Posted on 07/31/2005 12:35:50 PM PDT by freepatriot32
The LEGAL marijuana industry ... nothing wrong with that.
Thanks for the reply TL.
I just wonder why our fearless DEA wasted a year and a half on this MJ seed bust. You know that you can walk into any grocery store in the USofA and buy poppy seeds, McCormick is a big supplier. I guess an opium garden is okay, but we can't have any of those evil MJ seeds coming in.
I think the DEA's time and our tax dollars could be spent in better ways. Maybe they could use their resources (our money) making sure the southern border was less porous, the way it is now, one could drive a 50 megaton warhead across and no one would notice.
As for the fullauto weapons musanon, I wonder how many of those crossed our southern border in the last year and a half, while the DEA was busy protecting us from someone who might flip a MJ seed at us. You can bet FAs were not going to the law abiding, but I shall wait at my mail box and hope!
Lurker
Let him talk. The longer he goes on the more he sounds like a paper pushing career bureaucrat who's never turned a tap in his life, and terrified of the idea of an ordinary citizen being able to machine and assemble his own firearm.
You're welcome. If you check out groups like jointogether.org and their sponsor, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation you'll find the gun grabbers and drug warriors sleeping together quite amicably.
Thank you for the information, I shall follow your link. I think it is time for us freedom lovers to come together, and this takes work from both sides. We must put our petty differences aside and realize "IT'S ABOUT FREEDOM" or we will all be doomed to tyranny.
Lurker
2000 NSDUH shows 1.2 million cocaine (last month) users -- and my guess is maybe half are addicts. Add 200K heroin addicts, and you get around .25%, or half the 1900's legal rate.
Give it a rest already.
"Cautious evaluation of this data is necessary because the NHSDA cannot accurately measure rare or stigmatized drug use, relying as it does on self-reporting and on people residing in households. In alternate research, the number of hardcore* users of heroin in 1998 was estimated to be 980,000,"
"Estimates of heroin use from the NHSDA are considered very conservative due to the probable underreporting and undercoverage of the population of heroin users."
________________________________________
Drug Czar Barry McCaffrey, Oct 4, 2000:
"For example, numbers like heroin addiction. You can find numbers that go from 255,000 up to the one I'm currently using, 980,000, if I remember the last time we updated it, and those are all valid scientific studies."
--http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/drugs/symposium/panelmccaffrey.html
So, the government says its own household survey numbers are not reliable, and both the USDOJ and the Drug Czar say there are 980,000 heroin addicts.
The DOJ also says there are 3.6 million hardcore users who spend $36 billion/year on cocaine. That's $10,000/year per hardcore user. I suppose you're going to maintain that is not addiction?
Time to face the facts, the WOD is a failed social experiment.
This explains the difference. Your source adds the NHSDA number (close to my estimate of 600K addicts) to this DUF guesstimate.
"This less-stable population of hardcore drug users is, however, well-represented in data collected by the Drug Use Forecasting (DUF) program, which questions a sample of arrestees in 24 central city jails and lockups about their drug use. In this analysis, hardcore users in the DUF data are defined as those who admitted using cocaine or heroin on more than 10 days during the month before being arrested."
This "data" is then extrapolated to overall use. From the report: "For example, if hardcore users account for 2 million arrests per year, and if hardcore users are arrested an average of 0.5 times per year, then there must be 2 million divided by 0.5, or 4 million, hardcore users in the nation." What a joke.
The NHSDA measures drug use among the American household population age 12 and older, as well as among people living in group quarters and the homeless. The DUF supposedly picks up all others, AND "hardcore users in the DUF data are defined as those who admitted using cocaine or heroin on more than 10 days during the month before being arrested".
OK. So these losers, not part of a household, not part of a group shelter, not homeless (lord, what are they?), strung out on drugs over one-third of the time, are only arrested once every two years???
Once a week, I'd believe -- petty theft, vagrancy, public intoxication, prostitution, whatever. Once every two years is beyond credulity.
In the footnotes:
"For example, in the 1993 Household Survey, about 58 percent of weekly cocaine users surveyed had been arrested and booked at some time, 39 percent during the year prior to the survey. In the National AIDS Demonstration Research data, 81 percent of heavy cocaine users had been arrested at some time in their lives, and one-third had been in jail or prison during the six months prior to the interview.
Drug Czar Barry McCaffrey, Oct 4, 2000:
"Now I would also suggest to you that we've gotten a lot further, 'cause we brought in some of the most noted scientists, epidemiologists, mathematicians, statistical people in the country. We've identified the gaps in our data."
I say again, the government flat out says the numbers you using are invalid for hardcore use estimates. The Drug Czar himself said the same thing, and used the figure I've been citing: 980,000.
Not to worry Ken H, to qoute Forest Gump...tyrants are what tyrants do. Ignorance is curable, self inflected ignorance is stupidity.
Lurker
In 2002, we had, what, 1.5 million drug arrests? And 30% of those were for cocaine and heroin, sale and possession (need a link?).
So, according to you, we have 4.5 million hard core, strung-out-over-one-third-of-the-time cocaine and heroin addicts, and we're arresting only 450,000 per year? 10%, if we're arresting each addict only once per year.
"the government flat out says the numbers you using are invalid"
Fine. You believe the government numbers. I don't.
They're based solely on estimates, and those estimates are applied to the testimony of arrested drug addicts.
They're based solely on estimates, and those estimates are applied to the testimony of arrested drug addicts.
DUF relies on urinalysis. You need to read this footnote:
"Because urinalysis will detect cocaine and heroin use within two to three days of its consumption, it is unlikely that urinalysis will fail to identify an individual who uses cocaine on at least a weekly basis. [~snip~] Arguably, the EMIT test used by DUF understates drugs in the urine of arrestees."
You believe the government numbers. I don't.
HA! You believe the SAHSMA numbers, which they themselves say are not valid for estimating stigmatized drug use.
OTOH, the USDOJ and Drug Czar General Barry McCaffrey stand behind the survey which produced the higher figures I quoted.
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