| You should also watch “A Gay Brigadier General Asks a question” |
Many police officers are asking the question: if prohibition didn't work for alcohol, why are we in denial about it working for other things? LEAP is a major initiative now, and gaining steam.


Stumble This








http://www.briancbennett.com/
In 1979 the death rate for the cocaine class of drugs, local anesthetics, was 0.1 and it held fairly steady in that range for a few years. In the 80's we went after it in a big way and the death rate started a steady climb to 0.7 as of the last stats, a seven times climb in the death rate.
http://www.briancbennett.com/charts/death/cdc/cocaine-yr.htm
Heroin isn't looking any better, or the opiate class of drugs. 1979-1980 the death rate was bouncing between 0.2 and 0.1, by 1998 it had climbed to 1.1
http://www.briancbennett.com/charts/death/cdc/opiates-yr.htm
Anyone who thinks this stuff is about making it more available has it wrong. It's about saving a lot of lives we've been throwing away. Drugs are too dangerous to leave in the hands of criminals, we can better protect our kids with sensible regulation and quality control. Zero tolerance doesn't work and it never will, trial studies might find us something that does if we're allowed them.