Cocaine shouldn’t be legalized in the United States. Cocaine cause so much damage to this world. Even if it’s a small part of the world. Like North America, it made just $110 billion to $130 billion just last year. Cocaine is a very dangerous and addicted drug. A huge money, making business. The fight on the cocaine war, money, and deaths will continue no matter what happens.
Cocaine is a drug that can’t be stop in the United States. The war on cocaine is always going on. So much money and lives are lost on trying to put an end to this. Cartels are always finding ways to export their cocaine to other countries. Cartels do it at any cost just so they distribute their cocaine across the United States. The United States uses so much money just to try to put an end to the cocaine war. The lives they’ve lost and the innocent people who get caught in between the war. By legalizing cocaine in the United States, it
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Thousands of lives are lost each year because of the cocaine war. Innocent people are caught between the fight on cocaine. People who become addicted to cocaine end up losing their lives on overdose. Cartel members don’t even care about killing. Makes them show their power, like who’s in control. If people don’t collaborate or disobey an order, they would kill you and your family. Even police officers die every year. By legalizing cocaine, so much more lives would be increase. Cartels or drug lords would still fight each other just to try to stay on top. To be the number 1 drug dealers. If anyone tired to stop them, they would still try to kill each other.
That’s why we shouldn’t legalize cocaine in the United States. The lives and money we would lose. We would continue the suffering and innocent people being harm. Cocaine is very dangerous to be out there for the whole world to be exposed to. By legalizing cocaine, it would be more dangerous. The fight on cocaine, money, and deaths will continue if we legalized
Keeping drugs illegal will only carry on the on-going drug related cycle: people get caught with possession of drugs, their third time getting caught they get a sentence, go to prison, come out,
Proponents on the legalization of drugs believe if drugs were to become legal; the black market worth billions of dollars would become extinct, drug gangsters would disappear, addicts would stop committing crimes to support their habit and the prison system would not be overwhelmed with a problem they cannot defeat. The decriminalization of drugs will only make illegal drugs cheaper, easier to get and more acceptable to use. “The U.S. has 20 million alcoholics and alcohol misusers, but only around 6 million illegal drug addicts. If illegal drugs were easier to obtain, this figure would rise”(Should Drugs be decriminalized? No.November 09, 2007 Califano Joseph A, Jr).”
Liberalizing drug reforms would be a step in the right direction for Colombia and would seriously burden the cartels (Leff). The drug war is a catalyst that has increased the profits of drug cartels. The illegal nature of narcotics limits supply, allowing the cartels to charge large sums of money for their product. Everytime the authorities fighting the drug war bust a drug deal, the supply currently available goes down, and cartels are able to charge even more for drugs. The system of criminilazation created by the drug war is actually the reason that cartels are so profitable. By driving down prices, the power of drug cartels is limited. The illegality of the drug trade directs its multi-billion-dollar profits go to criminal gangs. The drugs account for the bulk of the gangs’ income and thus their firepower (“Burn”). Legalization benefits drug-producing countries by decreasing the money that cartels can use to buy firearms, 90% of which are sold to them from the United States (Ellingwood et al.). This would allow governments, rather than gangs, to govern the country.
Since Nixon and Reagan started the war on drugs the United States have struggled to keep a drug policy that would actually keep people from using drugs. The war on drugs was something that change the history of this country, by making drug trafficking their main priority. This is becoming a big issue since this issue is something that many Americans do everyday. During the time in 1971, President Richard Nixon was the man that created the Drug Enforcement Agency. This was the program called the war in drugs. This was supposed to keep narcotics out within our country and our borders. During 1994, the war on drugs caused people to go to jail, especially the non violent drug users. Criminalization is overcrowding the prisons by putting people
Usually kids and teenagers don't research the product they get so they don't know if it's high-quality or not, they are just interested in actually getting the drugs, legalizing drugs would benefit kids and keep them safe from the laced drugs and drug dealers. One of the guys Hari interviewed told a story about a kid approaching him and asking him to buy a bottle of liquor. At first he didn't understand why but then thinking about it he soon realized, "i'm saying to myself this kid needs me to get him a bottle of liquor, when he can go to get any drug he wants in the parking lot without me what was better regulated the liquor, or the drugs in the parking lot?"(267). If drugs became legalized it would be harder for kids to receive drugs because they would be selling in stores versus people selling it in parking lots. Of course you will get some dealer still trying to sell on the side but who would want to buy drugs that they don't know if it is laced are not versus buying it at a store where it would be higher quality and safer for them to use. So by legalizing drugs it stops the gangs and the dealers on the side selling them to kids teenagers and other people. An article about legalizing drugs called creating a market states, "International drug traffickers are spending a Normas amount of money to make sure the drugs are available to every American kid any schoolyard"(5). Legalizing drugs
that hasn't gotten much of a chance, but should be given one. It is my
According to Kristof (2009), the legalization of drugs is another solution to drug trafficking. With drugs more readily available, at lower prices and higher levels of potency many law enforcement personal and politicians favor legalization of drugs. While other experts favor keeping drug production and sell illegal, but decriminalizing possession. Either way if it is legalize it must be regulated. According to Kristof (2009), the United States have inquired three consequences due to the failure of “The War on Drugs”, increased population in jails, empowered criminals and terrorists, and squandered resources that cannot be replaced. With that said, why continue down a road were the drug problem is not getting resolved. Before drugs were prohibited, usage levels were lower among cocaine and heroin users, and states with legalized marijuana have not seen an increase in consumption, according to Kristof
For many people, the thought of making drugs easily accessible for consumption by the masses may be frightening. After all, we have drug laws in place because they have the potential to be harmful. It also may not be difficult to imagine that it could very well be subject to failure due to a numerous amount negative externalities that may occur. Our nation has been engaged in a war on drugs for several decades now. The effectiveness of this war, however, is a topic that has continuously been debated. Some argue that universal legalization of drugs, an alternative that has never been tried, may have a greater benefits when compared to the present state of the war on drugs. On the other hand, the opposition believes that legalization would only pave the way for a vast amount of crime and many wasted resources.
We should decriminalize drugs in the U.S. instead of legalizing them. Decriminalization refers to the lessening of criminal penalties of certain acts. According to De Marneffe, “… the legalization of drugs … [is] the removal of criminal penalties for the manufacture, sale, and possession of large quantities of recretational drugs, such as marijuana, cocaine, heroin, and methamphetamine” (346).
Today, cocaine is commonly derived from the coca plant that is most commonly grown in Columbia but also Peru and Bolivia. It is harvested and processed into a “coca paste” which the base of is extracted and turned into the white powder form of cocaine. Once the powder is made it is often mixed with laundry detergent, laxatives, or boric acid to cut down the potency and have more to distribute. Cocaine can be used snorting, smoking, injecting or swallowed. The United States outlawed cocaine in the early 1920’s but it wasn’t until the 1970’s and middle of the 1980’s that cocaine was at
If drugs were legal and being monitored for purity the people would not have to buy bootleg drugs. Look at alcohol, nobody buys bootleg alcohol now that it is legal. Before abolishing alcohol prohibition the same kind of violence polluted the United States and other countries because of the black market. According to one study, 40% of the homicides in a study of 414 homicides in New York City could be linked to the black market in drugs and these homicides were only committed because of the violence associated with the black market of drugs. Not because of the use of drugs but because of the black market that has resulted from the prohibition of drugs. Other so-lutions have been tried and proposed to include: tighter gun laws and better border control with Mexi-co. However none of these attempts will end the black market on drugs and violence will still occur be-cause of the black market. Billions of dollars has been and will be spent on the “war on drugs”. Why not spend this money on helping the addicts and research? Less money will be spent and the need for the amount of drugs will
The current policy in use by the United States concerning illegal drugs is both outdated and unfair. This so-called war on drugs is a deeply rooted campaign of prohibition and unfair sentencing that is very controversial and has been debated for many years. The war on drugs is designed so that it will never end. This current drug was has very little impact on the overall supply of prohibited drugs and its impact on demand seems non-existent. United States’ taxpayers are spending billions of dollars on this failure of policy. They are spending billions to incarcerate drug users instead offering drug treatment which could help lower demand. Legalizing illicit would lower abuse and deaths from use and could have a positive economic impact on the United States. Certain industries are making massive sums of money by capitalizing on the drug war.
First drug prohibition has cause harm to the entire country because of the escalating crime rate. Drug addicts will rob, kill and even prostitute themselves to obtain the illegal drugs they are addicted to. “Prohibition drives markets underground, thereby generation violence and corruption. Participants in black markets cannot resolve their disputes with courts and lawyers, so they resort to violence instead.”(Miron). If drug legalization takes places it this country will be a safer place.
One thing that must be made obvious is that the government makes money regardless of the results that they produce. A good majority of the criminal justice system is paid with this budgeted drug money. There has been a historical increase in judges, lawyers, police officers and the creation of entire government organizations that directly make money as a result of the prohibition. It is not only law enforcement side that would like to see prohibition remain intact; it is also the drug dealers that would like the policies to remain as they are. (Harvey) Prohibition causes the handling of drugs to become a risky business and, therefore, drives the prices up astronomically allowing for a business that has a profit in the thousands of percent with no tax. Ricky Ross, the most infamous crack-cocaine dealer in Los Angeles, while being interviewed in jail told the interviewer, “I became addicted to the money and also the power too I believe” (Booth). These people will have the opportunity to make extraordinary amounts of money so long as current prohibition stays intact. There is clearly something wrong if both the government and drug dealers would both like to see prohibition perpetuated.
Drug use is part of human nature, but the unimaginable wealth involved leads to the corruption of the police, judges, and elected officials. There is no reason to have the government regulating what goes into an individual’s body. An extreme case of what we’re letting the government do is letting them take away our own self, an individual’s ownership over his own body. I think it’s in everyone’s interest to legalize all drugs, since this war is going nowhere, letting