abonnement Unibet Coolblue Bitvavo
  donderdag 22 maart 2012 @ 02:07:27 #101
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_109375033
quote:
1s.gif Op donderdag 22 maart 2012 01:12 schreef El_Matador het volgende:

[..]

Sterker; de VS is de afzetmarkt voor die klotedrugs. De cokesnuivers in de VS houden die hele zooi in stand. Zonder kopers geen verkoop.

Als men slim is, zorgt men voor eigen productie van prettigere drugs in de VS. Zoiets als de Nederlandse XTC-markt dus.
Je kan mensen niet dwingen iets anders te gebruiken, dat is juist onderdeel van de oorlog. De farmaceutische industrie produceert voor een groot deel "drugs"; pijnstillers, anti-depressieva, etc. Plantaardige drugs zijn ongewenste concurrentie. Maar mensen bepalen zelf welke drugs ze willen.

Jouw plan is dus precies wat men probeert, en dat werkt niet.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 24 maart 2012 @ 08:09:27 #102
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_109454913
Druglord nr 1:

quote:
Pope arrives in Mexico pledging to fight drugs 'evil'

Thousands greet Pope Benedict XVI on his first visit to Mexico, as he denounces drug-related violence in the country

Pope Benedict has arrived in Mexico promising to "unmask the evil" of drug trafficking in a country ravaged by gang violence that has killed 50,000 people in the past five years.

The pope began his three-day visit to the world's second-most populous Catholic state in the central city of Leon, where he received one of the most exuberant welcomes of any of his foreign trips.

Tens of thousands of people, 20 deep in some places, lined the streets on his 22-mile (35-km) drive through the city.

He touched down in Mexico after making strong statements aboard his papal plane about the country's spiralling drug war.

"We must do whatever is possible to combat this destructive evil against humanity and our youth," he told reporters, referring to the violent conflict between rival drug cartels and the state.

"It is the responsibility of the Church to educate consciences, to teach moral responsibility and to unmask the evil, to unmask this idolatry of money which enslaves man, to unmask the false promises, the lies, the fraud that is behind drugs," the pope added.

Raising his arms aloft as he exited the plane, Benedict descended the stairs slowly, holding the handrail. He was greeted by President Felipe Calderon and a group of children while crowds cheered and waved Vatican flags.

Addressing the masses gathered at the airport in a steady, measured tone, the pope, speaking in Spanish, said he had come as a "pilgrim of faith, of hope, and of love."

"I will pray especially for those in need, particularly those who suffer because of old and new rivalries, resentments and all forms of violence," said Benedict, adding that he hoped his message would also reach Mexicans outside of their homeland.

The bloodshed across Mexico was in the mind of many waiting to see Benedict in the city, a Roman Catholic stronghold that has avoided the worst of the brutal turf wars.

Throngs of Catholics dressed in white t-shirts and caps threw yellow and white confetti, having waited since early morning to see the pope pass. Many of them were young people let out of school for the day.

Several stood in front of a large banner that read "Pope, pray that the violence ends, pray that peace returns."

"Violence is the country's biggest priority. There are some places where you can't even set foot outside it's so dangerous," said 16-year-old Martin Zamora who hung the sign with his Catholic youth group.

"Many young people have decided to join up with organised crime instead of fighting it. That's what the pope is coming here for, to help save young people."

Benedict, who turns 85 next month, will rest for 24 hours to recover from jet lag. His main message will be delivered on Sunday at a massive outdoor service that hundreds of thousands of people are expected to attend.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 24 maart 2012 @ 10:13:47 #103
56749 BlaZ
Torpitudo peius est quam mors.
pi_109456102
quote:
2s.gif Op donderdag 22 maart 2012 01:49 schreef Eyjafjallajoekull het volgende:

[..]

Mexico valt nog mee. Het is vooral de grens waar het zo slecht gaat. Mexico is gigantisch natuurlijk. Volgens mij gaat het in een aantal omringende landen nog erger aan toe dan in Mexico.
Inderdaad Honduras en Guatemala zijn nog een stuk gevaarlijker.
Ceterum censeo Turciam delendam esse.
pi_109463443
quote:
7s.gif Op donderdag 22 maart 2012 02:07 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]

Je kan mensen niet dwingen iets anders te gebruiken, dat is juist onderdeel van de oorlog. De farmaceutische industrie produceert voor een groot deel "drugs"; pijnstillers, anti-depressieva, etc. Plantaardige drugs zijn ongewenste concurrentie. Maar mensen bepalen zelf welke drugs ze willen.

Jouw plan is dus precies wat men probeert, en dat werkt niet.
Dwingen heb ik het niet over gehad. Marktwerking werkt ook met drugs; door de aanpak van wiet en crack, kwam er ineens het ranzige crystal meth op de markt.

Jij wuift je eigen verantwoordelijkheid weg, dat is veel dommer.

Coke gebruiken = de boel in stand houden...
The only limit is your own imagination
Ik ben niet gelovig aangelegd en maak daarin geen onderscheid tussen dominees, imams, scharenslieps, autohandelaren, politici en massamedia

Waarom er geen vliegtuig in het WTC vloog
  zaterdag 24 maart 2012 @ 16:01:08 #105
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_109463731
quote:
1s.gif Op zaterdag 24 maart 2012 15:49 schreef El_Matador het volgende:

[..]

Dwingen heb ik het niet over gehad. Marktwerking werkt ook met drugs; door de aanpak van wiet en crack
en coke en speed
quote:
, kwam er ineens het ranzige crystal meth op de markt.
Wat aangeeft dat de War on Drugs alleen negatieve effecten heeft.
quote:
Jij wuift je eigen verantwoordelijkheid weg, dat is veel dommer.

Coke gebruiken = de boel in stand houden...
Ik neem geen verantwoordelijkheid voor een wet waar ik tegen ben. Drugs verbieden is pervers, dat wrijf je gebruikers niet aan. Dat wrijf je de wetgever en lobbyisten aan.

[ Bericht 6% gewijzigd door Papierversnipperaar op 24-03-2012 16:11:32 ]
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 25 maart 2012 @ 10:39:22 #106
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_109484019
quote:
Guatemala proposes legalisation of drugs

President says war on drugs has failed and region must look at ways to regulate production, transit and consumption.

Guatemalan President Otto Perez Molina has said the war on drugs in Latin America has failed, and has set out a raft of proposals to look at the possibility of decriminalising narcotics or establishing a regional court to try traffickers.

"The proposal is decriminalisation," Perez said at a Central American summit on Saturday to address security throughout the region.

"We are talking about creating a legal framework to regulate the production, transit and consumption of drugs."

Perez Molina called the meeting to consider decriminalisation as a way of reducing drug-related violence.

But the presidents of Nicaragua, El Salvador and Honduras all cancelled their attendance at short notice.

Daniel Ortega of Nicaragua, Mauricio Funes of El Salvador and Porfirio Lobo of El Salvador decided not to attend.

Change of strategy

The discussion reflects growing concern in Central America about the cost of the war on drugs, which is prompting leaders to take an increasingly independent line from the United States, where officials have repeatedly rejected legalising drugs.

"We have seen that the strategy that has been pursued in the fight against drug trafficking over the last 40 years has failed," Perez Molina said. "We have to look for new alternatives. We must end the myths, the taboos, and tell people you have to discuss it."

Perez Molina caused widespread surprise when he announced in January that he thought it was time to consider decriminalising the consumption, production and trafficking of drugs.

A retired general, Perez Molina won an election in November 2011 promising to crack down on organised crime.

But he shifted from his hard-line message shortly after taking office in January, calling for a more open debate on drug policy.

"It's important this is on the discussion table as an alternative to what we've been doing for 40 years without getting the desired results," said Perez Molina, noting that decriminalisation would erode drug cartels' profits.

The president added that Central American leaders were considering asking the US, the biggest consumer of South American cocaine, to pay the region for drug raids.

"We're talking about economic compensation for every seizure undertaken and also the destruction of marijuana and cocaine plantations," said Perez Molina.

Regional leaders in countries affected by drug violence have called for more open debate on other solutions to the problem.

Mexican President Felipe Calderon, to whom Perez has turned for advice on confronting the cartels, has called on Washington to take more responsibility for reducing demand for drugs, and has said he is open to debates about legalisation.

The subject is also likely to be discussed at the Summit of the Americas in Colombia on 14-15 April.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 4 april 2012 @ 21:35:58 #107
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_109914335
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 5 april 2012 @ 13:33:59 #108
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_109937232
quote:
War on drugs a ‘comprehensive failure’

A coalition of legal experts, drug researchers and health professionals based at the University of New South Wales has backed a call by a group of eminent Australians for an overhaul of Australia's approach to illicit drugs.

The Australia21 group of eminent Australians today released their report The Prohibition of Illicit Drugs is Killing and Criminalising our Children and We Are Letting It Happen. The report calls for a fundamental rethink of current policies, and an end to the tough-on-drugs approach.

“By making the supply and use of certain drugs criminal acts, governments everywhere have driven their production and consumption underground and have fostered the development of a criminal industry that is corrupting civil society and governments and killing our children,” the report says.

Backing the report today is the newly formed Australian Drug Law Reform Initiative, comprising 20 multidisciplinary experts from the University of New South Wales (UNSW) and internationally. The group says the current approach to illicit drugs has comprehensively failed.

Every year some 400 Australians die from illicit drugs and thousands more suffer the short and long-term term health and social consequences of drug dependence. Criminalisation of drug production and use has resulted in the pervasive corruption of the criminal justice system, the group says.

“Over a decade ago, Portugal decriminalised the possession of small quantities of all illicit drugs. The results showed health and social benefits and a reduced burden on the criminal justice system. It is time to consider whether a similar approach should be taken in Australia,” UNSW criminology professor and initiative member Julie Stubbs said.

Former Director of Public Prosecutions Mr Nicholas Cowdery, a Visiting Professorial Fellow at UNSW, said the problems associated with drug use should be dealt with in the health and social systems, with only the peripheral involvement of the criminal law.

“Over more than 40 years in criminal legal practice I have seen the impotence of the criminal law in an area for which it is not suited,” Mr Cowdery said. “It is time to reform the laws to enable drugs to be dealt with by other mechanisms, although doubtless a small number of bootleggers would still need to be prosecuted.

“We need to discuss generally and openly the best way forward and engage politicians in the process. UNSW’s Australian Drug Law Reform Initiative provides the forum for that to occur in an informed way.”

International partner in the UNSW Initiative, Professor Ernest Drucker, from John Jay College of Criminal Justice (CUNY) in New York, said momentum for drug law reform was building around the world, especially in Latin America. A founder of the international harm reduction movement, Professor Drucker recently visited UNSW as a Fulbright Senior Specialist.

“As an American public health and drug treatment professional I have seen the harms that both drug addiction and errant drug criminalisation policies can cause. The drug law reform efforts now underway in Australia and other nations mark a hopeful change – a new milestone in our struggle to put drug issues where they belong – in healthcare, effective exercise of social responsibility, and defence of human rights – not as a criminal matter," he said.

President of the Australian Drug Law Reform Foundation and initiative member, Dr Alex Wodak, said: “It is clear that countries that have relied heavily on law enforcement to deal with drugs have failed, at great cost, and a difficult problem has been made much worse. The transition to more effective drug policy needs evidence and insights from law, health and other disciplines. And students need to learn more about the damaging effects of existing laws.”

For more information about the Australian Drug Law Reform Initiative and its aims, go to the website.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 5 april 2012 @ 13:38:30 #109
111528 Viajero
Who dares wins
pi_109937451
quote:
1s.gif Op zaterdag 24 maart 2012 15:49 schreef El_Matador het volgende:

[..]

Dwingen heb ik het niet over gehad. Marktwerking werkt ook met drugs; door de aanpak van wiet en crack, kwam er ineens het ranzige crystal meth op de markt.

Jij wuift je eigen verantwoordelijkheid weg, dat is veel dommer.

Coke gebruiken = de boel in stand houden...
Coke wordt in de meeste westerse landen in de praktijk gedoogd, maar het monopolie op de handel ligt wel bij criminelen.

Ik weiger de gebruikers de schuld te geven van de chaos die door incompetente en/of corrupte wetgevers gecreerd is.

Voor de duidelijkheid: ik heb nog nooit coke gebruikt, en zal het ook nooit gebruiken. Ik kijk echter gewoon praktisch naar de situatie.
It really is just like a medieval doctor bleeding his patient, observing that the patient is getting sicker, not better, and deciding that this calls for even more bleeding.
  donderdag 5 april 2012 @ 13:44:43 #110
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_109937758
quote:
A moral argument against the war on drugs

Former Brazilian President, Fernando Henrique Cardoso, has argued that the war on drugs has failed and cannabis should be decriminalised. He argued that the hardline approach has brought “disastrous” consequences for Latin America. Having just returned from Rio, we can only agree.

One of us was staying with an eminent professor of philosophy. We were returning to her house with her 11-year-old daughter, only to have our way blocked by police with machine guns. They were hunting a drug lord in the local favela – this road was the only escape route and they were preparing for possible altercation.

Cardoso highlights the practical failure of a zero-tolerance approach. A zero-tolerance approach to a crime like taking drugs must always fail, in the same way as a zero-tolerance approach to alcohol, prostitution or drugs in sport will always fail. Paradoxically, the worst thing you could do to the drug lords in Rio is not to wage a war on them, but to decriminalise cocaine and marijuana. They would be out of business in one day. Supplies could be monitored, controlled and regulated, the harm to users and third parties significantly reduced.

The case for legalising drugs has been made often, most recently by Australia’s foreign minister, Bob Carr, who this week co-signed a report declaring “the war on drugs has failed”. The argument is nearly always put forward in terms of the burdens that the drug war has imposed on us in terms of crime and public health. And it is true that these things give us good reason to abandon Richard Nixon’s war on drugs. But we so rarely hear a moral argument in favour of liberalising drug laws. This is a mistake.

Although experts have told us time and time again that things would be better without the drug war, politicians have ignored the expert advice because voters do not want drugs laws to be loosened. And voters feel this way not because they think they know better than the experts, but because they have moral objections to drug use. There is a hidden moral debate driving the war on drugs that we never seem to bring out in the open.

The original drug prohibitions had a moral rationale rather than a practical one. It began with the American prohibition of opium, which was primarily motivated by a moral objection to white people smoking in Chinese-run opium dens. This began a prohibition movement in the United States. In 1913, marijuana — which was used almost exclusively by Mexican and Indian immigrants — was prohibited for the first time by the state of California.

Today, when new drugs are added to the long list of illegal substances, it is because they are judged to be “addictive”, not because they are harmful. The United States’ Controlled Substances Act calls for a drug to be prohibited if it has “a high potential for abuse” and if it “may lead to severe psychological or physical dependence”.

The drug does not have to be harmful in any other sense. According to US government statistics, paracetamol (acetaminophen) is involved in nearly five times as many emergency room visits as MDMA (methylenedioxymethamphetamine, often referred to as “ecstasy”), and it remains available in supermarkets around the world.

So the main reason that drugs like alcohol and caffeine are legal, but cocaine and MDMA are not, is that the latter are judged to be “addictive”. (Suspend for a moment the true belief that alcohol and caffeine are addictive.)

Addiction does harm the addict, to be sure. But self-harm cannot provide grounds for prohibiting a substance. As philosopher John Stuart Mill famously put it, the sole legitimate reason for interfering with a person’s liberty is when he risks harming others.

And while it is sometimes argued that the “drug problem” makes us all worse off, most of these harms flow directly from the zero-tolerance approach — drug prohibitions harm others when they are robbed, beaten or killed by those who run the black market of drugs.

It is sometimes argued by liberal-minded people that addictions warrant state interference because they render the addict incompetent, powerless to make an autonomous decision to take drugs. The addict becomes like a child in need of parental protection — or in this case the protection of the state. In this way “addiction” becomes a moral concept, not a form of harm. It is a condition that robs us of our moral status.

We have argued in a number of articles that such a view of addiction is false. People who take drugs are not suffering from a disease and they do not necessarily have some pathological failing of will power. They may be imprudent or irrational in taking drugs, but then again, we all are, nearly every day, in various ways when we eat unhealthily, engage in risky sports, smoke, drink or gamble.

Addicts may place to greater value on pleasure, or on excitement, or escape from reality, but their addictions are not different in kind to desires for other pleasurable activities. People become “addicted” to gambling, videogames, internet use, exercise, sex, carrots, sugar and water. These substances or activities do not “hijack” the brain — they provide pleasure utilising the same brain pathways as drugs. Every pleasurable activity is “addictive”.

The public discourse on drugs includes liberty, health, and crime, but it so rarely includes the value of pleasure. We do not have to be hedonists to believe that pleasure is one of the important goods in a person’s life. A liberal society should be neutral with regard to which pleasures people may pursue; it should not force people to conform to a particular conception of “good” and “bad” pleasures.

But more importantly, if every pleasurable behaviour can be addictive, then there can be no reason to believe that the pleasures of drug use are less important than the pleasures of good food and wine, of rock-climbing and football, or of browsing the internet. Each of these things is pleasurable, and hence each is addictive, and each can be harmful if done to excess. But we all have a right to pursue the pleasures we find valuable, even though each of these pleasures puts us at risk of addictions or addiction-like problems: alcoholism, pathological internet use, sex addiction, binge eating disorders, and so on.

The right to pursue pleasure gives us reason to legalise drugs, while addiction and self-harm fail to give us good reason to prohibit them. That is the essence of a strong moral argument against the war on drugs.

There remains one possible ground for interfering in liberty and retaining the ban on drugs. That ground is the public interest. If society were to be severely impaired by liberalisation of drug laws, that might be an extreme case that warrants a ban on drugs.

But our (admittedly limited) experience suggests the opposite — the Netherlands appears to have reduced its drug problem, without increasing its overall rate of drug use, by enacting relatively liberal drug laws for “soft” drugs like marijuana. And as Cardoso argues, a complete ban seems to be strongly against the public interest, keeping drug lords in business and the user and others in a position of severe vulnerability.

In the future, perhaps we will give up our squeamishness about drugs which provide pleasure. We could use modern pharmacological science to select or even design drugs which give us the pleasure or experiences we seek, but cheaply and without serious acute or chronic health risks. For the present, the drug which we can most freely obtain is one of the most addictive, one which contributes to violent behaviour, one which produces terrible chronic health effects and the worst withdrawal syndrome of all drugs. Alcohol.

The time has come to take a rational approach to drugs.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 6 april 2012 @ 21:48:50 #111
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_110001270
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 7 april 2012 @ 22:59:32 #112
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_110040679
quote:
'War on drugs' has failed, say Latin American leaders

Watershed summit will admit that prohibition has failed, and call for more nuanced and liberalised tactics

A historic meeting of Latin America's leaders, to be attended by Barack Obama, will hear serving heads of state admit that the war on drugs has been a failure and that alternatives to prohibition must now be found.

The Summit of the Americas, to be held in Cartagena, Colombia is being seen by foreign policy experts as a watershed moment in the redrafting of global drugs policy in favour of a more nuanced and liberalised approach.

Otto Pérez Molina, the president of Guatemala, who as former head of his country's military intelligence service experienced the power of drug cartels at close hand, is pushing his fellow Latin American leaders to use the summit to endorse a new regional security plan that would see an end to prohibition. In the Observer, Pérez Molina writes: "The prohibition paradigm that inspires mainstream global drug policy today is based on a false premise: that global drug markets can be eradicated."

Pérez Molina concedes that moving beyond prohibition is problematic. "To suggest liberalisation – allowing consumption, production and trafficking of drugs without any restriction whatsoever – would be, in my opinion, profoundly irresponsible. Even more, it is an absurd proposition. If we accept regulations for alcoholic drinks and tobacco consumption and production, why should we allow drugs to be consumed and produced without any restrictions?"

He insists, however, that prohibition has failed and an alternative system must be found. "Our proposal as the Guatemalan government is to abandon any ideological consideration regarding drug policy (whether prohibition or liberalisation) and to foster a global intergovernmental dialogue based on a realistic approach to drug regulation. Drug consumption, production and trafficking should be subject to global regulations, which means that drug consumption and production should be legalised, but within certain limits and conditions."

The decision by Pérez Molina to speak out is seen as highly significant and not without political risk. Polls suggest the vast majority of Guatemalans oppose decriminalisation, but Pérez Molina's comments are seen by many as helping to usher in a new era of debate. They will be studied closely by foreign policy experts who detect that Latin American leaders are shifting their stance on prohibition following decades of drugs wars that have left hundreds of thousands dead.

Mexico's president, Felipe Calderón, has called for a national debate on the issue. Last year Juan Manuel Santos, Colombia's president, told the Observer that if legalising drugs curtailed the power of organised criminal gangs who had thrived during prohibition, "and the world thinks that's the solution, I will welcome it".

One diplomat closely involved with the summit described the event as historic, saying it would be the first time for 40 years that leaders had met to have an open discussion on drugs. "This is the chance to look at this matter with new eyes," he said.

Latin America's increasing hostility towards prohibition makes Obama's attendance at the summit potentially difficult. The Obama administration, keen not to hand ammunition to its opponents during an election year, will not want to be seen as softening its support for prohibition. However, it is seen as significant that the US vice-president, Joe Biden, has acknowledged that the debate about legalising drugs is now legitimate.

Fernando Henrique Cardoso, former president of Brazil and chairman of the global commission on drug policy, has said it is time for "an open debate on more humane and efficient drug policies", a view shared by George Shultz, the former US secretary of state, and former president Jimmy Carter.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 10 april 2012 @ 22:33:07 #113
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_110161146
quote:
Anonymous to launch Operation Cannabis 420 campaign

First Netflix, now the drug war. Anonymous is taking absolutely no prisoners this week.

The hacktivist group has declared a new project: Operation Cannabis 420. The informal Internet collective has declared April 20, a traditional day of observance for those in the marijuana community, as a day of action for all occupiers around the world and will launch a full campaign to educate the masses and (hopefully) end the war on drugs.

A press release put out today (April 9) highlights the myriad of medicinal uses for cannabis, and states, "Cannabis has been oppressed by the powers that be that are afraid of its true benefits, and these benefits do help all of mankind! So cannabis fits the criteria for Anonymous support."

And just what can you do? "We ask that all Anons and individuals please support the legalization efforts in any way possible! Even simply signing a petition or sharing info or even just having an open mind about the subject will help!" The group is also asking people to make their online social-media photos green on April 20 as a show of solidarity.

Anonymous and cannabis. It's like my two favourite things all rolled into one. If I didn't have a calendar, I'd swear it was Christmas.
#OpCannabis
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 11 april 2012 @ 22:52:01 #114
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_110209557
quote:
New drug gang wars blow Colombian city's revival apart

Hard-won peace process clears path for bloody challenge to Medellín's top cartel

A team of bodyguards fans out through the three-storey building in central Medellín, calling out "clear" after each room is checked. One gunman remains stationed on each floor; another three guard the building's entrance.

With the area secured, a young man in a designer T-shirt and baseball cap emerges on to the roof terrace, followed by his lieutenant. Javier is a trafficker with Colombia's longest-surviving drug cartel, the Envigado Office, but he describes his work in matter-of-fact terms.

"The Office controls the illegal businesses in Medellín. Its main businesses are extortion, hired killings, the traffic in arms and drugs," he says.

The heavy security is soon explained: Javier fears his cartel – and his home city – may be on the brink of another drug war.

Colombia was supposed to have overcome its bloody history. Over the last decade, the government has pushed leftist rebels back into jungles, overseen the demobilisation of tens of thousands of illegal far-right militia fighters and taken down various drug capos.

Washington foreign policy mandarins such as Paul Wolfowitz have held up Colombia as a model for other countries struggling with narco-chaos, such as Afghanistan and Mexico.

And Medellín, Colombia's industrial heartland, was promoted as the embodiment of the country's renaissance: the murder rate plummeted by about 80% over five years, reaching a decade low of 34 deaths per 100,000 in 2007. Once called the "city of death", Medellín was now open for business.

But the root cause of Colombia's violence – the country's status as the world's biggest cocaine producer – has not disappeared. And Medellín's apparent peace lasted only as long as its underworld was run by one man, through the Envigado Office.

Named after a neighbourhood of Medellin, the Office was originally a group of hitmen acting for Pablo Escobar's cartel. After Escobar's death in 1993, the Office was taken over by a former ally turned bitter rival of Escobar, Diego Murillo, known as Don Berna, who cemented control over Medellín and moved the organisation deeper into drug-trafficking.

The Office will collect on anyone's debt, as long as the creditor is willing to give over 50% of what is recovered. It has its own motto: "Debts get paid – with money or with life."

"Many people know that the government won't act as it should, it won't help the people in what they need. Many people come to us to collect money, debts on cars, debts for drugs, basically anything," says Javier.

In his book The Multinational of Crime: the Terrifying Office of Envigado, journalist Alfredo Serrano writes: "Whenever anyone died, people would say that 'they had got on the wrong side of the Office' – as if this criminal organisation held the power of life itself."

Murillo handed himself in to the authorities in 2005 as part of a peace process with the far-right paramilitary groups, but was accused of continuing to run the Office from behind bars, which eventually led to his extradition to the United States. He was convicted of exporting tonnes of cocaine and sentenced to 31 years in an American prison.

After his conviction, the then head of the US Drug Enforcement Administration said: "American and Colombian communities are safer with the removal of this notorious drug kingpin."

But it would not prove so for Medellín. With Murillo out of the way, a vicious power struggle erupted between his successors. Medellín's homicide rate doubled in 2009, leaving about 3,000 people dead.

"Around 15 close friends were killed in the war. We couldn't go out to clubs, we just had to stay home and not get killed," says Javier.

The factional fighting within the Office came to an end last year with the capture of one of the rival leaders, and since then most of the group has reunited under a new boss, just in time to confront a new threat: one of Colombia's emerging narco-militias, the Urabeños.

The Urabeños sprang up after the peace deal with the far-right paramilitaries. While the main militia leaders were jailed alongside Don Berna, most of the mid-range commanders – those who had been running the day-to-day cocaine operations – were free. Many of these commanders reorganised their old outfits, recruited other demobilised fighters, and returned to drug‑running.

The Urabeños are now a force across much of northern Colombia, bringing a military discipline to organised crime.

"They don't think like average narcos," said Jeremy McDermott, founder of Insight Crime, a thinktank that tracks organised crime in Latin America. "They are extraordinarily political, mixed with deep criminal experience."

The group's power was felt earlier this year when it forced dozens of towns to close all businesses after authorities killed a Urabeño leader. And now they are eyeing Medellín.

The looming battle between the Office and the Urabeños is for control of Medellin's underworld, the vast local market and for positioning to be able to negotiate with the Mexican mafias that ship cocaine to the US.

"Many Colombians are moving over to Mexico to firm up relations," says Javier. "We get our guns from there and they get the drugs from us."

Earlier this month, a city-wide police sweep targeted gangs including the Office, arresting 49 people, including seven due for extradition. Last month, the brother of the current leader of the Office was arrested.

But observers say cracking down on the Office will not be enough to keep the peace in Medellín. Jesús Sánchez, who heads the human rights office for the city's ombudsman, says the local government must offer legal alternatives to the legions of hitmen who would fight any drug war.

"The state must do more than just attack the crime; the state needs a greater presence in the poor neighbourhoods," he said.

Infrastructure in the slums has improved, but Sánchez says the city still owes its young men a historical debt: two generations have grown up in a culture of violence and the easy money of trafficking. "When a young man doesn't find work, he's got the chance immediately to join a gang and get all the money he needs."

Javier doesn't see Medellín emerging from its problems soon. "If this is going to change, people must really want to change. But people always want money and power."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 12 april 2012 @ 22:21:30 #115
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_110254108
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 15 april 2012 @ 14:12:28 #116
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_110348801
quote:
The only winner in the 'war on drugs'

The real effect of militarising drugs policy in Latin America has been to cement the hegemony of the US Southern Command

One of the most interesting and challenging paradoxes of debate on the "war on drugs" is how little examination there has been of its major warrior: the military. In Latin America, that means the US Southern Command (SouthCom).

The story of the US military's involvement begins in the late 1970s and early 1980s with episodic counter-narcotics operations, but when the "war on drugs" became a national security issue, the difference between military and police activities became blurred. At first, there was a certain reluctance on the part of the military to being sucked into an unconventional, politically-driven fight against the illegal drug trade. But they were eventually won over to participation in anti-narcotics efforts – thanks, in part, to growing anti-drug budgets approved by Congress.

New objectives and more resources were the result: correspondingly, SouthCom grew and evolved into a crucial player in what became, by the mid 1990s, a low-intensity conflict being fought on a very broad front. As SouthCom's role became dominant, ideology came into play: the Miami-based command not only carried out anti-drug activities, but also defined a new enemy – "radical populism", in the words of former SouthCom Commander General James T Hill, to the House armed services committee in 2004. Yet, seldom was the US Southern Command's role in the region subjected to scrutiny.

After 9/11 and the rise of the so-called "new threats" (the supposed amalgamation of international terrorism, organised crime, drug trafficking and weapons of mass destruction), Washington ceased to observe a distinction between internal security and external defence. SouthCom experienced a "great leap forward": its role was already extensive, but now it developed into a more autonomous protagonist in the "war on drugs". Plan Colombia, first, and the Mérida Initiative, more recently, were emblematic of the core rationality of a coercive anti-drug strategy – a strategy that, by definition, placed the military centre-stage in a prohibitionist crusade in the Americas.

The strategy led to several developments from 1999 onwards: the establishment of new bases (called "security cooperative locations") in the region, as part of the American global military posture; the increase in non-combatant personnel in charge of Latin America at the Miami headquarters of the US Southern Command over the last decade (surpassing the number of Latin America-related government officials in all the departments located in Washington); the unprecedented, ambitious mission of this command as the "leading joint and interagency organisation seeking to support security, stability and prosperity in the Americas", according to the 2016 SouthCom Command Strategy 2016(pdf); the redeployment of the US 4th Fleet in 2008, which had been inactive since 1950; and the stationing by mid 2010 of 7,000 troops, 200 helicopters and 46 warships to combat drugs in Costa Rica. All these developments are clear signs of the growing significance and autonomy of the US Southern Command in the "war on drugs".

What we are witnessing practically everywhere in the Americas is a coercive prohibition campaign that brings neither a partial nor a total solution to the drug question. Unless its premises are challenged, a permanent sense of a "clear and present danger" with regard to narcotics will be fostered both in the United States and in Latin America – which, in a circular way, will only serve to justify the existing repressive policies. The role of the US Southern Command in the Latin American front of the "war on drugs" is key to the prohibitionist paradigm.

The outcome of this militarisation of drugs policy has been overwhelmingly negative. Military involvement in such an irregular war was not only unrealistic, but has also proved counterproductive. Every once in a while, a momentous triumph is announced in one or another country. But within a few years, the proliferation of front lines in the "war on drugs" reveals that such "success" was, at best, a pyrrhic victory. Meanwhile, democracy deteriorates, national insecurity spreads and human rights violations worsen.

Instead of another state-led "coalition of the willing" to fight drugs in a new location, what is needed is a broad, social alliance with bold ideas that could lead beyond the current failed model of counter-narcotics. What is clear is that the current prohibitionist kulturkampf needs to be replaced. The answers will not come from SouthCom's Miami HQ, but from Latin America's civil societies.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 26 april 2012 @ 15:09:39 #117
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_110816189
quote:
A new legal high goes on sale every week, says EU drugs agency

Centre monitors new laboratory-made psychoactive substances that mimic effects of cannabis, amphetamine and ecstasy

New "legal highs" and other synthetic drugs are appearing on the market at the rate of one a week, the EU's drug agency has warned.

The Lisbon-based European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) says 49 new "psychoactive" substances were officially notified for the first time in 2011 through an EU early warning system.

"This represents the largest number of substances ever reported in a single year, up from 41 substances reported in 2010 and 24 reported in 2009," said the agency.

The largest group 23 were synthetic laboratory designed substances which imitate the effects of cannabis, such as mephedrone marketed as Spice, and a further eight that imitate the effects of amphetamine and ecstasy.

The list of new substances also, for the first time, includes "designer medicines" which are synthesised to mimic the effects of known medicines by slightly altering their chemical structure.

The report also reveals that there has been an explosion in the number of online shops marketing legal highs over the past year.

It says the number of websites selling at least one synthetic drug has more than doubled from 314 in January 2011 to 690 in January this year.

"New drugs have become a global phenomenon which is developing at an unprecedented pace," says the EMCDDA report.

"The speed at which new drugs appear on the market challenges established procedures for monitoring, responding to and controlling the use of new psychoactive substances."

Wolfgang Götz, the agency director, said: "We now see drugs marketed in attractive packages on the internet or sold in nightclubs and street corners.

"Whatever the source, the simple fact is that a dangerous game of roulette is being played by those who consume an ever-growing variety of powders, pills and mixtures without accurate knowledge of what substances they contain and the potential health risk they pose."

The agency says recent surveys show that across Europe, 5% of young people aged 15-24 say they have used legal highs.

In Britain, Latvia and Poland this rises to 10% and in Ireland it reaches 16%.

The UK's Serious Organised Crime Agency (Soca) told the EU that the extent to which organised criminals are involved in the trade in new drugs is unclear.

Soca said it closed down 120 websites in 2010/11 that were continuing to advertise mephedrone and naphyrone, another banned synthetic substance. Both were sold as legal highs before they were banned.

Roger Howard of the UK drugs policy commission, an independent organisation providing drugs policy analysis, said when the 1971 Misuse of Drugs Act was passed new drugs appeared once every few years: now they are being marketed almost once a week.

"We have rapidly growing numbers of psychoactive drugs on the market, and it's becoming increasingly difficult for the police to identify the drugs they're finding," he said.

"Just adding a drug to the long list already controlled won't make much difference.

"The police and forensics are under too much pressure already to be able to offer much deterrent to potential users.

"We are deluding ourselves if we think that using existing controls like temporary bans will solve the problem."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_110816798
control
dangerous
risks

Zou Wolfgang een Oostenrijker zijn? :')

Fearmongers zonder kennis van verantwoord recreatief gebruik.
The only limit is your own imagination
Ik ben niet gelovig aangelegd en maak daarin geen onderscheid tussen dominees, imams, scharenslieps, autohandelaren, politici en massamedia

Waarom er geen vliegtuig in het WTC vloog
pi_110816939
quote:
Whatever the source, the simple fact is that a dangerous game of roulette is being played by those who consume an ever-growing variety of powders, pills and mixtures without accurate knowledge of what substances they contain and the potential health risk they pose."
Dan zouden we maar snel beter sommige drugs legaliseren, daarvan weten we wel de gevolgen en vooral dat deze over het algemeen reuze meevallen. :D
  donderdag 26 april 2012 @ 15:28:53 #120
111528 Viajero
Who dares wins
pi_110817018
quote:
0s.gif Op donderdag 26 april 2012 15:27 schreef Basp1 het volgende:

[..]

Dan zouden we maar snel beter sommige drugs legaliseren, daarvan weten we wel de gevolgen en vooral dat deze over het algemeen reuze meevallen. :D
Drugs zijn slecht dus moeten ze verboden worden. Denk aan de kinderen!

Discussie gesloten, volgend onderwerp graag.
It really is just like a medieval doctor bleeding his patient, observing that the patient is getting sicker, not better, and deciding that this calls for even more bleeding.
pi_110817143
quote:
0s.gif Op donderdag 26 april 2012 15:28 schreef Viajero het volgende:

[..]

Drugs zijn slecht dus moeten ze verboden worden. Denk aan de kinderen!

Discussie gesloten, volgend onderwerp graag.
Als ze in het Catshuis een zak wiet en wat xtcpilletjes hadden gehad, waren ze er heel crealief uitgekomen.... -O-

(mijn 2e neologistische contaminatie van de dag. Ik ga maar es aan het werk)
The only limit is your own imagination
Ik ben niet gelovig aangelegd en maak daarin geen onderscheid tussen dominees, imams, scharenslieps, autohandelaren, politici en massamedia

Waarom er geen vliegtuig in het WTC vloog
pi_110817328
quote:
1s.gif Op donderdag 26 april 2012 15:31 schreef El_Matador het volgende:

[..]

Als ze in het Catshuis een zak wiet en wat xtcpilletjes hadden gehad, waren ze er heel lief uitgekomen... -O-
Helaas is dat niet de vrijheid die de V in 2 partijen die daar onderhandelden voorstaan. :')
pi_110817723
quote:
0s.gif Op donderdag 26 april 2012 15:35 schreef Basp1 het volgende:

[..]

Helaas is dat niet de vrijheid die de V in 2 partijen die daar onderhandelden voorstaan. :')
I know. Waarschijnlijk zijn ze daarom tegen; van wiet ga je links denken en met xtc op boeit het echt geen reet dat de ander moslim is. O+
The only limit is your own imagination
Ik ben niet gelovig aangelegd en maak daarin geen onderscheid tussen dominees, imams, scharenslieps, autohandelaren, politici en massamedia

Waarom er geen vliegtuig in het WTC vloog
  zondag 29 april 2012 @ 08:52:38 #124
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_110921432
quote:
quote:
Authorities believe Regina Martinez, who often wrote about drug cartels in Veracruz, was murdered
quote:
A correspondent with Mexican news magazine Proceso was found dead inside her home in Veracruz state on Saturday and authorities believe the journalist, who often wrote about drug trafficking, was murdered.

Regina Martinez's body was found by police inside the bathroom of her home in the state capital, Xalapa, and there were signs of heavy "blows to her face and body," the state's Attorney General's Office said in a statement. Authorities said initial evidence suggested she died of asphyxiation.

Martinez was the Xalapa correspondent for Proceso, one of Mexico's oldest and most respected investigative news magazines, and she often wrote about drug cartels in the area. Proceso said in a news story on its website that she had worked there for 10 years.

Authorities provided no possible motive for her killing.

Veracruz government spokeswoman Gina Dominguez said agents were searching Martinez's home late Saturday for evidence.

"All lines of investigation will be exhausted. The fact that she was a journalist is one of them," she said.

Recently Veracruz has been plagued by cartel violence, some of it between the powerful Zetas and the so-called Jalisco Cartel New Generation, which is believed to be linked to the Sinaloa cartel. The coastal state is also on a human trafficking route north to the United States.

Veracruz Governor Javier Duarte has ordered an exhaustive investigation into her death, he said in a statement.

Police found Martinez's body after receiving a tip from a neighbour that her house had been left open since early in the day.

In the past year, at least three journalists have been found dead in Veracruz, including Martinez.

In July 2011, a reporter on police matters with the newspaper Notiver, Yolando Ordaz de la Cruz, was found with her throat cut.

A month earlier, gunmen killed Miguel Angel Lopez Velasco, a columnist and deputy editor with Notiver. He was shot together with his wife and one of his children.

Media watchdogs considered Mexico one of the most dangerous countries in which to be a journalist.

There is disagreement on the number of journalist killings. Mexico's national human rights commission says 74 were killed from 2000 to 2011. The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists says 51 were killed in that time.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 4 mei 2012 @ 18:04:25 #125
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_111137494
quote:
quote:
Two press photographers found dead in a canal in the port city of Veracruz alongside a former cameraman and his girlfriend
quote:
Two press photographers have been found dead in a canal in the Mexican port city of Veracruz alongside a former cameraman and a fourth body, less than a week after another journalist based in the city was killed in her home.

The state attorney general's office issued an initial statement identifying photographers Guillermo Luna and Gabriel Huge as among the victims. Both were reportedly working for a local website called Veracruz News and had been missing since the day before.

State authorities later said Esteban Rodríguez, a former cameraman, was also among the dead as well as a woman named as Irasema Becerra, said to be Luna's girlfriend.

It followed the discovery of Regina Martinez, the Veracruz correspondent of the weekly national news magazine Proceso strangled to death in her home last weekend.

The latest murders underline Veracruz's current status as the most extreme focal point for attacks against journalists which have become commonplace in Mexico since President Felipe Calderon launched an offensive against the drug cartels in December 2006 and extreme violence exploded across the country.

Of the nine Mexican journalists killed last year probably because of their work, four were from Veracruz.

Ricardo Gonzalez, of the press freedom activist group Article 19, said journalists in Veracruz are being targeted because of their position "as witnesses to the decomposition of the state."

The attacks intensified following the change of state governor 18 months ago that, observers say, destabilised a previous division of the territory between the Zetas and the Gulf cartels. Their subsequent power struggle has been further complicated by the Sinaloa cartel's attempts to increase their influence in the state which is both a key smuggling route for illegal drugs, as well as fertile territory for kidnappings and extortion rackets.

A local paper called Notiver, which has a reputation for being more critical than most, has been hit particularly hard. Miguel Angel Lopez Velasco, a key figure at the publication, was shot dead alongside his wife and one of his children in June 2011. A political reporter from the same paper called Yolanda Ordaz, was found dead and dismembered a month later.

The two photographers tortured and killed this week were reportedly among a group of journalists who left the paper in fear around that time. After a period lying low they started working again as freelancers.

Gonzalez, of Article 19, said there have been "absolutely no advances" in the investigation of any of the murders of journalists in Veracruz. Rather, he said, the state authorities have tended to hint that the killings were motivated by personal troubles, or filed them away as the work of the cartels ignoring the fact that corruption means it is often difficult to define where the authorities stop and organised crime begins.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 6 mei 2012 @ 01:24:00 #126
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_111191411
quote:
quote:
Senior immigration officers and border force unions say staff shortages and growing political pressure to reduce queueing times mean that operations to combat the influx of drugs, guns and other contraband into the UK have, in effect, been placed on hold.

One senior official at Heathrow told the Observer the situation was so serious that Britain's busiest airport could be described as having "no border controls" when it came to smuggling. The officer, who wished to remain anonymous, added that passengers identified as suspicious, including those accredited to work on Olympic sites, were being waved through without extra security checks because they there were not enough staff to tackle queues.
quote:
The senior official at Heathrow, who has almost 10 years' experience, said: "We have actually ceased doing [anti-smuggling operations] at the moment, even though they won't say they have. Word has already got around to criminal enterprises."

Chris Hobbs, a former Metropolitan police officer who worked with border control at Heathrow and Gatwick before retiring last summer, said: "Organised crime networks will only be too well aware of this and, if they can recruit couriers, will be having a field day."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 6 mei 2012 @ 01:30:53 #127
56749 BlaZ
Torpitudo peius est quam mors.
pi_111191710
quote:
7s.gif [b]Op

Recently Veracruz has been plagued by cartel violence

Nah niks aan de hand in Veracruz momenteel ben er dit jaar alweer 2x geweest. Van een drugsoorlog is er na vorig jaar september echt geen sprake meer.
Ceterum censeo Turciam delendam esse.
pi_111275176
quote:
0s.gif Op zondag 6 mei 2012 01:30 schreef BlaZ het volgende:

[..]

Nah niks aan de hand in Veracruz momenteel ben er dit jaar alweer 2x geweest. Van een drugsoorlog is er na vorig jaar september echt geen sprake meer.
http://translate.google.n(...)om%2F%3Fs%3Dveracruz

Valt wel mee hoor, gebeurt nog genoeg daar.

quote:
Gunmen killed the deputy mayor of the municipality of Atzalan north of Veracruz, Rafael Fernandez Landa, 46 years old, who was a school teacher Telesecundaria "Alfonso Arroyo Flores.

During yesterday became the acts of terror in the state of Veracruz, as authorities moved to the subdivision streets Coyol after receiving the report of a strange situation.

It was right next to the sports called The Pit, where authorities found three male persons, men were beheaded.

Naval Police spotted Thursday in the vicinity of the dwelling unit Las Vegas II of Boca del Rio, four bags with the remains of four of these, were identified Guillermo Luna Varela, who was a photographer and agency Veracruznews Huge Gabriel, who, according to local media, until last year worked as a newspaper photographer Notiver.
En ik heb maar 3 nieuwsberichtjes gequote in een maand tijdsbestek oid. En dat is alleen in Veracruz.
Iemand die haat heeft tegen Elon Musk gunt succesvolle Afrikanen het licht niet in de ogen en is een racist bigot.
  dinsdag 8 mei 2012 @ 00:57:22 #129
56749 BlaZ
Torpitudo peius est quam mors.
pi_111275291
quote:
En ik heb maar 3 nieuwsberichtjes gequote in een maand tijdsbestek oid. En dat is alleen in Veracruz.
Stad vs provincie.
De provincie is 2x zo groot als Nederland dus niks vreemds dat daar wel eens wat gebeurd.
3 berichtjes per week is gewoon rustig voor Veracruz. Vorig jaar zomer vielen er nog wel eens 10 doden per dag.
Ceterum censeo Turciam delendam esse.
  donderdag 10 mei 2012 @ 21:27:37 #130
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_111395653
quote:
US officials at Mexican border accused of widespread human rights abuses

Civil rights body accuses Customs and Border Protection agents of using excessive force against US citizens and immigrants

US citizens and immigrants with full legal rights to reside in America are being subjected to widespread physical and legal abuses at the hands of US border guards at crossing points with Mexico, according to the American Civil Liberties Union.

The ACLU has sent a formal letter of complaint to the department of homeland security to protest what it says is a sharp increase in human rights violations by US government agents along the Mexican border.

The civil rights body accuses Customs and Border Protection agents of wielding excessive force, carrying out unwarranted strip searches, detaining people for long periods without explanation and coercing individuals into surrendering their legal rights and citizenship documents.

"We are seeing widespread federal abuses against US citizens and non-US citizens alike. Something is going very wrong here, and it needs looking into," said Sean Riordan, an ACLU lawyer and signatory to the complaint.

The ACLU is requesting an investigation into the instances of alleged excesses at the Mexican border. It cites 11 cases of individuals who claim they were mistreated at various border crossings.

Among them are Hernan Cuevas who crossed from Mexico to the US at Calexico/Mexicali on 19 May 2011. A Chilean businessman who works for an industrial manufacturing corporation, he spends most of his working life travelling to and from America and had never before had any trouble with border agents.

He was stopped and his car searched, and when he tried to complain that his property was being roughly handled was astonished by the reaction. He was handcuffed and chained by his big toe to a metal bench, and refused the right to call a lawyer or the Chilean embassy.

In sweltering heat, he asked repeatedly for water but was also refused. Before he was released after almost four hours of detention, an agent allegedly said to him: "I don't give a fuck of your educated manners and all your corporate bullshit. This is my country now and when you are here, you listen to me. I don't like your kind that takes our jobs and uses our system."

Cuevas told the Guardian that he was utterly taken aback by what had happened. "I never would have believed that such behaviour was possible in a civilised country, let alone the US," he said.

"I thought this kind of thing only happened in films about banana republics. These guys behaved as though they were above the law."

ACLU contends that Cuevas's experiences were part of a pattern of abuse by Customs and Border Protection that must now be investigated and rectified. CBP is America's largest law enforcement agency and has expanded dramatically in recent years. The numbers of its border patrol guards has grown from 5,000 in the mid 1990s to more than 20,000 today, and has doubled in just the past six years.

Riordan said that the exponential expansion of the agency had not been accompanied by a proporational growth in training, oversight and accountability, creating a vacuum out of which the current problem of abuses had been allowed to fester.

A spokesman for CBP said that ACLU's letter of complaint had not yet been received and made no comment at this stage.

The other cases highlighted by ACLU include Edith Collins-George, a US citizen who was detained without explanation in March 2010 at the Calexico/Mexicali crossing having visited her mother in Mexico.

She says she was told by officers: "You don't have rights here", and was then pushed up against a wall and searched, with officers touching her breasts and genitals.

Another of the cited cases, Trinidad Muraira de Castro, was crossing at Brownsville, Texas on a temporary visa with her two daughters who were born in the US and are thus US citizens.

The whole family was detained and interrogated for about 10 hours, at which point De Castro says she broke down and made a false confession that her daughters were not born in America and had no right to be there.

On that basis the family was turned back at the border and her visa confiscated.

Last month the justice department announced that it had decided not to prosecute a US patrol agent who shot and killed a Mexican teenager in June 2010 near the El Paso border crossing. Sergio Hernandez-Guereca, 15, was shot by the unidentified CBP officer after reportedly throwing rocks at the border line.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 13 mei 2012 @ 20:38:31 #131
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_111506381
quote:
quote:
Er zijn vandaag 49 onthoofde en verminkte lichamen gevonden langs een snelweg in Mexico, tussen de Noord-Mexicaanse metropool Monterrey en de grens van de VS.

Volgens de politie werden de lichamen van 43 mannen en zes vrouwen gevonden bij San Juan. De autoriteiten hebben de snelweg van Monterrey naar Reynosa voor sporenonderzoek afgesloten. Er zou een boodschap met dreigende taal achtergelaten zijn uit naam van de drugskartel Los Zetas. Het identificeren van de lichamen is lastig omdat hoofden, handen en voeten in veel gevallen afgehakt zijn.

De afgelopen tijd zijn op meer plaatsen in Mexico verminkte lijken op openbare plekken achtergelaten, als waarschuwing van drugsbendes aan hun rivalen. In april werd een leider van Los Zetas opgepakt – hij werd verdacht van de moord op 145 mensen.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 14 mei 2012 @ 22:48:16 #132
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_111558283
quote:
quote:
Violence that has claimed 50,000 lives is horrific but not mindless: it is inter-cartel turf wars played out in body count
quote:
This weekend's discovery in Mexico of 49 headless, handless and footless bodies dumped alongside a road just outside the northern industrial hub of Monterrey was the worst event of its kind, but it was far from the only one.

Last Wednesday, 18 mutilated bodies were found in abandoned vehicles near the country's second largest city, Guadalajara. The week before that, nine bodies were hung from a bridge, and in another case 14 severed heads were left in ice boxes outside the local government office in the north-east border city of Nuevo Laredo.

The federal government issued a statement following the latest incident in this spate of mass murders, blaming the cartels for "unleashing inhuman and inadmissible episodes of irrational violence in their criminal dispute".

Most independent observers, however, question the portrayal of the horror as mindless. They tend to put the massacres firmly within the dynamic of the inter-cartel rivalries that form a core part of the violence that has killed more than 50,000 people since President Felipe Calderén launched an offensive against the cartels in December 2006.

"I don't think they are irrational. They are psychopaths sure, but I believe there is method in this madness," Alejandro Hope, a security expert and former member of the government intelligence agency, told the Guardian. He said the display of mutilated corpses tended to contain messages for rival groups, for the authorities, and for the population. "They are fighting to defend their reputation for brutality and the image of control in the territories they claim."

The current spate of massacres appears linked to the rivalry between the Zetas drug cartel and the Sinaloa cartel, allied to the Gulf cartel. This is a long-running campaign of violence that involves a number of other cartels.

The 23 bodies displayed in Nuevo Laredo at the beginning of the month looked like an incursion into the Zeta cartel's most important stronghold by the Sinaloa cartel, led by the infamous capo Jaoquín "El Chapo" Guzmán. The subsequent massacre in Guadalajara looked like a Zeta retaliation on Sinaloa turf. At least, that is what messages left behind with the corpses claimed.

As well as displays of bravado, both events could also be seen as efforts to calentar la plaza, or heat up the turf, of their rivals as mass brutality tends to trigger announcements from the government that it will increase troop and police numbers in the area.

Within that logic, this weekend's scene outside Monterrey could be interpreted as an attempt by the Zetas to reaffirm their control of an area that is already heavily militarised. A graffito near the scene stated: "Z 100%."

Analysts tend to discount a direct link between the intensification of the violence and Mexico's presidential elections, seven weeks away, in which security has been a constant issue, but not a particularly contentious one.

All the candidates make vague promises to be more effective in reducing the violence, but avoid getting into serious debates about the problem.

Even so, the drug war provides a backdrop to the political campaign and the public's sense that Mexico is struggling to keep control of its destiny.

The feeling of powerlessness increases with evidence that many victims of the violence have no obvious links with the cartels. This has made it difficult for either the federal or local governments to imply that they brought their fate upon themselves, as was common in the past.

After the latest massacre outside Monterrey, the authorities suggested the mutilation of the bodies was a strategy to make identification more difficult. They noted that a number of the torsos were tattooed with images associated with the criminal underworld, such as the figure of the Santa Muerte, but also accepted that the victims could be unconnected people who had disappeared from elsewhere in Mexico, or perhaps Central American migrants trying to get to the United States.

Alberto Islas, a security expert who heads a consultancy company called Risk Evaluation, says that the Zetas are likely to pick their victims randomly because their networks are unsophisticated.

Islas, however, stressed that the force driving the violence does not lie within the criminal organisations but in the failure of the federal government to investigate the crimes or pursue those carrying them out. This, he says, means the level of violence required to shock is increasing.

"If the government doesn't do anything, this will continue," Islas said. "Forty-nine people is a lot of people, but tomorrow Mexico will forget about them."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 15 mei 2012 @ 09:08:56 #133
94080 VeX-
HAHA..JIJ hebt HEUL veel POSTS
pi_111568584
Gaat nergens meer over daar. Die Mexicaanse gangs vermoorden puur om het feit dat ze ongestraft kunnen vermoorden.

Je kan zeggen wat je wil over de Italiaanse, Japanse, Russische/etc maffia, maar die hebben over het algemeen nog enigszins fatsoensnormen en ruimen alleen elkaar op. Mexicaanse gangs gedragen zich als beesten tegenover onschuldige burgers.
Life is just a series of peaks and troughs, yeah. And you don't know whether you're in a trough until you're climbing out, or on a peak, 'till you're coming down. And that's it. - David Brent
pi_111568736
quote:
1s.gif Op donderdag 22 maart 2012 01:12 schreef El_Matador het volgende:

[..]

Sterker; de VS is de afzetmarkt voor die klotedrugs. De cokesnuivers in de VS houden die hele zooi in stand. Zonder kopers geen verkoop.

Als men slim is, zorgt men voor eigen productie van prettigere drugs in de VS. Zoiets als de Nederlandse XTC-markt dus.
Dat heeft men in de VS dat heet crack 8-) Omdat de war on drugs toch doorgaat wordt alles wat nieuw is per direct verboden. En de meeeste nieuwe uitvindgen zijn vaak een stuk slechter voor de gezondheid dan plantaardige materialen.
  dinsdag 15 mei 2012 @ 14:40:50 #135
215628 woid
let's get Friendly
pi_111580101
als je denk alles wel gezien te hebben...

http://www.borderlandbeat(...)-el-diablo.html#more

niet de video spelen als je er niet tegen kan.
pi_111582444
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 15 mei 2012 09:17 schreef Basp1 het volgende:

[..]

Dat heeft men in de VS dat heet crack 8-) Omdat de war on drugs toch doorgaat wordt alles wat nieuw is per direct verboden. En de meeeste nieuwe uitvindgen zijn vaak een stuk slechter voor de gezondheid dan plantaardige materialen.
crack... :')

En ik vind dat je de heer Shulgin ernstig tekort doet met je laatste zin...
The only limit is your own imagination
Ik ben niet gelovig aangelegd en maak daarin geen onderscheid tussen dominees, imams, scharenslieps, autohandelaren, politici en massamedia

Waarom er geen vliegtuig in het WTC vloog
  dinsdag 15 mei 2012 @ 15:46:58 #137
93664 waht
Mushir
pi_111582583
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 15 mei 2012 09:08 schreef VeX- het volgende:
Gaat nergens meer over daar. Die Mexicaanse gangs vermoorden puur om het feit dat ze ongestraft kunnen vermoorden.

Je kan zeggen wat je wil over de Italiaanse, Japanse, Russische/etc maffia, maar die hebben over het algemeen nog enigszins fatsoensnormen en ruimen alleen elkaar op. Mexicaanse gangs gedragen zich als beesten tegenover onschuldige burgers.
Vooral tegenover elkaar. Burgers zijn zo nu en dan ook slachtoffer.
The problem is not the occupation, but how people deal with it.
pi_111582779
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 15 mei 2012 09:08 schreef VeX- het volgende:
Gaat nergens meer over daar. Die Mexicaanse gangs vermoorden puur om het feit dat ze ongestraft kunnen vermoorden.

Je kan zeggen wat je wil over de Italiaanse, Japanse, Russische/etc maffia, maar die hebben over het algemeen nog enigszins fatsoensnormen en ruimen alleen elkaar op. Mexicaanse gangs gedragen zich als beesten tegenover onschuldige burgers.
Misschien waren het wel tegenstanders die omgebracht zijn. Hoe weet je dat ze zoveel "onschuldigen" ombrengen?
Rik: Hey guys, wouldn't it be AMAZING if all this money was real?
Vyvyan: Rik, that is the single most predictable and BORING thing anyone could ever say whilst playing Monopoly.
  dinsdag 15 mei 2012 @ 16:47:51 #139
215628 woid
let's get Friendly
pi_111585185
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 15 mei 2012 15:46 schreef waht het volgende:

[..]

Vooral tegenover elkaar. Burgers zijn zo nu en dan ook slachtoffer.
was dat maar waar. ze persen iedereen af, en emigranten zetten ze eerst aan het werk om ze vervolgens af te maken.
pi_111585492
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 15 mei 2012 09:08 schreef VeX- het volgende:
Gaat nergens meer over daar. Die Mexicaanse gangs vermoorden puur om het feit dat ze ongestraft kunnen vermoorden.

Je kan zeggen wat je wil over de Italiaanse, Japanse, Russische/etc maffia, maar die hebben over het algemeen nog enigszins fatsoensnormen en ruimen alleen elkaar op. Mexicaanse gangs gedragen zich als beesten tegenover onschuldige burgers.
Die gangs zitten dan weer vol met mensen die ooit onschuldige burgers waren. Maar dankzij die fantastische war on drugs zijn ze dat niet meer.
Wees gehoorzaam. Alleen samen krijgen we de vrijheid eronder.
  dinsdag 15 mei 2012 @ 17:04:39 #141
215628 woid
let's get Friendly
pi_111585981
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 15 mei 2012 16:54 schreef Weltschmerz het volgende:

[..]

Die gangs zitten dan weer vol met mensen die ooit onschuldige burgers waren. Maar dankzij die fantastische war on drugs zijn ze dat niet meer.
je bedoelt; dankzij die fantastische war on drugs zitten nu hele onschuldige volkstammen op gescheept met die bende zooi
pi_111588096
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 15 mei 2012 17:04 schreef woid het volgende:

[..]

je bedoelt; dankzij die fantastische war on drugs zitten nu hele onschuldige volkstammen op gescheept met die bende zooi
Die war on drugs heeft ervoor gezorgd dat de criminaliteit enorm verweven is met alle lagen en facetten van de samenleving. De resultaten van wat volgens bepaalde mensen een oplossing zou zijn voor problematiek omtrent mensen die drugs gebruiken, zijn vele malen schadelijker voor de maatschappij dan het aanvankelijke probleem.
celebrate your money
  dinsdag 15 mei 2012 @ 18:52:21 #143
215628 woid
let's get Friendly
pi_111590495
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 15 mei 2012 17:49 schreef leRomein het volgende:

[..]

Die war on drugs heeft ervoor gezorgd dat de criminaliteit enorm verweven is met alle lagen en facetten van de samenleving. De resultaten van wat volgens bepaalde mensen een oplossing zou zijn voor problematiek omtrent mensen die drugs gebruiken, zijn vele malen schadelijker voor de maatschappij dan het aanvankelijke probleem.
yep

ben alleen bang dat het hier en daar op een burgeroorlog neer komt, met in Guatemala als eerste, want daar broeit ie al weer een tijdje.
  zondag 20 mei 2012 @ 21:08:14 #144
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_111802088
quote:
New York judge writes impassioned defense of medical marijuana

In a New York Times opinion piece, a sitting state supreme court judge writes of his cancer and the palliative drug he depends on

A New York state supreme court judge has written an impassioned plea to legalize medical marijuana in the state, potentially taking New York one step closer to becoming the 17th state in the nation to allow use of the drug as a palliative.

In an op-ed piece in Thursday's New York Times, justice Gustin L Reichbach writes eloquently of his three-and-a-half-year long battle with prostate cancer. He describes enduring chemotherapy, brutal surgery, radiation, constant nausea and insomnia. The only remedy that has given him a modicum of relief has been marijuana.

"I find a few puffs of marijuana before dinner gives me ammunition in the battle to eat. A few more puffs at bedtime permits desperately needed sleep," he writes.

"This is not a law-and-order issue; it is a medical and human rights issue."

Reichbach, who was not immediately available for comment, goes on to "implore the governor and the legislature of New York" to pass a medical marijuana bill currently before the state senate.

"This is a huge thing," Gabriel Sayegh of the Drug Policy Alliance, an activist organization promoting alternatives to criminalization, told the Guardian. "To have an active judge sitting on the bench dealing with a fairly serious form of cancer, it's a remarkable turn of events."

New York's bill A7347-A/S7283, which would decriminalize medical marijuana, is currently before the state senate, having passed in the assembly. The bill requires a patient to have a licensed health care professional authorized to prescribe controlled substances certify a need for marijuana to treat a "severe, debilitating or life-threatening condition."

A Siena College survey released Wednesday found 57% of New York voters support legalizing medical marijuana, with 33% opposed.

But governor Andrew Cuomo, the former state attorney-general, does not appear prepared to join the majority of his constituents.

"I understand the benefits, but there are also risks, and I think the risks outweigh the benefits at this point," he recently told reporters.

The current session ends June 21, and even the bill's sponsor, state senator Diane Savino, is sceptical it will make it to the floor before the next session. But she did find Reichbach's piece remarkable.

"Every time somebody who is unexpected would be in support of medical marijuana, it moves the ball down the field in terms of support," she said.

There are thousands of people who fervently hope she's right.

"The Senate needs to act," said Jamin Sewell, an attorney who works for the New York city council. "It is an issue of compassion."

Sewell, 44, was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis 10 years ago, but because he works as a lawyer in the public sector, he said he has never smoked marijuana to provide relief from some of his symptoms.

Being able to smoke marijuana, he said, would alleviate the severe tingling and numbness in his legs ("the worst pins and needles when your legs fall asleep, magnified tenfold") and the neuropathic pain that shoots from his jaw down his back for up to 45 minutes at a time.

"There's nothing I've found legally that my doctors have prescribed," he said. He has spoken to other MS patients who have benefitted from smoking marijuana, but as long as it remains illegal, he said he will refrain.

"I've worked in public service my entire life and I want to continue to be able to do that," he said. "Because MS is progressive in nature, if the symptoms I live with currently continue to get worse, I really hope I'll be able to use the best medicine that will help alleviate them."

For Reichbach, marijuana has become too necessary a medicine to wait.

"Given my position as a sitting judge still hearing cases, well-meaning friends question the wisdom of my coming out on this issue. But I recognize that fellow cancer sufferers may be unable, for a host of reasons, to give voice to our plight," he wrote.

"Because criminalizing an effective medical technique affects the fair administration of justice, I feel obliged to speak out as both a judge and a cancer patient suffering with a fatal disease."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 21 mei 2012 @ 10:07:43 #145
215628 woid
let's get Friendly
pi_111821123
quote:
7s.gif Op zondag 20 mei 2012 21:08 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]

leuk verhaal, maar wat heeft het te maken met el narco del LA ?

edit: (maw, een beetje medicinale weed kan overal verbouwd worden en zullen geen oorlogen om bevochten worden)

[ Bericht 11% gewijzigd door woid op 21-05-2012 10:22:37 ]
  zaterdag 26 mei 2012 @ 11:09:12 #146
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_112046504
quote:
quote:
Heroïne wordt steeds vaker gesmokkeld in vrachtzendingen via Schiphol. Rechercheurs van het speciale opsporingsteam CargoHarc, een samenwerking van Koninklijke Marechaussee, FIOD en Douane, constateren een forse stijging ten opzichte van voorgaande jaren.

Dit jaar werd op de luchthaven tot nu toe al zo'n 100 kilo heroïne onderschept in verschillende vrachtzendingen. In heel 2011 werd ongeveer half zo veel in beslag genomen, aldus een woordvoerder zaterdag. De meeste van die zendingen komen uit Azië. De heroïne is vaak op ingenieuze wijze verstopt, bijvoorbeeld in trossen bananen of ingeweven in Perzische tapijten.

Tien dagen geleden werd op Schiphol een man uit Liberia aangehouden. Hij zou betrokken zijn bij de smokkel van 15 kilo heroïne. Volgens gegevens van het Trimbos-instituut wordt heroïne 'op straat' verhandeld voor 20 tot 40 euro per gram.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 27 mei 2012 @ 21:24:47 #147
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_112102076
quote:
quote:
De macht van vrouwen in de drugskartels neemt toe, omdat de drugsoorlog in Mexico zoveel mannen het leven kost. Steeds meer vrouwen krijgen daardoor leidinggevende functies in de kartels.

Dat schreef de Mexicaanse wetenschappelijke onderzoeker Arturo Santamaria in een boek hierover. Volgens hem profiteren de kartels van de toenemende macht van vrouwen. 'Zij zullen moeilijker te bestrijden zijn, omdat vrouwen slimmer te werk lijken te gaan.' Zij handelen behoedzamer en gebruiken minder gemakkelijk dodelijk geweld dan mannen.

Sinds de Mexicaanse regering in 2006 de drugskartels de oorlog verklaarde, zijn er ongeveer 50.000 mensen, vooral mannen, gedood. De vrouwen die de macht overnemen, zijn vaak de weduwen, dochters en vriendinnen van de doden. Die zijn opgegroeid in de drugshandel en weten waar het om draait en hoe die werkt.

In oktober hebben de Mexicaanse autoriteiten 46 vrouwen aangehouden die een leidinggevende rol in de drugshandel hadden, blijkt uit cijfers van het Openbaar Ministerie in Mexico-Stad. In de Verenigde Staten zijn de laatste 10 jaar 2143 Mexicaanse vrouwen gearresteerd om hun betrokkenheid bij de smokkel van drugs.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_112112916
quote:
De War on Drugs in Mexico #4 - Hoe lossen we de oorlog op?
Door daar waar de drug 'nodig zijn' (Amerika) het maatschappelijk probleem op te lossen. Waarom zijn de mensen de laatste veertig jaar drugs gaan gebruiken en is dit drugsgebruik maar blijven uitbreiden? Het zijn de zieke westerse maatschappijen die voor toename drugsgebruik zorgen, door die weer beschaafder te maken neemt het drugsgebruik af, dus ook de afzet. Op den duur bloedt die drugswereld dood. Er is geen andere manier om die war on drugs te beeindingen, hard erop inslaan met complete legertjes zorgt alleen voor een wapenwedloop en steeds grotere en bloedigere conflicten tussen regeringen en drugsbaronnen.
pi_112116436
quote:
But governor Andrew Cuomo, the former state attorney-general, does not appear prepared to join the majority of his constituents.

"I understand the benefits, but there are also risks, and I think the risks outweigh the benefits at this point," he recently told reporters.
Ik denk ook wel dat er een groot risico is dat mensen dan lol gaan hebben zonder dat de 1% daaraan verdient, en dat moet natuurlijk tegen elke prijs vermeden worden.
Wees gehoorzaam. Alleen samen krijgen we de vrijheid eronder.
pi_112263590
Mexico: Zetas rewrite drug war in blood

Interessant leesvoer over hoe de Los Zetas tot stand zijn gekomen en hoe ze zich ophoog hebben gewerkt tot de meest destabiliserende factor in Mexico.
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