Daniel Koffler | June 14, 2005
For a great example of what the War on Drugs does to developing economies, check out this Reuters report on the Swaziland front in the war.
Police in impoverished Swaziland say that despite dousing acres of towering plants with deadly insecticide, they are losing the war on marijuana to dirt-poor peasants bent on protecting their most lucrative crop.
No official word on whether some of those peasants might be slightly better off than "dirt-poor" if they could take their goods directly to market without having to deal with cartel overlords looking for a cut or police doing their damndest to destroy the crops.
This month in Reason, Toby Muse detailed the futility of the Colombian drug war. In January 2002, Michael Lynch interviewed three former professional drug warriors who soured on the project through first-hand experience.
By the way, I'm Dan Koffler and I'm the Burton Gray memorial intern at Reason this summer. In the fall, I'll be a senior in college; my major is philosophy. I also have a personal blog, which you can peruse here if you're so inclined.
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Welcome to the Thunderdome Daniel. Don't take anything
personally.
...Unless it's personal. Then, when you strike back, aim for
the eyes! . )
Do you get a nice dorm room, a workout area, and a $2,500 stipend like the Heritage Foundation interns?
Oh good. A sensitive college boy to harass.
"Yeah. She won't have any trouble finding a job. There's a new philosophy factory opening up on the edge of town." (That 79s Show)
"No official word on whether some of those peasants might be
slightly better off than "dirt-poor" if they could take their goods
directly to market without having to deal with cartel overlords
looking for a cut or police doing their damndest to destroy the
crops."
Daniel,
If all drugs were legal, those peasants would be unlikely to be
growing the raw material for drugs.
They would be financially better off, but it would be in a more
indirect way than you imply.
zach,
If you're asking me: because all drug raw materials would be grown
by Archer Daniels Midland.
Ruthless: Peasants who can take their goods directly to
market without having to deal with cartel overlords looking for a
cut or police doing their damndest to destroy the crops will
be better off regardless of what goods they are taking to
market.
I think that's what both of you said.
OK, that's it. When your regional capital is named Pigg's Peak, I dunno, but I guess you should expect to be fucked.
Welcome Dan. Remembr, don't take anything personally, Gary is a French marine and good luck dealing with the regulars. We're quite a bunch of characters (though for all I know, you could be a longtime lurker/commenter).
Congratulations on your internship, Dan. Good to see that you don't have to worry about living in Pigg's Peak "selling shiny stones to tourists at the side of the road", what with philosophy factories popping up all over.
Welcome, and congrats on the internship. Now, for some advice from a former Poli Sci/ Phil student: for god's sake, pick up a major that will allow you to make money. Seriously. Poverty sucks. Really sucks.
I agree---poverty does suck, which is why I think I might skip grad school and head for the lucrative world of freelancing.
Dude,
My brother in law was a philosophy major in Berkley in the 60s and
now he drives an ice cream wagon.
Take some accounting courses, just in case.
"Lucrative world of freelancing"? Please tell me you're
joking.
Grad school is the way to go. Sure, it's more debt, but there's
more money and a good life on the other side. It's coming up on ten
years now, and I still kick myself in the ass everyday for not
getting a PhD.
"...because all drug raw materials would be grown by Archer
Daniels Midland."
So bullshit it's obvious.
I hope this was a joke.
"...because all drug raw materials would be grown by Archer
Daniels Midland."
I think that's close, but not the whole story.
ADM will be turning corn and soybeans into marijuana. It will cost
several times what real marijuana costs, but after subsidies it
will be dirt cheap.
Dan, a few pointers on generating comments to your posts.
A) Post a story about some crazy-ass conspiracy theory; or
B) Post a story about religion, and un-ban "He Who Cannot Be
Named."
Of course, if you choose A, it doubles as research into the
electoral prospects of the L.P. by confirming pre-conceived notions
of said party's members.
Wouldn't "deadly insecticide" help the plants grow, by
preventing insects from eating the crop? Do they mean "deadly
herbicide"? Or is the only reason to spray it to get the
cultivaters sick?
Or does somebody need to do a better job editing their copy?
"So bullshit it's obvious."
Maybe you were hoping for Monsanto? What's the problem here?
ADM will be turning corn and soybeans into marijuana. It
will cost several times what real marijuana costs, but after
subsidies it will be dirt cheap.
*dies*
is it just assumed that ADM will never employ these
peasants?
granted, when i think, "good pot", i don't think, "swaziland"...
but hey, maybe we're all missing out on something here.
I agree---poverty does suck, which is why I think I might
skip grad school and head for the lucrative world of
freelancing.
Ah yes, freelance philosophizing. There's a guy who hangs out near
my bus stop who does that. The one with the "will philosophize for
food" sign.
freelance philosophy can actually be huge if you can work a few miracles into the act.
"granted, when i think, "good pot", i don't think,
"swaziland"... but hey, maybe we're all missing out on something
here."
According to
this site, Swaziland is a big source of Sativa, aka
"skunk", although Transkei Green is probably grown there too.
...I doubt any of it makes it into the United States though, just
like when people buy Thai Sticks here, it ain't from Thailand. It's
just that the seeds originally came from Thailand. I think most of
what's consumed in the United States is grown in the United
States.
Don't listen to them, Daniel -- I had a very good friend in college who majored in philosophy for her undergrad. She went from there to law school, and is now a well-compensated labor/contracts attorney.
zach,
No, I assume ADM will eventually employ the peasants in Congostan,
but long after the War on Drugs is a memory, Berkeleyites will
still be nagging the WalMarts and ADM's, just because the latter
think big.
Welcome to the Thunderdome Daniel.
Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, dyin' time is here!
Welcome on board Daniel. Now, spin the wheel, Raggedy Man!
blammo, I actually think they maean deadly to human
beings.
Welcome Daniel. Always a pleasure to meet another student of the
Retail Sciences.
Hi Dan! I am currently a sophomore in college, and hope to eventually get an internship that involves blogging, so I think you might be my new role model. I go to Northeastern, which is a corporate-statist indentured servitude factory, so I haven't really found an outlet for my libertarian ideas. Since giving up on technical education I have been spending a lot of time, uh... studying the social construction of the drug war.
I got an IT degree from a school that now markets themselves via
pop-up ads.
I work in my major. I'm not too proud of where I got my education,
but here I am.
Hi Dan.
Welcome to the world of reason.
People have been giving great topics for you to post. How about
"global warming" or "urban sprawl". Those are good ones. Joe, a
regular, is a great poster who never backs down from good debate.
He is in the spirit of our dearly-departed regular from two years
ago, Lefty of Minnesota. Joe knows lots about urban planning, and
he calls out those "libertarians" who would bully others with the
tyranny of the majority. It's always a good post when those barbs
start flying. (*chuckle*)
Have a great summer. Have lots of fun.
What area of philosophy is your area? Hopefully not the Frankfurt
School :)
(does it help that my favorite word is "Schadenfreude"?)
cheers,
drf
I majored in philosophy, too, and went to law school. That means
I am emphatically not making a living in my major.
Law school isn't really a grad school anyway. Its more of a trade
school, and the least fun I've ever had outside of a law
firm.
Still, judging by recent classes of summer interns, there are hot
chicks in law school these days.
Not to go off-topic or anything . . . .
honestly, while i see pot being legalized in most of the world
somewhat soon, i don't really see it happening without a slew of
ridiculous trade restrictions, independent to each country. at the
very least it's safe to say it won't be treated as just another
crop. so exactly who takes the lead in the worldwide production of
pot - assuming anyone does - is really hard to tell.
that said, ADM has got the lobbying thing down pat.
Wow, you guys can keep a thread going. Drf: I'm concentrating on contemporary analytic philosophy, partly by choice, partly because that's what the department at my school is about. Tros: I tend to find that there are pockets of liberated thought just about anywhere you could go.
If you really want to make it financially, skip college
altogether. If I had it all to do over, I think I'd have learned to
repair photocopiers or some such.
Decent pay, you can live in a big city or small town, and you
always work in a climate-controlled environment.
Starting out of high school, you get a four to six (+) year jump on
retirement and avoid the academic debt.
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