Three New Zealanders Have Spent 2+ Months in Detention in the UAE, Still Uncharged After Drug Bust
Patrick Kennedy can move there if he wants


Patrick Kennedy, the former congressman who stopped using drugs in 2009 and launched Project SAM, a well-funded marijuana prohibitionist group, likes to say that "incarceration is a powerful motivator." As a Kennedy, he must know this primarily from theory, not practice. Nevertheless, even as a theory it's a weak one. Forty years of drug war has been a failure by almost any measure, even as America's prison population ranks as highest in the world. Incarceration doesn't seem to be motivating anyone outside of the drug warriors in law enforcement, and elsewhere in government and out of it, who profit with their very livelihoods from the criminalization of drugs. Could drug laws be harsher?
Consider the United Arab Emirates (UAE), where the New Zealand Herald reports three citizens of New Zealand have been detained since December after some kind of drug bust, and none have yet been charged. One appeared for a ten-minute hearing, which ended with an adjournment for three weeks. The New Zealand Herald notes that the UAE has harsh drug laws; one Briton in 2012 was sentenced to death by firing squad for selling less than an ounce of marijuana. The threat of death penalty hasn't stamped out the UAE's people engaging in non-violent activity problem "drug problem." Twelve people have been sentenced to death in the country since 2007, though the Herald stresses that an appeals process involving up to 19 judges means none of them have been executed, yet. And a UAE prosecutor claims up to 30 men in the country of 9 million died of alleged overdoses last year.
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I can't help but think some drug warriors look at the UAE, lick their lips, and think "if only".
A mandatory minimum sentence for poppy seeds? "Due process" that is even more worthless than ours? I'm sure they do.
I seem to recall some guy getting arrested for having poppy seeds embedded in the treads of his shoes, after he visited a Bagel shop at Frankfurt airport before flying to Dubai.
If his life weren't on the line, it would be hi-larious.
"after some kind of drug bust"
KIWI BATH SALTZ?
Even worse, Israeli Dead Sea bath salts.
"Is this some kind of bust?"
"Yes ma'am, it's very impressive."
"after some kind of drug bust"
What do you call a bra filled with Quaaludes?
Has anyone put together estimates about just how much the WoD has contributing to expanding the scope and scale of police activity? This is the only reasonable measure of "success" attributable to the policy.
I'm comfortable with the guesstimate of "too much" for now.
Should have stuck to topless sunbathing...
Memo to self: leave the pot at home if ever traveling to UAE on bidness (cause I don't see going there for "pleasure" in the near future)
Thank Semiramis that the only business that I have ever had with the UAE could be conducted by email.
I know a few people going to work there soon, as Cleveland Clinic is building a new hospital in Abu Dhabi. Gonna be interesting to hire anesthesiologists...
And a UAE prosecutor claims up to 30 men in the country of 9 million died of alleged overdoses last year.
That's nothing. A Maryland police chief claims that in Colorado, a state of 5.2 million, 37 people died the day of marijuana overdose after marijuana was legalized.
He cited what everyone except him knew to be a satire site.
Salon? Oh, you meant unintentional self-parody.
Uh...intentional parody. Sorry, headache.
Sorry, cross-post.
No.
Will somebody remind me why we still do business with these 8th Century barbarians? Oh yeah, because the idiot scolds on the left think pumping our own oil out of the ground is more evil than subsidizing the kind of moral jihadists we end up doing business with over there.