Mexico's president opposes marijuana legalization
California's Prop. 19 would decriminalize small amounts of pot for personal use, but Mexico's President Felipe Calderon claims that this would undercut Mexico's fight against drug cartels. Because, you know, that's been going so well lately.
Mexican President Felipe Calderon strongly opposes the California ballot measure that would legalize small amounts of marijuana, saying it reflects softening attitudes toward drug consumption in the U.S. that are undercutting efforts to control organized crime groups in Mexico.
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Calderon, in an interview in Tijuana, said he was disappointed that the U.S. federal government, which for years has pushed Mexico to crack down on drug traffickers, has not done more to oppose the measure. "I think they have very little moral authority to condemn Mexican farmers who out of hunger are planting marijuana to feed the insatiable [U.S.] appetite for drugs," he said Thursday.
I think I tend to side with Calderon's predecessor on this one:
Calderon's predecessor, Vicente Fox, has made headlines by calling for legalization and regulation of all drugs as the best way to cripple the drug cartels economically. Fox recently said passage of Proposition 19 would be a "great step forward" and could "open the door to these ideas for us."
Comments
It empties jails of harmless folks, it raises revenues by taxing what was once contraband, and it pretty much ends drug-related street violence. Sure, there
will still be hard-core drug traffic, but if pot is legal, I expect that demand for harder-core illegal drugs would drop.
It's insane that we're still waiting around for this to happen.
Here's a problem...will pot farmers have to put up fences?