No question but that the US "War on Drugs" has been and continues to be
a spectacular failure on several grounds. New Mexico, by the way, is famous among drug policy reformers nationally, partly because of Gary Johnson's comparatively sane ideas, partly because of the endemic and destructive concentration of heroin addiction in Rio Arriba. The questions around the shape drug policy reform should take and its many consequences go on and on, You could check out the sanest reform lobby in the US, the Drug Policy Alliance, www.drugpolicy.org, if you're interested. Mike >>> owen at backspaces.net 12/22/05 4:49 PM >>> Here's an interesting speech by the ex-governor of NM: http://www.angelfire.com/on/GEAR2000/drugreform.html -- Owen Owen Densmore http://backspaces.net - http://redfish.com - http://friam.org On Dec 22, 2005, at 2:25 PM, Martin C. Martin wrote: > > > Owen Densmore wrote: >> My question from this is why have the War On Drugs at all? If we >> simply treated drugs somewhat along the line of liquor, or possibly >> pharmaceuticals for really hard stuff, do we have *any* idea what >> would happen? > > Yes; many voters would freak out, and toss out whatever politicians > were > responsible. While I think democracies are the best form of > government > overall, they still have drawbacks. "Tough on crime" is another > example; many studies have shown that there are far cheaper & more > effective options to locking people up, but the voting public doesn't > pay much attention. > > It's been said that democracies avoid both the worst and the best > ideas. > For example, the country that's eradicating poverty the fastest is > China, a dictatorship, not India, a democracy. On the other hand, > India > never had the cultural revolution. > > - Martin > > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at Mission Cafe > lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at Mission Cafe lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org |
On 12/22/05, Michael Agar <magar at anth.umd.edu> wrote:
> No question but that the US "War on Drugs" has been and continues to be > a spectacular failure on several grounds. New Mexico, by the way, is > famous among drug policy reformers nationally, partly because of Gary > Johnson's comparatively sane ideas, partly because of the endemic and > destructive concentration of heroin addiction in Rio Arriba. The > questions around the shape drug policy reform should take and its many > consequences go on and on, You could check out the sanest reform lobby > in the US, the Drug Policy Alliance, www.drugpolicy.org, if you're > interested. One of the more startling factoids that turned up in the past month was this article in PLOS Biology: http://biology.plosjournals.org/perlserv/?request=get-document&doi=10.1371/journal.pbio.0030387 ----------------------- Ancient and Recent Positive Selection Transformed Opioid cis-Regulation in Humans Changes in the cis-regulation of neural genes likely contributed to the evolution of our species' unique attributes, but evidence of a role for natural selection has been lacking. We found that positive natural selection altered the cis-regulation of human prodynorphin, the precursor molecule for a suite of endogenous opioids and neuropeptides with critical roles in regulating perception, behavior, and memory. Independent lines of phylogenetic and population genetic evidence support a history of selective sweeps driving the evolution of the human prodynorphin promoter. In experimental assays of chimpanzee?human hybrid promoters, the selected sequence increases transcriptional inducibility. The evidence for a change in the response of the brain's natural opioids to inductive stimuli points to potential human-specific characteristics favored during evolution. In addition, the pattern of linked nucleotide and microsatellite variation among and within modern human populations suggests that recent selection, subsequent to the fixation of the human-specific mutations and the peopling of the globe, has favored different prodynorphin cis-regulatory alleles in different parts of the world. ----------------------- So, we may have language, we may use tools, but natural selection has been making us into opioid factories. -- rec -- |
Owen asked for serious research on the subject of drug policy. Some of the
best is done by RAND, including that by my colleague at Carnegie Mellon, Jon Caulkins. See http://www.rand.org/multi/dprc/pubs/trends_national_1996-00.html Cheers, George On 12/22/05, Roger Critchlow <rec at elf.org> wrote: > > On 12/22/05, Michael Agar <magar at anth.umd.edu> wrote: > > No question but that the US "War on Drugs" has been and continues to be > > a spectacular failure on several grounds. New Mexico, by the way, is > > famous among drug policy reformers nationally, partly because of Gary > > Johnson's comparatively sane ideas, partly because of the endemic and > > destructive concentration of heroin addiction in Rio Arriba. The > > questions around the shape drug policy reform should take and its many > > consequences go on and on, You could check out the sanest reform lobby > > in the US, the Drug Policy Alliance, www.drugpolicy.org, if you're > > interested. > > One of the more startling factoids that turned up in the past month > was this article in PLOS Biology: > > > http://biology.plosjournals.org/perlserv/?request=get-document&doi=10.1371/journal.pbio.0030387 > ----------------------- > Ancient and Recent Positive Selection Transformed Opioid > cis-Regulation in Humans > > Changes in the cis-regulation of neural genes likely contributed to > the evolution of our species' unique attributes, but evidence of a > role for natural selection has been lacking. We found that positive > natural selection altered the cis-regulation of human prodynorphin, > the precursor molecule for a suite of endogenous opioids and > neuropeptides with critical roles in regulating perception, behavior, > and memory. Independent lines of phylogenetic and population genetic > evidence support a history of selective sweeps driving the evolution > of the human prodynorphin promoter. In experimental assays of > chimpanzee?human hybrid promoters, the selected sequence increases > transcriptional inducibility. The evidence for a change in the > response of the brain's natural opioids to inductive stimuli points to > potential human-specific characteristics favored during evolution. In > addition, the pattern of linked nucleotide and microsatellite > variation among and within modern human populations suggests that > recent selection, subsequent to the fixation of the human-specific > mutations and the peopling of the globe, has favored different > prodynorphin cis-regulatory alleles in different parts of the world. > ----------------------- > So, we may have language, we may use tools, but natural selection has > been making us into opioid factories. > > -- rec -- > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at Mission Cafe > lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org > -- George T. Duncan Professor of Statistics Heinz School of Public Policy and Management Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh, PA 15213 (412) 268-2172 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://redfish.com/pipermail/friam_redfish.com/attachments/20051222/28145755/attachment-0001.htm |
In reply to this post by Roger Critchlow-2
On 12/22/05, Roger Critchlow <rec at elf.org> wrote:
> > One of the more startling factoids that turned up in the past month > was this article in PLOS Biology: > > http://biology.plosjournals.org/perlserv/?request=get-document&doi=10.1371/journal.pbio.0030387 Owen's response this morning reminded me that I have more fun decoding these kinds of abstracts than most people. The article is about a very significant difference between the chimpanzee genome and ours, a difference which shows very strong evidence of positive natural selection at the time when humans diverged from the rest of the primates, because the mutations are universal in the human line, and strong subsequent selection, because there's a repeat polymorphism with very different frequencies in different populations around the world. The change facilitates the production of the precursor to endorphins, the natural neuropeptides which are simulated by opium, morphine, heroin, etc., hence they are called opioids. So we, as a species, are distinguished from our nearest relatives by a greater capacity for producing opioid neurotransmitters and, as a consequence, probably much more prone to substance abuse. This might have some bearing on the war on drugs. The year end issue of Science has named "Evolution in Action" as the "Breakthrough of the Year." This article from PLOS Biology is the first one cited in the bibliography under Human Evolution. -- rec -- |
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