Don’t you get it? Our politicians, media, and voting machines are corrupt. Soros has his fingerprints everywhere. Nothing is what it seems.
January 9, 2009 (LPAC)
Transnational Institute Calls For More and Better Opium in Asia
—Transnational Institute (TNI), a leading Soros outfit (with official funding from the EU, the Dutch Foreign Ministry and dozens of other “respectable organizations”), which is in the forefront of drug legalization and “harm reduction” promotion worldwide, released a doozy on Jan. 9: “Withdrawal Symptoms in the Golden Triangle: A Drugs Market in Disarray,” which screams out to stop stopping drugs, to stop stopping the poor farmers from growing poppy, to stop denying high quality and low priced heroin to the poor users. The report demonstrates the absolute rage of Soros and the Anglo-Dutch drug bankers that they lost their precious “Golden Triangle” drug haven.
The TNI report says that the near-elimination of opium in Myanmar, Thailand and Laos - part of the “Golden Triangle” which once supplied the majority of the world’s opium - is responsible for “driving hundreds of thousands of families into poverty.... The rapid decline in production has caused major suffering among former poppy-growing communities in Burma and Laos” - as if the poppy producers were once prosperous. This reporter’s trip through the Triangle by mule in 1973 revealed the deadly, stone-age conditions of the opium farmers.
The report continues that “repressive drug control policies and criminalization of users has caused increased health risks amongst consumers,” requiring legalization and drug distribution to cure them of their ills.
TNI denounces the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) for declaring the goal of a drug-free Asia by 2015, calling this “unrealistic and counter-productive,” arguing that “it would be wise not to enforce the 2015 deadline. It would be far better to take a longer-term perspective.”
What we need, says TNI, is better and cheaper dope: “Higher prices and lower quality heroin are leading to shifts in consumer behavior which create serious problems. While total numbers of opium and heroin users may be going down, more people have started to inject (the most cost-effective means of administration) and many have turned to a cocktail of pharmaceutical replacements with largely unknown health risks.”
Their conclusion: “Countries in the region and the international community should not abandon former and current opium growing communities and drugs users in this delicate phase of transformation of the Golden Triangle.”
I hijacked the thread to propose legalizing pot.