nevver: The Patriot Act, The Encyclopedia of 9/11
And the government justifies this by linking drug sales to money that funnels back to terrorists. They establish this link because they are the one’s helping traffic cocaine from Mexico and South America and they are the one’s providing military protection to the Afghan’s who grow and distribute opiates.
And that, folks, is how the two most dubious wars were married to become the largest waste of tax dollars in the history of humanity.
(via thefreelioness)
Joe Rogan and The Momentum of Ideas (by MischiefMaker37)
‘Joe Rogan talks about The War on Drugs, The Singularity, and Corruption in Politics. From his podcast The Joe Rogan Experience, featuring Duncan Trussell and Bryan Callen.’
This was excellent.
(via anarcho-alowisney)
If you legalize PCP, I want to see how people who are on PCP end up in person.
21st-century-classical-liberal:
Probably few.
With the prisons gone, the actual amount of people who would turn to harder drugs like PCP would drop because they would no longer be introduced to that type of environment (federal prison).
The substance itself would quickly fall out of popularity.
You can still arrest someone for violence, theft, or any crime committed while under the influence. It’s just completely immoral to punish someone for taking a substance at their own will.
What Voca said.
The point of legalizing drugs is that it is no longer illegal to use those drugs. But assault, battery, theft, lewd behavior, and various other laws are still illegal. If someone wants to lock themselves in their house and get high as a kite without hurting anyone else, so be it. It’s their health, their body, their money, their life.
(via thefreelioness)

