What is it about ex-Presidents seeing the light?

Discussion in 'Marijuana News' started by oltex, Sep 15, 2010.

  1. #1 oltex, Sep 15, 2010
    Last edited by a moderator: Sep 15, 2010
    What is it about ex-Presidents seeing the light?
    DrugWarRant / Pete Guither / 09,15,2010


    Already we have ex-Presidents Vicente Fox (Mexico), Ernesto Zedillo (Mexico), Cesar Gaviria (Colombia), and Fernando Henrique Cardoso (Brasil) calling for legalization and the end of the war on drugs.

    Add ex-Premier Felipe Conzalez of Spain to the list.

    Spanish ex-premier calls for legalising drugs worldwide
    Spain’s former prime minister Felipe Gonzalez Tuesday called for an international treaty to legalise drugs as a way to end the deadly wars between trafficking cartels. [...]

    Gonzalez, who was Socialist prime minister from 1982 to 1996, noted the consequences of Prohibition against alcohol in the United States in the early 20th century, when gangsters caused “thousands of deaths.” “When did this violence end? Not when they put the heads of the crime gangs in prison for tax fraud, but when Prohibition ended and the sale of alcohol was legal,” he said.

    He acknowleged that “no country can take this decision (to legalise drugs) unilaterally without an extremely serious (political) cost for its leaders. “What is needed therefore is an international treaty that is respected by all,” he said.

    I’m extremely pleased that legalization is getting this degree of international attention and interest. Still, sure would be nice if some leaders would grow a pair while in office.


    I believe ex-Presidents,like the ex-cops and judicial people in LEAP,are the honest and conscientious people serving in governments all over the world that are standing up because they have realized that the laws against drugs have done more damage to our society than the drugs ever could.



    Spanish ex-premier calls for legalising drugs worldwide

    Spain's former prime minister Felipe Gonzalez Tuesday called for an international treaty to legalise drugs as a way to end the deadly wars between trafficking cartels. "I think it will be our only way of confronting" drug trafficking, he told reporters at a reception for the Mexican ambassador in Madrid to mark the Latin American country's bicentenary.

    Gonzalez, who was Socialist prime minister from 1982 to 1996, noted the consequences of Prohibition against alcohol in the United States in the early 20th century, when gangsters caused "thousands of deaths." "When did this violence end? Not when they put the heads of the crime gangs in prison for tax fraud, but when Prohibition ended and the sale of alcohol was legal," he said.
    He acknowleged that "no country can take this decision (to legalise drugs) unilaterally without an extremely serious (political) cost for its leaders.

    "What is needed therefore is an international treaty that is respected by all," he said.

    He noted the deadly consquences of the drug war in Mexico, "where between 350 and 360 billion dollars (generated by traffickers) can be found on the other side" of the border with the United States. More than 28,000 people are believed to have been killed in drug cartel-related violence in Mexico since 2006. Gonzalez said organised crime is "one of the most serious threats to security that that world is facing, not just Mexico."

    He called for an international conference on the issue, while admitting that it was "unlikely ever to happen."
     
  2. Its pretty obvious what's up. They don't want to face any criticism while they are in office.

    The ones who are incumbents looking for re-election want their jobs so they avoid making tough calls on the big, controversial issues.

    This is why not enough shit gets done in politics.
     
  3. Government would be alright without the politics and the greed.
     

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