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Friday, March 27, 2009
David Harsanyi :: Townhall.com Columnist
Make Sense, Not War
by David Harsanyi
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What was the biggest suprise of Election Day?



This week, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton claimed that our nation's "insatiable" appetite for illegal drugs is in large part to blame for the violence in northern Mexico.

And it would be poor form, clearly, to single out violent Mexican drug cartels for the violence. It does, after all, take a village.

Clinton went on to say that over the past three decades, the drug war has failed to control demand, and with weapons smuggled from the United States, we are fueling Mexico's drug wars and murder.

So what are we going to do about it? Continue the drug war, of course.

A war on drugs -- in whatever form it is implemented -- never will alleviate our "insatiable" appetite for illicit drugs in any way. Appetite, or demand, is not affected by laws. Laws only affect the cost. And I don't know how many times I cursed Nancy Reagan's name for the outrageous price of Californian skunk.

For some time now, we've blamed our own consumption for the violence and lawlessness of Mexico -- which, apparently, would be a crime-free Shangri-La were it not for Phish heads. But the brutality taking place inside the borders of our veritable Third World neighbor is fueled by a black market we create, not the drugs themselves. If drugs were traded legally, there would be no violence.

Yet Washington never wastes a crisis. The erupting violence south of the border has allowed certain politicians a chance to climb on the anti-gun hobbyhorse, as well. We are, if you haven't heard, unable to prevent the massive shipments of weapons to Mexico.

The problem with this well-known fact is that it's highly dubious.

During a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing this week, titled "Law Enforcement Responses to Mexican Drug Cartels," one senator after another tried to induce law enforcement officials, who have every motivation to play along, to claim that military-style arms are streaming into Mexico from the United States.

Not one expert agreed.

The Los Angeles Times, in fact, recently reported that the "enhanced weaponry" used by drug cartels "represents a wide sampling from the international arms bazaar, with grenades and launchers produced by U.S., South Korean, Israeli, Spanish or former Soviet bloc manufacturers. Many had been sold legally to governments, including Mexico's, and then were diverted onto the black market." Continued...

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About The Author
Gonna take a whole lot o'pokies, Howie
Why not make the punishment fit the crime? Pot holes filled, coast to coast!

Talking about marijuana is sort of like spring training...or kindergarden. I suppose it's necessary, even the "gateway" conversation into the real deal, the big leagues of illicit drugs...cocaine and heroin.

"Even as the Bush administration hails Afghanistan as a major foreign policy success, the country's soaring drug profits now equal about half of its gross national product and have become the principal source of funds for reconstruction, outpacing foreign aid. The drug trade also is fueling corruption at the highest levels of the government, involving army generals and other top officials who routinely work with the US military on antiterrorism operations, according to the officials." (Boston Globe, 2004 used without permission)

Cocaine from Colombia is a much smaller percentage of their GDP, but it is a product.

I'm no historian, but I do smoke Marlboro. Civilization has been dealing with the merits and demerits of our first North American cash crop for about four hundred years now. Civilization will also, I predict, figure out a similar solution for the two (South American and Asian) crops aforementioned.

Better sooner than later, don't you think?

Markets and demand
The existence of a supply of something does not produce a demand for it. If I had a million rotten apples that would not produce a demand for them.

It's the existence of people who are willing to pay for something (demand) that makes people want to supply that thing. It's the profit motive. The greater the profit that can be gained the greater the incentive to fill the demand for the product in question.

R
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