May 15, 2015Carver: You can't even call this s--- a war.
Herc: Why not?
Carver: Wars end.
- May 8, 2025
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May 15, 2015
But otr Vancouver did this already
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May 15, 2015
Imagine a place where people legally carried around any drug in their pocket— from marijuana to MDMA (ecstasy) to heroin. It’s a reality in Portugal, as long as you have less than a 10-day supply.
In a 2012 interview with IPSnews.com the author of Portugal’s drug policy, Dr. João Castel-Branco Goulão said that while drugs are still prohibited, people can no longer be criminally punished for carrying them:
“[P]eople are not prosecuted in court for it, and it doesn’t go on their police record. And they are no longer sent to prison.”
Sure, if police find the stash, the individual is sent to a three-person committee made up of a lawyer, doctor, and social worker. The committee may recommend a small fine or treatment, but more often than not, you’re free to go:
Image Credit: Transform Drug Policy Foundation
These graphs show the policy may actually be the the key to solving any drug problems Portugal has faced. The UK-based Transform Policy and Drug Foundation notes that “rates of drug use haven’t skyrocketed like predicted”:
Image Credit: Transform Drug Policy Foundation
The graph below shows that more people ages 15-24 aren’t experimenting with drugs at all.
Image Credit: Transform Drug Policy Foundation
Furthermore, drug use by people ages 15-64 in Portugal has significantly decreased since 2001:
Image Credit: Transform Drug Policy Foundation
Overall, drug-related deaths have also decreased, something that the Transformation Drug Policy Foundation attributes to the treatment options that accompanied the decriminalization:
“…it’s difficult to help and protect people when you’re simultaneously criminalizing them.”
Image Credit: Transform Drug Policy Foundation
HIV and AIDS diagnoses also started to decrease in 2001, when the decriminalization took effect:
Image Credit: Transform Drug Policy Foundation
Until 2007, the rate of drug use among students decreased drastically. Critics of the law have pointed out that in 2011, use among students again increased, but some attribute that to a change in culture:
Image Credit: Transform Drug Policy Foundation
According to drugpolicy.org, “more than $51 billion is spent annually in the U.S. on the war on drugs.” So, how would a similar policy work here?
Presidential candidate Rand Paul has strong beliefs on drug decriminalization and has created a platform around it:
“The main thing I’ve said is not to legalize them [drugs] but not to incarcerate people for extended periods of time. With Senator Leahy, we have a bill on mandatory minimums.
There are people in jail for 50 years for nonviolent crimes. And that’s a huge mistake. Our prisons are full of nonviolent criminals.”
Rand Paul’s strong stance in the war on drugs mirrors Portugal’s decriminalization efforts in that he believes communities, not the federal government, should provide treatment for addicts.
http://www.ijreview.com/2015/05/312...-drugs-2001-7-charts-show-incredible-results/Cyreides, CODEiNE DEMON and Lucy like this.(This ad goes away when signing up)