Consideration of social justice to allow low drug use


- The Middle Ages are over

- Marijuana, opium, hashish have been banned since the British era, only a few kingdoms had such a ban, the rest of the kingdoms had

Who says alcohol is not available in a state where alcohol is banned? Gets as much as he sees. Everyone knows that. Bottles of 'English' are available in half an hour only when 'happy' people call. So the bags for the poor are kept in a certain place. It is hidden under a pile of leaves. So a little farther away, under the shade of a tree, the money is placed in the hands of the person holding the water feast, and four or six 'bags' are taken in proportion to the amount given from under the leaves. This includes the 'honesty' of gambling time. A bottle of 'Kothali' or 'Desi' is taken for the same amount of money given. All this is well known. The police also know everything, they also know everything. People also know that for all this, there must be an unwritten Mou-Memorandum of Understanding between the police and the bootleggers. There is nothing new in that. This is 'Aage se chali aati hai.'

In the Middle Ages, there were no restrictions on alcohol, opium or marijuana. Akbar should not drink alcohol, should not allow opium cultivation and should not allow 'Firangi' to be crushed. Salim-Jahangir was given a clear admonition before he died but Salim let all three of them happen. He drank twenty bowls of wine every day. Remained oblivious to the cultivation of opium and Dr. Watts gave his prince an injection and healed Firangi for trade. Aurangzeb tried hard to get rid of alcohol and opium. But it was almost impossible to stop the cultivation of opium in the vast empire that stretched from the Hindu Kush Arakan Yoma and the Karakoram to the Eucalyptus, or to hold liquor conventions. After the death of Aurangzeb (1908) and especially since the wars over the throne in 1911, there was no central power over India. Subas and princely states are not being controlled. Opium and alcohol re-emerged. The period from 1911 to 1917 was an era of chaos and darkness in the country.

The Marathi Maharajah was so engrossed in wars that he had no time for such sanctions. Alcohol and opium, on the other hand, had reached the Maratha chiefs and the masses. The Treaty of Salbai in 1917, when Bajirao II signed the Marquis of Hastings, brought British rule over the then unbroken Hindustan from the time of the Governor General. He banned opium, marijuana, hashish. It accepted British sovereignty. Alcohol, opium, marijuana etc. in Hindu or Muslim kingdoms of any country. There were no restrictions above. Alcohol was not banned even in British India. Raids for opium marijuana were difficult.

From now on, the situation is different. At present, the police have the facility to be contacted wirelessly. Roads are good, vehicles are fast. Yet alcohol is also easily found where alcohol is banned. And in certain places, opium is also found stuck between layers of paper. However, such places are rare but Bandhani knows about it. It seems that this contamination cannot be removed.

Let alone India, drug contamination is rampant in every country of the world. Troops from the Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) are back with trained dogs sniffing and catching drugs. Yet that contamination does not stop. It is also a well-known fact that these drugs are unloaded from abroad by boats at small ports or at certain places on the coast, taking advantage of the darkness of the night. That doesn't just happen in India. The west coast of Mexico is notorious for that. The drug arrives in the U.S. from Mexico. The situation is similar in South American nations. In Panama, the president was linked to the drug mafia. So even top Colombian officials are said to be linked to the drug mafia.

Directly on the Indian subcontinent, the opium trade is the main source of income for the current Taliban government in Afghanistan. Echoes If we go back to the 19th century, the sale or possession of opium in India was banned in British India but its export was not banned. Therefore, Indian traders mostly exported opium to China. As a result, there were three opium wars with the British government and the Manchu government of China from 18 to 19 and 181 (?). This is about the 19th century.

Whatever it is, but even in the 21st century, India's Ministry of Social Justice is considering allowing small amounts of drug use. It's shocking. This is a country where a starving boy is caught beating his wallet to death. Hundreds of crores of scammers can stay in five star hotels abroad. Can take lavish meals. Cabaret dance can be enjoyed at night. The beggar boy is lying on the road hungry and thirsty. It is full of smoke.

It is said that there is a 'rule-of-law' in the country. Yes it works. In the Middle Ages, there was a 'rule-of-law' that never touched the rich or the powerful and never left them starving.

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