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  donderdag 21 februari 2013 @ 22:08:19 #101
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_123180985
quote:
Mexico, Central America discuss war on drugs

San Jose (US), Feb 20 (AFP) Leaders of Mexico and Central America gathered today for a summit focused primarily on the relentless violence sweeping the region from the US-backed war on drug trafficking.

The United States says 90 per cent of the cocaine shipped there from South America passes through Mexico and Central America. In Mexico alone some 70,000 people have died in drug-related violence since the government deployed army troops to fight drug cartels.

Central America in the 1980s was ravaged by civil wars, and now finds itself again awash in blood as its serves as a gateway to the north, with penetration from Mexican cartels and grinding poverty that makes lucrative drug trafficking a lure hard to resist.

The violence has mainly affected an area known as the Northern Triangle. It is formed by Honduras, likened to one big airport for clandestine drug flights; Guatemala, penetrated by the most bloodthirsty of the drug cartels, Los Zetas; and El Salvador, which is enjoying a respite after a truce among street gangs.

The summit here in the capital of Costa Rica will be attended by Mexico's new president, Enrique Pena Nieto, Guatemalan President Otto Perez and President Porfirio Diaz of Honduras. It was not clear if Daniel Ortega of Nicaragua or Ricardo Martinelli of Panama will show up. Guatemala's Perez has called in recent international forums such as the Davos meeting in Switzerland for a change in strategy, saying the US-backed hardline approach is yielding nothing but dead bodies. He has suggested legalising drugs to remove the profit motive.

Pena Nieto has not commented on this idea. But he has promised a new strategy based on better cooperation among countries and more intelligence work, although he has kept army troops deployed in the war on drugs.

The countries at the summit will also discuss how to boost trade. Trade between Mexico and its smaller neighbours to the south has already quintupled over the past decade to USD 8.2 billion, according to the Mexican finance ministry.

This will be the Mexican president's first trip outside the country since taking power in December.
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  vrijdag 22 februari 2013 @ 17:08:32 #102
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_123211440
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 23 februari 2013 @ 02:27:17 #103
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_123232166
quote:
De echte stepping-stone theorie: Het drugsverbod dwing de markt en gebruikers naar zwaardere drugs.

quote:
Contrary to the above assumption, the “Iron Law of Prohibition” states that prohibition leads to higher dosage levels and more dangerous modes of administration. These consequences follow naturally from the illegal market. Black marketeers want to pack as much of an outlawed substance as possible into the minimum volume, which is the definition of a high-dosage level; and purchasers, because of the inflated black market price, want the biggest bang for their buck. Similarly, because injecting is so efficient a way of using an expensive substance, there is an economic motivation to use this more dangerous means of administration.

Under Prohibition, the United States went from a nation of drinkers of safe beer (low-dosage alcohol) to drinkers of higher-dosage and often contaminated whiskey. After Prohibition the country gradually returned to its preference for beer. Similarly, over time users have gone from smoked opium to injected heroin; from low-dosage cocaine in the original Coca-Cola to inhaled powdered cocaine to crack; and from lower THC levels in marijuana to higher levels. In addition, because marijuana is bulky and has a strong odor it has the black market disadvantages of taking up a lot of space and being relatively easy to detect. This drives up the price of marijuana relative to cocaine and heroin, and creates an economic incentive for users to switch from soft to hard drugs.
Experimenteren met drugs is normaal.

quote:
A major study published in American Psychologist back in 1990 contradicted the assumption that drugs hook victims. Its findings, summarized in the studys Abstract, have long been known, but are startling to many non-experts, and are worth quoting here:

. The relation between psychological characteristics and drug use was investigated in subjects studied longitudinally, from preschool through age 18. Adolescents who had engaged in some drug experimentation (primarily with marijuana) were the best-adjusted in the sample. Adolescents who used drugs frequently were maladjusted, showing a distinct personality syndrome marked by interpersonal alienation, poor impulse control, and manifest emotional distress. Adolescents who, by age 18, had never experimented with any drug were relatively anxious, emotionally constricted, and lacking in social skills. Psychological differences between frequent drug users, experimenters, and abstainers could be traced to the earliest years of childhood and related to the quality of parenting received. The findings indicate that (a) problem drug use is a symptom, not a cause, of personal and social maladjustment, and (b) the meaning of drug use can be understood only in the context of an individuals personality structure and developmental history. It is suggested that current efforts at drug prevention are misguided to the extent that they focus on symptoms, rather than on the psychological syndrome underlying drug abuse.

In other words, instead of saying that drugs hook victims, a better causal model for drug abuse is to say that people with significant problems self-medicate. In addition, this description of drug use fits with what we know about adolescence. That is, in our individualistic culture, adolescence is a time of experimentation with different options during the transition from childhood to adulthood. Teenagers work summer or part-time jobs, and they are exposed to courses in a variety of disciplines so that they can make informed career decisions. Dating is an institution that provides young people with experience in forming, maintaining, and dissolving intimate relationships, so that they have a basis for selecting a life partner. In a similar way, teen experimentation with forbidden psychoactive substances can be seen as a way of learning their effects so that people can decide whether to use them in the future.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_123289960
quote:
Guatemala: Report of shooting involving drug kingpin ‘El Chapo’ Guzman was mix-up

AN VALENTIN, Guatemala — A Guatemalan official said Friday there was no evidence that Mexico’s most-wanted drug lord, Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, had been killed in a shootout in the rural north, calling such reports a misunderstanding.

Interior Minister Mauricio Lopez Bonilla told local media that the original account was based on testimony from residents in San Valentin near the Mexican border, but that soldiers and police scanning the area found no sign of any confrontation.

“I apologize if there was a misunderstanding,” Lopez told the Guatemalan radio station Emisores Unidos. “It was a mix-up. We were referring to information generated from the area that there was possibly a crime scene with a dead person resembling El Chapo.”

Authorities mounted the search Friday in the tropical state of Peten, an isolated area known for the transport of livestock.

“As of now, we have no verification,” Lopez said.

An Associated Press photographer in the area also found no signs of shootout or victims, just a checkpoint of 12 soldiers stopping vehicles in an area considered to be held by Mexico’s Zetas cartel, Guzman’s biggest rivals.

Guzman heads the Sinaloa cartel, Mexico’s most powerful international drug-trafficking network, and has been in hiding since escaping from a Mexican prison in a laundry cart in 2001. He is one of the world’s most wanted fugitives, as well as one of the richest. Forbes magazine has estimated his fortune at $1 billion.

Lopez said on Thursday that authorities were investigating whether Guzman was one of at least two men killed in the remote area. But the government later backtracked and said it had only received reports of a battle from local people.

Government spokesman Francisco Cuevas first told Guatevision Television that two drug gangs had clashed in Peten, an area that has seen an increase in drug violence and that at least two men had died in the shootout.

Later, Cuevas told Mexico’s Televisa network that authorities hadn’t yet found a body or the scene where reports said a shootout took place.

He never said what led officials to think that one of the dead men might be Guzman.

Ik zie die man voorlopig niet zomaar dood gaan, want blijkbaar heeft hij altijd behoorlijk wat beveiligers om zich heen die zwaargewapend zijn, dus men zal een kogelzee voor lief moeten nemen om hem uit te schakelen.

Daarnaast heb ik zo mijn twijfels of de Mexicaanse overheid hem echt wel willen pakken. Ik kan me voorstellen dat ze bang zijn voor een neerwaartse spiraal van geweld als iemand zijn plek moet overnemen of dat zijn kartel door interne problemen verdeelt raakt. Ook zullen de overige kartels op deze situatie inspelen en voordat je weet heb je een orgie van geweld.

El Chapo is denk ik vergeleken met de andere kartels een stuk zakelijker, waardoor de Mexicaanse overheid met hem wel een deal kunnen sluiten. Het zal dan ook niet de eerste keer zijn dat er zo'n deal wordt gemaakt.
  maandag 25 februari 2013 @ 09:41:49 #105
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_123316033
De War on Drugs is een ecologisch probleem, en niet alleen vanwege het besproeien van coca-plantjes in Zuid Amerika:

quote:
quote:
Staatsbosbeheer zegt dat de kans op een ecologische ramp reëel is nu steeds vaker drugsafval in de natuur wordt aangetroffen. Het gaat om overblijfselen van de fabricage van synthetische drugs, die vaak bestaan uit vaten met zuren en chemicalieën.
Legalize!
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 25 februari 2013 @ 09:52:18 #106
66825 Reya
Fier Wallon
pi_123316261
http://www.spiegel.de/int(...)-drugs-a-884750.html

Een interessante beschouwing van Der Spiegel over de gevolgen van drugsbestrijding.
  maandag 25 februari 2013 @ 22:11:40 #107
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_123347555
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 26 februari 2013 @ 21:08:18 #108
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_123384441
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 27 februari 2013 @ 19:31:26 #109
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_123421865
quote:
quote:
De toestel spotte vorige week tijdens een routinevlucht een verdacht vaartuig waarna de Amerikaanse kustwacht werd ingeschakeld. Toen die naderde brachten de verdachten de boot met circa 500 kilo drugs tot zinken.
:')

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De onderschepping had plaats in het kader van de operatie Martillo. Hierin proberen een aantal landen in de regio een eind te maken aan de drugssmokkel.
_O- _O- _O-
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 28 februari 2013 @ 04:09:51 #110
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_123443022
quote:
US drugs prosecutors switch sides to defend accused Colombian traffickers

After working to take down cartels, former officials say America's 'war on drugs' is misguided and the human cost too high

US prosecutors and other senior officials who spearheaded the war against drug cartels have quit their jobs to defend Colombian cocaine traffickers, saying their clients are not bad people and that United States drug policy is wrong.

Senior former assistant US attorneys and Drug Enforcement Administration agents are turning years of experience in investigating, indicting and extraditing narcos to the advantage of the alleged traffickers they now represent.

"I'm not embarrassed about the fact that I changed sides," said Robert Feitel, a Washington-based attorney who used to pursue traffickers and money launderers at the Department of Justice. "And I'm not shy about saying that no one knows better how a prosecutor thinks. That's what people get when they come to me. There are lots of hidden things to know about these cases."

The fence-jumpers include Bonnie Klapper, who was feted for taking down the Norte del Valle cartel, Leo Arreguin, who headed the DEA's office in Bogota, and reportedly former members of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency, Ice. They work in separate legal practices with their own clients, not as a group.

In interviews with the Guardian, Feitel and Klapper spoke of recognising the humanity of their clients and called for alternatives to a four-decade-old "war on drugs" which costs billions of dollars and incarcerates thousands.

Feitel (pictured) called for cocaine and cannabis to be legalised and complained that extradited drug suspects were treated worse than Guantanamo Bay detainees. "I don't think I could ever be a prosecutor again. The human drama that I see on this side is sometimes more than I can bear."

Artikel gaat verder.
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pi_123446735
  vrijdag 1 maart 2013 @ 16:28:11 #112
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_123505334
quote:
How the Sinaloa cartel “won” Mexico’s drug war

Sixty thousand lives later, Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán's crew remains in tact -- and could be getting stronger
quote:
Compared to its humble beginnings in the 1980s, when it controlled only a single Pacific trafficking route into Arizona, the cartel’s territorial expansion has been staggering. Key areas it now controls include most of Mexico’s Pacific coast states and parts of central Mexico.

Even more impressive is its global reach. Sinaloa operatives have been arrested from Egypt to Argentina and from Europe to Malaysia. Properties attributed to El Chapo Guzmán have been seized in Europe and South America. US law enforcement reports that the group is now present in all major American cities. Recent US court documents involving the case of Vicente Zambada-Niebla, Mayo Zambada’s son, even suggest the Sinaloa cartel now controls the cocaine trade in Australia.

Earlier this month, Chicago named El Chapo Guzmán public enemy number one, the first to receive that title since the citys legendary crime boss, Al Capone.

Sinaloas share in the drug market is titanic. Even by the most sober estimates, Mexican drug trafficking amounts to over $6 billion per year, with El Chapos Sinaloa cartel controlling an estimated half of that market, raking in billions each year.

No wonder Forbes has listed El Chapo Guzmán on its annual list of billionaires since 2009.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 1 maart 2013 @ 20:22:14 #113
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_123513591
quote:
Noorwegen: heroïne-roken gedogen

Noorwegen wil het roken van heroïne gaan gedogen. De regering hoopt het aantal overdoses te kunnen terugdringen door drugsverslaafden van het injecteren van de drug af te krijgen.

Het land kent een van de hoogste percentages drugsverslaafden in heel Europa. Jaarlijks komen er meer mensen om door drugsgebruik dan door verkeersongelukken: 262 tegen 168 in 2011. Ongeveer eenderde van die sterfgevallen kwam door heroïne.

Chinezen

In Noorwegen zijn tussen de 8800 en 12.500 heroïneverslaafden, waarvan het grootste deel de drug spuit. Verslaafden kiezen vaak voor injecteren, omdat het goedkoper is, bovendien is de roes sneller en heviger. Dergelijk gebruik werd de laatste jaren oogluikend toegestaan.

Het roken van heroïne (chinezen) is minder gevaarlijk dan injecteren: behalve dat er een kleinere hoeveelheid voor nodig is, is de kans op overdraagbare ziektes kleiner. Minister Støre van Gezondheid vindt daarom dat chinezen ook gedoogd moet worden.

Niet legaal

Støre benadrukt dat gedogen niet betekent dat de drug legaal wordt. "Ik ben pragmatisch. Het gaat mij om de resultaten", zei hij op televisie. "Als injecteren meer risico's geeft, dan is het beter om roken ook te gedogen."

Volgens Støre staat een meerderheid van het Noorse parlement achter de plannen.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 7 maart 2013 @ 14:29:56 #114
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_123746033
quote:
Theresa May orders study into which drug laws work in other countries

Review will look at 'depenalisation' in Portugal, but home secretary rejects MPs' call for rapid royal commission on reform

An international "what works" study of drug laws, including Portugal's policy of scrapping criminal penalties for personal possession, has been ordered by the home secretary, Theresa May.

But she has rejected a call from the Commons home affairs select committee for a rapid royal commission to report by 2015 on how to reform Britain's 40-year-old drug laws.

The international review, to be led by the Liberal Democrat Home Office minister, Jeremy Browne, will include a visit to Portugal where the policy of "depenalisation" with its strong emphasis on getting users into treatment rather than jail clearly impressed MPs. The Portuguese policy stops short of decriminalisation as trafficking and dealing in drugs remain illegal and subject to strong police enforcement action.

The study will also look at the effects of the recent decisions in the American states of Washington and Colorado to legalise marijuana for recreational as well as medicinal use. It will also look at the international response to the rapid emergence of new psychoactive drugs or "legal highs" which have been appearing on the market at the rate of more than one a week.

The move represents a significant official acknowledgement of the recent shift in the Westminster consensus towards drug policy reform, as well as the more radical approach of the Lib Dem ministers in the coalition.

"The government does not believe there is a case for fundamentally re-thinking the UK's approach to drugs – a royal commission is simply not necessary," says May's official response to the MPs.

"Nonetheless, we must continue to listen and learn from emerging trends, new evidence and international comparators. In particular we will build on the commitment in the drug strategy to 'review new evidence of what works in other countries and what we can learn from it' and conduct a study on international comparators to learn more from the approach in other countries," says May.

The home secretary's official response says the government has no intention of decriminalising drugs but adds that any debate of alternative approaches should be focused on clear evidence and analysis.

She adds that the review will look at a number of countries that cover "a spectrum of approaches" to drug policy and assess their effectiveness in cutting drug use and reducing harm to individuals and communities. Its terms of reference will include looking at best practice as well as the different legal responses to the emergence of "legal highs". Britain has a system of temporary banning orders for the new psychoactive drugs which remain legal to possess but not sell or import while a full evaluation is carried out.

Browne said drugs were illegal because they were dangerous and destroyed lives and blighted communities.

"Drug usage remains at its lowest level since records began with National Treatment Agency statistics published yesterday showing that the number of heroin and crack cocaine users in England has fallen below 300,000 for the first time," said the minister responsible for crime prevention.

"We have listened carefully to the recommendations made by the home affairs select committee and will shortly undertake an international study to gather evidence on successful approaches that other countries are taking."

Drug reform policy groups, including Release and Transform, both responded to the announcement on Twitter by questioning how open-minded the home secretary could remain while ruling out decriminalisation before the study got under way.
quote:
"Drug reform policy groups, including Release and Transform, both responded to the announcement on Twitter by questioning how open-minded the home secretary could remain while ruling out decriminalisation before the study got under way".


[ Bericht 3% gewijzigd door Papierversnipperaar op 07-03-2013 14:36:15 ]
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  zaterdag 9 maart 2013 @ 21:56:50 #115
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_123844820
quote:
Former DEA chiefs worry Obama abandoning drug war

Eight former directors of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) said in an open letter published Tuesday (PDF) that they’re worried the Obama administration is abandoning the war on drugs by allowing Colorado and Washington to legalize marijuana.

“Our earlier attempts to have the Attorney General announce that he will enforce the Controlled Substances Act in Colorado and Washington have fallen upon deaf ears,” former DEA administrator Peter Bensinger said in an advisory sent to Raw Story. “Sadly, at this point we can only conclude that it is probably not Eric Holder’s decision.”

All eight former DEA chiefs — John Bartels, Peter Bensinger, Robert Bonner, Thomas Constantine, Asa Hutchinson, John Lawn, Donnie Marshall and Francis Mullen — addressed their letter to Sens. Patrick Leahy (D-VT) and Chuck Grassley (R-IA), who will question Attorney General Eric Holder during a Wednesday session of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Bensinger, who ran the drug war under the Ford, Carter and Reagan administrations, added that if the Obama administration fails to sue officials in Washington and Colorado to stop legalization in its tracks, it essentially means Holder “is willing to abandon his responsibilities as the Chief Law Enforcement Officer of the United States.”

The letter coincides with a statement by the United Nations’ International Narcotics Control Board, which urged the Obama administration on Tuesday to stand up for America’s international obligations to uphold marijuana prohibition.

Critics of marijuana prohibition, on the other hand, point to the social harms caused by criminalizing millions of people around the world every year for using a substance that’s less harmful than society’s intoxicant of choice, alcohol. A 2010 study published in the medical journal Lancet ranked alcohol as the most harmful inebriating drug of all, even above heroin and crack cocaine. Tobacco, similarly, was ranked roughly as damaging to society as cocaine.

Despite the latest science on drug abuse and the potential medical value of marijuana-based drugs, the Controlled Substances Act of 1970 considers marijuana to be a Schedule I drug with no medical value whatsoever. That scheduling means the U.S. government considers the herb to be more dangerous than substances like oxycodone, morphine and opium.

DEA officials who signed the letter to Leahy and Grassley also warned that officials in Colorado and Washington who engage in the legalization rulemaking process are committing felony crimes.

“Indeed, those who carry out the Colorado and Washington legislation are aiding and abetting violation of federal law, itself a felony under federal law,” former DEA administrator Robert Bonner wrote. “This may not be the perfect storm, but it can only lead to the perfect train wreck. That is why we are urging Attorney General Holder, as he did in the case of the Arizona immigration law, to file a lawsuit challenging the Colorado and Washington laws without delay.”

Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, sees things differently. “The former DEA chiefs’ statement can best be seen as a self-interested plea to validate the costly and failed policies they championed but that Americans are now rejecting at the ballot box,” he said in an advisory. “They obviously find it hard to admit that – at least with respect to marijuana – their legacy will be much the same as a previous generation of agents who once worked for the federal Bureau of Prohibition enforcing the nation’s alcohol prohibition laws.”

The Department of Justice has not announced whether any such lawsuits are forthcoming, continually saying that a review of the matter is underway. President Obama, who’s admitted to smoking marijuana as a young man, has previously said he does not support drug legalization of any kind, but as a state senator in Illinois in 2004 he called the war on drugs “an utter failure” and backed removing criminal penalties for small marijuana possession offenses.

It’s not clear if Obama’s views have evolved since then. Nevertheless, Obama said in December that he does not support legalization “at this point,” but added that the government has “bigger fish to fry” than adults who consent to using marijuana in states that permit it. His administration, however, has doggedly pursued merchants that sell marijuana in states that have legalized the drug for medical use.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 9 maart 2013 @ 22:00:04 #116
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_123844981
Uit bovenstaande artikel:

quote:
The letter coincides with a statement by the United Nations’ International Narcotics Control Board, which urged the Obama administration on Tuesday to stand up for America’s international obligations to uphold marijuana prohibition.
De verbodsfetisjisten in NL gebruiken hetzelfde argument. Terwijl regeringen met elkaar internationale verdragen afspreken, misbruiken ze die verdragen om binnenlands te stellen dat het verbod niet verlicht kan worden.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 9 maart 2013 @ 22:02:14 #117
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_123845089
quote:
quote:
Cannabis decriminalisation measures across the United States, including the medical use of marijuana in California, have been sharply criticised by the United Nations, which has warned Washington they violate the international drug conventions.
US-politici haten de VN, dus deze oproep zal het legaliseren van drugs in de VS bespoedigen.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 10 maart 2013 @ 18:33:34 #118
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_123876872
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quote:
Van 2007 tot 2010 bleef het aantal alcoholvergiftigingen redelijk stabiel, maar de laatste jaren laten een forse stijging zien. Vooral jongens tussen de 15 en 19 jaar gaan zich te buiten aan grote hoeveelheden alcohol. In deze categorie doet zich grootste stijging voor.
quote:
De Tweede Kamer ging afgelopen week akkoord met een verhoging van de leeftijd waarop jongeren alcohol mogen drinken van 16 naar 18 jaar.
Conclusie: Repressie leidt tot misbruik,.

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De recente cijfers bewijzen de noodzaak van deze verhoging, zegt staatssecretaris Van Rijn in Brandpunt. 'Alcohol onder de 18 is niet normaal, naar die nieuwe sociale norm moeten we toe', aldus Van Rijn.
En de bestuurder draait het om. De ellende veroorzaakt door repressie gebruikt hij als argument voor de repressie.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 12 maart 2013 @ 13:14:43 #119
156695 Tism
Sinds 24, Aug, 2006
pi_123954954
quote:
Geen misdaad meer in krant Mexico

Toegevoegd: dinsdag 12 mrt 2013, 12:10
Update: dinsdag 12 mrt 2013, 12:24


Een krantenuitgever in Mexico is gestopt met de berichtgeving over de georganiseerde misdaad om de veiligheid van de journalisten te waarborgen. Vorige week werd een journalist van een nieuwswebsite nog vermoord.

De Zocalo-groep geeft een aantal kranten uit in het noorden van Mexico. "We zijn verantwoordelijk voor het welzijn en de veiligheid van onze ruim duizend medewerkers", staat in een hoofdredactioneel commentaar.

Bedreigd

Vorige week hing een criminele organisatie, waarschijnlijk van het Zeta drugskartel, verspreid door de staat Coahuila posters op waarin de directeur van Zocalo wordt bedreigd. Daarnaast zijn de afgelopen jaren diverse redacties aangevallen, onder meer met granaten.

In het verleden zijn meer Mexicaanse kranten gestopt met de berichtgeving over de drugskartels.
....nachtrijder...Nachtzwelgje!
  woensdag 13 maart 2013 @ 21:05:31 #120
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_124024626
quote:
quote:
Er zijn twee redenen voor de verontrustende groei. Ten eerste gaan meer jongeren drugs verkopen en produceren om geld te verdienen. Vooral zelfgekweekte cannabis blijft populair. Ten tweede zorgt de crisis er voor dat overheden gaan besparen op het drugsbeleid, vooral op behandelingsmogelijkheden en schadebeperkende maatregelen.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 15 maart 2013 @ 13:19:35 #121
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_124089104
quote:
quote:
Twee mannen openden het vuur in de bar; een van hen met een machinegeweer, de ander met een handvuurwapen. Over de toedracht van de moorden is nog niets bekend. Mexico wordt al jaren geteisterd door geweldsuitbarstingen, die vaak voortkomen uit drugshandel. Meer dan 70.000 Mexicanen zijn sinds 2007 omgekomen door drugsgerelateerd geweld.
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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_124089364
Gisteren in nieuwsuur weer een mexico rapportage.. burgers van dorpen bewapenen zich , omdat het leger en de politie omgekocht worden door de kartels...
  vrijdag 15 maart 2013 @ 16:03:36 #123
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_124095541
quote:
U.N. development chief flags failings of "war on drugs"

(Reuters) - There is increasing evidence that the war on drugs has failed, with criminalization often creating more problems than it solves, said Helen Clark, the head of the United Nations Development Program.

Speaking ahead of Thursday's presentation of the UNDP's 2013 Human Development Report, Clark, a former New Zealand prime minister, said Latin American leaders should be encouraged to develop different policies to tackle the drug scourge.

"I've been a health minister in my past and there's no doubt that the health position would be to treat the issue of drugs as primarily a health and social issue rather than a criminalized issue," Clark told Reuters in an interview.

"Once you criminalize, you put very big stakes around. Of course, our world has proceeded on the basis that criminalization is the approach," she added.

Clark did not prescribe remedies to the Latin American governments but said they should "act on evidence," noting that she favoured treating drugs as a public health problem.

In recent years, many Latin American governments have begun to openly challenge the 40-year orthodoxy of the U.S.-led "war on drugs" that seeks to stamp out the cultivation and distribution of drugs like marijuana and cocaine.

Clark declined to comment on the responsibilities the United States should shoulder in any new drug policy and advised Latin American governments against adopting an "us-and-them" stance when dealing with the United States and consumer countries.

UNDP spokeswoman Christina LoNigro later said in a statement that Clark had not criticized the U.S. policy on the so-called war on drugs.

"She was speaking about the negative effects the drug trade has had on development in some Latin American countries in the context of the Human Development Report," she added.

BLOODSHED

Frustrated by ceaseless bloodshed and a perception that the United States has not done enough to curb its own drug consumption, many leaders in the region are now speaking openly about the possibility of legalizing drugs.

In Mexico, more than 70,000 people have been killed in drug-related violence since the start of 2007.

Supported by the United States, former Mexican President Felipe Calderon, who left office in December, launched a military offensive on drug gangs soon after taking office in late 2006. Rather than quelling the violence, killings rose and Calderon gradually moved away from his hardline stance.

At the U.N. General Assembly in September, Calderon and the leaders of Colombia and Guatemala - traditionally three of the most reliable U.S. partners on drug control - called on world governments to explore new alternatives to the problem.

In Latin America and other regions, calls are growing for new thinking on how to combat the trade in illicit drugs and the resulting bloodshed, Clark noted.

They have said "that the approach being followed has failed so we need a fresh set of eyes on this as well. And I think the debate going on at the regional level is a very, very useful one," Clark said, referring to Latin America.

The latest UNDP report argues that growing prosperity in the traditionally poor global south is driving gains in human development there. As a result, it said, "stronger voices from the south are demanding more representative frameworks of international governance."

Among those demands are growing calls to redraw the battle lines of the "war on drugs."

"To deal with drugs as a one-dimensional, law-and-order issue is to miss the point," Clark said. She stopped short of calling for outright legalization, but said the focus should be on keeping illegal profits out of criminal hands.

"We have waves of violent crime sustained by drug trade, so we have to take the money out of drugs," she said.

One of the arguments for legalizing drugs is that it would take away a key source of revenue for traffickers.

"The countries in the region that have been ravaged by the armed violence associated with drug cartels are starting to think laterally about a broad range of approaches and they should be encouraged to do that," said Clark.

"They should act on evidence," she added.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 15 maart 2013 @ 22:54:01 #124
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_124113544
quote:
Steve Katz Arrested: New York State Assemblyman Charged With Marijuana Possession

A New York State assemblyman who has opposed medical marijuana legislation was arrested and charged with unlawful possession of marijuana after he was pulled over for speeding this week.

In a statement released Friday, authorities reported that state police discovered Steve Katz had a "small bag" of marijuana in his possession during a traffic stop on the New York State Thruway around 10 a.m. Thursday.

A New York State Trooper noticed the smell of marijuana after stopping the 59-year-old assemblyman for driving 80 miles per hour in 65 mph zone. Katz was taken into custody and charged with possession before being released.

The arrest is particularly curious since Katz, who represents parts of Westchester, Putnam and Dutchess counties, voted against the legalization of medical marijuana in June. As the New York Times notes, the Republican assemblyman also serves on New York's Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Committee.

Katz addressed the "unfortunate incident" during a press conference Friday.

"This should not overshadow the work I have done over the years for the public and my constituency,” Katz told reporters. "I am confident that once the facts are presented that this will quickly be put to rest."

The assemblyman was first elected to represent New York's District 94 in 2010, and was reelected in 2012 for another two-year term. He is expected to appear in court for the possession charge on Mar. 28.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 17 maart 2013 @ 09:34:26 #125
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_124155295
quote:
quote:
Among the most prominent and vocal opponents of the UN’s ongoing narcotics machinations is Socialist Bolivian President Evo Morales (shown), who slammed the global prohibition regime as a failure. Even former Soviet Communist diplomat-turned planetary drug czar Yury Fedotov, executive director of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (ODC), admitted as much when he said "the overall prevalence of drug use is not decreasing.” Morales, however, went much further.

Speaking to the 56th session of the UN CND on Monday, the fiery South American leader said the international war has caused soaring violence and is being used as an "instrument of geopolitical domination." In typical fashion, Morales also took swipes at the U.S. government, which under Obama has expanded its ruthless, unconstitutional campaign of terror throughout Latin America under the guise of fighting the UN-mandated drug war. Morales slammed what he termed the “political use" of the drug war by "certain powers.”
quote:
While Morales was busy denouncing the UN-mandated drug war, a prominent U.S.-based organization known as Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP) was in Vienna making its case for total legalization of all drugs. The increasingly influential coalition of lawmen — judges, prosecutors, police officers, and others; people who have served on the front lines of the “war” and know what it really is — sent a four-member delegation to the UN summit.

LEAP Executive Director Neill Franklin, a 34-year law enforcement veteran of the Maryland State Police and Baltimore Police Department, says that ending drug prohibition would reduce violence, eviscerate the cartels, protect taxpayers, and more. He told The New American that UN mandates on the drug war were having a negative effect, and that it was time to call it quits when it comes to having the international organization ordering national governments to wage endless war on unapproved substances.

“We live in a global society in which each country is impacted by the actions of every other. This is particularly true in the war on drugs where the mandates of the UN system of drug prohibition greatly restrict the types of reforms countries can enact,” Franklin explained in an e-mail. “We're talking about a quickly adaptable multinational system of trade powered by forces that are more powerful than some countries — and a substantial part of the national economy of others.”
quote:
Critics of the failed UN-mandated prohibition approach often point to Portugal, which decriminalized all drugs — everything from marijuana to cocaine and heroin — about a decade ago. Studies show that since then, drug abuse has been cut in half already. Drug-related crime has also plummeted. Indeed, around the world, and especially in Latin America and parts of Europe, the Portuguese model is being seen as increasingly promising — especially when compared to the unconstitutional U.S. drug war mandated by the UN in direct conflict with the American Constitution.

Other elements that came under fierce criticism at the Vienna summit were outlandish UN claims that U.S. states were not free to set their own policies on marijuana. Citing invalid international treaties purporting to mandate a planetary war on drugs, the global body’s top drug warriors blasted voters in states like Colorado and Washington for legalizing the controversial plant for recreational use.

Even the 20 or so states that have nullified unconstitutional federal statutes by approving cannabis for medicinal use were attacked by the UN, which claimed it “warned” the Obama administration to crack down on the phenomenon. However, as Thomas Jefferson and the U.S. Supreme Court, among others, have explained, the federal government cannot expand its powers simply by ratifying treaties, and the Constitution does not provide any authority to regulate substances — that is why alcohol prohibition required an amendment.
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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_124164883
quote:
2s.gif Op maandag 25 februari 2013 09:52 schreef Reya het volgende:
http://www.spiegel.de/int(...)-drugs-a-884750.html

Een interessante beschouwing van Der Spiegel over de gevolgen van drugsbestrijding.
^O^

[ Bericht 20% gewijzigd door Misty_eyes op 17-03-2013 17:47:57 ]
  woensdag 20 maart 2013 @ 11:04:01 #127
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_124285147
Foto's op de site:

quote:
Marseille in ban blind geweld waarbij verkoolde lijken op straat worden gedumpt


Samen met het Slovaakse Kosice is Marseille dit jaar de culturele hoofdstad van Europa. Juist nu kampt de tweede stad van Frankrijk met een plaag van zwaar straatgeweld, dat doet denken aan de meedogenloze Mexicaanse drugsoorlog. Vorig jaar waren er minstens 24 moorden door het gangstergeweld. De voorbije twee weken vielen er weer vijf doden. De moorden dragen vaak dezelfde schrikwekkende stempel: het slachtoffer wordt op straat met kogels doorboord en vervolgens in brand gestoken. Verkoolde lichamen zijn immers lastiger om te identificeren.


Het was gangsterbaas Faris Berrahma die de methode voor het eerst introduceerde in het straatgeweld in Frankrijk. Het leverde hem de bijnaam 'Le Rôtisseur' op ('rôtir' betekent 'braden'). Op 24 april 2006 werd Berrhama zelf vermoord door rivaliserende bendes. In Bar des Marroniers was hij naar de voetbalmatch Lyon-AC Milan aan het kijken toen liefst tien gemaskerde schutters het vuur openden. Berrahma werd dodelijk getroffen door negen kogels. Ook twee van zijn kompanen kwamen om bij de bloedige aanslag.

Neergeschoten voor gevangenis
Hierdoor laaide de gangsteroorlog (die rond drugs, wapentrafiek en invloed draait) alleen maar op. Die wordt nu meer en meer op straat uitgevochten. Vorige week werd een gangster, die nog maar net was vrijgelaten uit de Baumettes-gevangenis, vlak voor de uitgang van de gevangenis neergeschoten. Enkele dagen werden twee jongeren van 21 jaar afgeslacht op de openbare weg. Een andere jongere werd gewond bij de nietsontziende schietpartij in de Cité des Bleuets. Vrijdag werd dan weer een verkoold lijk aangetroffen, wat een drugsrazzia van de politie ontketende. De identificatie van het verkoolde slachtoffer is bijna onmogelijk en daarom deed de politie een oproep om vermiste personen te komen aangeven.

Kalasjnikovs
De lokale autoriteiten stonden lang machteloos tegen het buitensporige geweld. Aanvalswapens als Kalasjnikovs zijn erg geliefd bij de straatbendes. De boeven kunnen ze al voor enkele honderden euro's aanschaffen in het illegale wapencircuit. De laatste tijd boekte de politie dankzij een gerichter antwoord wel enkele successen.

Reactie Hollande
De regering van de erg onpopulaire president François Hollande (volgens de laatste peiling is liefst 70 procent van de Fransen ontevreden over zijn beleid) blijft niet bij de pakken zitten. Vorig jaar besliste Parijs al om extra agenten te sturen naar de gewelddadige havenstad, maar nu Marseille ook nog eens cultruele hoofdstad van Europa wordt en het imago onbesmeurd zou moeten blijven, voert minister van Binnenlandse Zaken Manuel Valls de druk nog op. Er werden nog eens 240 agenten ter versterking naar Marseille gestuurd en de eerste resultaten zijn volgens Valls al zichtbaar gezien de grote hoeveelheden drugs die in beslag werden genomen. Ook het systeem met verklikkers werpt meer en meer vruchten af. Zo hopen de agenten stilaan het op de criminelen verloren terrein weer terug te winnen.
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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_124288835
quote:
Gepubliceerd: 20 maart 2013 08:30
Laatste update: 20 maart 2013 10:36


Onderzoek naar drugshandel bij Luchtmobiele Brigade
Militairen van de Luchtmobiele Brigade, de elite-eenheid van de Koninklijke Landmacht, hebben mogelijk op grote schaal drugs gedeald en gebruikt.

Er loopt een onderzoek naar de handel op de Oranjekazerne in Schaarsbergen. Dat bevestigen de landmacht en het Openbaar Ministerie (OM) woensdag.

Volgens het OM zijn er tien verdachten. Het gaat om zes militairen en vier burgers. Of het tot een proces komt, is nog niet besloten. Advocaat Michael Ruperti, die drie militairen bijstaat, zegt dat het gaat om sergeanten en korporaals.

Volgens de raadsman lopen er meer onderzoeken naar de Luchtmobiele Brigade, maar het OM wil daar niets over kwijt.

"Op feestjes wordt gehandeld in cocaïne, xtc en ghb", aldus een anonieme korporaal tegen De Telegraaf.

Trauma's
Ruperti zegt dat het drugsgebruik het gevolg is van trauma's uit Uruzgan. In die Afghaanse provincie waren van 2006 tot 2010 Nederlandse militairen gelegerd.

''De meeste veteranen kunnen niet omgaan met de ervaringen. Het leven gaat door als je terug in Nederland bent, je hebt geen tijd om het te verwerken. 's Avonds, als je droomt, uit het zich. Dan ligt drugsgebruik op de loer. Sommigen hebben drugs gebruikt om te kunnen slapen'', aldus Ruperti.

Nazorg
Volgens de advocaat schort er veel aan de nazorg van Defensie. ''Vanuit Afghanistan worden de militairen teruggevlogen naar Kreta. Daar kunnen ze na aankomst drinken en feesten, voor het eerst in maanden. De ochtend erna vraagt een psycholoog of ze problemen hebben. Maar dan dringt nog niet door wat ze hebben meegemaakt.''

Terug in Nederland moeten de veteranen vragenlijsten invullen. ''Als je aangeeft dat je problemen hebt, krijg je een vervolgafspraak met een psycholoog. Maar je wilt niet dat collega's dat weten. Dit zijn stoere mensen, je wilt niet als watje worden weggezet.''

Militairen kunnen op staande voet worden ontslagen als ze soft- of harddrugs gebruiken. Volgens Ruperti zullen zijn cliënten dat echter niet accepteren. Ruperti: ''Een goede werkgever hoort zulke mensen niet te ontslaan. Misschien moeten ze straf krijgen, maar ook hulp.''
Door: ANP/NU.nl
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
  donderdag 21 maart 2013 @ 16:31:27 #129
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_124339219
quote:
quote:
Russia is to step up multilateral cooperation in counternarcotics operations in Latin America, in what may also be a play to increase its geopolitical influence in the region.

The director of Russia's Federal Narcotics Service, Viktor Ivanov, announced plans to work with several Latin American countries in carrying out joint counternarcotics operations, training law enforcement agencies, improving user rehabilitation facilities, and helping develop common anti-drug policies.

Much of that investment will be in Nicaragua, where Russia is setting up an anti-drug training center, which will see Russian law enforcement experts train agents from seven countries in areas such as tactics and use of technology.

Ivanov also announced plans to increase security cooperation with Peru, and, in the coming year, begin training, information exchange, and joint monitoring of trafficking operations.

Ivanov added that Moscow police had identified trafficking routes into Russia in which cocaine is concealed in plantain shipments leaving Ecuador or in Colombian flowers shipped to Russia from via the Netherlands. He also highlighted West Africa as an increasingly popular transit point.


InSight Crime Analysis

Russia plays a central part in the global drug trade, but primarily as the world's largest consumer of heroin, which is generally trafficked in from Asian countries such as Afghanistan.

Nevertheless, according to European police force Europol, it also has a growing consumer market for cocaine. Europol also identified the former Soviet countries around Russia as possibly the next emerging entry point for cocaine into Europe.

However, the reasons for Russia's attempts to increase its influence in Latin America may also have a geopolitical angle. In an October 2012 tour of the region, Ivanov suggested his intention was to develop an alternative multilateral consensus around tackling drug trafficking that bypasses US dominance both in Latin America and in Asia.

In the past, Ivanov has criticized the US government's "heavy-handed methods of militarizing the region," in tackling drug trafficking. However, his suggested drug control strategies do not stray far from conventional thinking and the policies emanating from Washington and seem more focused on rivaling US influence than changing tack in the drug war.
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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_124357417
Ivanov zou es in eigen land moeten kijken, waar hele dorpen (!) de hele dag (!) dronken zijn. Allemaal van legale drugs.

De grootste krachten achter de "War" on Drugs zijn dan ook
- wapenleveranciers (afzetmarkt)
- farmaceutische industrie (concurrentie)
- alcoholfabrikanten (idem)
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
  vrijdag 22 maart 2013 @ 18:53:45 #131
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_124382586
quote:
Silk Road: the online drug marketplace that officials seem powerless to stop

Authorities around the world know about the website, but closing it is another matter – partly because it uses Bitcoins
quote:
Mark Johnson* rifles through his mail as he gets home from work. Among the usual bills is a small padded envelope. Though it doesn't have his name on, it's the package he's most interested in: inside lie two grams of, he hopes, relatively pure MDMA.

Johnson has no idea who has sent him the envelope: he has never met his dealer, and never will. The delivery was facilitated through a website called Silk Road, an underground eBay-like site which has become the core marketplace for buying and selling drugs online – and despite law enforcement authorities across the world being fully aware of its operation they have, so far, been powerless to stop it.

The site has been shrouded in secrecy even since it was founded in February 2011, but research due to be formally published later this year tracked its growth during six months of last year. Over those months, sales on the site doubled, hitting $1.7m a month.
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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 25 maart 2013 @ 15:01:43 #132
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_124484815
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_124485963
quote:
1s.gif Op donderdag 21 maart 2013 23:00 schreef El_Matador het volgende:
Ivanov zou es in eigen land moeten kijken, waar hele dorpen (!) de hele dag (!) dronken zijn. Allemaal van legale drugs.

De grootste krachten achter de "War" on Drugs zijn dan ook
- wapenleveranciers (afzetmarkt)
- farmaceutische industrie (concurrentie)
- alcoholfabrikanten (idem)
laatste 2 kunnen natuurlijk zelf ook toetreden tot de markt, slecht argument dus
  maandag 25 maart 2013 @ 15:34:53 #134
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_124486191
quote:
1s.gif Op maandag 25 maart 2013 15:28 schreef BlueRoom het volgende:

[..]

laatste 2 kunnen natuurlijk zelf ook toetreden tot de markt, slecht argument dus
Ze ziten al op de markt, maar met kapitaal-goederen.

Plantjes kan je niet patenteren. Als je drugs als coke en marihuana legaliseert krijg je goedkope bulkproducten als rijst en aardappelen. Daar is geen droog brood mee te verdienen, vooral omdat je er geen patent op aan kan vragen.

De farmaceutische industrie is een patent-industrie. Medicijnen in bulk leveren niets op. Die industrie heeft dus niets aan legale wiet en coke. .

Alcohol moet je stoken en je hebt een dure fabriek nodig om goede alcohol in grote hoeveelheden te produceren. De alcoholindustrie heeft niets aan een low-cost bulk product.

Maar beide industrieën ondervinden wel concurrentie van goedkope plantaardige drugs. Dus moet het verboden worden om voor winstmaximalisatie te kunnen zorgen. .
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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 25 maart 2013 @ 19:19:40 #135
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_124494406
NL politie fraudeert en is corrupt!
quote:
quote:
Uit het gepubliceerde vonnis blijkt dat verbalisanten verslag maakten van een gesprek waarbij de telefoon niet eens werd beantwoord. “NN man zegt dat ie een half boekje heeft gekregen”, staat er als weergave van een gesprek waarbij de telefoon niet werd opgenomen. In gesprekken waaruit blijkt dat de verdachte koper is van drugs wordt hij opgevoerd als dealer. En als een vrouw de telefoon opneemt, wordt dit in het verbaal toegeschreven aan de mannelijke verdachte.
quote:
De officier van justitie Sylvia Kubicz omschreef de valse processen-verbaal op de zitting als een vergissing en als een vormverzuim van geringe betekenis. De rechters zeggen de officier van justitie absoluut niet te volgen in haar standpunt. Volgens de rechtbank zijn de onjuistheden in de verbalen klaarblijkelijk doelbewust opgesteld.
Het gaat goed met de War on Drugs! *O*
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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_124494689
quote:
7s.gif Op maandag 25 maart 2013 15:34 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]

Ze ziten al op de markt, maar met kapitaal-goederen.

Plantjes kan je niet patenteren. Als je drugs als coke en marihuana legaliseert krijg je goedkope bulkproducten als rijst en aardappelen. Daar is geen droog brood mee te verdienen, vooral omdat je er geen patent op aan kan vragen.

De farmaceutische industrie is een patent-industrie. Medicijnen in bulk leveren niets op. Die industrie heeft dus niets aan legale wiet en coke. .

Alcohol moet je stoken en je hebt een dure fabriek nodig om goede alcohol in grote hoeveelheden te produceren. De alcoholindustrie heeft niets aan een low-cost bulk product.

Maar beide industrieën ondervinden wel concurrentie van goedkope plantaardige drugs. Dus moet het verboden worden om voor winstmaximalisatie te kunnen zorgen. .
Beter had ik het bijna niet kunnen verwoorden. ^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
  dinsdag 26 maart 2013 @ 14:46:35 #137
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_124525120
quote:
Follow the Money: How Former Anti-Drug Officials Ridiculously Still Say Pot Is Dangerous in Order to Make a Lot of Cash

Former DEA agents and cops are lobbying for tougher drug laws that make them rich.

When eight former DEA chiefs signed a letter to US Attorney General Eric Holder earlier this month, demanding that the feds crack down on Washington and Colorado, the states which voted last November to legalize marijuana, there was more than just drug-war ideology at stake. There was money.

Two of the elder drug warriors, Peter Bensinger (DEA chief, 1976–1981) and Robert DuPont (White House drug chief, 1973–1977), run a corporate drug-testing business. Their employee-assistance company, Bensinger, DuPont & Associates, the sixth largest in the nation, holds the pee stick for some 10 million employees around the US. Their clients have included the biggest players in industry and government: Kraft Foods, American Airlines, Johnson & Johnson, the Federal Aviation Administration and even the Justice Department itself.

“These are not just old drug war architects pushing a drug war model they’ve pushed for 40 years,” says Brian Vicente, a Denver lawyer and co-author of Colorado’s Proposition 64, which legalized marijuana for recreational use. “These guys are asking Eric Holder to pursue prohibition policies that line their own pockets.”

Bensinger and DuPont both deny money is their motive. “It’s true we might benefit from keeping marijuana illegal,” says DuPont. But he argues it's equally true that marijuana legalization could benefit his bottom line, putting forth the old drug-war line that legalization would create more users. “The more success legalization has, the better it is for our business because they are creating a problem for employers,” he says. “That would be smart for us.” DuPont also points out that only 15% of their business is made up of training employers to detect the warning signs of drug and alcohol abuse and supplying third-party testing. But both men are involved in industry-controlled lobbying groups like the Drug & Alcohol Industry Testing Association, which backed the Drug Testing Integrity Act of 2008, outlawing products that help people beat drug tests and keeping their business healthy.

By inserting themselves into the legal-pot debate, Bensinger, DuPont and other drug warriors benefit by promoting their own legacies and bolstering their own business, lobbying and consulting interests—even in the face of an increasingly skeptical public. A 2011 Gallup survey showed that half of Americans favor legalizing weed. “This letter that they signed is their attempt to once again become relevant within the public policy debate that has largely turned its back on such archaic viewpoints,” says Paul Armentano, deputy director of the pro-marijuana nonprofit, National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML).

The time-honored revolving door between government and business swings fast and often. It can be straightforward, like the appointment of banking behemoth Goldman Sachs' alumni as economic policymakers by recent presidential administrations. But when it comes to the drug war, the family tree is more like a thicket of interests among law enforcement, federal and state prisons, pharmaceutical giants, drug testers and drug treatment programs—all with an economic stake in keeping pot illegal.

Bensinger and DuPont are longtime allies of the marijuana prohibition group that sent the letter to Holder, Save Our Society from Drugs (SOS), which was founded by Mel Sembler, a Florida shopping-mall magnate, and his wife, Betty. The Semblers also founded Straight Inc.—a drug-treatment program that used sleep deprivation, beatings and psychological abuse to treat 10,000 teenage patients, in nine states, from 1976 to 1993, at $1,400 a month plus a $1,600 per patient evaluation fee, raking in millions. Straight wasshut down after investigations in state after state corroborated the hundreds of complaints. But the Semblers, longtime major Republican Party fundraisers, retain their influence as behind-the-scenes bankrollers of the anti-drug faction.

The department of the White House drug czar, otherwise known as the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP), is another arm of the government’s war on drugs that can be lucrative to incumbents. Andrea Barthwell, MD, former deputy drug czar during President George W. Bush’s first term and his point person against medical marijuana, has earned a living both treating drug addicts and lobbying against policies that weaken marijuana laws—and cut into her own bottom line.

As a past president of the American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM)—a group that opposes medical marijuana, and whose members’ business model could be threatened by legalized marijuana, since two-thirds of its clientele are court-ordered pot users trying to avoid jail time—Barthwell has been one of its fiercest attack dogs. In ASAM campaigns against Oregon and Illinois’ medical marijuana initiatives, she called those who favor medical marijuana “cruel” and “snake oil salesman.” She denounces this pain-relief and anti-nausea approach for patients with cancer and AIDS because, she claims, it is unregulated and unproven (the Institute of Medicine declared medical marijuana useful in 2003, and since then many studies, and many more users, attest to its benefits.)

Yet Barthwell was happy to jump from the ONDCP to the payroll of GW Pharmaceutical in 2005, lobbying for the Canadian company’s Sativex—a liquefied marijuana spray, extracted from whole plant cannabis, for the same pain benefits. Even as the American Medical Association and federal lawmakers maintain that pot has no medicinal value, Big Pharma is applying for dozens of cannabis-based new medicines in order to take hold of of the $1.8 billion medical marijuana industry, as NORML’s Paul Armentano pointed out five years ago in the Huffington Post.

Barthwell, like Bensinger and DuPoint, also has a financial stake in the prohibition treatment culture. She is founder and CEO of EMGlobal LLC, parent company of the Chicago-based Two Dreams Outer Banks drug treatment center, and is also a director of Catasys Inc., which provides substance abuse programs and behavioral health management services to companies, health plans and unions—a role for which she received $77,994 in compensation in 2011.

When it comes to the drug war, money rolls into whichever corporate pockets are willing to play ball, whether it’s big-time lobbyists or broadcast TV networks. Barry McCaffrey—President Clinton’s second-term drug czar and a former Army general, who also signed the recent letter to Holder—was in charge of the purse strings at ONDCP. He oversaw a money-soaked, ham-handed propaganda campaign: In 1999, his office hired PR giant Fleishman-Hillard (at $10 million a year), which encouraged TV networks to slip anti-drug messages into sitcoms and dramas in exchange for ad time worth millions. The secret effort allowed networks to avoid running PSAs, freeing up airtime for paid ads. Networks also gave the ONCDP advance copies of scripts to review. It’s estimated that between 1998 and 2000, the networks received up to $25 million in benefits.

At the same time, McCaffrey was sharpening his stick for the battle against medical marijuana, flatly denying that patients in pain could receive relief from pot. After he left the drug czar’s job, he went on the payroll of military contractors, promoting their interests in the Iraq war as a frequent talking head on national network TV, never disclosing his financial ties.

Lobbying your former employer—whether it’s the government itself or taxpayers who foot the bill—is the No. 1 way one-time public servants can serve themselves. The same is true of current state-paid employees, like cops and other law enforcement personnel whose job it is to crack down on illegal weed smoking. As Armentano notes, federal grants that target illegal drug use are a major source of funding for local police coffers, paying for new hires, equipment and coveted overtime pay.

John Lovell, a lobbyist for police associations in Sacramento, California, not only obtains those grants, he is a front-line fighter on behalf of the cops to keep pot illegal. When California weighed Proposition 19 to legalize marijuana in 2010, Lovell helped manage the opposition campaign. During the fight, according to a reviewof lobbying contracts by Republic Report, Lovell’s company received $386,350 from police groups, including the California Police Chiefs Association. The same report noted that Lovell helped local police departments apply for drug war money from President Obama’s American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. In 2009 and 2010, state police groups sought some $75 million from the feds to conduct a Campaign Against Marijuana Planting. Lovell represented one such group.

Indeed, law enforcement agencies around the country could lose as much as $11 billion in taxpayer money if marijuana prohibition is repealed, according to Harvard economics professor Jeff Myron. Weed arrests account for half of all drugs arrests in the US. The tangled money trail can seem at times like something from a smoke-filled Cheech and Chong plot.

In 2009, the California Police Chiefs Association posted on their website a position paperagainst pot for pain, courtesy of a group called Friends of the DEA. “Requiring the DEA unequivocally to take a ‘hands-off’ approach, no matter how egregious the dispensary’s practices, will not serve the best interests of patients. Uncontrolled proliferation of dispensaries will seriously undercut our FDA drug approval system and deprive patients of important regulatory protections,” the group argued. What the paper didn’t note was that Friends was a lobbying group headed by Michael Barnes, a former Bush appointee to the drug czar’s office, as first pointed out by CounterPunch that year. The nine-page, heavily footnoted position paper was written by none other than Andrea Barthwell, MD, the promoter of Sativex, which is likely to receive FDA approval soon.

Among the biggest financial winners from the war on pot are private prisons and the army of DEA agents, local deputies and SWAT teams who help fill them up. Since 1980, federal prisons have ballooned some 790% because of the war on drugs, which began in earnest the previous decade. Private prison companies have seen their business soar. Corrections Corporation of America (CAA), the largest operator in the US, with 60 facilities and a 90,000-bed capacity, had $1.7 billion in tax-payer-funded revenue last year. The GEO Group, a worldwide player with 53,000 beds, pulled in $1.6 billion in government-funneled revenue.

In its 2010 annual report, CAA is fairly transparent about its stake in the anti-drug battle: “Any changes [in laws] with respect to drugs and controlled substances or illegal immigration could affect the number of persons arrested, convicted and sentenced, thereby potentially reducing demand for correctional facilities to house them.” Last year, both companies stuffed millions of dollars into the pockets of Washington lobbyists to pressure lawmakers to maintain the status quo, as revealed in an investigation by Laura Carlsen in March's Counter Punch magazine.

“My most powerful adversity is the police-prison industry,” says former cop–turned–drug policy specialist Howard Woolridge, who lobbies lawmakers for marijuana reform for Citizens Opposing Prohibition. “They can say, ‘If you don’t vote for more prohibition, we will tell people you are soft on drugs on and soft on crime.’ The Fraternal Order of Police is looking out for their 326,000 members’ paychecks. If they say you’re soft on crime, they can move upward of 2% of the electorate. In a close election, that’s victory and defeat.”

Vincente doesn’t doubt that the Bensingers, Bathwells and McCaffreys are fervent believers in their anti-pot mission, even as they earn their living on its front lines or flanks. The same people who wrote to Holder battled Vincente's initiative as well. “It’s what they do—they get together and sign letters,” he says. For the older fighters, says Paul Armentano of NORML, “Their motivation is the fact their failed polices have been proved wrong. All they have is the ability to try to intimidate a couple of high-ranking officials. Most of America has moved on.”

Attorney General Eric Holder may recognize this. He has told members of the Senate that the Obama administration is still formulating its policy toward the states that legalized pot. “We are considering what the federal response to those new statutes will be,” Holder said at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing this week. “We will have the ability to announce what our policy will be relatively soon.” So far he has not answered the drug warriors' letter.
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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 27 maart 2013 @ 17:47:33 #138
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_124573519
quote:
Spaanse agenten runnen drugsbende

Spaanse opsporingsautoriteiten hebben op het Canarische eiland Fuerteventura een drugsbende opgerold die werd gerund door politieagenten. Negen dienders van de Guardia Civil zijn opgepakt, samen met elf burgers. Dat werd woensdag bekendgemaakt.

De autoriteiten verdenken de bende van grootschalige smokkel en handel in hasj, afkomstig uit Marokko. De betrokken agenten waren gestationeerd in de toeristische centrum van Corralejo in het noorden van Fuerteventura. Behalve van drugsmokkel worden ze ook verdacht van onder meer marteling, afpersing en belastingfraude.

De bende kon worden opgerold, nadat twee agenten waren betrapt op het strand, terwijl zij een boot met 1000 kilo drugs aan het uitladen waren.
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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 30 maart 2013 @ 14:53:15 #139
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_124683838
quote:
Homegrown crystal meth industry sparks west Africa crime wave

Clandestine methamphetamine laboratories discovered in Nigeria signal disturbing new chapter in regional drug trade

One May evening last year, as a tropical downpour lashed Lagos, Nigerian drug enforcement agents received the tipoff that would lead to a game-changing bust. Hours earlier, Baez Benitez Milan, a car dealer from Paraguay, had entered the country, telling airport officials that this, one of Africa's most notoriously gridlocked, chaotic cities, was ideal for plying his motor trade.

Instead, he drove to an unfinished, weed-choked building on the deserted outskirts of town, and holed up there for weeks. When agents eventually stormed the building, they found an amphetamine-producing factory capable of churning out 25kg of white crystal meth powder, or "ice", every few hours. Benitez Milan was, in fact, a Colombian drug runner named Gonzalo Osorio, whose skills in the rapid setup of clandestine laboratories commanded a $38,000 (£25,000) weekly fee. The factory, one of an intended three, was among the earliest to be discovered in west Africa, and signalled a disturbing new chapter in the regional drug trade.

For the past decade, west Africa's creek-lined coast has been a pipeline for trafficking South American cocaine to Europe and Asia. About $1.25bn of illicit trade has passed through annually, responsible in part for destabilising huge swathes of the region, from Mali's recent turmoil to the narco-state of Guinea-Bissau. But now homegrown criminal syndicates that previously earned cuts by providing mules for Latin American cartels are cooking up their own slice of the global drug pie. Their narcotic of choice is methamphetamine, a highly profitable powder concocted using readily available and legal ingredients.

"This is the next niche for criminal groups in west Africa because you can easily cook it at home, and you can easily adjust it for supply and demand. It is slowly but surely spreading in the region," said Pierre Lapaque, head of the United Nations office on drugs and crime in west Africa, whose latest report highlights the rising trade.

Four large-scale crystal meth labs have been discovered in Nigeria. Shipments of precursor chemicals have been seized in neighbouring Benin and Togo and in Guinea officials discovered huge vats used to cook MDMA, a similar synthetic drug.

Bola, a lanky drug baron with twitching hands who is based in downtown Lagos, said only local wrestlers bought synthetic drugs when he started peddling eight years ago. "It was difficult to sell. Now the guys selling [meth] to big boys and foreigners in the VIP dens can no longer come to areas like this because they will be robbed. Everybody knows they make big money," he said.

Behind Bola's stifling, corrugated iron shop selling dusty cartons of soft drinks is a warren of cramped brick-walled rooms barely high enough to stand up in. Ghoulish in the occasional shard of sunlight piercing through the haze, dealers and glassy-eyed users slump on wooden benches, hunch over chessboards or incessantly chop and wrap mounds of crystalline powder.

Most international orders come from South Africa and more recently Asia "because many people are afraid to go. The punishment there if they should catch you … " Bola mimed a knife across his throat, indicating the death penalty.

A kilo of meth exported to south-east Asia, where some countries have reported a 250% increase in traffickers from west Africa arrested over five years, brings in $45,000. In Bola's den, poorer users pay $1.20 for a single hit.

Crystal meth was traditionally brewed by US biker gangs but laws were tightened in 2005, curbing production. Thousands of miles away, there was unintended fallout. "Cocaine trafficking was falling because we were making record seizures. Suddenly we started making more and more interceptions of methamphetamine leaving the country, but nothing at all was coming in. We realised criminals had started making it within our borders," said Mitchell Ofojeyu, an official at the heavily guarded headquarters of Nigeria's drug enforcement agency.

Some worry the effects of this new trade will spill over into local communities, raising the spectre of rising crime and health problems.

"The warning signals are there that this really is a problem that could run amok in years ahead if comparable resources aren't devoted to the human consumption side," said Alan Doss, a senior adviser at the Geneva-based Kofi Annan Foundation.

For now, widespread unfamiliarity among the local population has sometimes got in the way of curbing the trade. When Nigerian officials discovered their first meth factory, they wanted to storm the site immediately.

"We didn't realise the chemicals were so poisonous. It was our international partners who told us: 'Look, you basically have to kit yourself up as if you're going to the moon'," said Ofojeyu.
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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_124729562
Drugskartels 5de werkgever Mexico

De drugskartels in Mexico zijn uitgegroeid tot de op vier na grootste werkgever van het land. Zij verschaffen werk aan 468.000 Mexicanen. De nieuwe cijfers staan in de begeleidende tekst bij een wetsvoorstel van twee parlementsleden, dat beoogt de federale wet op de georganiseerde misdaad aan te scherpen.

Het aantal van 468.000 personen dat werkt in een van de activiteiten van de drugskartels is "vijf keer zoveel als in de nationale houtindustrie en drie keer zoveel als het personeel van Pemex, de oliemaatschappij met het grootste aantal werknemers in de wereld", schrijven de parlementariërs. "Boeren, huurmoordenaars, bewakers, capo's, artsen, secretaresses, de drugshandel heeft ze allemaal nodig en geeft hun allemaal werk."

Besmet
Volgens de parlementsleden schommelen de jaarinkomsten van de kartels tussen de 25 en 40 miljard dollar.

Met hun wetsvoorstel willen zij vooral de infiltratie van drugsgelden in de legale economie tegengaan. Deskundigen stellen dat 78 procent van alle economische sectoren in Mexico besmet zijn met drugsgelden, maar "de regering meldt geen enkel geval van inbeslagname in geen enkele van de besmette sectoren".
  zondag 31 maart 2013 @ 20:10:23 #141
171727 StateOfMind
Ancient Astronaut
pi_124729812
quote:
0s.gif Op zondag 31 maart 2013 20:03 schreef Deeltjesversneller het volgende:
Drugskartels 5de werkgever Mexico

De drugskartels in Mexico zijn uitgegroeid tot de op vier na grootste werkgever van het land. Zij verschaffen werk aan 468.000 Mexicanen. De nieuwe cijfers staan in de begeleidende tekst bij een wetsvoorstel van twee parlementsleden, dat beoogt de federale wet op de georganiseerde misdaad aan te scherpen.

Het aantal van 468.000 personen dat werkt in een van de activiteiten van de drugskartels is "vijf keer zoveel als in de nationale houtindustrie en drie keer zoveel als het personeel van Pemex, de oliemaatschappij met het grootste aantal werknemers in de wereld", schrijven de parlementariërs. "Boeren, huurmoordenaars, bewakers, capo's, artsen, secretaresses, de drugshandel heeft ze allemaal nodig en geeft hun allemaal werk."

Besmet
Volgens de parlementsleden schommelen de jaarinkomsten van de kartels tussen de 25 en 40 miljard dollar.

Met hun wetsvoorstel willen zij vooral de infiltratie van drugsgelden in de legale economie tegengaan. Deskundigen stellen dat 78 procent van alle economische sectoren in Mexico besmet zijn met drugsgelden, maar "de regering meldt geen enkel geval van inbeslagname in geen enkele van de besmette sectoren".
Alleen die onderlinge concurrentie strijd is ietsjes heviger dan in andere bedrijfstakken.
Perhaps you've seen it, maybe in a dream.
A murky, forgotten land.
  zondag 31 maart 2013 @ 20:16:38 #142
94080 VeX-
HAHA..JIJ hebt HEUL veel POSTS
pi_124730072
Dat komt toch nooit meer goed met dat land? Gewoon nuken.
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_124731670
quote:
0s.gif Op zondag 31 maart 2013 20:03 schreef Deeltjesversneller het volgende:
Drugskartels 5de werkgever Mexico

De drugskartels in Mexico zijn uitgegroeid tot de op vier na grootste werkgever van het land. Zij verschaffen werk aan 468.000 Mexicanen. De nieuwe cijfers staan in de begeleidende tekst bij een wetsvoorstel van twee parlementsleden, dat beoogt de federale wet op de georganiseerde misdaad aan te scherpen.

Het aantal van 468.000 personen dat werkt in een van de activiteiten van de drugskartels is "vijf keer zoveel als in de nationale houtindustrie en drie keer zoveel als het personeel van Pemex, de oliemaatschappij met het grootste aantal werknemers in de wereld", schrijven de parlementariërs. "Boeren, huurmoordenaars, bewakers, capo's, artsen, secretaresses, de drugshandel heeft ze allemaal nodig en geeft hun allemaal werk."

Besmet
Volgens de parlementsleden schommelen de jaarinkomsten van de kartels tussen de 25 en 40 miljard dollar.

Met hun wetsvoorstel willen zij vooral de infiltratie van drugsgelden in de legale economie tegengaan. Deskundigen stellen dat 78 procent van alle economische sectoren in Mexico besmet zijn met drugsgelden, maar "de regering meldt geen enkel geval van inbeslagname in geen enkele van de besmette sectoren".
Oh lekker, een hele fucking economie. Volgende stap is dat overheden drugs gaan produceren.
The problem is not the occupation, but how people deal with it.
pi_124732160
quote:
0s.gif Op zondag 31 maart 2013 20:50 schreef waht het volgende:

[..]

Oh lekker, een hele fucking economie. Volgende stap is dat overheden drugs gaan produceren.
Dat zou het hele probleem oplossen.
  zondag 31 maart 2013 @ 21:09:07 #145
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_124732568
quote:
0s.gif Op zondag 31 maart 2013 21:00 schreef 16meter het volgende:

[..]

Dat zou het hele probleem oplossen.
Onzin, overheden produceren toch ook geen alcohol en antidepressiva?
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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_124735961
Uiteraard zal de overheid zelf niets produceren, staatsbedrijven zien we gelukkig enkel in de achterlijke delen van de wereld, ze geven enkel hun fiat.
The problem is not the occupation, but how people deal with it.
pi_124746692
quote:
0s.gif Op zondag 31 maart 2013 20:16 schreef VeX- het volgende:
Dat komt toch nooit meer goed met dat land? Gewoon nuken.
:r :r

Lul niet.
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 2 april 2013 @ 16:30:38 #148
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_124796621
quote:
Mexican drug cartels move deeper into US to tighten grip on narcotics market

Cartel threat looms so large that a Mexican kingpin is Chicago's public enemy No 1 – despite never setting foot in the city

Mexican drug cartels whose operatives once rarely ventured beyond the US border are dispatching some of their most trusted agents to live and work deep inside the United States – an emboldened presence that experts believe is meant to tighten their grip on the world's most lucrative narcotics market and maximize profits.

If left unchecked, authorities say, the cartels' move into the American interior could render the syndicates harder than ever to dislodge and pave the way for them to expand into other criminal enterprises such as prostitution, kidnapping-and-extortion rackets and money laundering.

Cartel activity in the US is certainly not new. Starting in the 1990s, the ruthless syndicates became the nation's No 1 supplier of illegal drugs, using unaffiliated middlemen to smuggle cocaine, marijuana and heroin beyond the border or even to grow pot here.

But a wide-ranging Associated Press review of federal court cases and government drug-enforcement data, plus interviews with many top law enforcement officials, indicate the groups have begun deploying agents from their inner circles to the US cartel operatives are suspected of running drug-distribution networks in at least nine non-border states, often in middle-class suburbs in the mid-west, south and northeast.

"It's probably the most serious threat the United States has faced from organized crime," said Jack Riley, head of the Drug Enforcement Administration's Chicago office.

The cartel threat looms so large that one of Mexico's most notorious drug kingpins – a man who has never set foot in Chicago – was recently named the city's public enemy No 1, the same notorious label once assigned to Al Capone.

The Chicago crime commission, a non-government agency that tracks crime trends in the region, said it considers Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman even more menacing than Capone because Guzman leads the deadly Sinaloa cartel, which supplies most of the narcotics sold in Chicago and in many cities across the US

Years ago, Mexico faced the same problem – of then-nascent cartels expanding their power – "and didn't nip the problem in the bud," said Jack Killorin, head of an anti-trafficking program in Atlanta for the Office of National Drug Control Policy. "And see where they are now."

Riley sounds a similar alarm: "People think, 'The border's 1,700 miles away. This isn't our problem.' Well, it is. These days, we operate as if Chicago is on the border."

Border states from Texas to California have long grappled with a cartel presence. But cases involving cartel members have now emerged in the suburbs of Chicago and Atlanta, as well as Columbus, Ohio, Louisville, Ky., and rural North Carolina. Suspects have also surfaced in Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota and Pennsylvania.

Mexican drug cartels "are taking over our neighborhoods", Pennsylvania attorney general Kathleen Kane warned a legislative committee in February. State police commissioner Frank Noonan disputed her claim, saying cartels are primarily drug suppliers, not the ones trafficking drugs on the ground.

For years, cartels were more inclined to make deals in Mexico with American traffickers, who would then handle transportation to and distribution within major cities, said Art Bilek, a former organized crime investigator who is now executive vice president of the crime commission.

As their organizations grew more sophisticated, the cartels began scheming to keep more profits for themselves. So leaders sought to cut out middlemen and assume more direct control, pushing aside American traffickers, he said.

Beginning two or three years ago, authorities noticed that cartels were putting "deputies on the ground here," Bilek said. "Chicago became such a massive market … it was critical that they had firm control."

Het artikel gaat verder.
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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 3 april 2013 @ 10:04:38 #149
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_124825406
quote:
quote:
In een bos bij Oisterwijk in Noord-Brabant zijn in de nacht van dinsdag op woensdag 41 vaten met drugsafval gevonden. Een vat lekte. Dat meldde de politie woensdag. Wie de vaten heeft gedumpt, is nog niet bekend.

In Noord-Brabant zijn de afgelopen maanden vaker vaten met afval van synthetische drugs gevonden. Zo was er half maart een vondst bij Waspik en eind januari bij Alphen, ten zuidwesten van Tilburg.
De War on Drugs is nog steeds slecht voor het milieu.
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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_124825905
Normale bedrijven dumpen ook wel eens afval, vaak nog legaal ook.
The problem is not the occupation, but how people deal with it.
  woensdag 3 april 2013 @ 13:48:04 #151
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_124832860
quote:
0s.gif Op woensdag 3 april 2013 10:22 schreef waht het volgende:
Normale bedrijven dumpen ook wel eens afval, vaak nog legaal ook.
Dat is geen argument voor een verbod op 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
  woensdag 3 april 2013 @ 16:56:06 #152
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_124840086
quote:
quote:
For much of the twentieth century, Iran’s strategy for curbing drug addiction looked a lot like Afghanistan’s current one: stopping the flow of narcotics and destroying crops. When, in the early 1970s, it became clear that this method wasn’t working, Iranian authorities adopted policies that focused more on prevention and treatment, with promising results.

But the 1979 revolution changed all that, and the Islamic government it brought to power implemented strict zero-tolerance narcotics laws. The regime, which saw drug use not as a medical or public health issue but as a moral shortcoming, believed that addiction and abuse could be beaten out of the public through punitive measures. Penalties for addicts included fining, imprisonment, and physical punishment; drug dealers and smugglers were often considered to be “at war with God” and executed. By the late 1980s, the government was sending thousands of addicts to prison camps, where they were supposed to detoxify and atone for their sins through forced labor.

These draconian social measures against drug users and dealers were matched with similarly aggressive operations to prevent the flow of opiates across the border from Afghanistan. By the late 1980s, an estimated 50 percent of Afghan opiate production was passing through Iranian territory, and the Iranian markets were flooded with Afghan opium, heroin, and morphine. Starting in the early 1990s, Tehran constructed more than 260 kilometers of static defenses -- including concrete dams that blocked mountain passes, anti-vehicle berms, trenches, minefields, forts, and mountain towers -- at a cost of over $80 million. By the late 1990s, more than 100,000 police officers, army troops, and Revolutionary Guardsmen were committed to antinarcotic operations.

Yet both the social policies and the border fortifications were fruitless. Although the Iranian authorities seized nearly eight times the amount of narcotics in 1999 than they had in 1990, they could not keep up with the expansion of Afghan opium production, which rose in those years from approximately 1,500 metric tons to roughly 4,500. Iran also found that the number of intravenous drug users was growing. Ironically, the prisons and camps where addicts were expected to kick their habits became epicenters of drug use, in which people learned how to inject heroin and shared primitive infection-prone needles.

The rise in malignant drug use brought with it more deaths, more cases of addiction, and, most embarrassingly for Irans leaders, a full-blown HIV/AIDS epidemic. After years of blaming the Wests moral turpitude and decadence for the virus, Irans leadership had to face an outbreak at home, fueled by its own failed antinarcotic policy. By the late 1990s, in some provinces, double-digit percentages of heroin users were falling prey to the disease. In 2005, biological surveillance data from the Kermanshah province showed a 13.5 percent HIV prevalence rate among the adult prison population.

These setbacks prompted a complete turnaround in Irans approach to fighting narcotics. Instead of focusing on punishing addicts and trying to stop the drug supply, Iran decided to try to reduce the harm of narcotics and the demand for them. By 2002, over 50 percent of the countrys drug-control budget was dedicated to preventive public health campaigns, such as advertisement and education. Irans conservative and previously intransigent leadership opened narcotics outpatient treatment centers and abstinence-based residential centers in Tehran and the provinces.
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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 3 april 2013 @ 17:13:44 #153
156695 Tism
Sinds 24, Aug, 2006
pi_124840836
quote:
Plan voor 'gemeentewiet' naar minister

Eindhoven heeft een concreet plan voor gereguleerde wietteelt naar minister Ivo Opstelten van Veiligheid en Justitie gestuurd.
De gemeente wil criminelen buitenspel zetten door zelf de aanvoer van softdrugs bij coffeeshops te reguleren. De gemeentes Heerlen en Roermond hebben onlangs ook een plan daarvoor aangenomen.

De teelt van de cannabis moet volgens het Eindhovens plan worden uitbesteed aan een bedrijf dat onder toezicht van de gemeente komt te staan. Op die manier zijn de coffeeshops voor hun voorraad niet meer afhankelijk van het illegale circuit en kan de kwaliteit van de softdrugs gecontroleerd worden.
....nachtrijder...Nachtzwelgje!
  donderdag 4 april 2013 @ 15:00:42 #154
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_124876889
quote:
'They stole our dreams': blogger reveals cost of reporting Mexico's drug wars

Exclusive: Anonymous author of celebrated Blog del Narco speaks for first time about the risks – and reveals she is a woman

For three years it has chronicled Mexico's drug war with graphic images and shocking stories that few others dare show, drawing millions of readers, acclaim, denunciations – and speculation about its author's identity.

Blog del Narco, an internet sensation dubbed a "front-row seat" to Mexico's agony over drugs, has become a must-read for authorities, drug gangs and ordinary people because it lays bare, day after day, the horrific violence censored by the mainstream media.

The anonymous author has been a source of mystery, with Mexico wondering who he is and his motivation for such risky reporting.

Now in their first major interview since launching the blog, the author has spoken to the Guardian and the Texas Observer – and has revealed that she is, in fact, a young woman.

"I don't think people ever imagined it was a woman doing this," said the blogger, who asked to use pseudonym Lucy to protect her real identity.

"Who am I? I'm in my mid-20s, I live in northern Mexico, I'm a journalist. I'm a woman, I'm single, I have no children. And I love Mexico."

This is the first time Lucy has spoken directly about the motivations for running a blog which could cost her her life. In the early days, her male colleague who manages the technical side engaged in a few short, anonymous email exchanges with reporters, but neither has spoken out since.

The telephone interview was arranged through an anonymous intermediary. The Guardian then took steps to verify that Lucy was in control of the blog.

She said she wanted to show the truth of what was happening to help turn the page. "I'm in love with my culture, with my country, despite all that's going on. Because we're not all bad. We're not all narcos. We're not all corrupt. We're not all murderers. We are well educated, even if many (foreign) people think otherwise."

She and her colleague live in daily fear of retribution, either from the cartels or government forces. She revealed that a young man and woman tortured, disembowelled and hung from a bridge in September 2011 – murders which shocked even atrocity-hardened Mexicans – were collaborators on the blog. "They used to send us photographs. That was very hard, very painful." The threats, she said, have recently become more serious.

Despite those fears, however, Lucy has written a book that gives an inside account of the blog and provides the most gruesome, explicit account yet of the mayhem that the cartel wars have brought to Mexico. Dying for the Truth: Undercover Inside Mexico's Violent Drug War, is now on sale in English and Spanish, and documents a full year of killings from 2010, a pivotal year.

"I did the book to show what was happening," she said. "When I finished, I was able to breathe, because I had worried about being killed before finishing. But the book is there, it's there on paper, a testament to what we have suffered in Mexico in these years of war."

Adam Parfrey, head of the independent Washington-based publisher Feral House, which specialises in taboo topics, said the book would be bound in a police-tape type band as warning of its contents. "It's gruesome and horrible. It goes far beyond anything I've ever dealt with. It's an important element of what's happening in our southern neighbour."

The inside account of Blog del Narco comes at a sensitive time. President Barack Obama is due to visit Mexico in early May for talks with his counterpart, Enrique Peña Nieto, who since taking office last December has tamped down confrontations with the drug lords and the ensuing media attention.

Even so, drug-related violence claimed nearly 3,200 lives in his administration's first three months, according to government figures, and in recent weeks killings have spiked along the border, and even in the tourist city of Cancún. Cartels are increasingly sending agents to live and work in US cities such as Chicago, according to a recent AP investigation.

The legalisation of marijuana in Colorado and Washington has intensified pressure on the US government to review its four-decade-old "war" on marijuana, cocaine and other narcotics, much of it trafficked through Mexico.

After President Felipe Calderón declared his own war on Mexico's drug cartels in 2006, sparking turf battles between groups like Sinaloa, La Línea and the Zetas, and bloody interventions by the police and armed forces, who have been accused of siding with criminals. More than 70,000 people died and 27,000 disappeared by the time he finished his term last year.

Intimidation of journalists – dozens have been murdered, often sadistically – neutered news coverage by newspapers, radio and television stations. Massacres, kidnappings, corruption, even pitched battles in city centres, often went unreported.

Blog del Narco sprang up three years ago to fill the vacuum left by cowed journalistic colleagues who could not even report vital information such as narco roadblocks and kidnappings.

Over time, Blog del Narco acquired multiple sources, including drug gangs, and became indispensable reading, drawing more than 3m hits monthly. It provides bulletins, pictures and video of abductions, shootouts, executions and the discovery of bodies as well as severed human heads, limbs and torsos. One video showed cartel members interrogating a captured rival and then decapitating him.

Critics accuse the blog of being a public relations forum for drug dealers, but Lucy said the material showed reality and helped families identify missing relatives. "If it wasn't for the blog often bodies wouldn't be identified."

Narcos occasionally sent photos of them partying with pop stars, but the blog refused to publish such material, she said. The blog takes advertising from car and mobile-phone makers, among others. Lucy has told no friends about her clandestine activity. "My close family knows. No one else."

The blog had come under repeated cyber-attack – the government was more aggressive than narcos in this regard, Lucy said – but the main concern was being identified and captured, either by narcos or government forces who have been accused of multiple abuses.

"We change where we live every month. We've been in basements. It's very difficult. We hide our equipment in different places. If the authorities get close we run."

A sign left by the young couple disembowelled in 2011 in the state of Tamaulipas said the bloggers were next. Lucy had not met the couple but received material from them via email. A few days later, another contributor was killed. A keyboard, mouse and sign mentioning the blog were strewn over the corpse. "It's very painful. But they believed this work was necessary."

Lucy said it was too soon to judge Peña Nieto's administration but that she had already noted one change. In contrast to Calderón-era officials, who cowed journalists with threats and bribes, the new government appeared to want to do it through repressive laws, she said. The government denies wanting to stifle the media.

"We have thought about quitting the blog thousands of times. But we haven't, because we have to get the message out. They have stolen our tranquility, our dreams, our peace." Lucy said she was tired of living in fear but had no plans to give up the blog. It has spawned other anonymous blogs carrying similar material.

The revelation she was female would surprise many, said Lucy. "It's a strong blow to Mexican machismo and the idea women are weaker, more delicate. There is an expectation for women to always look pretty. But we're much more than that."

She tried to relax, she said, with music, coffee and cigarettes. She missed having a normal life. "My only boyfriend is the blog. A whole phase of my life – boyfriends, going to parties, hanging out with friends – I've missed it. Getting married, having babies – there's not been time to think of any of that."

Lucy hoped the book, which focuses on 2010 and 2011, will stand as a historical record. In addition to stomach-turning photographs, it includes a glossary of terms such as encintado – the binding of a victim with duct tape – and encobijado – wrapping a murdered person in a blanket or sheet. It will initially be on sale only in the US but the publisher, Feral House, hopes Mexican booksellers will stock it.

Lucy said she had recently take a paying job but would continue the blog.

"My plans for the future? To live. That's my hope for the short, medium and long term."
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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 7 april 2013 @ 13:13:49 #155
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_124983896
quote:
First ‘magic mushroom’ trial for depression treatment hits stumbling block

The world’s first clinical trial designed to explore using a hallucinogen from magic mushrooms to treat people with depression has stalled because of British and European rules on the use of illegal drugs in research.

David Nutt, president of the British Neuroscience Association and professor of neuropsychopharmacology at Imperial College London, said he had been granted an ethical green light and funding for the trial, but regulations were blocking it.

“We live in a world of insanity in terms of regulating drugs,” he told a neuroscience conference in London on Sunday.

He has previously conducted small experiments on healthy volunteers and found that psilocybin, the psychedelic ingredient in magic mushrooms, has the potential to alleviate severe forms of depression in people who don’t respond to other treatments.

Following these promising early results he was awarded a £550,000 (about $849,000 Canadian) grant from the UK’s Medical Research Council to conduct a full clinical trial in patients.

But psilocybin is illegal in Britain, and under the United Nations 1971 Convention on Psychotropic Substances it is classified as a Schedule 1 drug – one that has a high potential for abuse and no recognised medical use.

This, Nutt explained, means scientists need a special licence to use magic mushrooms for trials in Britain, and the manufacture of a synthetic form of psilocybin for use in patients is tightly controlled by European Union regulations.

Together, this has meant he has so far been unable to find a company able to make and supply the drug for his trial, he said.

“Finding companies who could manufacture the drug and who are prepared to go through the regulatory hoops to get the licence, which can take up to a year and triple the price, is proving very difficult,” he said.

Nutt said regulatory authorities have a “primitive, old-fashioned attitude that Schedule 1 drugs could never have therapeutic potential”, despite the fact that his research and the work done by other teams suggests such drugs may help treat some patients with psychiatric disorders.

Psilocybin – or “magic” – mushrooms grow naturally around the world and have been widely used since ancient times for religious rites and also for recreation.

Researchers in the United States have seen positive results in trials using MDMA, a pure form of the party drug ecstasy, in treating post-traumatic stress disorder.

“What we are trying to do is to tap into the reservoir of under-researched illegal drugs to see if we can find new and beneficial uses for them in people whose lives are often severely affected by illnesses such as depression,” Nutt said.

The proposed trial would involve 60 patients with depression who have failed two previous treatments.

During two or three controlled sessions with a therapist, half would be given a synthetic form of psilocybin, and the other 30 a placebo. They would have guided talking therapy to explore negative thinking and issues troubling them, and doctors would follow them up for at least a year.

Nutt secured ethical approval for the trial in March.

In previous research, Nutt found that when healthy volunteers were injected with psilocybin, the drug switched off a part of the brain called the anterior cingulate cortex, which is known to be overactive in people with depression.

“Even in normal people, the more that part of the brain was switched off under the influence of the drug, the better they felt two weeks later. So there was a relationship between that transient switching off of the brain circuit and their subsequent mood,”, he said. “This is the basis on which we want to run the trial.”
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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 9 april 2013 @ 15:29:51 #156
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_125071468
quote:
quote:
Much of the movement in public opinion toward marijuana use has been driven not necessarily by the arguments drug reformers have made for years -- that it is safer than alcohol, that we waste too much money on incarceration, that drug use is a victimless crime -- but by simple generational change, said Robert Blendon, a professor of health policy and political analysis at Harvard University.

"Younger generations are much more supportive of having choices, they've had much more experience with it, and also in general on many social issues, people are getting more libertarian, more open to less restriction," he said.

When Blendon studied public opinion on the drug war in the mid-1990s, the results were clear: although the American public believed the drug war was failing, they still thought of using drugs as morally wrong and worthy of punishment.

It was a time when Nancy Reagan's maxim -- just say no to drugs -- was still treated as gospel. But two decades later, Blendon said, there are simply too many people who have tried marijuana themselves to believe in that.

According to the Pew survey, 48 percent of Americans say they have smoked weed themselves, up 10 percent from a decade ago. Fifty percent of Americans, meanwhile, say smoking marijuana is not a moral issue, compared to 32 percent who believe that it is. That's a mirror image of the 50 percent moral opposition and 35 percent indifference Pew found just seven years ago.

The shift has come fast, Pew found. In just the past three years, pro-legalization sentiment has spiked 10 percent. And a relatively new phenomenon has emerged: it's not just liberals or libertarians speaking out. Increasingly, it is the names most identified with conservatism.
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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 9 april 2013 @ 15:34:00 #157
122155 arucard
Amplifier Worship
pi_125071605
T zit er wel een beetje aan te komen denk ik
O)))
  dinsdag 9 april 2013 @ 16:09:32 #158
131800 Tarado
capô de fusca
pi_125072928
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 9 april 2013 15:34 schreef arucard het volgende:
T zit er wel een beetje aan te komen denk ik
Wordt een beetje tijd ook, nooit begrepen
  donderdag 11 april 2013 @ 11:20:59 #159
156695 Tism
Sinds 24, Aug, 2006
pi_125147309
quote:
WIETKWEKER IN JE HUIS - 11 APRIL 2013

Veel huiseigenaren zijn door de crisis gedwongen om hun onverkoopbare woning te verhuren. Makelaars en verhuurbemiddelaars storten zich massaal op deze groeimarkt. Het grote aanbod van huurwoningen trekt ook criminelen aan die zich voordoen als betrouwbare huurders. Maar eenmaal binnen bouwen ze de woning om tot een wietkwekerij.

Als de politie zo’n plantage oprolt, blijkt hoe groot de schade aan het huis is. Die loopt al gauw in de tienduizenden euro’s. De criminelen zijn vaak gevlogen en de eigenaar draait op voor de kosten.

Hoe komen cannabiskwekers zo makkelijk aan een huurwoning? In de aflevering ‘Wietkweker in je huis’ – aanstaande donderdag 11 april om 21.10 uur bij de VARA op Nederland 2 - onderzoekt ZEMBLA de dubieuze praktijken van de verhuurmakelaars.

Jaarlijks rollen speciale hennepteams van de politie 5.500 hennepplantages op. Dat zijn er zo’n vijftien per dag. De plantages leveren veel schade en gevaren op. Zo zorgen ze voor bijna dertig procent van alle woningbranden. En door het illegaal aftappen van de elektriciteit lopen de energiemaatschappijen de inkomsten van een miljard kWh mis, op jaarbasis zo’n 180 miljoen euro.

Research: Hans van Dijk.
Samenstelling en regie: Jos Slats.
Eindredactie: Manon Blaas.

ZEMBLA: ‘Wietkweker in je huis’, aanstaande donderdag 11 april om 21.10 uur bij de VARA op Nederland 2.
....nachtrijder...Nachtzwelgje!
  donderdag 11 april 2013 @ 20:19:09 #160
156695 Tism
Sinds 24, Aug, 2006
pi_125167739
quote:
'Aanpak wietteelt faalt'

Nederland • Geplaatst door Redactie op 11-04-2013 @ 20:00


De aanpak van de georganiseerde wietteelt faalt. Dat blijkt uit een verslag van de Taskforce Aanpak Georganiseerde Hennepteelt, zo meldt Zembla. Door capaciteitsproblemen bij de politie en justitie blijven zaken liggen en worden drugsbendes niet of nauwelijks aangepakt.

De taskforce, die sinds 2008 bestaat, heeft als doelstelling de grootschalige teelt van marihuana in Nederland terug te dringen. Uit een verslag dat in januari is opgesteld blijkt dat de aanpak niet werkt.

"Het klassieke doorrechercheren door de politie en justitie na het aantreffen van een kwekerij om op die manier de organisatie erachter aan te pakken, blijkt in de praktijk niet of onvoldoende te werken", staat volgens het onderzoeksprogramma in het vertrouwelijke rapport.

Hoewel de verkoop van softdrugs wordt gedoogd, is het verbouwen van wiet niet toegestaan. De politie schat dat Nederland zo'n veertigduizend wiettelers telt. Per jaar worden zo'n vijfduizend plantages opgerold.

Bron: Novum
....nachtrijder...Nachtzwelgje!
  vrijdag 12 april 2013 @ 22:44:41 #161
156695 Tism
Sinds 24, Aug, 2006
pi_125215814
quote:
'Straatdealers ronselen schoolkinderen'

Straatdealers ronselen steeds vaker Maastrichtse schoolkinderen om drugs te verkopen.
In het programma L1 Laat zegt burgemeester Onno Hoes dat de kinderen op scholen al worden benaderd om als drugsrunner te gaan werken. Om te voorkomen dat de jongeren in het criminele circuit terecht komen, moeten ze een goed toekomstperspectief krijgen volgens de Maastrichtse burgemeester.

Ook moet er een toekomst geboden worden aan kinderen die al actief zijn als dealer.
....nachtrijder...Nachtzwelgje!
  zaterdag 13 april 2013 @ 08:49:55 #162
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_125225342
quote:
Drugskartels Mexico willen Europa veroveren

Mexicaanse drugskartels proberen een sleutelpositie in te nemen op de Europese markt. Dat maakte de politiedienst Europol vrijdag bekend. Grote kartels als Los Zetas zijn bovendien betrokken bij mensenhandel en ze smokkelen wapens van Europa naar Zuid-Amerika.

De afgelopen decennia zijn Mexicaanse drugskartels een centrale rol gaan spelen in de internationale georganiseerde misdaad. De groepen zijn extreem gewelddadig. Toch zijn er in Europa tot nu toe slechts enkele geweldsincidenten geweest waarbij de kartels betrokken waren. Een daarvan was een moordpoging, meldt Europol.

De politieorganisatie wil voorkomen 'dat het niveau van bruut geweld dat we in Mexico zien zich ook voordoet in Europa', aldus Europol-directeur Rob Wainwright. 'We zullen ervoor zorgen dat de Mexicaanse kartels geen voet aan de grond kunnen krijgen in Europa.'
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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 13 april 2013 @ 13:43:19 #163
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_125229648
quote:
Respect State Marijuana Laws Act Introduced In Congress

NEW YORK -- Republicans and Democrats in Congress are coming together in defense of states' rights -- and marijuana.

Rep. Dana Rohrbacher (R-Calif.) introduced a bipartisan bill on Friday to protect marijuana users and businesses from federal prosecution when they are following state laws. The Respect State Marijuana Laws Act would shield both medical and recreational pot users.

"This bipartisan bill represents a common-sense approach that establishes federal government respect for all states’ marijuana laws. It does so by keeping the federal government out of the business of criminalizing marijuana activities in states that don’t want it to be criminal," said Rohrbacher, in a statement.

Despite promising not to go after medical marijuana dispensaries, the Obama administration has raided hundreds of them. Federal officials are still trying to make up their minds, moreover, about how to respond to recently passed referendums in Colorado and Washington state that legalized marijuana outright.

Rohrbacher's bill should take away any doubt: It would say that residents of states that take steps to reform drug laws on their own shouldn't be subject to federal harassment.

A Pew Poll released last week showed that a broad majority of Americans, even when they don't agree with legalizing marijuana, believe the federal government should not step in to punish users in states that do. Sixty percent of Americans said the federal government should not meddle in states that legalize pot.

"Marijuana prohibition is on its last legs because most Americans no longer support it," said Steve Fox, national political director for the Marijuana Policy Project. "This legislation presents a perfect opportunity for members to embrace the notion that states should be able to devise systems for regulating marijuana without their citizens having to worry about breaking federal law."

The bill is cosponsored by Reps. Justin Amash (R-Mich.), Don Young (R-Alaska), Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.), Steve Cohen (D-Tenn.) and Jared Polis (D-Colo.). Rohrbacher, whose state has a large medical marijuana program, has previously introduced legislation seeking to reclassify marijuana at the federal level as a drug that does have medical uses.

The bipartisan makeup of the bill's cosponsors reflects increasing support among Republicans for ending or shifting the country's war on drugs. In the past two months, for example, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) has called for lessening marijuana penalties and evangelical media titan Pat Robertson has announced his support for outright legalization.
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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 15 april 2013 @ 10:34:30 #164
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_125302412
quote:
Afghanistan: high expectations of record opium crop

UN report reveals rapid growth of poppy farming as western troops get ready to withdraw, which reflects badly on Britain

Twelve years after the fall of the Taliban, Afghanistan is heading for a near-record opium crop as instability pushes up the amount of land planted with illegal but lucrative poppies, according to a bleak UN report.

The rapid growth of poppy farming as western troops head home reflects particularly badly on Britain, which was designated "lead nation" for counter-narcotics work over a decade ago.

"Poppy cultivation is not only expected to expand in areas where it already existed in 2012 … but also in new areas or areas where poppy cultivation was stopped," the Afghanistan Opium Winter Risk Assessment found.

The growth in opium cultivation reflects both spreading instability and concerns about the future. Farmers are more likely to plant the deadly crop in areas of high violence or where they have not received any agricultural aid, the report said.

Opium traders are often happy to provide seeds, fertilisers and even advance payments to encourage crops, leaving farmers who do not have western or government agricultural help very vulnerable to their inducements.

At the same time the more powerful figures in the drugs trade, from traffickers to corrupt government officials, who take over half the profit from each kilo of opium, have shrinking opportunities to earn money from Nato or international aid contracts – and may be preparing a war chest for upcoming presidential and parliamentary elections.

"Opium cultivation is up for the third successive year, and production is heading towards record levels," said Jean-Luc Lemahieu, Afghanistan head of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime. "People are hedging against an insecure future both politically and economically."

Just 14 of Afghanistan's 34 provinces are now "poppy free", down from 20 in 2010. In three provinces, the spring sowing was the first time this decade that farmers had risked an attempt at growing opium.

The only figures showing a fall in cultivation, for western Herat province, may actually be due to a statistics blip. The UN was forced to use external data last year instead of the satellite images that are usually the basis of poppy growing calculations, and local officials protested heavily that the opium crop there had been overestimated.

If this year's poppy fields are harvested without disruption, the country would likely regain its status as producer of 90% of the world's opium. Afghanistan's share of the deadly market slipped to around 75% after bad weather and a blight slashed production over the past two years.

But the decline in opium production also drove up prices, to a record $300 a kilogramme. Prices have now slipped by over $100 but are still far above historic levels, helping tempt more farmers to turn land over to poppy.

It seems unlikely that the poor harvests of the last year will be repeated; there have been no reports of blight and the exceptionally bitter winter of 2011-12 was followed this year by a milder one, creating expectations of a large crop.

The increase has come despite a marked improvement in Afghanistan's specialised counter-narcotics units, Lemahieu said. Fear of eradication has become a far more significant reason for farmers to stick to legal crops than in the past, the report found.

But overall the government and aid community has not prioritised efforts to cut back a crop and trade that feeds global markets for heroin, Lemahieu said, despite its corrosive effect on security, corruption and trust in Kabul.

Typical of the official neglect are the 22 "national priority programmes" drawn up by Kabul to focus aid money and diplomatic efforts on its key development concerns including justice and education. Counter-narcotics was not one of them, nor has it been put at the heart of the other programmes.

"We need to have counter-narcotics dealt with seriously by the entire government as well as the aid community," Lemahieu said. "One of the big missing links here is providing for the communities themselves."

Eradication programmes that do not provide farmers with benefits such as healthcare and education, and support growing other crops will just push the Taliban or other insurgent groups that do tolerate or encourage poppy production, he added.
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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 16 april 2013 @ 15:30:41 #165
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_125355503
quote:
Organised crime worth $90bn year in East Asia

UN report says drug trafficking accounts for more than third of illegal transnational trade every year.

Organised crime gangs dealing in fake goods, drugs, human trafficking, and the illicit wildlife trade earn nearly $90bn annually in East Asia and the Pacific, a UN report reveals.

In a report released on Tuesday, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) said drug trafficking accounted for more than a third of the illegal transnational trade.

The report, named "Transnational Organised Crime in East Asia and the Pacific: A Threat Assessment", says that as much as $16.3bn worth of heroin and $15bn of methamphetamine are traded annually in the region.

"These transnational criminal activities are a global concern now," Jeremy Douglas, a regional representative of the UN agency, said in a statement.

"Illicit profits from crimes in East Asia and the Pacific can destabilise societies around the globe," Douglas said.

He said that the profits could be used to buy properties and companies, and used for bribery.

The UN representative urged "a co-ordinated response" to address the problem.

Sandeep Chawla, the UNODC deputy executive director, said the report opened the window on "the mechanics of illicit trade: the how, where, when, who and why of selected contraband markets affecting this region".

"It looks at how criminal enterprises have developed alongside legitimate commerce and taken advantage of distribution and logistics chains," he said at the launch of the first comprehensive study on transnational organised crime threats in region in Sydney.
Het artikel gaat verder.

quote:
"It is a fight that we cannot lose," Broussard said.
:')
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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 17 april 2013 @ 15:33:25 #166
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_125399340
quote:
Update: Heftige maatregelen in lokale 'war on drugs'


WOERDEN - De gemeente Woerden gaat samen met het Openbaar Ministerie en de lokale politie harddrugsgebruikers registreren. Hier gaat een preventieve werking vanuit, volgens de betrokkenen. Ook kan er hulpverlening aangeboden worden en door een betere registratie hoopt de politie een verband tussen criminaliteit en harddrugsgebruik te kunnen leggen.


Het zogenaamde project Achilles gaat zich richten op de klanten van drugsdealers. Er zullen dossiers worden aangemaakt van klanten rond drugsdealers en deze kunnen worden ingezet in een eventuele strafzaak tegen de dealer. Minderjarige harddrugsgebruikers en ouders met minderjarige kinderen kunnen een bezoek van Bureau Jeugdzorg verwachten. Inmiddels heeft de gemeente 360 brieven gestuurd naar mensen die zich op een bestellijst (lijst telefoonnummers in het bezit van groep drugsdealers, veel van deze nummers worden ook wekelijks bestookt met sms'jes).

Een gemeentewoordvoerder licht de plannen toe aan de redactie:

"Het accent in dit drugsbeleid tussen gemeente, politie en Openbaar Ministerie verlegt zich van de drugsdealer naar de drugsgebruiker. Zonder gebruikers geen dealers en vice versa. Harddrugs zijn illegaal en het is strafbaar om te gebruiken."

De eerste acties hebben al plaats gevonden in Woerden. Van een zogenaamde 'bestellijst' van een drugsdealer zijn alle telefoonnummers nagetrokken en hebben deze mensen (en bedrijven) een brief gehad. "Dat is een heftige maatregel maar ook een hele effectieve", vervolgt de woordvoerder. "Op de 360 brieven die zijn verstuurd, kregen we al 60 reacties. Natuurlijk van mensen die verontwaardigd waren op deze lijst voor te komen, maar ook van ouders en bedrijven. Dat bedrijf gaat het nu bespreekbaar maken op de werkvloer."

Uit de brief die is verstuurd naar 360 adressen:

"Tijdens een politieonderzoek is een op uw naam geregistreerd telefoonnummer in een drugsbestellijn van een drugsdealer aangetroffen. Wij hebben geconstateerd dat er meerdere malen contact is geweest met de drugsdealer."

Op het einde van de brief: "Mocht u van mening zijn deze brief onterecht te hebben ontvangen, verzoeken wij u een afspraak te maken met de politie om een verklaring af te leggen."

In een convenant dat eind najaar is gesloten tussen deze drie partijen is afgesproken hoe er met deze gegevens om zal worden gegaan. "Het primaire doel is bewustwording en preventie, niet het criminaliseren van de gebruiker. Maar die kans bestaat natuurlijk altijd. Harddrugs zijn illegaal."

Uit het persbericht van de gemeente:

Drugsbestrijding staat landelijk en lokaal op de agenda van de overheid. Waar de landelijke overheid zich vooral richt op de georganiseerde criminaliteit en preventieve voorlichting, biedt project Achilles in Woerden een werkwijze voor lokaal beleid. Achilles richt zich met name op de drugsgebruiker en spreekt deze direct aan.

Het artikel gaat verder.

Comment:

quote:
ms1973
Beste mensen, ook ik ben zwaar gedupeerd door deze doorgeschoten actie, waarover ik uiteraard zeer ontstemd ben.

Ik beken, ik heb in een ver verleden wel eens zon bestellijn gebeld. En ook ik ontvang nog regelmatig de sms'jes met de nieuwe bestelnummers. Ik heb wel eens geprobeerd om daar vanaf te komen door een bericht terug te zenden met het verzoek mijn nummer te verwijderen. Dat lukt helaas niet aangezien mijn telefoonnummer kennelijk bij meerdere dealers bekend is en de nummers van (potentiële) klanten onderling worden uitgewisseld. En nee, een verandering van nummer is vanwege zakelijke motieven niet wenselijk.

De inhoud van de brief die is ontvangen impliceert dat ik tot op heden drugs zou gebruiken. DIT IS NIET WAAR! Het vervelende is nu dat ik door mensen in mijn directe omgeving hier op word aangesproken en dit mijn verder prettige leven onder grote druk zet.

Zojuist heb ik vernomen dat de brief eveneens naar een bedrijfsadres is verzonden. De houder van het telefoonnummer is daarmee eveneens in grote problemen gekomen en kan mogelijk ontslag tegemoet zien. Dat kan naar mijn mening toch niet de bedoeling zijn van deze maatregel? En daar is dan kennelijk een half jaar over nagedacht... Elke idioot kan bedenken wat de vergaande gevolgen voor de ontvanger van de brief kunnen zijn!
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_125400621
ACHTERLIJK!

En dat mag zomaar? Het is prima om bedrijven en - artsen op de hoogte te stellen van het gedrag in het priveleven van iemand? DIT is nou een voorbeeld van actieve privacyschending. Gaat wel ff wat verder dan cameraatjes bij het station...
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_125400789
quote:
11s.gif Op woensdag 17 april 2013 16:01 schreef El_Matador het volgende:
ACHTERLIJK!

En dat mag zomaar? Het is prima om bedrijven en - artsen op de hoogte te stellen van het gedrag in het priveleven van iemand? DIT is nou een voorbeeld van actieve privacyschending. Gaat wel ff wat verder dan cameraatjes bij het station...
Het mag/kan zo lang niemand werk maakt van een rechtszaak, en wie gaat het opnemen voor harddrugverslaafden?
The problem is not the occupation, but how people deal with it.
pi_125401025
quote:
15s.gif Op woensdag 17 april 2013 16:04 schreef waht het volgende:

[..]

Het mag/kan zo lang niemand werk maakt van een rechtszaak, en wie gaat het opnemen voor harddrugverslaafden?
Dus je mag op een feest foto's maken en maandags "even de bank bellen"; zeg weet u dat uw hoofd hypotheken op zaterdag met 3 pillen op zichzelf stond te vermaken? En dat is allemaal prima?

Drugshandel is geen criminele daad. Alleen omdat overheden bepaalde scheidslijnen in genotsmiddelen hebben aangebracht, maken ze het crimineel.
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_125401514
quote:
6s.gif Op woensdag 17 april 2013 16:10 schreef El_Matador het volgende:

[..]

Dus je mag op een feest foto's maken en maandags "even de bank bellen"; zeg weet u dat uw hoofd hypotheken op zaterdag met 3 pillen op zichzelf stond te vermaken? En dat is allemaal prima?

Drugshandel is geen criminele daad. Alleen omdat overheden bepaalde scheidslijnen in genotsmiddelen hebben aangebracht, maken ze het crimineel.
Of het prima is vraag ik me af, dat het effect kan hebben weet ik zeker. ;)
The problem is not the occupation, but how people deal with it.
pi_125401589
quote:
0s.gif Op woensdag 17 april 2013 16:22 schreef waht het volgende:

[..]

Of het prima is vraag ik me af, dat het effect kan hebben weet ik zeker. ;)
Effect op een verminderde acceptatie van drugsgebruik in je vrije tijd ja. Ontslagen van werknemers die gewoon goed werk verrichten en daarnaast op zaterdag lekker uit hun dak gaan.

Dat terwijl de inzet precies het omgekeerde zou moeten zijn. :N

Overal in de wereld is men bezig drugs minder hard aan te pakken. Maar Nederland kiest precies de andere weg. :')
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
  woensdag 17 april 2013 @ 16:24:08 #172
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_125401597
quote:
0s.gif Op woensdag 17 april 2013 16:22 schreef waht het volgende:

[..]

Of het prima is vraag ik me af, dat het effect kan hebben weet ik zeker. ;)
Hier, foto van een junk.

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_125403273
quote:
6s.gif Op woensdag 17 april 2013 16:23 schreef El_Matador het volgende:

[..]

Effect op een verminderde acceptatie van drugsgebruik in je vrije tijd ja. Ontslagen van werknemers die gewoon goed werk verrichten en daarnaast op zaterdag lekker uit hun dak gaan.

Dat terwijl de inzet precies het omgekeerde zou moeten zijn. :N

Overal in de wereld is men bezig drugs minder hard aan te pakken. Maar Nederland kiest precies de andere weg. :')
We convergeren naar elkaar zo lijkt het. :P
The problem is not the occupation, but how people deal with it.
pi_125403392
quote:
0s.gif Op woensdag 17 april 2013 17:03 schreef waht het volgende:

[..]

We convergeren naar elkaar zo lijkt het. :P
Ook qua armoede. ;)
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_125403408
quote:
7s.gif Op woensdag 17 april 2013 16:24 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]

Hier, foto van een junk.

[ afbeelding ]
En nog een grofgebekte ook. Heeft die man dan helemáál geen normen en waarden?
Wees gehoorzaam. Alleen samen krijgen we de vrijheid eronder.
pi_125405666
quote:
15s.gif Op woensdag 17 april 2013 16:04 schreef waht het volgende:

[..]

Het mag/kan zo lang niemand werk maakt van een rechtszaak, en wie gaat het opnemen voor harddrugverslaafden?
Waar in het nieuwsbericht gaat het over verslaafden?
pi_125408434
quote:
6s.gif Op woensdag 17 april 2013 16:10 schreef El_Matador het volgende:

[..]

Dus je mag op een feest foto's maken en maandags "even de bank bellen"; zeg weet u dat uw hoofd hypotheken op zaterdag met 3 pillen op zichzelf stond te vermaken? En dat is allemaal prima?

Drugshandel is geen criminele daad. Alleen omdat overheden bepaalde scheidslijnen in genotsmiddelen hebben aangebracht, maken ze het crimineel.
Volledig eensch!
  zaterdag 20 april 2013 @ 12:39:01 #178
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_125519266
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
  woensdag 24 april 2013 @ 17:24:09 #179
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_125685612
Nee, echt!?!? :o

quote:
Obama Makes Major Moves To End The War On Drugs!

ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) — President Barack Obama’s new strategy for fighting the nation’s drug problem will include a greater emphasis on using public health tools to battle addiction and diverting non-violent drug offenders into treatment instead of prisons, under reforms scheduled to be outlined by the nation’s drug czar Wednesday.

Gil Kerlikowske, director of the National Drug Control Policy, is scheduled to release Obama’s 2013 blueprint for drug policy at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore.

Millions of people in the United States will become eligible in less than a year for treatment for substance abuse under the new health care overhaul.

Read more: http://globalgrind.com/ne(...)etails#ixzz2ROXKii8t
quote:
The strategy also includes a greater emphasis on criminal justice reforms that include drug courts and probation programs aimed at reducing incarceration rates. It also will include community-based policing programs designed to break the cycle of drug use, crime and incarceration while steering law enforcement resources to more serious offenses, according to details of the strategy released by Kerlikowskes office.

Read more: http://globalgrind.com/ne(...)etails#ixzz2ROXWQP00
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_125697276
kan iemand mij uitleggen waarom coca cola, wat werkelijk waar de grootste troep is die je maar in je lichaam kan hebben en bovendien je gebit ruïneert, in de USA wel toegestaan is maar een simpel pilletje waar je happy van wordt niet
  donderdag 25 april 2013 @ 12:21:28 #181
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_125713935
quote:
Prison governors hit out at war on drugs

Prison governors have joined the ever-growing list of professional associations and celebrities calling for a rethink of the war on drugs, in a further sign of a sea-change in attitudes.

The Prison Governors Association (PGA) has backed the Time to Count the Costs initiative – a campaign calling for international drug law reforms backed by figures like Richard Branson.

"The blanket prohibition on Class A drugs allows criminals to control both the supply and quality of these drugs to addicts who turn to crime to fund their addiction," Eoin McLennan-Murray of the PGA said.

"The Prison Governors' Association believe that a substantial segment of the prison population have been convicted of low level acquisitive crimes simply to fund that addiction.

"The current war on drugs is successful in creating further victims of acquisitive crime; increasing cost to the taxpayer to accommodate a higher prison population and allowing criminals to control and profit from the sale and distribution of Class A drugs."

Count the Cost is backed by Human Rights Watch, the Howard League for Penal Reform and the former president of Brazil.

A recent appeal by rap music mogul Russell Simmons saw a range of celebrities join the campaign, including Susan Sarandon, Justin Bieber, Harry Belafonte, Cameron Diaz, Jim Carrey, Will Smith, Ron Howard and Mark Wahlberg.
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_125777861
Omstreden zanger Mexico gedood

Een bekende zanger in Mexico, Chuy Quintanilla, is doodgeschoten. Zijn lichaam met twee kogelwonden werd gevonden op een landweg bij het Amerikaanse stadje Mission in Texas, net over de grens met Mexico. Het lag naast een grote Tahoe-terreinwagen, die populair is bij leden van de drugskartels.

Quintanila was een van de sterren in het noorden van Mexico gespecialiseerd in de narcocorrido, de drugsballade waarin de heldendaden van criminelen worden bezongen.

Op de hoes van een van zijn cd´s liet hij zich afbeelden met een AK-47 machinegeweer.

El Hummer
In 2008 veroorzaakte Quintanilla een nationale rel met zijn lied El Hummer, dat ging over een van de meest gezochte misdadigers in Mexico en de Verenigde Staten. De hoofdpersoon van dat lied werd verdacht van de moord op de beroemde Mexicaanse zanger Valentín Elizalde.

Veel van de zangers van drugsballades werken in opdracht van kartels en zijn daardoor het mikpunt van concurrerende bendes. De afgelopen jaren zijn meer dan tien zangers vermoord. In januari dit jaar werden alle zes leden van een band ontvoerd en doodgeschoten.

http://nos.nl/artikel/500115-omstreden-zanger-mexico-gedood.html
pi_125784164
Hoge Italiaanse gangster opgepakt in Colombia.

quote:
Voortvluchtige drugsbaas in Colombia opgepakt

ROME - De voortvluchtige Italiaanse drugsbaas Domenico Trimboli is in de Colombiaanse stad Medellín aangehouden. Dat heeft het Italiaanse persbureau ANSA vrijdag gemeld. Trimboli is in Italië tot 12 jaar gevangenisstraf veroordeeld. Hij was een van de meest gezochte leden van de 'Ndrangheta, de georganiseerde misdaad in de Zuid-Italiaanse regio Calabrië.

Bij de opsporing hebben de Colombianen samengewerkt met de Italiaanse politie en de internationale politie-organisatie Interpol.

De 59-jarige Trimboli was in Colombia zeer actief in de drugssmokkel. Hij zou verantwoordelijk zijn voor de smokkel van enorme hoeveelheden drugs uit Latijns-Amerika naar Europa. Trimboli moet niet alleen een celstraf uitzitten, hij is ook veroordeeld tot 3 jaar huisarrest en een boete van 40.000 euro.
http://www.telegraaf.nl/b(...)baas_opgepakt__.html

[ Bericht 3% gewijzigd door #ANONIEM op 26-04-2013 23:48:58 ]
pi_125800384
Free epub of the Dutch book by Egbert Tellegen: 'Het Utopisme van de Drugsbestrijding' from publisher Mets &... http://t.co/EIIMl4RfuX
  maandag 29 april 2013 @ 03:50:09 #185
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_125854472
quote:
Minstens tien doden bij schietpartijen in Mexico

Bij gevechten tussen vermoedelijke leden van een drugskartel en leden van een burgerwacht zijn zondag in het westen van Mexico minstens tien mensen om het leven gekomen. Zeven gewonden liggen met schotwonden in het ziekenhuis.

Dat melden de krant La Reforma en het lokale nieuwsagentschap Quadratin op basis van politiebronnen.

Gewapende mannen vielen 's ochtends in Tepalcatepec en Buenavista Tomatlán, in de deelstaat Michoacán, leden van de burgerwacht aan.

Eenheden van deze zelfbenoemde gemeentepolitie namen in februari de controle over deze plaatsen over. Naar eigen zeggen beschermen ze de inwoners tegen de drugkartels, maar er zijn ook aanwijzingen dat ze zelf banden onderhouden met de onderwereld.
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
  dinsdag 30 april 2013 @ 17:08:23 #186
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_125909453
quote:
Steeds meer doden in drugsstrijd Afghanistan

De strijd tegen de papaverteelt in Afghanistan eist steeds meer levens. In 40 dagen tijd zijn 131 doden gevallen onder veiligheidstroepen en burgermedewerkers die hielpen bij de vernietiging van de papavervelden.


Dat heeft de Afghaanse viceminister voor Drugsbestrijding Mohammad Ibrahim Azhar dinsdag gezegd. Het dodental is ongeveer twee keer zo hoog als in dezelfde periode vorig jaar.

Uit opiumpapaver wordt opium gewonnen. Afghanistan is de grootste producent. Voor de Afghaanse boeren is het gewas erg lucratief en ze verzetten zich dan ook tegen de vernietiging van papavervelden. Ook de Taliban verdienen aan de papaverteelt.
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
  woensdag 1 mei 2013 @ 18:27:14 #187
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_125948788
The Wall Street Journal:

quote:
Have We Lost the War on Drugs?

After more than four decades of a failed experiment, the human cost has become too high. It is time to consider the decriminalization of drug use and the drug market.
quote:
—Mr. Becker is a professor of economics and sociology at the University of Chicago. He won the Nobel Prize in economics in 1992. Mr. Murphy is a professor of economics at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. Both are senior fellows of the Hoover Institution at Stanford University.

A version of this article appeared January 5, 2013, on page C1 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: HaveWeThe War Lost On 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_125968829
quote:
Waarom de Zetas sneller groeien
Dossier - Mexico
woensdag 01 mei 2013 12:48

Van alle drugskartels in Mexico zijn Los Zetas momenteel het meest succesvol en het meest gewelddadig. In Mexico vallen jaarlijks meer doden door geweld dan in Syrië of Afghanistan. Uit een recente studie van onderzoekers van Universiteit van Harvard blijkt dat deze groep zijn activiteiten veel sneller uitbreidt dan de concurrentie. Ze komen ook naar Europa. Waardoor komt die groei? Hieronder de oorzaken op een rijtje.

Door @Wim van de Pol

Het territorium van Mexicaanse kartels in Mexico was ooit ruwweg verdeeld. Het grootste kartel was het Sinaloa, uit de gelijknamige staat in het noordwesten van het land. Het Tijuana-kartel en het kartel in Ciudad Juárez langs de grens met de Verneigde Staten werden door Sinaloa goeddeels uitgeschakeld. Langs de oostkust regeerde het Golf-kartel. De Zetas ontstonden in 1999 toen de leider van die groep een gewapende arm oprichtte. Die bestond aanvankelijk uit een dertigtal goed getrainde ex-militairen, veel van hen uit de special forces, met name uit de Grupo Aeromóvil de Fuerzas Especiales (GAFES) die speciaal was opgericht om de drugshandel te bestrijden.

Vernietigen

In 2010 begonnen de Zeta's voor zichzelf. Dat leidde tot territoriumstrijd, eerst vooral in het oostelijk deel van het land met het Golf-kartel. De studie van Harvard meet in welke gemeenten Los Zetas actief waren. Dat is belangrijk omdat de strijd tussen de drugskartels een territoriumstrijd is omdat de doorvoerroutes van drugs moeten worden gecontroleerd. Als enige groep opereren de Zetas nu in alle deelstaten van Mexico.

Uit de studie komt een verklaring naar voren. De Zetas zijn veruit de meest gewelddadige groep. De Zetas sluiten geen bondgenootschappen, zoeken geen tactische overwinningen, ze vernietigen hun vijanden. Onthoofdingen, in stukken hakken, opéénstapelen van lichamen op publieke plaatsen zijn vooral door de Zetas geïntroduceerd en op uiterst cynische wijze geperfectioneerd. In gemeentes waar de Zetas de baas zijn vallen veel doden.

Overigens worden deze technieken ook toegepast door de concurrentie. Afgehakte hoofden rondstrooien op de dansvloer in een drukke discotheek werd voor het eerst door het kartel van La Familia Michoacana uitgevoerd in 2006.

Militaire deskundigheid

De Zetas hadden lak aan bestaande verdeling van het territorium. Hun operaties kenmerken zich door militaire deskundigheid, precisie en efficiëntie, ook een voordeel ten opzichte van andere kartels. Ze zijn getraind, leiden recruten op en leren ze handig gebruik te maken van de meest moderne vuurwapens en communicatiemiddelen. Andere kartels hebben ook paramilitaire groepen opgericht, maar zonder succes. Ook het intimideren van het publiek via internet en spandoeken is een tactiek uit de koker van de Zetas.

Ondanks dat 14 oprichters inmiddels zijn gesneuveld en de invloed van militairen vermindert breidt hun gebied zich uit. Een andere belangrijke factor in het succes is de tactiek van afpersing. Zetas nemen niet zelf de drugshandel in een gebied over. Ze laten de drugshandelaren hun werk doen, ze romen alleen hun winst af. Dat gaat sneller en kost minder strijd.

In de internationale (regionale) cocaïnehandel hebben de Zetas Guatemala vrijwel geheel in handen, althans de gebieden waar de cocaïne op weg naar het noorden doorheen wordt vervoerd. Ook in andere Midden-Amerikaanse landen dwingen ze lokale onderwereldgroepen tot "samenwerking". Langs de noordgrens domineren ze bepaalde corridors: drukke grensovergangen naar de Verenigde Staten. In Colombia doen de Zetas in de aanschaf van cocaïne vooral zaken met Los Urabeños. Hun concurrenten van het Sinaloa-kartel kopen momenteel vooral van zakenpartners van guerilla-beweging FARC.

Via de Urabeños, die veel zaken met Europese zakenpartners doen, komt de invloed van Los Zetas langzaam maar zeker ook naar Europa.

Zie ook Dossier Mexico.
  vrijdag 3 mei 2013 @ 09:30:26 #189
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_126012147
quote:
Bust of "over-the-hill" Aspen drug gang pits local cops against feds

ASPEN — When Montgomery Chitty was arrested during the bust of a senior-citizen cocaine ring in 2011, there were more titters about an "over-the-hill" drug gang operating in this celebrity-studded, laissez-faire resort town than there was outrage over the smuggling of hundreds of kilos of cocaine.

From the luxury Gucci and Fendi shops in the heart of the town to the murky interior of the iconically funky Woody Creek Tavern up the valley, the fact that there are big lots of drugs being bought, sold and consumed where the world comes to party isn't much of an eyebrow-raiser.

But Chitty's prosecution and conviction have raised angst of another sort.

In a town that prides itself on having no cops devoted to busting drug dealers and that views drunken driving as a bigger threat to public safety than cocaine, Chitty has become emblematic of a long-standing quandary.

Aspen is locked in a war over drugs because the town isn't part of the war on drugs.

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency doesn't trust the Pitkin County Sheriff's Office and, to a lesser extent, the Aspen Police Department, so the DEA keeps investigations and busts as secret from those agencies as it does from drug dealers. The feds' excuse is that local law enforcement officials are not to be trusted: They are too chummy with dealers, and Chitty is a prime example of those too-close ties.

When Chitty's quickly dubbed "over-the-hill" gang was busted after a 15-month investigation that included wiretaps and surveillance cameras, it was as much a surprise to Aspen law enforcement as it was to those arrested — by design.

"Our extensive and prolonged investigation showed relationships between persons who had active arrest warrants and members of the Pitkin County Sheriff's Office," said DEA agent Jim Schrant.

Local officers counter that it is hard to be in a town the size of Aspen and not be acquainted with just about everyone, including those who, it turns out, sell drugs. That doesn't mean officers are turning a blind eye to drug problems.

But the local departments have policies in place that eschew undercover drug investigations, that don't condone the use of drug users as undercover informants and that put the focus of local law enforcers' jobs on public safety.

In that context, armed drug agents operating in secret in Aspen are viewed as a menace.

"Community safety can be jeopardized by these people," Pitkin County Commissioner Michael Owsley said about federal drug agents.

That became a very open controversy in 2005 when federal agents stormed two downtown bars and eateries during a busy happy hour. In a locally unpopular show of force and weapons, the agents arrested kitchen workers who were dealing drugs.

Local law officers knew nothing about the operation until calls started coming in from the public that armed men were on the downtown mall.

Fast-forward to 2011 and the arrest of the golden-years gang. Ten Aspen and Los Angeles-area residents — mostly in their 60s and 70s — were arrested for dealing about 200 kilos of cocaine over an eight-year period.

Chitty, 61, ended up being the only one who went to trial and the only one who received a lengthy sentence.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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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 3 mei 2013 @ 19:45:26 #190
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_126033339
quote:
Cocaine flows through Sahara as al-Qaida cashes in on lawlessness

Young Malians risk their lives to earn big money transporting drugs across desert

As the daily power cut struck Timbuktu, the town and surrounding desert were plunged into a sandy, grey darkness. Mohamed – a 31-year-old native of the town dressed in rich, deep blue cloth that engulfed his head in the traditional Tuareg style – seemed to shrink further into the shadows. He tipped ash into a saucer as he talked and smoked, telling his story for the first time.

"I didn't know cigarette trafficking was illegal," he said, exhaling into the black. "I smoke, everyone here smokes, so it didn't seem serious. But when I started transporting cocaine … I'm a Muslim, I knew it was wrong."

In 2009 Mohamed, who spoke to the Guardian on condition of anonymity, joined a team that drove packages of cocaine across the Sahara. He and his boss – who introduced him to the illicit trade in cigarettes as a young apprentice – were lured into the business by the apparent wealth of Moroccan and Algerian narco-traffickers whom they encountered in desert towns.

"When we transported cigarettes, I would be paid around 100,000 CFA francs [about £130] for each trip. With cocaine, I earned 1 million," Mohamed explained. "We would drive through the desert in convoys, and each car would earn roughly 18m CFA – the driver, security man and I would all be paid a fee, and my boss would keep the rest."

It is impossible to estimate how many young Malians are, like Mohamed, drawn into drug trafficking by the prospect of earning big money in short periods. In a region where youth unemployment and poverty are high, the prospect of travelling for days at a time through one of the most inhospitable terrains on earth offers little deterrent.

"It was hard, but there was no other way I could earn that kind of money," said Mohamed. "Our routes were never fixed, but we would drive 24 hours a day, without stopping, until we got there. We would eat tinned food, and prepare tea in the car. The most important thing was to get there as quickly as possible."

The UN estimates about 18 tonnes of cocaine, with an estimated street value of $1.25bn (£800m), crosses West Africa every year – nearly 50% of all non-US-bound cocaine. Most of it originates in Columbia, Peru and Bolivia, and travels to west Africa on private jets, fishing boats and freighters along the notorious "Highway 10" — the shortest route between the continents along the 10th parallel of latitude.

Now the role of al-Qaida-linked Islamists – who controlled northern Mali from early 2012 until they were ousted by French and African troops this year – is fuelling fears for the potential of the drug trade to destabilise the region.

"There is hard evidence of the link between al-Qaida and cocaine trafficking in the Sahara," said Dr Kwesi Aning, director of academic affairs and research at the Kofi Annan international peacekeeping training centre in Ghana. "In the beginning, the trade was mainly dominated by Tuaregs and middlemen who guided traffickers to water and fuel dumps in the desert. But after al-Qaida got involved around 10 years ago, we saw a massive increase in the quantities of cocaine involved. They had the networks, and they had the logistical know-how."

Experts say the lack of law enforcement in the Sahara has allowed both Islamism and the cocaine trade to flourish, with vast, inhospitable, mountainous desert borders all but impossible to police. Many in Mali also accuse successive regimes of the now ousted president Amadou Toumani Touré of being deeply complicit in the trade.

The region's lawlessness was blamed for the 2009 "Air Cocaine" incident, when a Boeing 727 believed to have been carrying up to 10 tonnes of cocaine was found burnt-out in the Malian desert. In 2010, a Malian police commissioner was convicted in connection with attempts to build an airstrip in the desert for future landings. And in the same year, the UK Serious Organised Crime Agency reported that a plane from Venezuela had landed in Mali, and that its cargo was driven by 4x4 vehicles to Timbuktu before authorities lost track of the convoy.

"You have to bear in mind that we are talking about the middle of nowhere," said Pierre Lapaque, representative of the United Nations office on drugs and crime (UNODC) regional office for west and central Africa. "It's a huge piece of sand where you can easily cross borders without knowing it. It is a serious challenge for law enforcement.

"On top of that, these are countries where law enforcement officers are poorly trained, poorly equipped and corrupt, and were logistics don't work. Put that together, and it's a nice opportunity for criminals," he added.

The Nigerian former president Olusegun Obasanjo, commissioner for the recently formed West Africa Commission on Drugs, said: "These criminal groups have the money to buy influence, which makes it difficult to apprehend them. It is affecting the normal operations of civil, military and paramilitary officials. [Drug traffickers] are even paying for political campaigns."

Mohamed said traffickers were highly organised and had well-established means of making their presence even harder to detect. "We waited to collect the drugs at a place between the mountains in the desert called 'al-Hanq' he explained. "The drugs were transported there by camels which travelled across the desert without a guide. The camels were trained by being starved and taken through the same route repeatedly, and fed when they arrive at al-Hanq, until they learned to do the journey alone.

"We would continue in convoys of 4x4s, but we had ways of hiding," Mohamed added. "A reconnaissance vehicle would always go ahead, with no drugs on board, and alert us to any obstacles. We would put grease on the car and stick sand on it as a camouflage, that way it's impossible to see from a distance in the desert."

Lapaque said: "We have heard about camels being trained to carry drugs. These are criminal groups which are well organised, and you have to understand that they have a business approach. They are weighing the potential risks against profits, which are really huge."

Mohamed said he had learned the risks first hand, and has now left the business after his convoy was attacked by heavily armed bandits. "We had stopped to repair a problem with the car, when a car mounted with weapons opened fire on us," he said. "I ran three hundred metres on foot until the shooting stopped, but three of my colleagues and all the attackers were killed. Two vehicles were burnt completely. It scared me so much, I told my boss I didn't want to be involved any more."

Mohamed said his boss is now a senior figure in the drug trade, with a mansion in the Nigerien capital, Niamey. In Timbuktu, the presence of drug chiefs is an open secret, he says, although many were forced to flee during the war.

"Everyone knows who in Timbuktu is doing drug trafficking, even the government," Mohamed said. "When senior officials [in the last government] came to Timbuktu, the drug traffickers were the ones who provided them with 36 brand new 4x4s."
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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 4 mei 2013 @ 00:09:13 #191
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_126045738
quote:
Barack Obama calls for 'new realities' and improved US-Mexico relations

President follows talks with counterpart Peña Nieto with speech that includes prediction of successful immigration reform

President Barack Obama called for a positive re-evaluation of the US-Mexico relationship on Friday, in an emphatically upbeat speech in Mexico City. Obama expressed strong confidence that immigration reform in the US would become a reality before the end of the year.

"It is time to put old mind sets aside and time to recognize new realities," Obama said, in a speech to hundreds of Mexican students interspersed with political leaders. The relationship, he said, should not be defined by threats but by shared prosperity.

This message of mutual respect, partnership and economic potential has dominated Obama's two-day visit to Mexico, which began on Thursday with a meeting with the country's new president, Enrique Peña Nieto.

In the press conference that followed, the emphasis on the economy dovetailed with an effort to defuse underlying tensions over America's role in Mexico's drug wars, by stressing that US collaboration would be respectful of the new government's promise to prioritize reducing violence rather than going after the cartels.

Obama's speech, which was delivered in the impressive setting of the National Anthropology Museum, was filled with eulogies to Mexican cultural and historical figures, from the painter Frida Kahlo to the Independence hero Miguel Hidalgo. Periodic phrases delivered in Spanish – such as "Es un placer estar entre amigos," or "It is a pleasure to be among friends" – earned cheers.

But the speech also contained much that seemed designed to convince the president's domestic audience that Mexico's economic potential should allay fears generated by the bipartisan initiative on immigration reform that is currently making its way through Congress. Obama said he was "absolutely convinced" that reform could be passed this year.

While the president called on Mexicans to put aside their traditional vision of the US as either disrespectful of national sovereignty or isolationist, he put most stress on the need for the US to go beyond the perceptions created by headlines about violence and concerns about border security.

"Mexico is a nation that is in the process of remaking itself," Obama said, before praising everything from pro-competition legislative reforms to trade figures and the fact that most Mexicans now identify themselves as middle class. "The long-term solution to the challenge of illegal immigration is a growing, prosperous Mexico that creates more jobs and opportunity right here."

The Mexican government has studiously avoided commenting in any depth on the possibility of an immigration reform, but Obama's message still fitted easily with President Peña Nieto's own efforts to persuade Mexicans that, as the government slogan goes, "This is Mexico's Moment". This also involves redirecting attention away from the continuing violence of the drug wars that are killing around 1,000 people every month.

Obama did briefly touch on security issues, although this was primarily to promise that he is working hard to curb American demand for illegal drugs and weapons trafficking that he recognized is fuelling the killing.

Following the speech, Obama met representatives of the business community in private before flying on to Costa Rica. After meeting with the Costa Rican president, Laura Chinchilla, he is due to join leaders from Belize, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Panama at a gathering of the Central American Integration System.

Obama is reportedly preparing to be rather tougher on the Central Americans than the Mexicans, calling for enhanced security cooperation as well as improvements in human rights and democratic reforms.
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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 4 mei 2013 @ 13:43:14 #192
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_126054933
quote:
Latin America growth key for war on drugs - Obama

President Barack Obama has said the war on drugs will not be effectively won unless the economies of Latin American countries are strengthened.

Mr Obama was speaking in Costa Rica, where he is due to attend a summit of Central American leaders.

They are expected to discuss ways of tackling increasing violence generated by drug cartels operating in the area.

Most of the cocaine produced in South America is smuggled through the region before it reaches the US.

At a joint news conference with Costa Rican President Laura Chinchilla on Friday, Mr Obama said criminal organisations prosper in economically vulnerable countries:

"The stronger the economies and the institutions for individuals seeking legitimate careers, the less powerful those narco-trafficking organisations are going to be," Mr Obama said.

The Costa Rican president called for a review of the current approach to the drugs problem in the region.

"Costa Rica doesn't have an army and cannot allow to come to a situation of war with the drugs cartels," she said.

'Common enemy'

Mr Obama began a three-day tour of the region in Mexico on Thursday, and arrived in the Costa Rican capital, San Jose, on Friday.

He will take part in a summit of the Central American Integration System (SICA), which includes Dominican Republic and all seven Central American countries - Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Panama.

Central America has become increasingly engulfed in the violence generated by the illegal drugs trade.

Local gangs are being employed by the Mexican cartels to bring the drug from South America.

These organisations are also involved in human trafficking, arms smuggling and other forms of crime.

The US has security co-operation agreements with several countries in Central America and Mexico, which it intends to renew.

The summit will also discuss trade and economic co-operation.

Costa Rica and other countries are expected to request favourable conditions to buy gas from the US. Guatemala is expected to raise the issue of immigration.
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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 5 mei 2013 @ 22:04:43 #193
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_126109522
quote:
Marijuana smokers march in their thousands in Mexico City - video

Thousands march through the streets of Mexico City on Saturday for the 13th annual global marijuana march. The recreational use of marijuana is already legal in Mexico, with users able to carry 5g without fear of arrest. Although, unprecedented growth in local and international demand for illegal drugs is contributing to escalating violence, as gangs battle over their share of Mexico's billion-dolllar illicit drugs industry
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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_126115741
quote:
7s.gif Op zondag 5 mei 2013 22:04 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]

Was hier in Bogotá ook. Mijn dealer waar ik 's avonds mijn wiet haalde vertelde het me.

Hier is 20 gram persoonlijk bezit getolereerd en in de club gisteren was openlijk drugsgebruik ook geen probleem. Heerlijk. :9

Heel de wereld lijkt op weg naar acceptatie, alleen Nederland verkiest de omgekeerde weg lijkt het...
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 7 mei 2013 @ 09:45:07 #195
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_126162634
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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 9 mei 2013 @ 14:08:17 #196
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_126261081
quote:
Legal highs: international drugs gangs 'expanding into growing market'

Head of US overseas drug enforcement bureau says officials lack tools needed to keep up with rapidly expanding market

International criminal gangs are rapidly expanding into the burgeoning market for newly minted legal highs, while law enforcement agencies lack the tools needed to keep up, the head of the US's overseas drug enforcement has warned.

Governments have struggled to keep up with the rapidly growing market for new psychoactive substances, as banning a new drug can require a complex legislative process - and many of these drugs remain legal in some countries, said Brian Nichols, assistant secretary at the US Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs.

"These types of drugs are what transnational criminal networks are increasingly moving towards. Traditional drugs like marijuana are not as much in favour – they are bulky and hard to transport. Heroin and cocaine are very important but drug addiction is moving to the illicit use of pharmaceuticals and new substances like GBH," he told the Guardian

"This is the growing threat. The use of traditional drugs is declining in the UK and the US, cocaine use is dropping, but prescription drug abuse is growing and new substance abuse is growing. "

Websites offering new psychoactive substances, marketed as "bath salts" or "plant foods", are proliferating, thanks in part to the failure of law enforcement agencies to keep up with the range of new chemicals. Dealers remain a step ahead of the law by slightly altering the formula for known molecules such as MDMA (ecstasy), ketamine or LSD, to create new drugs. They can be far more dangerous than traditional drugs, because they have not been widely tested on the street and because the difference between a dose that supplies a high and one that results in fatality can be extremely small.

What was once a cottage industry has rapidly evolved, with labs and factories in China, Europe and the US manufacturing the chemicals on an industrial basis, churning out hundreds of tonnes of the compounds and selling them over the internet. It is this massive expansion of the trade that has attracted the attention of international drugs gangs, who use their expertise in trafficking traditional drugs such as heroin and cocaine to move into a new and lucrative market, said Nichols.

"There was a period of time in the US when you had new substances each week. Now you have by some counts well over 200 psychoactives [that] have been identified. It's my belief there are many more out there. We do not have people testing everything they come across," Nichols warned.

As with some other areas of international crime, such as wildlife trafficking, for which Nichols is also responsible, the rise of the internet has been a central factor.

"Cybercrime means people can order up crime online. It is a greater globalisation [of crime] than we have ever seen before," said Nichols.

But many of the buyers do not realise how dangerous the substances they are taking can be. "Some of these party drugs are an incredible high at the right dosage, but if you take [a fractional amount more] then you have an incredible toxin," Nichols said.

Nichols wants other countries to follow the lead of the US by bringing in legislation to fast-track the banning of new drugs. In the US, a process known as the scheduling of analogues allows drugs that are similar in effect or chemical make-up to existing illegal drugs to be banned without a lengthy process.

He also called for much more international co-operation in tracking and identifying new drugs and trying to prevent their distribution.

"One of the efforts we are pioneering in the UK and other partners in the G8 is encouraging the World Health Organisation to dedicate increased resources to identifying and scheduling of new psychoactive substances [and] create a more robust regime." He said there would also be an emphasis on demand reduction and treatment as well as preventing the sale and use of such drugs, and that help would be made available to countries lacking expertise in these areas.
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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_126265849
quote:
7s.gif Op donderdag 9 mei 2013 14:08 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]

Laten we gewoon bij voorbaat alle middelen verbieden waar je lol aan zou kunnen hebben, dus het is verboden tenzij toestemming van de regering. Toestemming kan worden verkregen wanneer het product door een naamloze vennootschap wordt gemaakt en/of het de arbeidsproductiviteit van de gebruiker verhoogt.
Wees gehoorzaam. Alleen samen krijgen we de vrijheid eronder.
pi_126266220
quote:
0s.gif Op donderdag 9 mei 2013 16:09 schreef Weltschmerz het volgende:

[..]

Laten we gewoon bij voorbaat alle middelen verbieden waar je lol aan zou kunnen hebben, dus het is verboden tenzij toestemming van de regering. Toestemming kan worden verkregen wanneer het product door een naamloze vennootschap wordt gemaakt en/of het de arbeidsproductiviteit van de gebruiker verhoogt.
Hier gaat het wel naartoe.
As the officer took her away, she recalled that she asked,
"Why do you push us around?"
And she remembered him saying,
"I don't know, but the law's the law, and you're under arrest."
  donderdag 9 mei 2013 @ 17:18:17 #199
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_126268407
quote:
0s.gif Op donderdag 9 mei 2013 16:09 schreef Weltschmerz het volgende:

[..]

Laten we gewoon bij voorbaat alle middelen verbieden waar je lol aan zou kunnen hebben, dus het is verboden tenzij toestemming van de regering. Toestemming kan worden verkregen wanneer het product door een naamloze vennootschap wordt gemaakt en/of het de arbeidsproductiviteit van de gebruiker verhoogt.
En ondertussen word de voedselmarkt kapot gereguleerd zodat straks al ons eten verboden is tenzij...

Ik zie een patroon.
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_126268664
quote:
7s.gif Op donderdag 9 mei 2013 17:18 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]

En ondertussen word de voedselmarkt kapot gereguleerd zodat straks al ons eten verboden is tenzij...

Ik zie een patroon.
Yep, het idee van 'het mag tenzij verboden' had als voordeel dat er tijd overheen ging en er zich dan toch vanzelf een noodzaak tot het geven van (valse) argumenten voor een verbod opdrong. Als wetgevers limitatief gaan opsommen wat wel mag dan worden die pas echt gevaarlijk.
Wees gehoorzaam. Alleen samen krijgen we de vrijheid eronder.
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