traveltrish




I'm doing 28 things
 

traveltrish's Life List

  1. 1. get out of debt
    1 entry . 39 cheers
    11,042 people
  2. 2. save up 3 months worth of salary for emergencies
    30 cheers
    171 people
  3. 3. walk for a half of an hour daily
    1 entry . 46 cheers
    1 person
  4. 4. exercise three times a week
    3 entries . 18 cheers
    322 people
  5. 5. graduate from college
    6,132 people
  6. 6. make an emergency kit and plan
    38 cheers
    8 people
  7. 7. Write a will
    13 cheers
    774 people
  8. 8. duct tape somebody to the ceiling
    5 entries . 76 cheers
    4 people
  9. 9. Reupholster my desk chair
    1 entry . 16 cheers
    4 people
  10. 10. learn to make stained glass
    33 cheers
    141 people
  11. 11. backpack through Europe
    32 cheers
    4,967 people
  12. 12. own a hybrid car
    1 entry . 40 cheers
    592 people
  13. 13. see the northern lights
    18 cheers
    16,927 people
  14. 14. become a better photographer
    1 entry . 17 cheers
    1,975 people
  15. 15. design and build furniture
    20 cheers
    7 people
  16. 16. construct or live in an eco-friendly house
    41 cheers
    64 people
  17. 17. live by the ocean
    28 cheers
    624 people
  18. 18. max out a roth IRA
    1 entry . 14 cheers
    2 people
  19. 19. Read one book a month
    5 entries . 29 cheers
    705 people
  20. 20. travel the world
    13 cheers
    18,583 people
  21. 21. Vote in every election
    3 entries . 31 cheers
    23 people
  22. 22. grow old gracefully!
    18 cheers
    170 people
  23. 23. make a smaller ecological footprint
    1 entry . 21 cheers
    1,042 people
  24. 24. practice mindful consumption
    1 entry . 25 cheers
    171 people
  25. 25. take down corporate america
    15 cheers
    25 people
  26. 26. end the war on drugs.
    3 entries . 14 cheers
    3 people
  27. 27. Name 10 songs that over the course of time, have meant something to me, and say why
    9 cheers
    21 people
  28. 28. Donate 1,000,000 grains of rice through freerice.com
    66 people
Recent entries
adopt a Greyhound
Someday... 2 years ago

I have to put this one aside for awhile. I need to get some major traveling done before I take on the responsibility of a dog.



end the war on drugs. (read all 3 entries…)
Former police chief advocates legal drugs 2 years ago

Former Seattle Police Chief Norm Stamper advocated the decriminalization of drugs in a speech before a packed audience Wednesday in Arntzen Hall 4.

Western sociology professor Ron Helms, who said he organized the event to expose the community to a controversial viewpoint, introduced Stamper to the audience.

“When I see opportunities to bring people in who can offer insight and thereby stimulate public discourse on policy, I jump in,” Helms said.

The reasoning for decriminalizing drugs, Stamper said, comes from the largely ineffective war on drugs the Nixon administration started in 1971.

In an excerpt from his new book, published in May and titled “Breaking Rank: A Top Cop’s Expose on the Dark Side of American Policing,” he said American taxpayers are financing the war on drugs at a price of more than $50 billion per year. So far this year, taxpayers spent $59 billion on the drug war; with more than $1 trillion spent since the 1970s, to no avail, he said.

Near the end of his speech, he added that the government’s anti-drug movement has placed all of the drug industry’s power squarely in the hands of organized-crime leaders.

The illegal drug market thrives on government drug prohibition because it can exploit customers by charging far more for an illegal substance than it cost to acquire.

Should the government legalize drugs, it could tax distributors similar to the way it does with liquor stores, Stamper said. This would create less price exploitation, he said.

Stamper said he wanted laws to regulate the age people could purchase or possess the drugs, similar to the alcohol laws police already enforce.

“Anything that moves us toward a saner path is OK by me,” he said.

Stamper said the United States only prohibited the world’s most dangerous intoxicant, alcohol, for a short time in the 1920s.

“Alcohol is hands down the one drug that police officers and anyone else with eyes and mind open will acknowledge is the most damaging drug of all,” he said. “It costs more in money, health costs, personal losses to individuals and their families than all other drugs combined.”

Stamper went on to recount an incident in which, as a 21-year-old recruit training to become a member of the San Diego Police Department, he was sitting with his colleagues in a local doughnut shop and heard a thunderous car crash nearby.

A drunk driver slammed a Lincoln Continental into a tree. The impact propelled the woman sitting in the passenger’s seat into the windshield before sending her flying into the backseat.

“What I remember more than anything else is the smell of the booze because it just reeked,” he said.

Although Stamper calls for the legalization and regulation of all drugs, he believes certain professionals should be drug-free in all circumstances.

Examples he gave included police officers, airline pilots, firefighters, soldiers or any other professionals whose job could put lives at stake if they performed under the influence.

Stamper also advocated the legalization of prostitution.

“It’s long since past time to legalize and regulate the behavior in both the sex industry and drug scenes,” Stamper said.

On the subject of prostitution, Stamper said the U.S. government needs to make it a legitimate business and move it into brothels, as Canada did. This would make the practice safer, as prostitutes would no longer need to face dangers such as murder while walking the streets.

Western senior Erica Rasmussen said she was surprised to hear Stamper’s ideas in his speech.

“I’ve never heard a police officer say ‘we need to legalize drugs,’ ” she said. “I mean, he had a valuable point in that if it was legalized, it would be regulated. But it was just surprising to hear that firsthand.”



exercise three times a week (read all 3 entries…)
This is the entry... 2 years ago

Where I am going to keep track of my progress.



See all entries ...


 

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