LOSING BATTLE AGAINST DRUGS The article, Losing Battle Against Drugs, is true. I agree with the article that the regulation of drugs into America is impossible to manage. You can spend millions and billions of dollars to decrease the drug trafficking but drugs are going to find another way into the country. For most people that are into drugs such as selling them I can see why they would want too. Its obvious that it is against the law but if you can get away with it, you would have a lot of money in your pocket.
A quote that holds true to that statement would be: Another reason that the drug trade continues to flourish is that it is so lucrative (Boozer, 1999).
At least one group of distributors in a case before me sold 37, 500 kilos of cocaine a month, for gross sales of almost 20 million a month. (Judge Sweet) What it comes down to is money, which the article emphasizes. I agree with the article, people that sell drugs do not care who they are selling it to whether it be kids, teenagers, or adults, those individuals just care about the income their getting. An article that agrees with my opinion, besides the article from the Essays book, about money being the reason why were losing the battle against drugs was written in USA TODAY. Ironically the headline was U.
S. Law Enforcement Losing the War on Drugs. The quote taken from USA TODAY is: Street prices for heroin and cocaine are at a record lows and purity for both drugs is at record highs. This reveals traffickers are flourishing and continuing to discount the risks they face from law enforcement. Shockingly, heroin and marijuana have never been easier for teen-agers to get, and crack cocaine is now easier to get than at any point in this decade (Sterling, 1999) That just makes my point; drugs are going to make it into America because people want to sell it fo profit. Even when prices for drugs are low, there are people still buying them.
The Term Paper on Drug War Marijuana People Hemp
by Jello Biafra From I Blow Minds for a Living, recorded at Slim's, San Francisco, Nov 21, 1990 Does anybody out there know that for the first time in American history the U. S. Army was used in a war operation against the American people? Right near here, up in Humboldt County about 200 miles north of San Francisco right near a town called Shelter Cove, get this: three- to four-hundred American ...
That is why were never going to be able to get rid of drug trafficking. Sellers dont care whom they sell it too, it just matters if their wallets are getting filled. Cocaine is such a profitable drug to sell and in the article from USA TODAY, it says it has been easier to get at any point in this decade. What it comes down too is the green paper people want to get by doing as little work as possible.