>>519165966
There is. It's called Evoism.
>Adopting a policy known as "Coca Yes, Cocaine No",[187] Morales' administration ensured the legality of coca growing, and introduced measures to regulate the production and trade of the crop.[188] In 2007, they announced that they would permit the growing of 50,000 acres of coca in the country, primarily for the purposes of domestic consumption,[189] with each family being restricted to the growing of one cato (1600 meters squared) of coca.[190]
>These industrialization measures proved largely unsuccessful given that coca remained illegal in most nations outside Bolivia, thus depriving the growers of an international market.[192] Campaigning against this, in 2012 Bolivia withdrew from the UN 1961 Convention which had called for global criminalisation of coca, and in 2013 successfully convinced the UN Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs to declassify coca as a narcotic.[193] The U.S. State Department criticized Bolivia, saying that it was regressing in its counter-narcotics efforts, and dramatically reduced aid to Bolivia to $34 million to fight the narcotics trade in 2007.[194] Nevertheless, the number of cocaine seizures in Bolivia increased under Morales' government,[195] as they sought to encourage coca growers to report and oppose cocaine producers and traffickers.[196] High levels of police corruption surrounding the illicit trade in cocaine remained a continuing problem for Bolivia.[197]