Monday, August 25, 2014

The House I Live In (Comments)



“War of drugs”

Soothing internal turmoil from the illegal use of drugs

Mandatory minimum sentences causing a rippled effect of the demand of undesirable drug use

1850 enslaved blacks is less than the amount of poor and minority black incarcerated today

Has the falsified precept of war on crime not tried to prevent the crime, but actually punish those committing it?

The temptation and desire of a better life is plagued by the options of a life as a young drug dealer, into order to survive life’s poverty.

Being plagued by the disease of survival by a fatherless role model is being replaced by the father of drug users and drug sellers.

“paying for others fear, instead of paying for your crime.”

When governmental budget suffers, then rehabilitation suffers first, following increase budgets for law enforcement.

Can the fight against drug dealers and user affect the fundamental purpose of police officers and the community?


arrest laws of Chinese - opium, Blacks - cocaine, Mexicans - marijuana,

escaping Jim Crow, to a new age Jim Crow of the “ghetto” exclusive for blacks

“Drug law are shaped less by scientific concerns than by political ones”

Nancy Reagan, “just say no”
Reagan increased forces by all means from all legal sources again drugs

5 grams crack cocaine (blacks) = 100 grams powder cocaine (mainly whites)

Outsourcing jobs is effected how many communities, including blacks and whites.

What is really the war on drugs? Every business seems to financially benefit from the effects on drugs.

Could the success of war on drugs be how much and how many people can benefit from the casualty of all communities sucked into these unfortunate mishaps, while failing in society like quicksand.

Instead of investing in the disruption of the communities, through increase budgets against the impoverished communities, but invest in the rebuilding and increased quality of the communities

The government has found a new way of investment, through the harvesting of the unfortunates and the impoverished communities.

Chains of destruction:

1) identification,
2) ostracism,
3) confiscation
4) concentration,
5) annihilation,

A problem with drugs is not all those who uses and sells; but the main question is where did these drugs come from in the beginning.

Incarceration deflects true sight of a more realistic problem, subdued to the avoidance of lower cost treatment

Class based destruction with the title of war on drugs at the cost of human life.

Drugs are only the manifestation of the actual problem… what is the problem?

Amputating the hope of a better life for some, while the disease of greed has become the new epidemic for others. 

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