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American Drug War The Last White Hope 2007 DVDRip XviD-UNDEAD

The last few days were so slow and boring in terms of new scene releases I degraded myself to posting a bunch of limited movies noone will probably care about. Still, this is the only stuff you can get right now. The first release is actually little interesting for particular audience: American Drug War is a documentary about crack, drugs and cocaine. Released as 2 CD rip with AC3 audio by group UNDEAD.

The War on Drugs has become the longest and most costly war in American history, the question has become, how much more can the country endure? Inspired by the death of four family members from “legal drugs” Texas filmmaker Kevin Booth sets out to discover why the Drug War has become such a big failure. Three and a half years in the making the film follows gang members, former DEA agents, CIA officers, narcotics officers, judges, politicians, prisoners and celebrities. Most notably the film befriends Freeway Ricky Ross; the man many accuse for starting the Crack epidemic, who after being arrested discovered that his cocaine source had been working for the CIA.

American.Drug.War.The.Last.White.Hope.2007.DVDRip.XviD-UNDEAD

2 CD, 1.4 GB, undead-adw
120 min, 1207 kb/s, 576×432, 448 kb/sac3
IMDB (8.0), hp, NFO, torrent

Comments (65)

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  1. O
    May 14th, 2008 | 18:26

    more limited thx.

  2. Pro
    May 14th, 2008 | 18:29

    I don’t understand.
    where are the links?
    or am I blind?

  3. blitz
    May 14th, 2008 | 18:30

    its ricky ricky ross, da boss

  4. djmedi4
    May 14th, 2008 | 18:36

    This is an amazing movie.

    Take the time, dl and watch this.

    Thanks for offering it up.

  5. Jako
    May 14th, 2008 | 18:42

    400MB netload links would be cool…

  6. Gaius
    May 14th, 2008 | 18:46

    The only reason the US Government criminalizes drugs is to ensure that the government can profit from it’s sale.

    -The CIA sold drugs to finance it’s operations in Latin America and to this day still sells drugs under false aliases and agents beyond US borders so that it can continue to finance it’s operations elsewhere.
    -American pharmaceutical companies prosper by marking up their prescription drugs, which are in many cases made of the same stuff you can buy on the street.
    -The criminalization of drugs allows the US Government to have an excuse to put non-violent minorities in jail, so it doesn’t have to spend on programs that would allow a lot of young men to do something better with their lives, while the mostly white corporate interests are allowed to sell alcohol and cigarettes, which kill a lot more people each year, without fear of criminal prosecution.

  7. FYNGAZ
    May 14th, 2008 | 18:49
  8. joao
    May 14th, 2008 | 18:59

    can be interesting, but i pass this one off. i have a lot to download.

    :S

  9. CIA - Cocaine Import Agency
    May 14th, 2008 | 19:01
  10. CIA - Crack in America
    May 14th, 2008 | 19:04

    great post!

    everyone who is interested in CIA and ‘the war on drugs’ should check this out!

  11. sly
    May 14th, 2008 | 19:17

    I guess we’re playing the waiting game till all the morons that are sending people to jail for smoking a joint all die (liver cirose and other alcoholic diseases will most likely bew their cause of death)

    the only reason the war on drugs lives is to justify the huge amount of cash the dea gets

    and I still can not understand how most people can’t see that a crapload of legal meds are as detrimental and addictive as heroin

    eg smoking pot aides allergie and asthma patients without harming them, tho if you go to a docter he’ll fill give you meds and inhalers with steroids and cortisone (NOT healthy)

  12. niggler
    May 14th, 2008 | 20:19

    @6 - while the US does (or at least used to) profit from drug trade outside of US soil, your arguments dont make sense:

    1) the government would legalize all drugs if profit was the main concern - legal drugs = more money from taxing them, plus less money spent policing drug crime.

    2) locking up “non-violent minorities in jail” costs more than putting on programs that would allow the young people concerned to do more positive things, as long as we’re talking education and art classes :)

    the main problems are these:

    1) drugs have a massive stigma attached, in no small part due to all the “war on drugs” propaganda and misinformation - because of this, a large majority of voters would go hysterical if a president (or potential president) advocated the legalization of drugs.

    2) drugs are cool. not unilaterally, but in a lot of (particularly poor and non-white) communities, being a dealer is a much more respectable life choice than education and art classes!

    3) drugs are dangerous. this one’s obvious, but if you legalize drugs, you send out a message that its ok to take them - if you don’t spend a LOT of money on intensive education programs, the number of people trying the newly legalized drug will rise, which will in turn increase the number of casualties and or deaths caused by that drug. and legalizing something which then goes on to lead to lots of extra deaths/injuries is political suicide.

    so please, enough of the ‘the white man’s keeping us down’ schtick - its a complicated problem, and one that can only be resolved by educating people, and looking for reasonable solutions; not by wildly invoking race war. apart from anything else, the US economy is in such a rubbish state, the government would like nothing better than for all dealers to lay down their baggies and start up more legal pursuits, so stop suggesting the illegal drug trade benefits them so much.

  13. niggler
    May 14th, 2008 | 20:24

    @ 12 (sly)

    i smoke a fair bit of dope myself (just picked up some AWESOME blueberry last weekend, and its the best thing ive smoked since i went to amsterdam last year… but i digress) and im all for preaching its benefits (pain relief, relaxant, possible aide to digestion, plus all the more dull uses for hemp like clothing, paper, rope, etc), but pot alleviating ASTHMA!?! really? where’d you hear that?

  14. j teeezy
    May 14th, 2008 | 20:28

    hey guys im having problem i downloaded the movie using the torrent files it gave me a folder full of files wut program can i use to burn this to a dvd ? can u help me out please new to this

  15. PaiN
    May 14th, 2008 | 20:34

    Netload links?

    This movie loks very interesting…

  16. wizewiz
    May 14th, 2008 | 20:36

    looks interesting, thanx.

  17. zepski
    May 14th, 2008 | 20:39

    @15 I have asthma and it does help to be honest i don’t agree it works better then a real inhaler. However, it does help. it causes the airways to expand due to the fact it relaxes your throat and so on. iirc

  18. igorvaclav
    May 14th, 2008 | 20:39
  19. Gaius
    May 14th, 2008 | 21:09

    @14

    1) Drugs cost more when they are illegal. That’s a fact. There is a risk when selling illegal drugs and that shows up in how much you pay for them from a dealer. It’s in a drug dealer’s best interest for drugs to be illegal as the fewer people in the market, the higher the profit for the drugs they sell. Also, who better to sell illegal drugs than those who have the authority in the first place? Governments are in the best position to sell drugs and they do it all the time because they can’t get caught and it makes them a LOT of money.

    2) Locking up minorities doesn’t make sense if you look at it from a taxpayer perspective, but from the perspective of the government, it makes perfect sense. The corporations who own those jails and make them make millions of dollars each year, and the government stays strong by employing a LOT of people in the DEA, FBI, CIA to look like they are doing good for the country when they are really doing something completely unnecessary. Also, it’s in the best interest to ruin minorities chances of contributing to society as they would saturate the job market. Keeping the poor from climbing up the social ladder is essential to maintaining the status quo, and one method for doing so is funneling drugs to urban centers, where minorities are the ones most affected by them.

  20. justsomeone
    May 14th, 2008 | 21:23

    the Drug war is never going to end, im from Colombia and they can capture all the druglords and another one steps into place simple as that, the only thing being achieved by those tactics is make the price of cocain to grow higher and higher, what do you think the DEA and all the other organizations do with the cocaine that gets confiscated……. they resell it, probably will destroy a 30% of the load to show they did something and the rest well goes to the streets again, another one of the biggest buyers for Colombian cocaine are the russians

    by the way you should probably place cocaine cowboys a dvd rip over here.

  21. billy2134
    May 14th, 2008 | 21:26
  22. IC
    May 14th, 2008 | 21:36

    Also, the profits from Illegal drugs are un-discernable and un accountable to the public.

    The Govt. reaps a lot of benefits keeping drugs illegal.. They gain control, they gain an excuse to breach the constitution, they limit your liberty, and they of course can fund their secret ops.

    It’s really getting disgusting, and it’s got to stop.

  23. kuken
    May 14th, 2008 | 21:37

    legalize it!

  24. kilo
    May 14th, 2008 | 21:38

    Netload links or megaupload please?

  25. BabylonSoul
    May 14th, 2008 | 21:40

    @8 - FYNGAZ

    wrong password

  26. T.O.
    May 14th, 2008 | 21:45

    Its really weak of you to suggest in any way that “minorities” (I assume you’re referring to racial minorities) are targeted by anti-drug laws. The predisposing condition is not race, but rather social conditions within the economically “dis-inclined” (?) community. I realize that this was only lightly touched upon by one of the posts, but I did feel hit by the issue of the disadvantaged minorities.

  27. askd
    May 14th, 2008 | 21:57

    This is why US Gov won’t secure the borders or ports. Drugs = petty cash.
    War On Terror is the new War On Drugs, it’ll never end and the false flags will continue to fly.

    VOTE RON PAUL!!!!!

  28. the J3STeR
    May 14th, 2008 | 22:16

    This here LiMK is for the MA6iCiAN

    http://d01.megashares.com/?d01=6953e38

    BLUNTS

  29. romath
    May 14th, 2008 | 22:20

    Thanks for posting this! Coca Cola had - guess what - cocaine until 1929, tho there had been very little used in it for quite awhile. Coke and other drugs were commonly used in prescribed and over-the-counter drugs into the early 20th century. For example, Bayer sold heroin as a sedative for coughs and Fraser sold it an an anti-asthmatic. While speed was commonly available until the 1970s, these other types of ’street’ drugs (also including morphine and opium) became illegal when the Temperance movement and whoever else got worried about ‘immorality,’ industrial productivity and ostensibly safety.

    Aside from being a way to fund right-wing paramilitaries outside of the government budget and Congressional oversight, at least in public, the value of street drugs internally is political suppression. As the U.S. learned well from the Brits, druggies don’t make revolutions. The end of the ‘War on Poverty,’ the beginning of the ‘War on Drugs’ and the introduction of crack cocaine all came during the time when major industry shut down in the U.S., hitting stride around 1978. During the 1960s and ’70s, working class militancy had been largely initiated if not led by blacks, so piecing them off with drugs was consciously seen as a strategy for control. That’s when the population of African Americans caught in the so-called criminal justice system skyrocketed. In general, capitalism necessarily creates a reserve army of labor (temporarily and permanently unemployed), based on supply and demand for labor-power. In that, drugs play a useful role in helping a section of them - and rebellious middle-class types - fade into oblivion - and beyond.

  30. Ted
    May 14th, 2008 | 22:25

    Password for the RS files anyone??

  31. stunzeed
    May 14th, 2008 | 22:31

    I dont know what you are talking about in the description. This is a GREAT movie. Really it is! Talk about lame releases lets talk about K Rhino and that dumb as$ $hit!

  32. Gaius
    May 14th, 2008 | 22:42

    @28

    Here’s something to think about:

    Is the fact that most prisoners are doing time due to non-violent offenses an issue that is hotly debated by the media or general US public? Obviously not.

    Would that change if the non-violent offenders that crowd US jails were mostly white? You bet.

    You may think that the US is a increasingly progressive society where racism is a dwindling issue, but when most people in jail are minorities in a country that is 74% white, you can’t say that economic disadvantages are the only issues that affect the statistics.

    Think about the victims of violent crime in this country. When a white person is kidnapped, murdered, raped, etc, the media makes a frenzy of it, but when the same happens to that of a person of color, the media goes no further than a few articles or mentions. Race is still an important factor.

  33. ilk
    May 14th, 2008 | 22:43

    FYNGAZ: proper pass is “Houndz Of Hell” (big “O”). Don’t post links if You can’t do it properly..

  34. Ted
    May 14th, 2008 | 22:48

    Ilk - thanks for the pass.

  35. gonzalez
    May 14th, 2008 | 22:54

    Niiice indeed thanks! ;)

  36. Ghost Of Pablo Escobar
    May 14th, 2008 | 23:02

    Sounds interesting

    One question : Do they talk about the Medellin Cartel/Pablo Escobar/CIA connection in that documentary ?

  37. Darkone23
    May 14th, 2008 | 23:10

    Most posts on releases like this pls…very cool Martin :)

  38. Jeje
    May 14th, 2008 | 23:24

    Drugs are no less dangerous than alchool… Did you know you wont die from quitting heroin (altough its VERY painfull) but you can actually die going cold turkey from booze…
    Also, there is to many jobs at stake in the war against drugs. It would not be profitable to win this one!
    Shame to the hypocrits in power. It’s easier to fund repression instead of rehabs because its much easier to quantify costs of inmates vs recovering addicts.

    Legalise, educate, be real, let the people decide whats good for them

  39. justsomeone
    May 14th, 2008 | 23:59

    man all the Colombian drug lords during the 70’s and 80’s were giving tons of money to the republicans and so on, watch cocaine cowboys you will learn a lot about all this stuff, pablo escobar killed himself on the rooftop its a fact, the drug business is to big people go from 100 bucks in their pockets to 100 million in no time, man all the stories that i remember from those times, like drug lords which are called magicians because they used to go and buy a house, would ask for the price 800 thousand dollars for example, they would comeback an hour later with 3 briefcases full of money lol, so many stories like that.

  40. Souryusen
    May 15th, 2008 | 02:52

    Great movie be SURE to watch it.

  41. Derek
    May 15th, 2008 | 03:58

    Gaius, I’m noticing a trend with your posts, and they aren’t leading you on to that bright of a person.

  42. the Ma6iCiAn
    May 15th, 2008 | 05:36

    appreciate the megashare LIMK the J3STeR…

    Bluntz

  43. matty ducks
    May 15th, 2008 | 05:44

    Kevin Booth directs this film, he was a longtime friend of the late great comedian Bill Hicks. If it anything like the films that Kevin and Bill worked on together it should be lie a shotgun blast right between the eyes, but in a GOOD way.

  44. cheyennewarrior
    May 15th, 2008 | 05:49

    This is a great movie–very educational. Everyone should burn multiple copies and give them out to everyone they know.

  45. The Messiah
    May 15th, 2008 | 06:13

    I started out posting this movie on 420chan

    Its funny how things turn around like that

  46. bigjoke
    May 15th, 2008 | 06:21

    thx for the pwd ;)

  47. optimusp
    May 15th, 2008 | 06:27

    seems live these types of movies are always tight

  48. Hulk
    May 15th, 2008 | 08:32

    Mandatory reading (!) about this topic:

    Alfred W. McCoy’s “The politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia”

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_W._McCoy

    Also a rather interesting watch:

    “Plan Colombia: Cashing In on the Drug War Failure”

    http://www.thefilmconnection.org/films/510

  49. rs
    May 15th, 2008 | 08:45

    MR FYNGAZ no. 7
    Wrong password.
    Please give us the password

  50. Yes
    May 15th, 2008 | 15:21

    I haven’t seen this film yet however if you want to understand the drug war this is one of the best lectures I have heard

    http://au.youtube.com/watch?v=cT5rDG2S7kY

    Noam Chomsky: American Addiction Pt. 1/5

  51. cannedangst
    May 15th, 2008 | 23:21

    @49
    “Houndz Of Hell”

  52. DJWill_I_AM
    May 16th, 2008 | 05:21

    I knew this doc sounded familar…

    The rip was already out 7+ months ago

    http://www.torrentz.com/3aea2f527f838f118fccf88e3b4f729f1b4828c0

  53. yancp
    May 16th, 2008 | 13:46

    Unfortunately RS links are down…again.

  54. wizewiz
    May 16th, 2008 | 16:59

    yeah both set of RS links are down. damnit.

  55. some dude
    May 16th, 2008 | 17:16

    is anyone else having problems with the comments? they seem to get cutoff if they get longer than 13 lines, its kinda anoying … wasnt like this a week ago … if its just me anyone know why i might have this probelm?

  56. clarkbar
    May 16th, 2008 | 19:37

    yeah what’s up with the RS stuff peeps? lately everything is down :(

  57. Lumberg
    May 16th, 2008 | 20:28

    I never believed the conspiracy that the CIA was importing Drugs during the 80-90’s until I watched this movie. The evidence in this movie is very compelling to prove that fact. I hope this makes it into the mainstream. This is right in line with what Rev Jeremiah Wright stated in his now infamous sermoms which many folks [myself included until now] took as rants against the power structure with no basis in fact. This movie shows that CIA involvement w/ drug trafficking was in fact real and did happen. Thanks for posting this.

  58. me
    May 17th, 2008 | 04:49

    Vote RON PAUL or BOB BARR!!!

    If you are a true American that believes in liberty and a government OF THE PEOPLE, BY THE PEOPLE AND FOR THE PEOPLE then do yourself and the rest of your countrymen a favor then vote LIBERTARIAN!

    “Don’t Tread On Us”

  59. comments not fully readable
    May 17th, 2008 | 05:22

    @55. some dude

    “is anyone else having problems with the comments?
    they seem to get cutoff if they get longer ”

    Yes, I noticed too; I haven’t seen that before. Using the free norwegian Opera browser though, I just click on that “fit to width” button that also enforces type to line break on the window’s edges. This same function automagically makes every line appear always - I don’t know why. As long as it is active.

    Opera keeps most ads out of you view, too.

  60. comments not fully readable
    May 17th, 2008 | 05:57

    Very interesting documentary, by the way!

    I have been mostly unaware of that former eight-year govenor of New Mexico, Gary Johnson (he had been in office from january 1995 until 2003), with his remarkable grasp on how devastating the U.S. drug policy is to the nation. And to most western countries, thanks to international treaties. I won’t even mention countries like colombia.

    As someone wrote earlier, this policy had already started long before former president Nixon, it was in the early twentieth century with the christian puritan temperance movement that organized crime grew fat and violent on alcohol prohibition.

    Nixon just comitted the crime of creating that class system of scheduled substances that has been composed without any knowledge on the topic.

  61. comments not fully readable
    May 17th, 2008 | 05:59

    I also got only till RAR part 6, so I could see only the first 45 or so minutes. I hople they’ll be reupped soon.

  62. some dude
    May 17th, 2008 | 19:52

    @59 thx that helped

  63. some dude
    May 17th, 2008 | 20:59
  64. Opera, Javascript-disabled
    May 18th, 2008 | 21:55

    @63 some dude

    Thanks for
    the links! All others have been deleted.

  65. Jeff
    June 14th, 2008 | 19:45

    Awesome documentary — check it out.

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