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Crime Up? Down With the Drug War

Oh noos: the po-lice and associated eggheads can’t figure out why Northeast Brooklyn murders — that includes Bushwick — have gone up. Now, “up” is of course a relative notion: 212 in a borough of 2.5 million people. This New York Magazine article does little to dispel my assumption that probably 97% of the victims are also perps of some form. The remainder are their unfortunate neighbors. It’s why, when choosing a new neighborhood, it’s pointless to pay attention to the murder part of the crime stats — unless you’re planning on moving into a “Crips” floor at the Bushwick Houses.

Those whose agenda it serves of course have their own view of the problem: gentrification is to blame. The article mentions, as if to back up a comment about people pushed out of Bed-Stuy and into Bushwick, that in 2006, “Bushwick’s population jumped by more than 8,000.” I’m sure that’s true. But these people weren’t gentrified out of Bed-Stuy — they were gentrified out of the East Village and Williamsburg. Or they came from Mexico to work. Bushwick is not a catch basin for the poverty-mired of Brooklyn, it’s a magnet for the upwardly mobile who still have a long way to go.

The academics and cops of course mention the drug trade as the fuel for this murderous fire, but stops short of what makes selling drugs such a violent endeavor: it’s the drug war, stupid. From the 70s, throughout the crack epidemic, to now, the government has not changed its policy on dictating to Americans what they can put in their bodies. Since prohibition hardly dents demand, and no state anywhere, ever has yet found a way to crush the market signals for demand, there are people dedicated to making a living supplying that demand. Since the government has made punishment of the non-crime of drug selling so outrageously severe, the only people ballsy and reckless enough to sell drugs are those who have nearly nothing to lose, and rather impaired senses of the value of human life in general. You end up with the most violent elements having most of the money and weapons. Not a recipe for peace.

Drug prohibition created the problem of rampant crime in the United States. Drug prohibition helped keep New York a shithole for decades. Hell, drug prohibition has destroyed entire Central American countries and empowered vicious militias in Mexico and Colombia. It’s responsible for millions of deaths, holocaustian proportions.

End drug prohibition, and you will nearly end what little violence is left in New York. There will still be residual knuckleheads around because of the cultures incubated during the last 40 years, but that will eventually peter out with no drug industry to support it. Until then, stay clear of the projects and you won’t get shot. Not that anyone who doesn’t actually live there usually does.

5 Responses to “Crime Up? Down With the Drug War”

  1. Jimmy Legs Says:

    speaking of which, Jeremy who do you support in the primaries? :^)

  2. Jeremy Says:

    JL, you have me all figured out. :D

  3. longtime in the hood Says:

    maybe jeremy, one day will become a man, be a resposible father and you may understand why the general populace supports this war. Condoned access for for your “son”?? If your son at 16 wants, thinks it might be cool to poison his body and/or mind your neighbors just smile.

  4. Jeremy Says:

    “Longtime,” you have addressed none of my arguments, and you have made no legitimate ones of your own. In addition, nobody pays attention to a person who can’t type even a single coherent sentence. You fail.

  5. Dresden Says:

    “…the city’s sharpest murder spike, in Bushwick’s 83rd Precinct, where a peace between area Latin gangs has fallen part…”

    The 83!!! That’s where I’m living! Give ‘em hell Jeremy! You sound better than William S. Burroughs!

    The idea that the “war against drugs” has anything to do with stopping drugs is misinformed ignorance. If the drugs stop, the law enforcement people are out of jobs. It’s an unfortunate and vicious circle. I’m with Jeremy.

    NYC could also use a red light district, one that is controlled and cleaned up and taxed! The back of the Village Voice is ridiculous.

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