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WALL STREET JOURNAL
4 hours ago ago from NewsLanc.com
“Saving Mexico” reports from Mexico City: “To weaken the cartels, some argue the U.S. should legalize marijuana, let cocaine pass through the Caribbean and take the profit motive out of the drug trade… A senior Mexican official who has spent more than two decades helping fight the government's war on drugs summed up recently what he's learned from his long career: ‘This war is not winnable.’ Economically, there is no argument or ...
Related contentSolutions to Mexico's Drug Crisis
3 hours ago ago from One Penny Sheet
OPS_admin | Dec 26, 2009 | Comments 0 To weaken the cartels, some argue the U.S. should legalize marijuana, let cocaine pass through the Caribbean and take the profit motive out of the drug trade In the 40 years since U.S. President Richard Nixon declared a war on drugs, the supply and use of drugs has not changed in any fundamental way. The only difference: a taxpayer bill of more than $1 trillion. A senior Mexican official ...
Related contentDrug War Debate on the Right
16 hours ago ago from Law Enforcement Against Prohibition
LEAP does NOT take sides in political disputes and has members and supporters from many different political perspectives. However, we should take note of debates that are taking place. A conservative blogger recently wrote an essay on drug legalization in which she argued that marijuana should remain illegal because : Marijuana . . . has always been counter-cultural in the West. Every toke symbolizes a thumb in the eye of Western values. ...
Related contentWant to Weaken Mexican Drug Cartels? Legalize Marijuana.
16 hours ago ago from Free Market Mojo
In the 40 years since U.S. President Richard Nixon declared a war on drugs,' the supply and use of drugs has not changed in any fundamental way. David Luhnow of the Wall Street Journal writes . The only difference: a taxpayer bill of more than $1 trillion. So what would be the best step to take to win an unwinnable war? Growing numbers of Mexican and U.S. officials say—at least privately—that the biggest step in hurting the business ...
Related contentSaving Mexico
13 hours ago ago from The Denver Chronicle
To weaken the cartels, some argue the U.S. should legalize marijuana, let cocaine pass through the Caribbean and take the profit motive out of the drug trade By DAVID LUHNOW Wall Street Journal Dec 26, 2009 Mexico City In the 40 years since U.S. President Richard Nixon declared a "war on drugs," the supply and use of drugs has not changed in any fundamental way. The only difference: a taxpayer bill of more than $1 trillion. A ...
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