Ivo Skoric on Fri, 5 Oct 2001 22:51:19 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
[Nettime-bold] Re: Drug policy |
If you are going to run for Senate, remind me to give you my vote. Are you related by any chance to former senator D'Amato, anyway? Legalizing drugs, while from my perspective a no-brainer, won't really happen because the 'moral majority' needs about another 50 years to understand that perspective. I don't think the US will bomb poppy fields in Afghanistan - precisely because that might help Taliban achieve higher price for their already stockpiled heroin. Rather, they might present themselves as one of the buyers of heroin. Let's see - if US government buy heroin from Taliban using marked money, than: 1) they are in control of heroin supply; they can destroy what they have bought, driving price up, without any benefit to Taliban, while reducing availability in the end market. 2) they can trace the whereabouts of money - Taliban would try to buy ammunition, for example - so, the US government would know which arms trader sold them the ammo, or whatever else. On the other hand - Taliban may burn poppy fields themselves to artificially raise the price of heroin now when they are in need of cash. And they can acuse the US of doing so to solidify their domestic support. ivo Date sent: Thu, 4 Oct 2001 12:33:56 -0500 Send reply to: International Justice Watch Discussion List <JUSTWATCH-L@LISTSERV.ACSU.BUFFALO.EDU> From: "D'Amato Anthony" <a-damato@NORTHWESTERN.EDU> Subject: Drug policy To: JUSTWATCH-L@LISTSERV.ACSU.BUFFALO.EDU Intelligence sources that I've read seem to agree on two conclusions: 1) The US will bomb the Afghan poppy fields (one source called this an "unprecedented opportunity" for our war on drugs); and 2) The taliban is preparing its stockpile of heroin for dumping into the open market, in order to raise cash. Since the demand for heroin is relatively steady (like, for example, the demand for diamonds), dumping will immediately depress prices. An aggravating factor for heroin is that the wholesale buyers from the taliban are mainly in the business of quickly turning over inventory by supplying retailers; they are not accustomed to inventorying much of the stuff. Moreover, inventorying drugs is very dangerous; one police raid and you lose it all to the police (who then inventory it and retail it anyway) But police aren't going to buy the stuff in the first instance. Thus, the wholesalers will have to buy and distribute quickly, which means they can't afford to pay more than pennies on the dollar for the product. These factors indicate that, absent external intervention, the taliban will receive only pennies on the dollar for their entire enormous heroin stockpile. But they have no choice. Except for external intervention. If the US comes to the rescue of the heroin market by firebombing the poppy fields, the heroin market will adjust by moving prices dramatically upward. The result is that the taliban could receive 30 to 40 times as much for its stockpile than it would receive if the poppy fields were left alone, thus providing huge additional funds for buying military equipment. The rational thing to do would be to take either of these two steps: a) Don't bomb the poppy fields, or b) Legalize drugs. The latter could be a decisive blow in the war against terrorism, and can be accomplished, in President Bush's words, by the stroke of a pen. But since when did rationality guide our foreign policy? == Tony D'Amato _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold