War on Drugs Essay

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    In the short Just Say No:“Dancing On The Ashes Of the Drug War,” documentary filmmaker Eugene Jarecki uses a combination of dance, excerpts from political speeches and news-reports, and recent statistics to assess the current war on drugs in the United States (U.S.). The video ends with a link to a petition to pass the “Smarter Sentencing Act” which would shorten the mandatory minimum sentence for some drug offenses and release thousands of individuals. Jarecki uses a variety of rhetorical strategies

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    A new report indicates that the economic cost of lost productivity from drug-related incarcerations is considerably higher than the cost associated with drug use. The Prime Minister of your country is weighing the option of proposing new legislation which experiments with models of legal regulation of certain illicit drugs, including the decriminalization of marijuana possession. The proposed policy has received sharp criticism from members of the law enforcement, as well as groups of parents and

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    The War on Drugs has led to an increase in the mass incarceration of people of color and minorities, which is a problem in the United States. In the past thirty years, the number of females jailed across the country, many of whom are poor with mental health and drug problems. The increase in the incarceration of females has had a devastating impact on their children, families and communities. This paper will describe the authors of Upper Bunkies Unit and Orange Is the New Black who wrote their

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    Slavery has ended over hundreds of years ago, the oppression that followed the black people by those that are not of color has not stopped since. The main point of the “Drug War nightmare” was basic. The author, Michelle Alexander, showed through many points throughout the article that back people still face racism and the prison system is a way of enforcing a new Jim Crow system upon them. The way she conveyed these points was what was interesting borderline exquisite. She strongly used ethos, pathos

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    project Pablo Escobar was just the average criminal who sold drugs in a country filled with narcotics. I became more drawn to the life story of Pablo Escobar after watching the critically acclaimed Netflix series, Narcos. Narcos tells the story of Pablo and his rise and fall from power. Narcos is being told through the eyes of an American DEA agent working to take down Pablo Escobar. That led me to question why America was concerned with a drug dealer in Columbia, and what means they took to stop him

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    America’s failing War on Drugs and the Culture of Incarceration Richard B. Carpenter Adams State College America’s failing War on Drugs and the Culture of Incarceration Richard B. Carpenter Adams State College Abstract For over a century, America has waged a failing war on drugs even as it feeds a cultural apathetic and underground acceptance of drug and alcohol use. The views of the dominate group have placed blame on society’s ills on the evils

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    half making minimum wage in order to have a simple 10 minute phone call with someone in prison. Additionally, politicians  throughout the 80’s and 90’s played a crucial role in the development of the system which exists today. Richard Nixon’s “war on drugs” is when we began

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    to drug laws favors more stringent and draconian laws, with the attempt to stifle use and punish crime. There are many claims used against drug legalization, such as, moral degradation, crime, the destruction of inner cities; along with families, diseases, such as AIDS, and the corrupting of law enforcement. When one examines the effects of prohibition, one has to inquire: has the cost been worth it? Certainly, an argument for the abolition of prohibition doesn’t include the favoring of drug use

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    It is not enough to understand that the surge and Petraeus’s strategy were effective; policymakers must be able to comprehend why they were effective, that way these strategies and lessons are properly put into action in the future. I will explain why they were effective by comparing and contrasting the situation in Iraq before and after February, 2007 (when Petraeus took command and the additional troops started arriving) and establishing the causal relationships between the new strategy and the

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    total budgetary costs (including law enforcement, jails, courts, etc.) of policing prostitution in their city was over $7.6 million for the year of 1994. Obviously, those costs have clearly increased substantially since then. As detailed in The Drug War: A Trillion Dollar Con Game, there is a massive “prison industrial complex” that profits from an increased prison population. Likewise, money and special interests generally explain the motivations behind several of the flaws in the criminal justice

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