Cannabis
Related: About this forumBlack People Twice As Likely to be Arrested For Pot In Colorado And Washington — Where It’s Legal
Oh well--it's down from 4 times as likely. Still, this shit has GOT to stop!
http://www.nationofchange.org/news/2016/03/21/black-people-twice-likely-arrested-pot-colorado-washington-legal/
When Colorado and Washington became the first states to legalize recreational marijuana in 2012, drug policy advocates and pot consumers believed racial drug arrests would drop dramatically. That logic inspired voters in Washington, D.C., Oregon, and Alaska to hit the polls two years later in favor of less restrictive pot laws.
But it turns out that advocates and consumers were only half right. Drug arrests have plummeted overall, yet black people are still disproportionately arrested.
Between 2008 and 2014, marijuana arrests decreased by 60 percent in Colorado and 90 percent in Washington. However, a study of FBI Uniform Crime Reports conducted by the Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justices Mike Males concluded that black people in 2008 and 2014 were twice as likely to be arrested for marijuana in both states.
I am surprised and disappointed by this, Males told the Washington Post. The forces that contribute to racial disparities under prohibition are clearly still in place after legalization.
According to a national study from the ACLU in 2013, black users are 3.73 more likely to be arrested for possession than their white counterparts, even though both groups use pot at the same rate. As a result, black people are disproportionately slapped with mandatory minimum sentences and languish in prison for decades even as more states consider legalization.
silverweb
(16,402 posts)[font color="navy" face="Verdana"]How can they get away with arresting someone for something that's now legal?
Any prior denials of discrimination are now out the window!
eridani
(51,907 posts)--to be black. Most street dealers haven't a prayer of raising the cash to open a store.
silverweb
(16,402 posts)[font color="navy" face="Verdana"]I hope everyone's a lot more careful, then, especially blacks - who have more than enough discrimination to deal with already.
Jackie Wilson Said
(4,176 posts)A quote given by key Nixon policy adviser John Ehrlichman in 1994 pertaining to Nixons war on drugs has just been released, and with it comes clear proof that the war on drugs was a complete at total farce.
Something many of us have known for a long time, the war continues.
silverweb
(16,402 posts)[font color="navy" face="Verdana"]As if we didn't already know, but it's nice to have confirmation.
And it's still going on in a different guise. Since we invaded Afghanistan, the U.S. now controls some 80+ percent of the heroin (poppy seeds) worldwide. Our military is helping guard those poppy fields.
Invading Afghanistan was just another "business opportunity" for the mega-rich - and 9/11 just a convenient excuse - paid for by us, and it's still a way to criminalize and eliminate the marginalized in our society - especially blacks, who bear the brunt of our drug laws.
It's not demand fueling the supply, it's the flooding of our poor neighborhoods' streets with drugs that's fueling addiction. Gotta protect Big Pharma's legal oxycodone source, as well as keep the down-and-outs addicted, ya know.