No I amn't.Are you suggesting that the reason Rotterdam is Europes busiest port is because drugs are coming in there?
So they in them selves are dealing - certainly if they are buying to supply onto others.but my point there was that these people aren't purchasing from a dealer. These people are buying what is legal in their own country and bringing it here. Yes, an illegal activity
Eh what planet are you on - yes they are - inadvertainly they are - Joe Bloggs buys some hash from a local small dealler in town, this dealer buys from a bigger dealler and so on - so eventually along the chain it goes to an organised gang.And therefor recreational drug users are not responsible for the gangs.
You are not making one ounce of sence here - The only way gangs can be obliterated is if every country in the world has an "open drugs" policy - and concidering there isn't even a global "open alcohol" policy that is some stretch of imagination.If the gangs are just going to move their business, then we can see it is the fact the drugs are illegal in the first place that is responsible.
Eh what planet are you on - yes they are - inadvertainly they are - Joe Bloggs buys some hash from a local small dealler in town, this dealer buys from a bigger dealler and so on - so eventually along the chain it goes to an organised gang.
It think his point might be that you said the gangs would remain if drugs were legalised, which contradicts the claim that the drug users are responsible for the existance of the gangs. Either the gangs would mostly disappear if everyone stopped buying drugs from them, or they will remain. In the first case drug users should all stop, in the second case it doesn't matter what they do and everyone should focus their energy on the root cause of gangland criminality - gangs.
It beggars belief that people are arguing that buying cocaine that is sourced by criminal gangs does not support these gangs financially and perpetuate their criminality. A bad case of "hear no evil see no evil" methinks. If enough people, by word and deed, cried "stop", this problem would diminish and wither, even if it would never go away completely. This is what happened in Northern Ireland when the public turned against paramilitarism.
Who is arguing that?It beggars belief that people are arguing that buying cocaine that is sourced by criminal gangs does not support these gangs financially and perpetuate their criminality.
My specific question there was if you think recreational users from abroad or here who have their own drugs and are using it themselves and not selling it are responsible for criminal gang violence. Do you think this? A yes or no will suffice.So they in them selves are dealing - certainly if they are buying to supply onto others.
Yes, that is the point I was attempting to make.It think his point might be that you said the gangs would remain if drugs were legalised, which contradicts the claim that the drug users are responsible for the existance of the gangs.
I agree completely, if enough people stop buying illegal drugs the trade will diminish and without a large enough market it would not be worth the risk for gangs to import large quantities of drugs.
However, it is equally true that if recreational drugs were sold legally in licensed premises in a manner similar to alcohol, the illegal drugs market would shrink considerably, starving the gangs of revenue.
That is why I consider it duplicitous for the government to blame recreational drug users for gang violence without acknowledging their own role in the affair.
So it is all very well to champion for civil liberties - if you yourself and none of your friends or family are affected and none of the trouble is in your back yard.
Yes you are correct - but in the two years I lived in Finglas there were three shootings - none of them newsworthy and one of these incidents narrowly missed children. The dealer involved was small time and we later discovered was involved in 16 shootings in the area.
Originally Posted by ubiquitous
It beggars belief that people are arguing that buying cocaine that is sourced by criminal gangs does not support these gangs financially and perpetuate their criminality. Who is arguing that?
Who is arguing that?
Either the gangs would mostly disappear if everyone stopped buying drugs from them, or they will remain. In the first case drug users should all stop, in the second case it doesn't matter what they do
....
and everyone should focus their energy on the root cause of gangland criminality - gangs.
But had it not been for the illegal drugs trade this guy would probably have pursued a career in investment banking, right?
Absolutly - I am not arguing otherwise - but what I am saying is that the criminal gangs do impeded ordinary citizens civil rights. And those who'se money ends up with the gang is enabling them.Civil liberties are important, and during times of duress governments will frequently try erode these liberties citing 'special circumstances'.
This ignores the obvious point that if the market for cocaine contracted, there would be less business and money for the criminal traffickers.
Well if he is in a disadvantaged area there is a chance that his involvement with drugs started at an early age therefore removing any chance of a normal life.
The other aspect is, that no matter where he is from, there is no other illegal trade that can make so much money with so little risk to the seller. The levels of money that can be made are reflected in the apparent willingness to eliminate any competition from the market.
At what line do the pro legalisation people draw to what can be construed as a legal drug that should be made available to the open market. Surely there have been enough proven cases to show that most hard drugs have a very negative impact on users. Should heroin, LSD etc be available to 18 year olds as soon as they leave school? Would legalising it not remove the final barrier from kids experimenting and putting their lives on the line?
This argument also holds for legalising drugs though. A poster responded to this saying they shouldn't be legalised on this basis, since gangs "won't go away", and will "shift business elsewhere". My point was that if you're going to argue against legalisation on this basis, you can't simultaneously argue that buying drugs supports the gangs. If you re-read my post you'll see I'm not arguing that buying drugs doesn't support gangs, I was offering two possible scenarios.
Both legalisation and abstaining will produce the same effect of reducing the gangs' impact. Neither are very likely unfortunately.
Absolutly - I am not arguing otherwise - but what I am saying is that the criminal gangs do impeded ordinary citizens civil rights.
And those who'se money ends up with the gang is enabling them.
Neither this, nor being born into an area of disadvantage is an excuse to engage in violent behaviour.
The risk to the seller is actually enormous, I don't know how you can think it isn't.
I'm not offering an excuse, my point is that disadvantaged areas have generally been the worst hit in terms of crime, alcohol and drug abuse.
I don't think it is. At the lowest level many sellers get cautions, or carry low levels of supply on them. By the time they get jailed, it's usually short sentences with part suspended. At the higher levels the risk is in who you mix with. And when you consider soime of the sentences for large shipments worth millions the risks are nearly worth it in my opinion.
We use a unique data set detailing the Financial activities of a drug-selling street gang to analyze gang economics. On average, earnings in the gang are somewhat above the legitimate labor market alternative. The enormous risks of drug selling, however, more than offset this small wage premium. Compensation within the gang is highly skewed, and the prospect of future riches, not current wages, is the primary economic motivation. The gang engages in repeated gang wars and sometimes prices below marginal cost. Our results suggest that economic factors alone are unlikely to adequately explain individual participation in the gang or gang behavior.
I know it's a US study but Freakonomics author Steven Levitt has done some work on the economics of drugs gangs. He concludes that the majority of dealers do not make more than the minimum wage.
Yes, but legalisation is hardly even an option for Ireland in isolation from similar action by the US and other Western powers?
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