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Legalising drugs will only worsen crime - Lenihan
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#2
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Re: The song remains the same....
Here is the article. Please include the actual article in the future as links often become broken. Thanks.
h.a. [top]Legalising drugs will only worsen crime - LenihanMinister for Justice Brian Lenihan arriving for the Patrick MacGill summer school in Glenties, Co Donegal last night, accompanied by school director Dr Joe Mulhollland Wednesday July 18 2007 LEGALISING drugs to help eliminate a large portion of serious crime was dismissed yesterday by Justice Minister Brian Lenihan as a fanciful argument. Decriminalisation, he argued, would be a recipe for a vastly increased dependency on drugs. "The harm that would be done by going down that road would far exceed any benefits that might be gained from it," he told the MacGill Summer School in Glenties, Co Donegal. Mr Lenihan said it was nonsense to think Ireland could take that step while drugs remained controlled in other jurisdictions. "People who make the argument for decriminalisation rarely seem to carry its logic to its conclusion and say that if people stopped using illicit drugs then the crime associated with supply would disappear." He said society had to tackle some real issues about the demand for illicit drugs. "It is a cruel irony that while the use of what would be regarded as hard drugs was once confined to areas of deprivation, there is evidence now that in many cases it has become the product of affluence." He said the value of human life had been set at nought by members of the gangs at the centre of this pernicious trade. "We have seen a spate of savage killings. Sometimes, they happen because of rows that take place related to the drugs trade. "Others are related to feuds. Anyone who has any doubt about the dangers of illicit drugs and the corrosive effect they have on society need only look at the savagery with which often 'coked up' young men take each others' lives," the minister added. Mr Lenihan was critical of those who underestimated the difficulties which gardai confronted in trying to stop these killings. "They get absolutely no help from the people they are trying to protect and when killings take place they get no co-operation either. "To condemn these killings as in some way a failure on the part of the gardai - or, indeed, the Government - flies in the face of the harsh realities involved. It is no consolation that the vast majority of these killings take place among members of criminal gangs," Mr Lenihan said. "To take that view would be to share their disregard of human life. Tragically, it has been the case that their activities, too, have spilled over into the law abiding community." The truth, he said, was that the fight against those gangs was going to be long and had to be relentless. He called on gang members who feared for their lives to break out of the vicious circle in which they found themselves and talk to the gardai. Mr Lenihan said he had told the Garda Commissioner there was no limit to the funding available for the witness protection programme. |
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#3
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Re: The song remains the same....
I think one of the ideas behind legalization is that when everything is legal, it is legal to sell on the normal market... a la people buy their drugs not from "coked up" young men but old batty pharmacists. Legal drugs would also eliminate a large gap of the profit margin of illiegal drugs.
I think its ironic how he sort of calls legality advocates shortsighted when his own words actually show he is the one who doesnt really grasp the entire concept of what he is ruling about... GoGo justice system eh? |
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#4
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Re: The song remains the same....
Quote:
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#5
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Re: The song remains the same....
The major quote from this piece and the real telling one is this:
"Mr Lenihan said it was nonsense to think Ireland could take that step while drugs remained controlled in other jurisdictions." Therein lies the problem for anyone wishing to go down the legalisation route (not saying he does). Just look what happened when Mexico's president was considering such an option. Everybody's favourite global police force came a battering at the door with words of 'wisdom' and 'comfort'.....hey presto, reversal of decision. SWIS can not see any government taking such a decision, lest the US administration have a huge change of heart and SWIS fears that is about as likely as him becoming a Carthusian monk.......mind you, no....... |
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