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Marijuana Legalization Swept In on Obama’s Dopetails

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British Empire speculator George Soros’s henchmen are crowing that the full-scale legalization of marijuana passed by voters in the states of Colorado and Washington, with the support of the Obama administration, sets the precedent needed to "pav[e] the way for the rest of the country and the world to follow." Passage of these laws, combined with President Obama’s backing for "negotiations" with South America’s number one cocaine cartel, the Colombian FARC, constitute an immediate threat to U.S. and hemispheric security.

Soros’s hired gun, Drug Policy Alliance chief Ethan Nadelmann, took credit for drafting, financing, and organizing the initiatives which make those two states "the first political jurisdictions anywhere in the world to approve regulating, taxing and controlling marijuana similar to alcohol." Nadelmann, however, pointed to the "notable" silence by administration officials on the legalization initiatives as what made the difference between their failure two years ago in California, and today, in his statement released today.

On Oct. 15, all nine of the last Drug Enforcement Administrator chiefs, every former Drug Czar from 1989-2008, and others, demanded that the administration come out against the legalization initiatives on an unprecedented conference call with reporters. When Executive Intelligence Review’s Dennis Small raised the "hot potato" on that call, that the Obama administration’s de facto support for drug legalization stemmed from the drug monies, including those channeled to him by George Soros, which financed Obama’s 2008 and 2012 Presidential election campaigns, no one would refute the charge.

Mexican-U.S. anti-cartel cooperation has already been jeopardized by the Soros-Obama legalization victory. Luis Videgarary, head of the transition team for Mexico’s incoming President Enrique Pena Nieto, told a Mexican radio station that Pena Nieto remains opposed to legalization, but the new laws mean Mexico will have to review "its joint policies in regard to drug trafficking and security in general," since they are being asked to try and stop shipment of a product which is now legal in parts of the United States.

At the same time, President Obama has pulled the rug out from U.S. and Colombian law enforcement and military forces committed to finishing off the narcoterrorist FARC, by throwing the administration’s full weight behind the formal negotiations which the Santos administration announced last Sept. 5 it had arranged with the FARC. The White House immediately issued a statement welcoming the talks; State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland later acknowledged that the Colombians are keeping the Obama administration briefed on the negotiations; and President Obama took to the Colombian airwaves to reiterate his support in an Oct. 31 interview with Radio W.

Like President Obama, Colombian President Santos relies on Tony Blair as a principal advisor, and the only war Blair has been known to oppose, is any war against Her Majesty’s drug trade.