
The war on drugs has been an on going campaign of prohibition by the US with the help of domestic and foreign military forces to stop and reduce the illegal drug trade. This initiative includes a set of drug policies of the US to stop the import, manufacture, sale, and use of illegal drugs. President Dwight D. Eisenhower began the war on narcotic addiction at the local, national, and international level with the establishment of an Interdepartmental Committee on Narcotics on November 27, 1954, which was responsible for coordinating executive branch anti-drug efforts. The phrase "War on Drugs" first came into common use after President Richard Nixon used it at a press conference on June 17, 1971, during which he described illegal drugs as "public enemy number one in the United States."

There are those that believe there are ways to win the war without legalizing drugs. One of the ways is to send people convicted of drug use or possession to drug rehab instead of prison. That way, they would get help for their addiction and would pay for their stay there. After that, would be released from rehab once their doctor says they are ready for release. This way it could collapse the Narcotics Market, because Drug Dealers would have less customers to sell their dope to. Another way to is educate the youth, who are highly susceptible to buy and use drugs, about the harms of using drugs. American schools are a huge outlet for the sale of drugs. By educating them, there is hope that they will use and demand less drugs, which will in the long run hurt the drug trade. Ann Coulter in her book, "How to Talk to a Liberal (If You Must)" stated that "Prohibition resulted in startling reductions in alcohol consumption (over 50 percent)." Prohibition of alcohol was effective and it can do the same thing for drugs, and so drugs should not be legalized.

I firmly believe that the war can be won if drugs were legalized. The war on drugs has failed. The drugs keep getting trafficked into the US and more lives are being lost because of the high demand. Mexico, the epicenter of it all, is suffering great violence from this. Mexico's drug gangs are more powerful than the government itself. According to the article "Briefing: The gang war that's ravaging Mexico", the drug cartels are getting a staggering income from the drug smuggling, from $8 billion to $23 Billion a year. The gangs can afford to buy powerful weapons and don't have a problem killing police, journalists, and politicians. The cartels are responsible for the deaths of more than 5000 lives in the past year alone. According to Norm Stamper, a former police chief of Seattle, “We’ve spent a trillion dollars prosecuting the war on drugs... What do we have to show for it? Drugs are more readily available, at lower prices and higher levels of potency. It’s a dismal failure.” What Norm Stamper said is true and that is why drugs should be legalized. With the legalization of drugs, the cartels will lose power because there is no one that is demanding drugs from them. These cartels have power based on that they are the only ones producing the drugs. If legalized, the US can have different companies produce them and regulate the sale of the drugs. This will create a lot more jobs and the US can tax the drugs, just like alcohol and tobacco, and that produces a source of revenue. The cartels would then lose all income, thus losing power, and finally bringing the war on drugs to an end.
FACTS
* The drug cartels are getting a staggering income from the drug smuggling, from $8 billion to $23 Billion a year
* The cartels are responsible for the deaths of more than 5000 lives in the past year alone
* The phrase "War on Drugs" first came into common use after President Richard Nixon used it at a press conference on June 17, 1971, during which he described illegal drugs as "public enemy number one in the United States."

