Obama Legalize Drugs or Turn Back Drug War at Colombia Summitt
Obama Legalize Drugs or Turn Back Drug War at Colombia Summitt
Robert Taylor
34 minutes ago
When President Obama head to Colombia this week for the Summit of the Americas, he will face some difficult and important questions that no president before him has really had to answer. With the U.S.-led drug war into its fourth decade, the leaders of South and Latin America are demanding change and reform from the largest importer of drugs in the hemisphere and the mightiest enforcer of drug prohibition. Despite the growing influence and voice of our southern neighbors, President Obama lacks the incentives and the principles to stop, or even commit major reforms on, the disastrous drug war.
Since the early 1970's, the U.S. government has pursued a highly militarized and aggressive policy domestically and in the rest of the Western hemisphere fighting the consumption and sale of substances they label illicit. And while the U.S. has had mainly a free hand in Latin and South America enforcing the drug war, that is quickly changing. According to the Guardian, that mood is starting to shift and America's position is now being challenged, increasingly and vociferously, by its neighbors in South and Central America.
Guatemala, Mexico, Colombia, and Brazil have all expressed a strong desire to engage the U.S. and have even taken steps toward decriminalization. They are reacting to what the drug war has created in their countries; like Prohibition in the U.S., ruthless cartels are lured by the artificially high profits the drug war creates to enter the black market and are willing to commit horrendous acts of violence to in order to do so. Much of South and Latin America has been ravaged by drug gangs and violence; tens of thousands of people have died in Mexico alone in the last five years as a direct result of the drug war.
Given these trends, it is obvious why many of these countries leaders will be eager to have President Obamas ear in Colombia. But even after four decades of war, Obama likely wont be listening. Although calling the drug war a failure while campaigning in 2008, Obama has maintained the status quo.
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CaliforniaPeggy
(149,610 posts)But I think it would be politically disastrous for him to support decriminalization now.
There are just too many people in this country who cannot support that. Of course, they are way behind the times.
Mopar151
(9,982 posts)Those with a vested interest in continuing this charade have proven, over and over, that they will meet attempts at rational debate with smear, ridicule, and all the tactics of schoolyard bullies.
Including a solid 120+ year history of fearmongering to solve a public health issue with jail.
Uncle Joe
(58,355 posts)Thanks for the thread, Judi Lynn.
Judi Lynn
(160,526 posts)Obama faces skeptical leaders at Americas summit
By Brian Ellsworth
BOGOTA | Tue Apr 10, 2012 7:14pm IST
(Reuters) - Three years after being feted by star-struck Latin American leaders, U.S. President Barack Obama faces skepticism and disappointment at this week's Summit of the Americas for failing to meet promises of a new era in relations with the region.
Obama's first meeting with leaders from the hemisphere in Trinidad and Tobago at the height of his popularity included a vow to mend ties with Cuba and a photo-op handshake with Hugo Chavez, the Venezuelan president and pugnacious U.S. critic.
This year, Obama is more focused on re-election than foreign policy and is set to receive a grilling over contentious issues like the drugs war, Cuba and even U.S. monetary policy from heads of state eager to remind him that Washington is growing less relevant for the region.
"The deception and disappointment are quite real," said Hal Klepak, a Canadian history professor and Latin America expert. "The last summit's focus was the 'Obama show,' this time what we have are years of nothing happening."
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http://in.reuters.com/article/2012/04/10/americas-summit-obama-idINDEE8390EE20120410?rpc=401&feedType=RSS&feedName=worldNews&rpc=401