Drug boats and more
By Jim Thompson
HCP columnist
John Stith Pemberton (1831-88), a pharmacist and Confederate Army officer, invented Coca-Cola. It is estimated that the original formula contained about nine milligrams of cocaine per glass, a small amount compared to “recreational” drug use today.
Coca-Cola became completely cocaine free in 1929. Which is about the time cocaine became a widely used “recreational” drug.
Over the years, there have been many government initiatives to stop illegal drug use (of cocaine and beyond) involving education and interdiction. To date, all have failed. Mind-altering drugs are just too attractive for many people.
Now comes President Trump and Secretary Hegseth with a bold idea. Blow the drug-transporting boats out of the water. This has evoked a range of reactions from the American citizenry agreeing strongly to disagreeing strongly with this idea.
Illegal drugs cause many, many deaths every year. Likewise, abortions and to a certain extent, people with guns. And let’s not forget automobiles and family abuse.
The headline reactions to these preventable deaths are wide ranging. The headline reactions to these preventable deaths are political, too. You can almost tell someone’s political leanings based on which of these methods of actionable death are involved.
We can use force and persuasion to attempt to stomp out these preventable deaths. Sometimes, such methods have some success.
I believe real progress will be made only when we change people’s attitudes. Some may say change people’s hearts. This is done through Biblical study. If there is anything we are short on these days, it is Biblical study. No one is shooting boats out of the water that are attempting to deliver more Bibles to the United States.
I believe in signaling. Everyone should have a Bible within arm’s length, no matter where they work. Keep it prominent, in your store, in your office, wherever you spend your day. You just may be inspired to open it and read a bit once in a while.
Jim Thompson, formerly of Marshall, is a graduate of Hillsboro High School and the University of Cincinnati. He resides in Duluth, Ga. and is a columnist for The Highland County Press.
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Comment
Now hold on there...
Maybe it's just me but when I think of going after "drug lords" and "narco-terrorists" where they live, I think of guys like President of Honduras Juan Orlando Hernández, who the Biden administration extradited, charged, tried and convicted in 2022 for weapons violations and the distribution of 400 tons (ten 40' shipping containers) of cocaine.
Again, just my opinion, but I don't consider the guys riding riding in boats to unload a couple of hundred pounds of his "product" to be drug lords.
I wonder how much Mr. Hernández paid for his Presidental pardon after serving one year of his 45 year sentence?
••••Publisher's note: My point was for the libs who claimed that DJT invented the term "narco-terrorist." It's been around at least since Biden was a senator "100 years ago" as he frequently claimed.
A 'procedural' crime...
OOOOO! A weapons violation! A conviction of tax fraud too! But enough about the Joe Biden pardon of Hunter Biden...
Not so fast
Jim,
It seems the Trump "bold idea" for dealing with narco-terrorists is straight from the Joe Biden playbook; and yes, Biden used the term narco-terrorists. As a U.S. senator, Biden was an active participant in the "war on drugs" discourse of the late 1980s. In a 1989 Democratic Party response to the administration of then-President George H.W. Bush, Biden delivered a speech calling for a tougher approach. The relevant quotes from his speech include:
• "Let's go after the drug lords where they live with an international strike force."
• "There must be no safe haven for these narco-terrorists and they must know it."