I don't like weed. I've tried it throughout my teens, but left it there.
With that said, it's amazing to me that we're still having the same conversations around drugs. Decriminalise EVERYTHING! Ensure what is on the market is clean, drive the costs down to remove criminals from the market, and dedicate every police force to protecting those on the bottom rung of the drug ladder.
I read a book from a former officer a while back, where he'd spent two years working on infiltrating a drug network. It was successful, and they not only shut down a major network of drugs, but arrested around 100 people, and removed tons of illegal weapons from the market, and arrested several people in the network known to police for being involved in several murders. They believed that the drug market in the UK during this time had been disrupted "for three hours". That was all it took for another gang to take over, and apparently it's those successes that cause a lot of people to leave drug enforcement - after all, what's the point?
There almost seems to be zero benefit to drug criminalisation, other than "old conservatives hate it".
The police love drug criminalization because it gives them widespread latitude to hassle pretty much anybody they feel like whenever they feel like, because "drugs could be involved." Marijuana especially, since stoners are generally fairly nonthreatening folks but "I smelled marijuana" is a zero-effort way to instantly manufacture a fictitious probable cause for anything.
I don't like weed. I've tried it throughout my teens, but left it there.
With that said, it's amazing to me that we're still having the same conversations around drugs. Decriminalise EVERYTHING! Ensure what is on the market is clean, drive the costs down to remove criminals from the market, and dedicate every police force to protecting those on the bottom rung of the drug ladder.
I read a book from a former officer a while back, where he'd spent two years working on infiltrating a drug network. It was successful, and they not only shut down a major network of drugs, but arrested around 100 people, and removed tons of illegal weapons from the market, and arrested several people in the network known to police for being involved in several murders. They believed that the drug market in the UK during this time had been disrupted "for three hours". That was all it took for another gang to take over, and apparently it's those successes that cause a lot of people to leave drug enforcement - after all, what's the point?
There almost seems to be zero benefit to drug criminalisation, other than "old conservatives hate it".
The police love drug criminalization because it gives them widespread latitude to hassle pretty much anybody they feel like whenever they feel like, because "drugs could be involved." Marijuana especially, since stoners are generally fairly nonthreatening folks but "I smelled marijuana" is a zero-effort way to instantly manufacture a fictitious probable cause for anything.
Rich corporations and people profit, everyone else is criminalized for reasons.