You are ranting with your ludicrous assertions.
Do you think Mayor Barry is a Republican? After being convicted of smoking crack, he was elected to D.C. City Council. He is still holding a political office. I think convicted felons, should be barred from public office.
CNN Praises Marion Barry's 'Resilience,' 'Incredible Tenure'; Asks If He's 'Bothered' By Association With Drug Bust
http://newsbusters.org/blogs/matt-h...esilience-incredible-tenure-asks-if-hes-bothe
I think "liberals" are schizophrenic and hypocritical. They make laws and legislation restricting opiates that cause pain patients to suffer more pain, have more illness and are more likely to die. Their policies prevent pain patients from getting proper medical care. Thereby increasing illness and deaths. Under "liberalism" innocent people must suffer and die, because some people become addicted and some people use those drugs illegally.
Yet much of the the "liberal" movement is advocating legalizing illicit drugs for recreational use. Marijuana, cocaine, heroine, PCP, LSD, crack, methamphetamine, etc.
At a party, I've seen LEOs standing and sitting around white powdery lines on a table (allegedly cocaine), bragging about how they were getting high off of drugs they shook down from a mule.
That's a few of many reasons I am cynical of our government.
Not as cynical as I am, because you still advocate government-enforced prohibition as a solution, despite a century's worth of evidence that it doesn't work.
The Harrison Act of 1914 (which has an interesting history in its own right) didn't directly outlaw opium (nor other substances it incorrectly classified as narcotics, such as coca), but in the best spirit of American progressivism, it taxed them. It also, in effect, made it illegal for doctors to prescribe these substances purely for the maintenance of addiction, thus ushering in the era of Big Brother's presence in the consultation room between a doctor and his or her patient.
The Harrison Act also marked the birth of organized crime in America, a fact that the government acknowledged as early as 1919 in the Rainey Committee report. In fact, the total importation of opium increased steadily and dramatically in the years following passage of the Harrison Act, with proportionately less of it being used for legitimate medical reasons, and proportionately more for recreational purposes.
The government's response was, as one would expect, to "toughen" the Harrison Act, compounding failure upon failure rather than recognizing an essential detail about the realities of drug distribution that people like yourself still fail to grasp, almost a hundred years later. It's that detail that is the missing piece of the puzzle that makes drug laws actually harmful, rather than being simply useless.
That detail that people like yourself miss is this: Doctors and pharmacists are extremely unlikely to deliberately get someone addicted to drugs. Members of the illegal drug distribution network, on the other hand, have no such ethical constraints.
Doctors may prescribe addictive drugs to treat other medical problems, knowing that dependency is possible or even likely; but they're not going to prescribe those drugs for recreational use by people who are not already users / addicts. That would be unethical.
Drug pushers, on the other hand, routinely get people, often including children, hooked on drugs, as a marketing and growth strategy. They give away free samples of illegal drugs as if they were selling laundry soap or underarm deodorant, not potentially deadly, highly-addictive, mind-altering substances.
It would be nice if all of you "get tough" types would ponder the fact that the very existence of the profession of "Drug Pusher" is an invention of the government, specifically, of "get tough" types like yourselves. For the last century, you've continually strengthened the illegal drug distribution network by continually applying the same "get tough" strategies, despite repeated evidence that that approach simply doesn't work.
The "get tough" types not being the sort to let facts get in the way of their ideology, in 1965, they gave the FDA the authority to effectively outlaw certain substances, thus ushering in the golden age of the illegal drug distribution empire, an era marked by growth that exceeded even the drug kingpins' hopes and dreams.
The "get tough" types then solidified their failure by codifying it into the Controlled Substance Act of 1970, and shortly thereafter, declaring a "war on drugs," thus guaranteeing that the illegal drug distribution empire will continue to exist and thrive, and that your friendly neighborhood drug pusher will continue to offer freebies to your children to get them hooked.
How much failure will it take to get "get tough" types to grasp this basic fact?
How long will it take for you to understand that the criminal enterprise that encourages and advances addiction for profit is your own creation, and that its continued existence is dependent on its continued illegality?
How long will it take for you to realize that you could make that whole illegal drug distribution syndicate go away overnight, if that's what you really wanted to do?
This whole issue is another reason why I'm no longer a Republican. Republicans claim to want small government, and yet they support a massive anti-drug bureaucracy whose only achievement (other than being a sinkhole for untold billions of dollars) has been to strengthen and incentivize the illegal drug industry and its network of pushers. For what? What else has your "war" accomplished other than making the drug pusher a permanent fixture of urban society?
Again, if there were the least evidence I could grasp upon that the approach you favor actually worked, I might feel differently. I'm very much against drug use, actually. I'm just honest enough and have seen enough to realize that your approach to the problem isn't just useless: It actually makes the problem worse.
-Rich