War on Drugs Essay

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    War On Drugs And Drugs

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    War on Drugs The war on drugs has come a long way without any remarkable success. America has been dealing with the drug menace for many years to a point that four of its presidents have declared the war on drugs part of their main agenda. Sadly, it has been a lost war in various perspectives. Drug abuse continues to be a daily topic with drug abusers flooding not only the American society but also many countries’ hospitals, prisons and courts. The drug trade has continued to cause violent crimes

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    Whose interests are advanced by sustaining the "war on drugs"? Police seems to gain a lot by sustaining the “war on drug”. Drugs are a significant force in police deviance, with as many as half of all convictions in police corruption cases involving drug-related crimes. Corruption in law enforcement, courts, and corrections can be explained through egoism selfish desires for personal gain. In other cases, however, corruption might be better understood as stemming from socially hedonistic incentives;

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    PEGGS Project 9/19/2017 The War on Drugs Timeline: 1970 - The U.S. passed laws prohibiting narcotic use under the Controlled Substances Act. 1971 - U.S. President Richard Nixon declares war on drugs and says drug abuse is the country’s biggest threat. 1973 - President Richard Nixon sets up the Drug Enforcement Administration or DEA. 1985 - Drug smuggling shifts into Mexico after U.S. law enforcement cracks down. 2001 - Joaquin “Shorty” Guzman Mexico’s most wanted drug lord escapes from a Mexican

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    unfortunate events opened his eyes to the constant presence of drugs that surrounded him. He was both a victim and active participant in the world of drugs. The trek was initially to search for the answers to a number of questions that Hari had throughout his experience with drugs that stemmed both from using and observing others do so. These questions included “Why did the drug war start, and why does it continue? Why can some people use drugs without any problems, while others can’t? What really causes

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    The war on drugs has been talked about since Nixon brought it into play several years ago. It is not surprising that the war on drugs has been rather stagnant over the decades, with little positive outcomes. The war on drugs seems to only fill up the prison with people who in societies eyes have minor or nonviolent offenses. I understand that drugs in the community in a serious problem, however, if this same method hasn’t been working for years then why would it work now. My biggest issue with the

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    War on Drugs

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    understatement to the punishments given to drug dealers for their drug related offenses. Mandatory minimum drug sentencing was arguably established to target higher level drug dealers but recently the majority of cases have been low level drug dealers. Distributing narcotics is a serious offense, but do these people who are trying to support themselves, a family, or an addiction deserve to spend close to a lifetime incarcerated? During the 1960’s drugs became a symbol of “youthful rebellion, social

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    The War on Drugs

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    struggling with the problem of drug addiction of its citizens. This has led the federal government to take measures to restrain the problem of addiction in the United States. However, after observing these measures, such as the ‘War on Drugs’ and its consequences, scholars now question the effectiveness of the drug policy implemented. Some scholars even argue that the War on Drugs has been more harmful to American citizens than helpful. Also, scholars claim that the drug policy has had severe consequences

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    The War On Drugs

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    than harm. Drugs have been public enemy number one ever since Richard Nixon declared so in the 1960’s. The war on drugs today had proven to become a huge failure with some unintended consequences. Some of those consequences include corruption, mass incarceration, and political debilitation and violence. It has negatively affected many across the globe. While this is happening we continue funding drug cartels who what nothing more than to keep drugs underground. The war on drugs is a war of freedom

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    The War On Drugs

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    stereotypes. Yes, we know the War on Drugs was meant to eradicate the use of controlled substances and with intentions to destroy the way in which controlled substances are distributed, but this is only half the story. In actuality, the government’s efforts to try to control the use of drugs, hence the War on drugs, was also a way for privileged groups to express racial power as Michelle Alexander eluded to. The War on Drugs has a direct correlation to race. As we see, anti-drug policies are more geared

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    The War on Drugs

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    The war on drugs began in the United States in 1971 when President Richard Nixon declared war. President Nixon increased the number of federal drug control agencies, increased mandatory sentences for drug offenders, and utilized no-knock warrants in attempt to get the problem under control. It has been over forty years since President Nixon declared a war on drugs. Did America win the war on drugs? Is it time to legalize illicit drugs in this country? What are other countries doing in reference

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