"Gesetze sind ineffektiv zur Züglung des Cannabis Konsums"
In einem neuen Buch, herausgegeben von der Beckley-Stiftung und der Oxford University Press, wird festgestellt, dass die Cannabis-Verbots Politik umfassend gescheitert ist und ein neues Konzept zur Cannabis-Politik dringend erforderlich ist.
In diesem Buch meinen Experten, dass die Droge zwar einigen Nutzern geschadet hat, dies aber nur eine geringe Wirkung auf die Gesellschaft hat im Gegensatz zu Kokain und Alkohol, die potenziell schädlicher sind.
Forscher Peter Reuter meint, dass die Behörden die "immer deutlicheren Beweise, dass die Kriminalisierung des Konsums nur eine kleine Abschreckung ist" anerkennen sollten und die Bedeutung der Entwicklung "verantwortlicher Arten der Verteilung anstatt des Schaffens grosser illegaler Märkte" erkennen müssen. Ähnlich wie das Coffee-Shop-System in den Niederlanden, obwohl die dortige, derzeit konservative Regierung versucht hart gegen diese Cannabis-Verkaufsstellen vorzugehen.
Eine wesentliche Schlussfolgerung des Buches ist, dass es offensichtlich keinen Zusammenhang zwischen Cannabis-Politik - ob drakonisch oder liberal - und der Verbreitung des Konsums gibt. Liberale Ansätze seien vorzuziehen, da diese die negativen Folgen, durch Gesetze und ihrer Durchsetzung minimieren.
Lies hier den ganzen Artikel (auf Englisch).
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Kommentare
Sponge - 2010-01-27 10:53:39
Sad thing is, as true as the article and what Joe said may be, it probably wont make a blind bit of difference to the government's way of thinking...:(
Joe - 2010-01-27 13:56:10
yep.u are exactly right Sponge. they refuse advice from their drugs commities and they show real prejudice when it comes to drugs users...
i wander if any of them actually do enjoy a nice joint or two...? cos so many of them tried it at school... what they always fail to mention when they say that is the second line: "and i loved it!"
noone is willing to make a move in the right direction or even make a stand because politics is too much about covering ur own back, too little about the answers and the best options.
the drugs czar was dismissed for just telling the truth, he wasnt even attempting to force any change.
i'm not very optimistic.
Manos - 2010-01-27 22:09:51
Yeah...The biggest problem lies not in the government but in the industry and the banks.Their point of view is making profit wherever possible.How can they do that?Through making wars,leeching out smaller countries and through debts everybody has.All governments have huge debts to the banks.Because of that they don't want open minded people,they don't want thinking people,they want aggressive,stupid and fanatic people,they are easy to control,they will make wars,they will make huge debts without thinking...That is how the controlling people behind the scene want us to be...Simpleminded morons,just nothing to cause trouble...Therefore it is fact that as long as nothing changes with the whole corrupt system they wont legalize weed and other mind expanding drugs....Really sad :/Truth - 2010-01-28 10:42:57
People shouldn't expect anything (rational or wise) from governments. Take life in your own hands, don't wait. Governing isn't done through wisdom or careful examination, it never has been. It has always been done through brute force and the playing out of people against eachother: Divide et impera.The fact that stupid decisions are made concerning mind-altering substances has nothing to do with that the governments in question aren't properly informed. It is and has always been about controlling people, their behaviour, their viewpoints and their mindset. Alcohol, tobacco (the Western version that is) and caffeïne are the propellants of the current dominant culture.
Peaceful resistance and civil disobedience is the greatest power people have...
SKA - 2010-01-29 02:48:50
This truth has been publicly available for many many years now. It's about time Politicians start listening to their people and their experts (in the field of public health & drugs) and stop trying to shove their ignorant, blind,and drunk ideologies down everyone's throat.I'm affraid to break free from the conservative, ignoble agenda there's going to have to be "a bit" of violence.
Mindlessly - 2010-02-02 19:40:23
The ammount of political slander and false propaganda behind the original prohibition of cannabis use in the U.S. and then the rest of the world is shocking. The intire process is depicted in detailed in the film 'Grass' (1999).The world is so close minded about cannabis use that it is now nearly unthinkable to question the validity of the prohibition laws.
Watch the film, very interesting...







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Joe - 2010-01-27 02:23:53
the law cant stop it, but only make it illegal. William Blake claimed that "prisons are built with stones of law"
by which he meant it is only the laws that make crimes bad. energy and natural desire has been made sin. this shouldnt be the case.
just look at Holland, the people who like weed smoke it. the people that dont like it dont smoke it. easy.
look at Portugal. all drug use decriminalised. usage has not increased and may have decreased.
in Australia they want to ban bongs, but it wont make a difference. maybe more people will smoke from bent coke cans and do their lungs in, or even in more joints and get more addicted to the tobacco.
this is all very stupid.
the government need to sort it out.
let it be. let weed flourish. just incourage responsibility!