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The Technology of Drug Prohibition

ches_grin writes "Although the GWOT gets all the headlines, technology is proving to be the key factor in the 'war on drugs'. This article and slideshow take a look at the current state-of-the-art for both federal agents and drug traffickers, from greenhouses to Predator drones: 'In the pitched battle surrounding illegal drugs, each side has its advantages. Law enforcement can take advantage of private sector expertise, expensive machines, and, of course, the law. Those who cultivate, manufacture, and smuggle illegal drugs can leverage vast sums of cash, generated by constant demand.'"

8 of 724 comments (clear)

  1. Another "war" without end.... by oDDmON+oUT · · Score: 4, Interesting

    That has done nothing save expand and enshrine the prison "industry".

    Feh!

    --
    Some days it's just not worth
    chewing through my restraints.
  2. War on drugs by Iamthefallen · · Score: 4, Interesting

    From TFA:
    On the other hand, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control found in 2004 that about 20% high school seniors had used marijuana in the preceding month.

    If 20% of your kids are actively sleeping with the enemy, you've already lost the war. No technology in the world will help you when the enemy has wide spread grass root support in your own country. It'd probably be a good idea to start to negotiate a cease fire.

    I'd rather see money be spent on helping those trying to get out of enemy territory than punishing those who want to be there

    And before writing an angry rant about how your cousin's roomate was kidnapped by dealers and forced into drug addiction and prostitution, please see my sig.

    --
    Wax-Museum Fire Results In Hundreds Of New Danny DeVito Statues
  3. Don't you mean the war on... by Rotten168 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    some drugs?

    Caffeine, alcohol, and tobacco are all "psychotropic" substances.

  4. Re:Legalise "Them"?? by Mattintosh · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Legalizing these drugs (and others) serves two purposes:

    1) It allows for the users without self-restraint to remove themselves from the picture, usually through death. It sounds hardhearted, but this really is the only way to convince some people. This has the side effect of showing a generation of would-be users just how awful addiction really is, and during their childhood to top it off!

    2) It allows law enforcement to get back to its REAL job - enforcing laws to benefit society. There's nothing beneficial in forcing useless people to stop killing themselves. Allow them to die and enforce the laws that benefit the "greater good". Now, this doesn't mean that we should turn a blind eye when someone in their death throes decides to stir trouble for everyone else. If you murder, steal, etc. you should still be held accountable for that.

    I don't think drugs are good. Not even marijuana. But I think that people who are stupid enough to harm themselves should be allowed to. It's a long-forgotten concept here in America... "Freedom" they used to call it. Free will and the ability to exercise it are a necessity. Consequences should arise from conflicting interests, not from arbitrary rules.

  5. Talk and Action? by localman · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Opening statement: I've never used any of the currently illegal drugs and don't intend to, yet I am a strong supporter marijuana legalization.

    When I popped into this thread, I was expecting to see the usual arguments. I was expecting to spend a little time combatting ignorance. I wasn't expecting any actual progress.

    However, what amazed me was that every highly rated comment (I browse at +3) was pro-legalization. Every single one. Sure, they were responding to some of the same tired old arguments, but it seemed that the pro-legalization camp was far more strongly represented by both posters and mods. That surprised me and made me hopeful. I'm a regular financial supporter of The Marijuana Policy Project. There are so many lost causes in the world, improvements I'd love to see that will never happen. But I believe this is one issue that we might actually see resolved in our lifetimes.

    I live in the Las Vegas area, and there is a statutory initiative on the ballot this upcoming election. Please, please, please, if you live in the Las Vegas area get out and vote. There are initiatives in other states as well, but I don't know the details there.

    I am convinced now there is more than enough support to pass legalization in many states. But people need to get active about it. They need to watch the issue an vote. If this is an issue you care about, please take the time. We're at a possible turning point in the next 10 to 20 years. We can make things better.

    Cheers.

  6. Re:Why?? by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Legalization doesn't make it easy to obtain Marijuana, nor does keeping it illegal make it harder. In fact, the legality of the substance has had virtually no impact on demand...kinda like alcohol during the 1920s. The legal history of Marijuana is rife with racism, propaganda, and business interests. Actually, until the 1980s, most popular drugs were made illegal for political or racial reasons: cocaine was popular among jazz artists (BLACK!), LSD was popular among hippies (they oppose the government), opium had created problems in the far east (money money money), marijuana was a somewhat viable alternative to alcohol during prohibition (citizens circumventing the law?!), and alcohol had been lobbied against by groups like MADD. One of the only drugs which is actually dangerous to use is methamphetamine, and the danger has nothing to do with "addiction" -- rather, it has to do with the metabolic breakdown of methamphetamine, which creates free radicals in the brain and damages neurons.

    Then, in the 1980s, an actor named Ronald Reagen, ascending to the office of president from his former job as governor of California, where he knocked the state university down a few notches, decided that America needs to spend all the money it gave back in tax cuts on arresting people who use drugs. Furthermore, we would begin saturating our children with anti-drug propaganda, riddled with half-truths and missing information but disguised as legitimate findings. We would adopt the Christian 12-step programs' philosophy of lifetime addictions ("addiction" has no agreed upon medical definition, by the way. Doctors use the terms "abuse" and "dependence" to describe specific behaviors), then tell the parents that if their kids become intoxicated with any illegal substances they will be lying in the gutters and become complete failures in life. Then, we use this theory that if a drug is illegal it is fundamentally bad in order to justify keeping all drugs illegal, until a new generation arises that grew up surrounded by the propaganda who won't even think to question something that they have been told since the age of 5.

    Don't believe me? Consider a substance known as Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA; street name is ecstasy). MDMA was sometimes used by psychiatrists for its ability to help people open up, and some research indicated that small amounts of the substance (below the threshold for getting high) could help cure cluster headaches. Then, a couple of techno fans discovered that the high from MDMA was kinda cool at their parties, and soon MDMA became the most popular party drug after alcohol and marijuana. The response of the US government? Reschedule MDMA as a "schedule I" substance, which classifies it as having no known medical use, and tell everybody that MDMA is the new plague threatening their kids. Tell all the kids that MDMA is going to get them in a lot of trouble in life, but don't bother to tell them what effects MDMA actually has, and create mass hysteria about the substance. Then, perform an experiment on primates that shows MDMA is as neurotoxic as methamphetamine is, and then hide the face that the research was recalled because instead of using MDMA, the scientists accidentally used methamphetamine. Result? People are taken about at the suggestion of legalization.

    The funny thing is that nobody ever needs to present any evidence to support a claim that drugs are a plague to our society. The claims don't even have to make sense: many people believe that crack is a worse substance than cocaine...because nobody informed them that they are the same drug, taken in a different form (crack is smoked and therefore absorbed faster; but cocaine can be injected, and absorbed still faster). What is the difference between morphine and heroine? One is prescribed by a doctor, one is not (pure heroine and pure morphine have similar effects, both physical and mental). Why isn't alcohol demonized the way other drugs are? What about caffeine, don't people become dependent (physically and ment

    --
    Palm trees and 8
  7. The "war on drugs" by Ginger+Unicorn · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The US government caused the drug industry in south america, by sending tons of wheat to places like columbia as "aid" thus running all the wheat farmers out of business (wheat was columbias main export up to the 1950's).

    Gigantic megacorps that run farms like factories can ride out yearly dips and rises in the commodity price of staple crops, but some peasant trying to grow wheat cant say to his kids "wheat is worthless this year, but we can eat next year"; so the peasant farmers of colombia have to find a crop that has constant demand no matter what the US government is subsidising, embargoing or shipping out as aid, and that crop is coca and cannabis.

    --
    (1.21 gigawatts) / (88 miles per hour) = 30 757 874 newtons
  8. Re:Legalise Drugs by hotspotbloc · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The history of the prohibition of drugs is the history of shitting on blacks and mexicans.


    Ding! Ding! Ding! We have a winner! And just to back you up everyone should go watch The History of Marijuana narrated by Woody Harrelson.

    --
    "I hate to advocate drugs, alcohol, violence or insanity but they've always worked for me" - HST