities."
And they conclude: "These findings suggest that expanding efforts at controlling the global illegal drug market through law enforcement are failing."
"It is hoped that this study highlights the need to re-examine the effectiveness of national and international drug strategies that place a disproportionate emphasis on supply reduction at the expense of evidence based prevention and treatment of problematic illegal drug use," they add.
In an accompanying podcast, co-author Dan Werb says that other indicators of the effectiveness of illegal drug policies are needed, such as rates of HIV related transmission.

donnay
10-01-2013, 08:53 AM
That's because the suppliers are the CIA also know as Al CIAdah. Afghanistan was not about Bin Laden, it was about opium.

thoughtomator
10-01-2013, 09:03 AM
That's because the suppliers are the CIA also know as Al CIAdah. Afghanistan was not about Bin Laden, it was about opium.

As was Bosnia, the route for getting that stuff into Europe.

donnay
10-01-2013, 09:09 AM
As was Bosnia, the route for getting that stuff into Europe.

Absolutely!

Antischism
10-01-2013, 09:28 AM
Why isn't the War on Drugs being defunded?

tod evans
10-01-2013, 09:30 AM
Why isn't the War on Drugs being defunded?

It is, haven't you heard government is shutting down.

Antischism
10-01-2013, 09:31 AM
It is, haven't you heard government is shutting down.

Shutdown? More like a paid vacation.

donnay
10-01-2013, 09:59 AM
Why isn't the War on Drugs being defunded?


Because they have too much to lose. The money they collect is for the black-ops that keep constant wars going and keep our jails full with slave labor. It's a very lucrative business that they are not readily going to give up. Unless we expose it, and educate the people about it.

better-dead-than-fed
10-01-2013, 08:30 PM
The people who claim that decriminalization would amount to "forcing everyone to smoke pot"; are they serious or just profiting from this black market run by corrupt government employees?

Mani
10-02-2013, 03:43 AM
Cops like to bust pot users.....Its a lot more fun to bust some guy sitting at home smoking weed and eating Cheetos, than taking down actual violent criminals....thats scuuury!!!


Also agreed US needs Afghan for drug trade. When the Taliban started burning down poppy fields years ago (around 2000), the CIA started shitting bricks. Wasnt long after that our troops arrived...Now


http://www.theguardian.com/world/2001/apr/01/internationalcrime.drugstrade (Taliban destroys Poppy farms).


My favorite quote in the article:

The UN's Drug Control Programme (UNDCP), meanwhile, which compensated farmers who switched from opium to other crops, was scrapped in December because of a lack of funding from the US and other donors. (You don't say...The Poor Farmers who got rid of their poppy and switched to something else stopped getting funding from the US??? Poor 3rd world farmers that need literally only a couple bucks to survive a day. So the US stopped helping out on the War on Drugs? You mean we can spend billions and BILLIONS of dollars arming drug dealers in fast and furious and on SWAT teams shooting dogs and helicopters chasing down smugglers at the border and all sorts of other high tech equipment and wastes of money...But spending a few bucks to encourage farmers to STOP production...To actually Prevent the drug from being produced...You mean to do something that would make a DENT in the war on drugs...FOR that, there's not a fucking dime...Yup...Sure...because there never was a GOAL to end the war on drugs). In fact, Fucking Taliban is fucking up the whole goddamn drug market, we need to stop this shit NOW!!



http://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/may/20/taliban-destroy-poppy-afghan-opium

...Afghanistan has for years produced the vast majority of the world's opium, with only a brief break in 2001 when the Taliban government, which had previously relied on the crop to bolster its coffers, unexpectedly dug up most of the country's poppy fields.

But opium production has flourished since the group was toppled by US-backed forces in 2001... (What a koinkydink!)


http://www.zerohedge.com/contributed/2013-09-17/afghanistan-cannabis-and-opium-business

...Export value stands at roughly $4 billion today for the country. (Hmmmm...The CIA I'm SURE would not want to have ANYTHING to do with $4 billion dollars in Opium export....Nah, why would they get involved in such dirty Drug wars you tin foil hat folks!)

http://southasiamonitor.org/detail.php?type=sl&nid=5249

"...Since the US-led invasion of Afghanistan in October 2001, the Afghan opium cultivation and production has soared. In 2001, as a result of the Taliban ban on opium poppy cultivation, production fell to 185 tons, but with the demise of the Taliban regime in late 2001 farmers started growing poppy again. By 2002, it reached 3,422 tons under the international forces regime. According to a UNODC report, The Opium Economy in Afghanistan: an International Problem 2003, there is anecdotal evidence of Taliban’s involvement in the opium economy to expand their exchequer due to growing isolation and funding difficulties.

There has been constant increase in the cultivation and production of opium since then, with production peaking in 2008. Since 2008 till 2012 there has been symmetrical increase in production...." (wait...you mean WE invaded and Opium production EXPLODED??? And The Evil Taliban went from outlawing it, to becoming this efficient structured organization into the entire Opium process? The U.S. worked with the Taliban?? How could this be???)

Most of this stuff is easily discovered online from MULTIPLE sources. Some sources even talk about how the US leaves alone certain Opium folks, because they are just so helpful in find Al CIada.