Drug Dealing and the Bible

WandererInFog

New member
You completely ignore the fact that it is prohibition and this idiotic "war on drugs" that creates this violence.

But is the core of the problem that the drugs are illegal or is that we're running the drug war in such a way as to be more concerned with seizing people's property than with actually reducing the importation, manufacture, and sale of those drugs which are illegal? :idunno:

One thing that really makes me question the notion that legalizing marijuana would lead to a reduction in crime is that while people make comparisons to prohibition, they seem to ignore is that Mafia actually became more powerful after prohibition ended than they were during it as it forced them to take their capital and diversify into a broader array of criminal enterprises, many considerably worse than bootlegging, while what ultimately brought their power to the tiny fraction of that was the government seeking to actually enforce the law and prosecute them.
 

Granite

New member
Hall of Fame
So that's your explanation of why 6,000,000 Torontonians
got up for work yesterday and didn't feel the need to kill anyone?

I guess its clear that you have no answer for the existance of law abiding citizens.

I wasn't talking about them, Naz, I was talking about you.

Your mind is morbid and your heart is sick. You're hooked on despair and horror.
 

Nazaroo

New member
Your mind is morbid and your heart is sick. You're hooked on despair and horror.

You've just degenerated into a broken record, Granite.
You just skip over the same line again and again and again.
I guess thats what alcohol does.
The brain gets stuck and you can't help yourself.

What you do is morbid and sick, friend.
You're obviously hooked on spamming every thread, every discussion,
with the same tired old line.
Its the old hypnotism gag.

Do you honestly think that by repeating yourself endlessly,
I'll somehow come to believe you?
Or are you pushing your brainwashing technique on the weaker minds here,
who innocently read the posts, and don't bother to count how many times
you pump the same poison into their little minds?

You're a professional, thats for sure.
But I sure hope you're just an auto-bot.
Because this task really should be done by an auto-bot,
and a real human being shouldn't be tied up doing
such a brainless, tedious, boring task.

If you're being paid for this, I feel sorry for you,
that you couldn't secure a better job in whatever organization
is paying you to waste your time doing this.
If you're stuck in a wheelchair somewhere,
behind some computer screen,
and this really is your life (just search the forums to see how much time you're wasting),
I really feel sorry for you.

I'll be praying for a miracle for you,
that you finally get out of your wheelchair, or hospital bed,
just so you can get some fresh air and sunshine.
No organization, not even the CIA, would be stupid enough
to willingly pay you for this tripe.
So you must be ripping them off.

you have my sympathy, in all sincerity,
Nazaroo
 

Granite

New member
Hall of Fame
You are an absolute cloud cuckoolander. The last time someone went this far off the deep end was when they accused me of being Mossad.
 

TomO

Get used to it.
Hall of Fame
You are an absolute cloud cuckoolander. The last time someone went this far off the deep end was when they accused me of being Mossad.

:noid:








:plain:













:think:























Can you introduce me to Ziva? :Shimei:


ziva-david-photo.jpg
 

Granite

New member
Hall of Fame
You're too dumb for Mossad.
And they don't pay people to be household pests.
And your real name would be Joycelin

:rotfl:

Thanks, I needed that. Comic relief for me, breathless dead serious business for you. As I said: you're hooked on the worst things you can find.
 

Nazaroo

New member
:rotfl:

Thanks, I needed that.... As I said: you're hooked on the worst things you can find.

Aren't you just projecting your own story again?

Going by your own statements,
you're hooked on the worst thing you can find.
Why else are you still here,
ever posting but never contributing?

Better ask mom about me and the CAS.
We must have been separated at birth.
But you seem to have got the cleft palate and autism
from daddy's little binges.
 

Granite

New member
Hall of Fame
Aren't you just projecting your own story again?

Going by your own statements,
you're hooked on the worst thing you can find.
Why else are you still here,
ever posting but never contributing?

Better ask mom about me and the CAS.
We must have been separated at birth.
But you seem to have got the cleft palate and autism
from daddy's little binges.

:yawn:

Every time you open your mouth your prove my point. Thanks. I'll leave you with Gerald now, but it seems clear you are easily one of the most disturbed posters here. Get help.
 

Nazaroo

New member
Legal Drug Cartels Immune from Prosecution...

Legal Drug Cartels Immune from Prosecution...

Nude, bound woman found dead in Big Pharma CEO’s home, not yet a criminal investigation



"If a dead woman was found naked, with her hands tied behind her back and her feet bound hanging from a balcony, most people would think it would become a criminal investigation from the outset.
When the home in which the woman is discovered belongs to the Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board of Scottsdale, Arizona based Medicis Pharmaceuticals Corporation, this is not the case.
Medicis Pharmaceuticals Corporation is a healthcare and biotechnology company which Shacknai founded in January of 1988 after a career in government capacities and the corporate world. He also just happens to be a multi-millionaire.
Adam Shacknai, brother of Jonah Shacknai, discovered the corpse of Jonah’s girlfriend Rebecca Nalepa on Wednesday morning.
Interestingly, Shacknai’s six-year-old son was hospitalized after an “apparent accident” on Monday according to CBS Los Angeles.


Sheriff’s Captain Tim Curran of San Diego County told CBS Los Angeles that, “Because of the unique and bizarre circumstances of this incident, it has yet to be determined if this will become a criminal matter or remain as a death investigation.”
I was astonished by this statement, to say the least. How would a murdered, bound woman hanging from a balcony in her birthday suit be anything other than a criminal matter? I guess when you’re a powerful CEO of a major pharmaceutical corporation, the police give you the benefit of the doubt.
In an age where police justify SWAT teams liquefying veterans, children are executed by police officers for schoolyard scuffles, people filming police officers from their own property are arrested for no reason or brutally beaten, and Americans are arrested for gardening, why would this be treated as anything other than a criminal manner?
If this isn’t a clear case of selective enforcement and unequal treatment, I have no clue what is.
According to reports, Jonah Shacknai’s six-year-old son is now in a coma after falling down a staircase. Jonah’s girlfriend, the now deceased 32-year-old Nalepa, was allegedly the only person home when the accident occurred.

According to investigators, when Adam, Jonah’s brother, discovered the bound and murdered Nalepa he was the only other person present in Jonah’s mansion.
The officers investigating the case conjecture that the boy’s fall and subsequent coma and the murder of Nalepa are isolated and unrelated incidents.
Apparently, it is quite common for a child to fall down a set of stairs and enter a coma while only a girlfriend is present, then just two days later the woman happens to be found bound and killed. I’m not quite sure how any sane investigator would see these two events as unrelated.
Jonah Shacknai was apparently at the hospital when his brother discovered the body of Jonah’s girlfriend.
An autopsy on Nalepa has been completed but the results are being withheld until further tests are performed by the county medical examiner.
According to ABC News, the victim had recently returned to her maiden name of Zahau two months before her death. Her sister, Mary Zahau-Loehner reported that they spoke on the telephone hours before Rebecca’s death.
According to Zahau-Loehner, her sister sounded completely normal the night before she was killed.
According to a San Diego Kennel owner who spoke with the victim less than 24 hours before her death, Rebecca was “shaken by recent events in her home.” What exactly these events are along with most details of the case are still being withheld by the Sheriff’s department.
Autopsy records, requests for copies of search warrants, and recordings of Adam Shacknai’s 911 call will all be ignored during the investigation according to investigators.
The family of the victim has not made any comments regarding the death, but apparently most of the investigation’s focus is being placed on her boyfriend, Shacknai.
The quote published by CBS Los Angeles gives a completely different impression, making it appear that the investigators have not yet decided that this even qualifies as a criminal investigation.
The IB Times makes a point which is conspicuously absent from other media reports,
“There has been no explanation yet from the medical examiner’s office about how Nalepa might have hung herself while her wrists and ankles were bound.”
If the county’s medical examiner can come up with a scenario in which someone can bind their wrists and ankles with an electrical cord and hang themselves naked from a balcony, someone should look in to giving them a Pulitzer Prize for fiction.
Does Shacknai’s history have anything to do with his strangely preferential treatment?
This seems quite reasonable given Shacknai was chief aide to the United States House of Representatives’ committee for health policy from the years of 1977 to 1982 and his position on the Commission on the Federal Drug Approval Process along with the National Council on Drugs."




Big Pharma...
 

Nazaroo

New member
The extent of corruption even within the police forces due to drug trafficking is staggering:

Corrupt Law Enforcement Officer confesses to 1,500 murders


Mexican police say a suspected drug cartel leader they arrested last week has confessed to ordering the killing of 1,500 people in northern Chihuahua state.
Jose Antonio Acosta Hernandez is also a suspect in the murder of a United States consulate employee last year near a border crossing in Ciudad Juarez.
Felipe Calderon, the Mexican president, said on Sunday that the capture was "the biggest blow" to organised crime in Ciudad Juarez since he first sent about 5,000 federal police personnel to the city in April 2010 in a bid to curb violence in one of the world's most dangerous cities.
Acosta, 33, was caught on Friday in the northern city of Chihuahua, said Ramon Pequeno, head of the federal police's anti-drug unit.
The arrest was not confirmed until Sunday, just before Acosta was displayed to the media in Mexico City.
He was limping as he was brought before the cameras, escorted by two masked federal police officers.
Acosta, who is nicknamed "El Diego", told federal police that he had ordered 1,500 killings, Pequeno announced at the news conference.
Investigators say that he was also the mastermind behind an attack that killed a US consulate employee, her husband and the husband of another consulate worker, in Ciudad Juarez.
US prosecutors say they want to try him in that case, and a federal indictment filed in the western district of Texas names Acosta and nine others as conspiring to kill the three US citizens.
Pequeno said that he expects an extradition request to be filed by the US government.
Mexican authorities have identified Acosta as the head of La Linea, a gang of hit men and corrupt police officers who have been acting as the enforcers of the Juarez cartel.
 

Nazaroo

New member
THINGS THAT ARE DOWN RIGHT IMPOSSIBLE TO SAY WHEN DRUNK:

1. Thanks, but I don't want to have sex.
2. Nope, no more beer for me.
3. Sorry, but you're not really my type.
4. Good evening, officer. Isn 't it lovely out tonight?
5. Oh, I couldn't. No one wants to hear me sing.
 

Nazaroo

New member
Burned Alive in Mexican Casino.

DRUG WAR escalating...


http://www.thestate.com/2011/08/26/1947964/us-bears-some-blame-for-casino.html

In a 20-minute televised address to the nation, Calderon gave an unusually blunt assessment of the causes of Mexico's surging violence before flying to Monterrey to place a wreath at the burned-out hulk of the Casino Royale.



He referred repeatedly to the attack as a terrorist act, elevating the conflict to a new level, at least linguistically, and casting it in terms of a broader struggle for control of Mexico. He said rampant corruption within his nation's judiciary and law enforcement bore some blame.
But in unprecedented, direct criticism of the United States, Calderon said lax U.S. gun laws and high demand for drugs stoked his nation's violence. He appealed to U.S. citizens "to reflect on the tragedy that we are living through in Mexico."
"We are neighbors, allies and friends. But you, too, are responsible. This is my message," Calderon said.
He called on the United States to "once and for all stop the criminal sale of high-powered weapons and assault rifles to criminals that operate in Mexico."
Calderon declared three days of national mourning.
The motive of Thursday's attack wasn't clear, but authorities indicated that it might have been part of an extortion campaign against one of many casinos that operate in Mexico on the margins of the law.

Calderon's blast at the United States underscored frustrations here that there's little appreciation north of the border for the role Americans have played in strengthening the cartels that are responsible for the grisly violence that's claimed as many as 40,000 lives in the last five years.
With weapons bought in the United States, the gangs, whose roots lie in drug smuggling but which have branched out into a variety of criminal enterprises, are better armed than the police tasked with combating them. While Calderon's government has captured dozens of mid- and upper-level gangsters, beheadings, public executions and kidnappings are epidemic, and many Mexicans feel less safe than ever.
"Part of the tragedy that we Mexicans are living through has to do with the fact that we are next to the world's greatest drug consumer," Calderon said in his speech, "and also the greatest global arms vendor that pays billions of dollars each year to criminals."
In a statement, President Barack Obama condemned "the barbaric and reprehensible attack" and lauded Mexico's "brave fight to disrupt transnational criminal organizations that threaten both Mexico and the United States."
Of the 52 who died in Thursday's firebombing, 35 were women, mostly in their 40s, 50s and 60s, who were passing time in the casino on a weekday afternoon, civil defense officials said. Ten people were injured in the blaze.
A video taken by a closed-circuit camera that overlooks the casino's entrance showed that the attack unfolded in only two and a half minutes. Four vehicles can be seen pulling into the driveway of the Casino Royale, on San Jeronimo Avenue in a posh area of western Monterrey, at 3:48 p.m. Gunmen jump out of the cars and enter the casino, carrying three canisters apparently filled with gasoline.
Moments later, gamblers and employees are seen scuttling from the building. Black smoke then pours from the casino as the assailants jump into the vehicles and drive off.
Witnesses who fled the casino said the gunmen shouted at gamblers to flee before setting the building ablaze, indicating that they didn't seek a high casualty count.


Initial reports said the gunmen sprayed gunfire inside the casino, but Nuevo Leon Gov. Rodrigo Medina said none of the 52 victims discovered by Friday morning had bullet wounds.
"It was an indescribable scene," said Reynaldo Ramos of Monterrey Civil Defense. Most victims died from smoke inhalation rather than direct contact with fire, he said. Cell phones on the bodies of victims rang constantly as rescuers removed them, he added.
He said some 300 people were in the casino at the time of the attack.
No arrests were made immediately. The Attorney General's Office offered a $2.5 million reward for information leading to the conviction of the attackers.

Monterrey is seen as a bellwether for Mexico's rising chaos. Home to some of Mexico's biggest companies and with the highest standard of living in the nation, with a per capita income of $18,000 per year, the city has been identified with booming entrepreneurship. As recently as early last year, Monterrey was hailed as a safe, prosperous city, a Mexican version of Dallas or Houston.


But a turf war between large criminal syndicates, the Gulf Cartel and Los Zetas, now unfolds in city streets daily. Drive-by shootings, roadblocks, gangland grenade attacks and bodies hanging from overpasses are common. Earlier this week, gangsters hung a still-living victim by the neck from a pedestrian walkway in the city in broad daylight, then took potshots at the victim with weapons.



Local media said that one of the main investors in Casino Royale is a company, Atracciones y Emociones Vallarta, that operates 26 casinos across northern Mexico. Its owners are reportedly relatives of a former mayor of Monterrey.
Gangs routinely shake down casinos for payoffs. On Wednesday, gunmen threw a grenade at a casino in the city of Saltillo in northern Coahuila state.


Read more: http://www.thestate.com/2011/08/26/1947964/us-bears-some-blame-for-casino.html#ixzz1WEfyshWL
 
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