A Comment About

Drug Cartels Use Failed States to Traffic in Chemicals

May 28, 2009 - 12:08 am - by Todd Bensman
Bigger Diggler
2009-05-30 10:48:38

“the more intense the law enforcement, the more potent the prohibited substance becomes,” says the Iron Law of Prohibition.

First, in this insane war on drugs, we harvested thousands of non-violent american citizens, and filled the prisons past the bursting point with marijuana users.

So marijuana was breathlessly replaced by the newest evil drug, Cocaine. Which was henceforth “sucessfully” largely eradicated and replaced by the malignant crack epidemic. As soon as our prison system population grossly exceeded every other country on earth, including China which has four times the population, we turned our steely gazes to the next National Security Threat, meth. Which is now sufficiently evolved to where the precursors are being supplied by such psychotic and despicable regimes of hate as North Korea and Iran.

Whew! I am sure glas this War is working out good!

Assuming that we can eradicate the meth menace by creating the Amerian version of the Gulag Archipelego with running tank and large weapon battles between the government and the heavily armed drug cartels in our downtown streets, one wonders what kind of psychotic drug will replace meth as the new scourge of american life.

Prediction: the drug that will replace meth will instantly turn users into one-eyed irradiated psycho killers, will cost less than half the cost of meth, will be 20 times stronger, and one hit will last you the rest of your life. The drug will be so berzerkly powerful that the rest of society will be forced to live in heavily-armed and guarded military enclaves for safety, with the entire economy completely devoted to manufacturing, selling and using the drug everywhere outside of the military zones.

By the way, where do they find these morons that write these articles? Is there a police academy where normal people are transformed into psychotic droning drug warrior zombies?