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Related: About this forumUruguay's neighbors now considering legalization of pot
cross post from here to have in the drug policy forum - http://www.democraticunderground.com/1014681139
http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/americas/131222/latin-america-uruguay-argentina-marijuana-legalization
The taboo is broken: Argentina's new anti-drug czar says the country deserves the debate, while Chile's new president could ease marijuana laws.
Argentina has given the first sign that Uruguays groundbreaking cannabis reform just may have started a domino effect across Latin America.
Following the momentous vote by its smaller neighbors senate this month making it the first nation in the world to completely legalize the soft drug Argentinas anti-drug czar Juan Carlos Molina has called for a public discussion in his country about emulating the measure.
His comments are the clearest sign yet that Uruguays strategy aimed at breaking the link between the lucrative marijuana trade and organized crime has kicked off a trend in a region that long ago wearied of the bloodshed, expense and failed results of Washingtons war on drugs.
Some 70 percent of all women in Latin American jails are there for drug offenses, according to a recent report by the International Drug Policy Consortium. Many of them were convicted for acting as mules to transport forbidden substances clandestinely, including the dangerous practice of hiding their illicit cargo in their own bodies.
Following the momentous vote by its smaller neighbors senate this month making it the first nation in the world to completely legalize the soft drug Argentinas anti-drug czar Juan Carlos Molina has called for a public discussion in his country about emulating the measure.
His comments are the clearest sign yet that Uruguays strategy aimed at breaking the link between the lucrative marijuana trade and organized crime has kicked off a trend in a region that long ago wearied of the bloodshed, expense and failed results of Washingtons war on drugs.
Some 70 percent of all women in Latin American jails are there for drug offenses, according to a recent report by the International Drug Policy Consortium. Many of them were convicted for acting as mules to transport forbidden substances clandestinely, including the dangerous practice of hiding their illicit cargo in their own bodies.
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Uruguay's neighbors now considering legalization of pot (Original Post)
RainDog
Dec 2013
OP
Warpy
(113,131 posts)1. Good, I hope they all shake off the shackles of the failed war on drugs
I hope the sky doesn't fall, their economies boom, and they act as a lesson to this country that the war on drugs is not only doomed to failure, it's also holding the country back, no matter how useful it's been to the rich men at the top to institute totalitarianism at the bottom.
It doesn't work, it never worked, it won't work. End it.
TeamPooka
(25,577 posts)2. hopefully a real domino effect. nt