Quantcast
Welcome Guest  —  No members and 115 guests online
WELCOME TO THE SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN COMMUNITY
Please join the conversation!

Feel free to explore the site and create an account (click on "Log In" on the upper right hand side).

Uncover cool stories and news and participate in lively discussion that will force you to think.

Be inspired, launch a blog, and stake your place in the realm of the new, new media.
Sciam Observations
Your forest on drugs: America's cocaine habit destroys national parks
If you use cocaine and need a reason to quit—or one to avoid starting in the first place—think conservation. The national parks of Guatemala and other countries have become the preferred haven of drug traffickers who usurp protected areas and burn the forest to serve their own purposes and the demands of their customers, according to Roan McNab, Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) country director for Guatemala.

"They systematically destroy and sabotage forests so they can put in landing fields," McNab said at the WCS State of the Wild conference on April 15. The landing fields enable them to move drugs—particularly cocaine—north by plane to feed American habits.

Similar misuse of parklands has plagued Colombia since at least the 1990s, and the Sierra de la Macarena National Park there is home to some 13,000 hectares (32,100 acres) of coca plantations, according to field data compiled by the illegal-drug monitoring U.N. body the Sistema Integrado de Monitoreo de Cultivos Ilicitos. As a result, officials have targeted the park for herbicide spraying from airplanes. Of course, this indiscriminately kills both coca and forest vegetation as well as poses a risk to the area's frogs and other amphibians.

In Guatemala, drug traffickers clear a new landing strip on average once every six months to avoid being caught. And, over the last 15 years, trafficking has eliminated half the nesting trees of the scarlet macaw. At El Mirador, the jungle-covered remains of a once flourishing Mayan city, its pending listing as a new national park will likely invite narco-traffickers to take over the home of those same scarlet macaws as well as white-lipped peccaries, jaguars and other animals.

In addition to destroying wildlife, eliminating tourism and otherwise terrorizing the locals, drug traffickers also make it impossible for park employees to focus on fighting poaching and other conservation crimes. "Neither archaeologists nor conservationists can go there," McNab noted. "It's difficult for the government to go there unless escorted by a lot of military and police."

As a result, archaeologists, biologists and others have banded together to conduct monitoring flights of these areas with the services of LightHawk, volunteer pilots from the U.S. who help in environmental efforts. But the prognosis is not good, given the success of such "narco-ranchers" in other parts of Central and South America.

"It is time for consumers in the U.S. to own up to the results and impacts of their activities," McNab says. "This is my forest on drugs."

--
Edited by dbiello at 04/21/2008 8:36 AM
11 Comments
Why don't they just allow them to grow it?
Commitment to the global warming mantra really is a religion if you honestly think the threat of it is enough to break me of my cocaine habit. Praise Gaia!
How about for the government of the U.S. and other countries to own up to the results and impacts of their absurd and counter-productive war on drugs? All this environmental damage is not consequence of the cultivation of coca per se, but rather of its criminalization, which pushes its practice outside the law. And once it is there, why would they bother not trampling over conservation regulations? Didn't the U.S. government learn anything from the Prohibition period?
As a Forestry worker in Florida, I can tell you this is not just a problem abroad, or with cocaine. In my forest, marijuana was regularly discovered by the Forestry personnel. Some growing locations were booby trapped, or video taped so they could come after you later. I know while walking through the forest to take biological samples, the thought of getting shot over a little marijuana was alway in the back of my mind.
Revolutionary and terrorist organizations have been supporting themselves with the drug trade for a long time. From FARC, which raises cocaine, to Osama bin Laden, who ran slave plantations in southern Sudan and handles Afghanistan's drug traffic, drugs provide funds.

If we seriously want to undercut terrorism, really make war on it, we have to end the war on drugs. We have to legalize or decriminalize it, like alcohol, perhaps slightly more restricted, and concentrate on collecting tax revenue.

Doing this will:
A. Fight terrorism by removing major source of funds.
B. Release millions of prisoners to be taxpayers.
C. Cut our prison population population by 22%, thereby lowering our collective tax bill.
Drug LEGALIZATION is the obvious answer to this manufactured crisis. This is like saying "america's drug habit causes dangerous carcinogenic chemicals to be sprayed on coca growing areas"! Its not the drug habit, its the stupid drug war (fuelled by the insatiable appetite of the prison-police complex) that fuels the destruction of the environment.
I agree with John Toradze - the war on drugs has caused more problems than it has solved

This has been going on particularly since the time of the Vietnam war.

Whilst not advocating drug use I think it should be recognised that hippies and their like, drifting around drug producing areas, particularly around Arab countries - in fact acted as a buffer between the straight population back home and the locals they drifted amongst. In a strange way they were informal ambassadors

Prohibition merely enhances crime and finances terrorism - even supplying motives for local drug producers to support terrorist organisations. What is a poor village supposed to do? - grow tomatoes? - dream on!

Drug consumption should be treated for what it is - a serious and socially destructive medical problem of individuals and whole communities - Even as such it rarely creates individual problems on the scale of alcohol and tobacco use

You want to pacify the Middle East and Latin America? - not push whole populations down political paths that are against you? - you want to work towards co-operation, gradual change and cosensus? You want to be loved again, as America once rightly was, as the champion of democracy?

Then stop the stupid and ineffective war on drugs. Grow up. Prohibition never works.

Currently in Indonesia there are a group of young Australian people awaiting execution for trafficking crimes. It is arguable that they were set up to be captured through an act of entrapment in which our local Australian police were involved.

This is not the way for even well meaning agencies to become universally popular - especially amongst decent people who oppose the death penalty.

The drug war has created a web of violence, corruption and evil far more than it has fought one

Let medical science be the real tool used to help minimise harm and even solve the problems of addiction.

Violence has a very poor track record. Try compassion, medical research and friendship.
I agree with John Toradze - the war on drugs has caused more problems than it has solved

This has been going on particularly since the time of the Vietnam war.

Whilst not advocating drug use I think it should be recognised that hippies and their like, drifting around drug producing areas, particularly around Arab countries - in fact acted as a buffer between the straight population back home and the locals they drifted amongst. In a strange way they were informal ambassadors

Prohibition merely enhances crime and finances terrorism - even supplying motives for local drug producers to support terrorist organisations. What is a poor village supposed to do? - grow tomatoes? - dream on!

Drug consumption should be treated for what it is - a serious and socially destructive medical problem of individuals and whole communities - Even as such it rarely creates individual problems on the scale of alcohol and tobacco use

You want to pacify the Middle East and Latin America? - not push whole populations down political paths that are against you? - you want to work towards co-operation, gradual change and cosensus? You want to be loved again, as America once rightly was, as the champion of democracy?

Then stop the stupid and ineffective war on drugs. Grow up. Prohibition never works.

Currently in Indonesia there are a group of young Australian people awaiting execution for trafficking crimes. It is arguable that they were set up to be captured through an act of entrapment in which our local Australian police were involved.

This is not the way for even well meaning agencies to become universally popular - especially amongst decent people who oppose the death penalty.

The drug war has created a web of violence, corruption and evil far more than it has fought one

Let medical science be the real tool used to help minimise harm and even solve the problems of addiction.

Violence has a very poor track record. Try compassion, medical research and friendship.
Guys....I've been a passive reader of SCIA for a long time now, but never felt the need to create an account and comment before, but I'm just so overjoyed at all your posts....

Once again, all of the posts above just confirm to me what we have all pretty much known for a long time. SCIA is a haven for those of us who treasure logic and reason, and an anathema to those who value ignorance and hysteria....

The answer to this "environmental" problem is pretty clearly economic, every nasty part of the drug trade is fueled by economic incentive as well

No one grows up wanting to be a drug dealer....but when it's by far the best paying job you can get (that's always hiring, no education necessary etc etc)

It's pretty cut and dry why the disenfranchised would turn to any economic black market to survive....what's not cut and dry is why "the land of the free" imprisons a larger percentage of it's population that any other country in the world....why we routinely prescribe amphetamines (Brand name: Adderall:[ADHD medication] Major active ingredient: dex-amphetamine): to our children to help them keep quiet, but then put them in prison if they grow up and do amphetamines.....ETC ETC ETC.

There are easily at least 500 other reasons why the Drug War is without a doubt the biggest failed social endeavor since New Coke...or Beta Max....or Snakes on a Plane.
Every one should read this, its an insight into the hypocracy of our so called normalacy .... It shows how lunatic the powers that be are, and it is all painted over with the GOD thing, moral thing, etc etc etc. Stupid is as stupid dose, it defies an answer.
First of all, there is no war on drugs. The slogan, which is nothing but a political sop for stupid people, is all there is to it's substance.

However, there is a straight forward solution to the drug problems that have taken root in United States.

A federal law should be passed and enforced (!) that states that anyone who is convicted of profiteering from illegal narcotic (addictive) drugs twice, on the testimony of three trust-worthy, non-felon witnesses should immediately be put to death.

There would be no appeals, no exceptions and no plea bargains.

Anyone, including police, judges, or politicians, who was found to be making money from the trafficking or dealing these murderous substances, would forfeit their life for their greedy crimes. It would take a while to kill all these people, but eventually, society would be rid of this evil and as the drugs disappeared from the streets our nation would become free from this scourge.

Anyone who has had a loved one hooked on this vicious crap, knows that legalizing addictive drugs is the worst thing that could possibly be done. Rather, let's hold those who are causing this plague responsible, by taking their lives away, just like the drugs they deal take away other people's lives.

This is justice, pure and simple! And it would be a very effective solution and a real war on drugs!
 

ADVERTISEMENT