“Thank you note from Mexican drug cartels”
“Joaquin Guzman Loera: Net Worth $1 Billion As of March 2012,” Forbes
“The World’s Billionaires: #701 Joaquin Guzman Loera,” Forbes, March 11, 2009
Why Legalize Drugs?
We believe that drug prohibition is the true cause of much of the social and personal damage that has historically been attributed to drug use. It is prohibition that makes these drugs so valuable – while giving criminals a monopoly over their supply. Driven by the huge profits from this monopoly, criminal gangs bribe and kill each other, law enforcers, and children. Their trade is unregulated and they are, therefore, beyond our control.
History has shown that drug prohibition reduces neither use nor abuse. After a rapist is arrested, there are fewer rapes. After a drug dealer is arrested, however, neither the supply nor the demand for drugs is seriously changed. The arrest merely creates a job opening for an endless stream of drug entrepreneurs who will take huge risks for the sake of the enormous profits created by prohibition. Prohibition costs taxpayers tens of billions of dollars every year, yet 40 years and some 40 million arrests later, drugs are cheaper, more potent and far more widely used than at the beginning of this futile crusade.
We believe that by eliminating prohibition of all drugs for adults and establishing appropriate regulation and standards for distribution and use, law enforcement could focus more on crimes of violence, such as rape, aggravated assault, child abuse and murder, making our communities much safer. We believe that sending parents to prison for non-violent personal drug use destroys families. We believe that in a regulated and controlled environment, drugs will be safer for adult use and less accessible to our children. And we believe that by placing drug abuse in the hands of medical professionals instead of the criminal justice system, we will reduce rates of addiction and overdose deaths.
“Why Legalize Drugs?” from Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP)
More. Much More.
- Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP)
- “Federal Domestic Illegal Drug Enforcement Efforts: Are They Working?” CRS Report R40732
- “International Drug Trade and Its Impact on the United States,” CRS Report 96-671
- “International Drug Control Policy,” CRS Report RL34543
- “Prescription Drug Importation and Internet Sales,” CRS Report RL32191
- “Student Aid Eligibility,” CRS Report RS21824
- “The Controlled Substances Act,” CRS Report RL34635
- “Drug Certification/Designation Procedures for Illicit Narcotics Producing and Transit Countries,” CRS Report RL32038
- “Drug Offenses,” CRS Report RL30721
- “Andean Counterdrug Initiative (ACI) and Related Funding Programs,” CRS Report RL33370
- “Federal Cocaine Sentencing Disparity: Sentencing Guidelines, Jurisprudence, and Legislation,” CRS Report RL33318
- “U.S. Sentencing Commission’s Decision on Retroactivity of the Crack Cocaine Amendment,” CRS Report RS22800
- “Federal Cocaine Sentencing,” CRS Report 97-743
- “U.S.-Mexican Security Cooperation: the Mérida Initiative and Beyond,” CRS Report R41349
- “Drug Crop Eradication and Alternative Development in the Andes,” CRS Report RL33163
- “Ecstasy: Legislative Proposals in the 107th Congress to Control MDMA,” CRS Report RS21108
- “Drug Crop Eradication and Alternative Development in the Andes,” CRS Report RL33163
- “Mexico’s Drug-Related Violence,” CRS Report R40582
- “Drug Trafficking and North Korea: Issues for U.S. Policy,” CRS Report RL32167
- “North Korean Drug Trafficking,” CRS Report RS20051
- “Latin America and the Caribbean: Illicit Drug Trafficking and U.S. Counterdrug Programs,” CRS Report R41215
- “Mexico’s Drug Trafficking Organizations: Source and Scope of the Rising Violence,” CRS Report R41576
- “Afghanistan: Narcotics and U.S. Policy,” CRS Report RL32686
- “Merida Initiative: Proposed U.S. Anticrime and Counterdrug Assistance for Mexico and Central America,” CRS Report RS22837
- “Narcotics Certification of Drug Producing Trafficking Nations: Questions and Answers,” CRS Report 98-159
- “Medical Marijuana: Review and Analysis of Federal and State Policies,” CRS Report RL33211
- “Marijuana for Medical Purposes,” CRS Report RS20998
- “Mexico’s Counter-Narcotics Efforts Under Zedillo and Fox, December 1994 to March 2001,” CRS Report RL30886
- “Hemp as an Agricultural Commodity,” CRS Report RL32725
- “Drug Control: International Policy and Approaches,” CRS Report IB88093
- “International Drug Trade and U.S. Foreign Policy,” CRS Report RL33582
- “Medical Marijuana: Review and Analysis of Federal and State Policies,” CRS Report RL33211
- “War On Drugs: Legislation in the 108th Congress and Related Developments,” CRS Report IB10113
- “War on Drugs,” CRS Report RL32352
- “Ratification of Amendments to the U.S. Constitution,” CRS Report 97-922
- “Mexico’s drug war” – One of the predictable results of prohibition
18th Amendment: Liquor Abolished
21st Amendment: Amendment 18 Repealed
Tags: 18th Amendment, 21st Amendment, 96-671, 97-743, 98-159, ACI, Amendment 18, Amendment 21, Cocaine, controlled substances, Counterdrug, Crack, Crack Cocaine, CSA, DEA, drug legalization, drug trade, drug trafficking, drug war, IB10113, IB88093, illegal drugs, jail, Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, LEAP, Mexico's drug war, narcotics, prison, prohibition, R40582, R40732, R41215, R41349, R41576, RL30721, RL32038, RL32167, RL32191, RL32352, RL32686, RL32725, RL33163, RL33211, RL33318, RL33370, RL33582, RL34543, RL34635, RS20051, RS20998, RS21108, RS22800, RS22837, trafficking, war on drugs