Tight Border Security Slows Trafficking |
Posted by FoM on September 20, 2001 at 10:38:48 PT By Adrian Humphreys, National Post Source: National Post The week-long war against terrorism declared by George W. Bush, the U.S. president, seems to have inadvertently done more to hurt drug lords than most initiatives his father enacted in his 10-year-old war on drugs. An unexpected benefit of the enhanced security efforts at borders and airports following the Sept. 11 hijackings and suicide dives is a curtailment in illicit drug shipments into the country, police and custom officials said. Snipped Home Comment Email Register Recent Comments Help |
Comment #11 posted by Rambler on September 21, 2001 at 06:26:25 PT |
I actually prefer domestic weed.It's much fresher,and we need to keep that money in the country to support the war effort,and to do our part by donating money to help bail out the airlines,and providing funds to help the government out with the expenses involved with increased surveilance. [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #10 posted by kaptinemo on September 21, 2001 at 06:12:18 PT:
|
""They'll (smugglers) sit back and wait to see what is going on at the airports and borders, see what the weaknesses are now. They'll be sitting down, putting their heads together and thinking things through -- until the new security systems put in place get to be known and importers find their way around them, like they always do," he said." and ""Unfortunately, where you are going to benefit from the upside of increased security, the criminal mind is always flexible and they will start to place an increased emphasis on drugs they can manufacture locally," said Det. Sgt. Brownell. "For sure they are not going to stop forever," he said. "Historically, we have seen that when you stop one way of smuggling drugs it doesn't take long before they find another." In other words, they know that they have been asked to clean the Augean Stables...and Hercules, they ain't. They know it's pointless. So, the question that must be asked is, if they know this, why persist? The answer is because the US forces pressures them to. And that pressure is going to increase in the next few months. Which will cause domestic American cannabis production to increase over the next year to heights undreamed of previously. Just like an idiot child squeezing the balloon. They never learn. [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #9 posted by freedom fighter on September 21, 2001 at 00:14:01 PT |
Click on pufftuff's link and check on his link and it is blank.. censorship in effect?? ff [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #8 posted by freedom fighter on September 21, 2001 at 00:10:12 PT |
there will be growers growing more than ever before. More people heading to prisons because of this whole thing. Our largest army is sitting in the prisons with nothing to lose.
Just count them. There are more prisoners than we have in our armed forces.
Some genius said that our next war will be fought with sticks and stones. ff [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #7 posted by puff_tuff on September 20, 2001 at 20:54:28 PT:
|
The tighter security has slowed the movement of BC Bud INTO the US as outlined in this article.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Sept 20 2001 Border crackdown hurting B.C. pot growers CBC Vancouver The increased security along the B.C.-Washington border since last week's terrorist attacks are wreaking havoc on B.C.'s multi-billion dollar marijuana business. B.C. Marijuana Party leader Marc Emery says growers are having a tough time finding people willing to run drugs across the border in boats, small planes or on foot. "The thought that there's increased penalties, or that the United States may shoot on sight or are a bit jumpier and more security conscious means there's more marijuana backed up here," he says. He says mules are being offered twice as much for the risk – up to $1000 for a half kilo of B.C marijuana – and that price is being passed on to Americans. Emery says that's lowering the cost of drugs in B.C., but doubling it in the United States. http://vancouver.cbc.ca/ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Considering that marijuana production is an estimated 6 billion dollar industry in BC (it's largest industry) the ramifications of virtually no distribution will be harsh. [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #6 posted by aocp on September 20, 2001 at 17:19:36 PT |
While there is no statistical evaluation comparing the volume of drugs flowing into Canada last week to other periods, police officers and customs officials suspect there is a sharp reduction. Substitute "evidence" for "evalutation" and what is a synonym for this article? Try: empty. What they claim may very well be true, but they're merely speculating to this own spin at the current time. The media laps it up like the curs they are in this country. Filth. aocp out. [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #5 posted by Sudaca on September 20, 2001 at 14:11:57 PT |
to the war on drugs:
- fear
people will give up their civil liberties for security.
- hatred
people will buy stereotypes and nonarguments on why the enemy is the enemy
- intolerance
people will be willing to turn against the diverse neighbors for the above two reasons
- xenophobia
people will be willing to turn against the countrie's diverse neighbors.. bla bla. You know what else could help? A complete worldwide recession, and a higher unemployment rate, then less people will have money to buy drugs. I hope they're happy those fine drug warriors.. [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #4 posted by p4me on September 20, 2001 at 12:13:04 PT:
|
Yeah that is a real benefit that we have because of the terrorist attack- a chance to put more people in jail for something that should have never been made illegal. Why does everyone have such a problem with admitting they are wrong? The tide is going out and history will remember the lies that the government has spread and kept alive. End the war on peace. Protect me from the bad guys like the constitution requires and give me my freedom to smoke MJ back. You can count on me to vote the way I talk. [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #3 posted by FoM on September 20, 2001 at 11:35:48 PT |
Hi Dankhank, You are green when you leave an email address and red like I'm going to do if you don't put an email address in. [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #2 posted by Dankhank on September 20, 2001 at 11:18:13 PT:
|
What color am I now ... ? [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #1 posted by MDG on September 20, 2001 at 10:47:02 PT |
I can't believe police are acknowledging this fact! But, rest assured, they will be calling for more of this in the future...knowing it won't "help". [ Post Comment ] |
Post Comment | |