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The Only Way The State Can "Win" The War On Drugs

The Only Way The State Can "Win" The War On Drugs - Libertarian Country

Introduction: A Bitter Realization

The bootlickers love to chant that the War on Drugs must be fought until the bitter end — that law and order will prevail, that society will be purified, that the scourge of narcotics can be crushed through iron-fisted policy.

And you know what? In a twisted, horrific sense, they might actually be right.

The War on Drugs will eventually end. The state will eventually “win.” But their victory won’t come from saving lives, protecting kids, or making communities safer. It will come from pushing drugs into such deadly, concentrated forms that the only people left are corpses.

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The Iron Law’s Death Spiral

The iron law of prohibition is simple: the harder you crack down, the stronger the drugs become.

  • Opium dens gave way to morphine.

  • Morphine gave way to heroin.

  • Heroin gave way to fentanyl.

  • Fentanyl is now giving way to carfentanil and xylazine.

Each step is deadlier than the last. Each escalation makes overdose more likely. And each new crackdown pushes the market further into substances no human body can withstand.

This is the “progress” of prohibition. It’s not healing addicts. It’s engineering stronger poisons, making addiction and withdrawal extremely complicated.


The Pyrrhic “Victory” of Prohibition

What does “winning” look like for the state? Not rehabilitation. Not freedom. Not compassion.

It looks like this:

  • Prisons full of nonviolent offenders.

  • Botched drug raids that kill innocent people. 

  • Graveyards overflowing with overdose victims.

  • Pharmaceutical monopolies protected from natural competition.

  • Cartels raking in record profits until their customers are all dead.

  • Politicians still pounding podiums, bragging about how “tough on drugs” they are.

Victory, in this sense, is genocide by policy. The state doesn’t have to cure addiction. It just has to make the drug supply so lethal that addicts remove themselves from society permanently.


The State’s Real Plan: Attrition by Death

The cold reality is that prohibitionists don’t need to save lives to declare success. They just need the bodies to pile up until demand collapses under the weight of extinction.

That’s why harsher laws never solve the problem. That’s why life sentences for dealers won’t bring back the dead. That’s why every new crackdown ensures the next batch of drugs will be deadlier than the last.

The state’s “victory” is not a clean, drug-free society. It’s a battlefield of broken families, ruined communities, and empty chairs at dinner tables.


The Libertarian Solution: Life Instead of Death

There is another way — a saner, more humane path:

  • End prohibition.

  • Provide safe, regulated options.

  • Treat addiction as a medical issue, not a crime.

  • Allow people to taper down instead of being driven toward stronger and stronger poisons.

The choice is clear: liberty offers life, while prohibition offers only death.


Conclusion: Call It What It Is

The War on Drugs is not a war to save people. It’s a war to bury them. The state can claim “victory” only when the very people it pretends to protect are exterminated.

That’s not justice. That’s not compassion. That’s not freedom.

The only real victory comes when we reject prohibition, embrace liberty, and save lives instead of sacrificing them on the altar of control.

 

Expose the scam. Defend liberty. Wear it on your chest. 👇

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