Showing posts with label decriminalise. Show all posts
Showing posts with label decriminalise. Show all posts

Sunday, 6 October 2013

Decriminalising Drugs

Decriminalising a drug?  Is it a good thing?
We have a problem with drugs, the war on drugs is happening yet have we the need to surrender.
I have been studying the drug problem, from all angles.  I have been listening to not just the drugs issue from a user’s perspective on the streets in Kings Cross.  From the dealers I have interviewed for the books, these dealers I have met over the period of 18 months within Kings Cross have all threatened me in one way or another.
You notice that many of the drug dealers carry three types of drugs.  To legalise the drugs across the board doesn’t help society.  The problems will be devastaging.  An example for people in the western countries I will have to say it’s Kings Cross during the 2011-2012 where the drug known on the streets is Ice or GHB have taken a hold in massive proportions.
When  we look at the problems from the streets that are created.  We must also look at the otherside why the Poppies are grown.  The affect on the country, the affect for the income of the farmers and the economy in those some third world countries where poppies are grown.
From working beside the heroin addict, the shots seem to be limited.  They don’t over indulge in the drug as the result is normally death.  Therefore it is a drug that could be looked at in the form of injecting or smoking.
The heroin, is available within our community.  Yet the drug busts we have seen in Sydney 2012 have been primarily relating to the drug known on the streets as Ice.
Ice can be made anywhere by what is happening around Australia.  The other drugs are from other countries affecting economies around the world.  Even the countries relating to Government aid needs to be looked at.
I propose that heroin, is not used as a over dosing drug on a large scale we need to look at the history for this drug.
Poppy power
Opium poppies were among the first crops to be cultivated. No one can say when the first human learned to use their unripe seedpods’ milky sap to alleviate pain or fever or to soothe and pacify a teething baby. We can only speculate when the first baker sprinkled the seeds on a loaf of bread. Poppy seeds have been discovered in caves occupied by prehistoric peoples (and probably stuck between the teeth in the skulls of prehistoric bagel eaters). The species is thought to have originated in Asia Minor or the Mediterranean region, but it has been cultivated so long that it has become naturalized from Spain to India.
Poppies to ease peoples cares and put them to sleep. People do awake refreshed and relaxed. 
The poppy plant that could relieve pain and hunger, ease anxiety, and allow people to work longer and harder proved invaluable, but habitual use of the drug prepared from the sap of its unripe pods proved addictive and even fatal. Tests on some Egyptian mummies have revealed high levels of the drug, which we know in our society today as opium.  Opium contains more than twenty-five alkaloids, including morphine, narcotine, codeine, and papaverine.
The ancient Greeks were well aware of the healing properties of the opium poppy. The Romans spread the plant throughout Europe and into England. The spread of Islam took the poppy to India, and Portuguese traders introduced the practice of smoking opium to China in the seventeenth century. Millions of Chinese became addicted to it, and the emperor banned its importation. Smuggling of the banned substance from India into China nevertheless became big business for En­glish shipping companies. Attempts of the Chinese viceroy in Canton to halt the drug’s importation led to the infamous Opium Wars of 1839–1842 and 1856–1860, with capitalist England finally prevailing. Everyone except the Chinese made ­oodles of money with opium.
Opium was a chief ingredient of both British and U.S. patent medicines during that period.  Opium has played an important legitimate role in medicine. Morphine, one of its derivatives, is still a primary weapon against intractable pain. Opium poppies have long been grown commercially in many countries for use in treating diabetes, bronchial disorders, malaria, dysentery, rheumatism, even elephantiasis, and as a preoperative painkiller. In addition, they continue to be grown on a large scale for the fine seed, particularly for use in baked goods.
The seeds of the poppy have no narcotic value. There is no effect of poppy seeds on cakes, breads, cream cheese there is no effects of euphoria from eating them. However, the seeds do contain some compound that has produced positive readings in drug tests.  Yet we do eat poppy seeds, yes they are legal in fact some would label poppy seeds as a spice.
People go to hospital, are given pethadene  after a while they have a habit.  Yet this is a legal drug in our country Australia and many other countries around the world.
To legalise just one drug, heroin would be the most effective to the world’s economy.  Deregulating drugs to allow personal use on the end user of the drug, well if this was just on one drug that over the years has affected the world economies.  By the growing of the Poppy’s
 210 million people, or 4.8 per cent of the population aged 15-64 years, use illicit substances each year. Drug abuse overall, including problem drug abuse, has remained stable at 0.6 per cent of the population aged 15-64 years. However, demand has soared for substances not under international control, such as piperazine and cathinone, and synthetic cannabinoids that mimic the effects of cannabis, such as Spice products.
How about if the Global Drug Commission looks at only decriminalising one drug out of many.
Yes, the decriminalising at the end user for a small personal quantity.  However by allowing Heroin/Poppy to be grown for a selective quantity legally moving between countries will help countries that are third world.
There should be restrictions that the country can not buy arms with the money, or be fighting with other countries or states of countries to sell the product.  The product should be heavily scrutinized.  To regulate it like Alcohol and tobacco is all over the world.






Tuesday, 17 September 2013

Premier of NSW, expose the system search the premises that the gang hold precious

Premier of NSW calls for Gangs to be Criminals.

I wrote this in 2012, it is now 2013 and if the Premier of NSW just searches the premises Sparkling Chandeliers in Kings Cross he  will expose the gangs hidden treasures from the 1930's and before.

This premises was once controlled by Abe Saffron, allegedly he was a Cor Scorpion the Red Heart of the Scorpion the elite of the gang.  This is just a mark, however he is dead since 2006 and the gang still protect these premises like the magic that they contain, is the reason why they can deal drugs and not get caught.  Because the Police as Detective Inspector Ian MacDonald of Kings Cross Police said  it was a blind eye he turned as it gave him a job.  

Aren't we trying to stop the drug network, if this gang hold the secrets of the business agreements here for the drug network then it is a reason why the premises hidden compartment needs searching.

Credit: Jennifer Stone
Many punters just have fun and others sell drugs
The Premier of NSW has announced to fast track the alleged bikie group to be a criminal organisation. The organised crime in NSW has allegedly been shooting from one house to another.
Wake up Australia!!!!!
Allegedly 2009 Hells Angels USA were thinking to disowning Sydney Chapter of Hells Angels due to the links to criminal behaviour. This Criminal behaviour didn't stop, it just went underground. The problem went away, the criminal activity has links to drugs, over who owns this illegal drug money. Companies representing these gangs should have the assets confiscated as the money behind has been huge for the operation to exist.
Yet Kings Cross, has an association with many of the groups that move the drugs through our network to the helpless drug user. Some have been through torture with family breaks, life of beatings, till there nerves are shot. To kill the pain they turn to illegal drugs as the legal drugs haven't worked for them for the pain is so deep.
The government has celebrated 555 criminals being pulled through the court system yet we still have had numerous shootings and I am sure the drugs would have ran last night anywhere in Sydney. Yet on the weekend our King of the Cross was pushing the disorganised crime as the problem. 555 Criminals seems more likely organised crime with a network with a system entrenched and existing.
The saying "once used, a user for life is a reality". If we allow the organised crime cause our society a problem, through meetings, through networks, the money feeding this OMBG we need help to bring calm to the country.
Legalising drugs will in fact abolish most of the city of Sydney's problems by treating these drugs as a drug like the methadone clinics to have the control to the government. Even if the price of the drug stayed the same think how much money all the governments of the world will receive.
Lets get behind moving the governments to control the drugs in all societies. We can all die from smoking yet we allow it to exist, taxed heavily to the governments.

Read more at http://www.broowaha.com/articles/13398/premier-of-nsw-calls-for-gangs-to-be-criminals#LgLOOG52ULmedmKL.99