by Howie Katz
Law Enforcement Today
March 25, 2019
Local and state police, the DEA, Customs and Border Patrol agents, and the U.S. Coast Guard are in the front lines of the war on drugs. These agencies seize illegal drugs that were intended to be sold on this nation’s streets. And our drug warriors are not just fighting the illegal drug distributors, but they are also confronted by a ‘fifth column’ in our country.
Liberals have been declaring that we are fighting a failed war on drugs. It is true that the Mexican drug cartels have been successfully smuggling heroin, cocaine, meth and marijuana across the border and even control their distribution in a number of our cities. It is also true that Heroin and fentanyl have bee coming into this country by container ships from China. But to claim that the war on drugs is a failed war is a damn lie. If our law enforcement agencies were not making narcotic seizures, there would be tons more of illegal drugs available on the streets.
The problem in this country is that we are fighting a two-front war on drugs. On one front we are fighting the distributors of illegal drugs. On the other front we are fighting a ‘fifth column’ consisting of liberals with their soft-on-drugs approach and groups like the ‘National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws’ (NORML).
Before the Vietnam War there was no fifth column. Most illegal drug use occurred among poor blacks and Mexican- Americans. Whites were not the least bit concerned about the arrest of minorities for possession of pot and other drugs. But all that changed with the ant-war movement and counter culture revolution of white youths from the middle and upper class. When kids from good white families were being thrown in jail for illegal drug possession, their parents squealed like stuck pigs about their clean-cut kids being imprisoned.
A two-front war is difficult to fight. Just ask the surviving Germans about fighting the Russians on the eastern front and the Allies on the western front, both at the same time.
And then there is the problem of who we are not fighting … the users of illegal drugs. The Law of Supply and Demand tells us that when there is no demand for a product, it will no longer be produced. The insatiable hunger of Americans for illegal drugs keeps the Mexican Drug cartels and other distributors of illegal drugs busy meeting that demand.
Compared to us, Asian countries fight the War on Drugs not only against those who manufacture and distribute them, but also against the users of drugs. In Japan drug users are imprisoned if caught, including those who use marijuana, the possession of cannabis for personal use carrying a maximum prison sentence of five years. In China, Malaysia, Indonesia and Singapore, drug users are imprisoned and drug dealers or those found in possession of large quantities are executed.
According to Human Rights Watch, since taking office on June 30, 2016, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has carried out a war on drugs that has led to the deaths of over 12,000 Filipinos. In July of last year, Duterte told the Philippine Congress: “Let me begin by putting it bluntly. The war against illegal drugs is far from over. It will be as relentless and chilling as on the day it began.”
Illegal drug use in those Asian countries is not nearly as bad as it is in the United States because the police go after the users who are severely punished when caught. That acts as a significant deterrent to illegal drug use.
Now let’s take a look at some significant victories in our war against drugs.
In December 2016, the U.S. Coast Guard and the Royal Canadian Navy seized 26.5 tons of cocaine worth $2 billion and in November 2018, the Cost Guard seized 18.5 tons of cocaine worth $500 million.
In November 2017, Colombian police seized more than 12 tons of cocaine worth $360 million.
In August 2018, Mexican Marines raided an underground drug lab in Sinaloa and seized 50 tons of meth worth $7.5 billion.
In January, around 1.7 tons (3,800 pounds) of meth worth almost $1 billion was seized by U.S. Customs and Border Protection at the Los Angeles/Long Beach port. The meth, as well as 55 pounds of cocaine and about 11 pounds of heroin which were also seized, were bound for Australia.
In January, the Mexican navy intercepted a speedboat off the Sinaloa coast from which they seized more than 1,300 pounds (630 kilograms) of cocaine. Of the 15 crew members taken into custody, eight were from Ecuador, four were Colombians and three were Mexicans.
In February the U.S. Coast guard offloaded 17 tons of cocaine seized by six Coast Guard cutters from 21 different smuggling vessels in the Pacific off the coasts of Mexico and Central and South America. The 17 tons was worth an estimated $466 million wholesale.
On February 28, authorities seized about 1.6 tons of cocaine from a shipping container in the port at Newark, N.J. The seizure resulted from a joint investigation by U.S. Customs, the U.S. Coast Guard, Homeland Security Investigations, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the New York Police Department and the New York State Police. The coke had an estimated street value of $77 million.
On March 2, the DEA seized more than 20 kilos of fentanyl and 5 kilos of heroin from a truck at a New Jersey highway rest stop. That amount of fentanyl was enough to kill more than the entire population of NJ. The next day, LAPD seized more than 100 pounds of meth worth about $1 million at a South Los Angeles motel. Two children, ages 8 and 10, had been left alone with the meth.
I’ve called attention to these seizures to show that the War on Drugs is not a failed war. The seized drugs, and the drugs in many more seizures too numerous to mention here, would have been sold on the streets of America were it not for the War on Drugs.
Our soft approach to the use of drugs and the legalization of marijuana for recreational use have made it harder for us to fight the war on drugs.
Make no mistake about it though, the war on drugs is protecting our society. Because we are winning many battles in this war, tons of illegal drugs are being kept off of our streets.
4 comments:
The war on drugs will never be won. Economics prohibit it from happening. You're 16 live in the inner-city with your Momma and 6 kids and sleep on the floor. Hood School is a joke and you quit. You're choices are slim. You can work fast food for $8 an hour or deal drugs on the corner for a minimum of $500 a day. If you get busted, you're a juvenile and they call your Momma who is home watching the big screen TV you bought her.
You're 80 and live on social security for $1200 a month if your lucky. Your taxes, insurance and utilities eat up half. You can mule for $5000 a load on an all expense paid 3 day trip. If you get caught you get 1st offense probation.
You're a long haul trucker that picks up a load of toys from Mexico once a week. The drugs are loaded in Mexico. If found at a check point, you are released because the load is sealed. If not found, you make the drop off and collect the cartel cash.
There is no way to stop the drugs or cash. If the U.S. stops 10% of the drugs we're lucky.
That 10 percent, however, is very significant!
No it isn't.
We could stop the drug problem if we had the political will to do it. The Chinese communists solved their drug problem. The army went out to the opium dens. Every time they found one they shot everybody in the building and then burned the building down.
We COULD do the same thing fairly easily. First offense, treatment and diversion. Second offense, ten years. Third offense, 20 years. For EVERYBODY. Street dealers would be the first to go, they are the easiest to catch, along with users. Pretty soon there would be nobody to sell and nobody to buy. It would be EXPENSIVE and not nice, that's why we won't do it.
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