Blacks and the failure of the "War on Drugs"
I was reading the book "The Ten Things you Can't Say in America" and thought this was pretty interesting
Nearly one third of all young black men are involved in in the criminal justice system:either in jail, on parole or on probation.Consider the effects of the war on drugs on an innner city youth.He gets involved in the drug trade, gets busted, goes to prison. There he interacts with with hard core criminals, broadening his criminal horizons. He gets out of prison with a record. Depending upon the state he lives in, he may or may not be able to vote. In addition, his "marriage value" has now declined, making it less likely that a woman would find him a good long term marriage prospect. Because he has a record, he may or may not be able to get a job, with employers understandably reluctant to hire an ex-con. While in prison, he may have engaged-forcibly or willingly-in unprotected sex,possibly contracting and STD, up to and including AIDS.The young black man now has no pension, no 401K, no stock options, no money, no spouse, lots of enemies, and is possibly ill. And for what? So that a bunch of cops can stack a bunch of drugs on a table, have their pictures taken, and declare that we've "turned a corner" on the war on drugs.
The war on drugs is a big sham. It ruins people's lives for the sake of photo ops and takes away fundamental civil liberties, all the while pretending to be our friend. Well, at least Canucks and some other "brits" oversees can possess small amount of the devil's lettuce without being thrown in the slammer.
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R.I.P. H.S.T.

I wanna have El Scrabino's man babies.
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