Sunday, June 05, 2011

MUGS FOR DRUGS

A report on drugs was released with great fanfare this week by the Global Commission on Drug Policy[1]. They say the war on drugs has failed, as if there has been a war! Indeed the title page of their report contains the phrase War on Drugs with the word War scribbled out. The Global Commission on Drug Policy Mugs for Drugs make no mention of Afghanistan in their report. Why? Because they would have to explain the rise and rise of opium production in that region that has been occupied by the NArco Terrorist Organisation NATO for nearly 10 years.

And who funded the report? George Soros via Open Society Foundations.

And who contributed to this report? George Schultz along with other globalist minions.

And who is now supporting the report? Bilderberg Martin Wolf at the FT[2].

Wolf would not be allowed to call for a radical change in drug policy in arguably the mouth piece of the New World Order (the chief rival being the Washington Post) if drug legalisation was not part of the agenda.

There has been no war on drugs. That's why it has failed. There has been no war on drugs, just like there has been no war on banking and derivatives.

There is a war on the poor, a war on global food and water supply, a war on freedom, and a war on conciousness (which drugs are a part of).

But there is no war on drugs.

There never has been.

I have been proposing for years that most if not all aspects of society will be legalized or decriminalized. Why? Because in a cashless society everything needs to be able to be bought and sold in e-currency. It may be possible to buy drugs or snuff in hard objects or even humans, but for the weekend user of MDMA what else could be used except cash? In a cashless society it will be illegal to trade in cash or to trade goods directly. The cashless society is part of the surveillance grid to snoop on every aspect of our lives.

Why would Soros push this?

Why would the FT allow Wolf to push this?

Drugs do your consciousness in, and they need to be legalized for a cashless society.

There is a case for medical use of cannabis, but that's about it.

Drugs do your consciousness in and are part of the real war on you and your consciousness.

[1] Global Commission on Drug Policy Report, http://www.globalcommissionondrugs.org/Report

[2] We should end our disastrous war on drugs, FT, 3/6/2011

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