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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Column: War On Drugs Reaches A Crucial Turning Point
Title:US: Column: War On Drugs Reaches A Crucial Turning Point
Published On:2000-08-09
Source:San Diego Union Tribune (CA)
Fetched On:2008-09-03 13:11:14
WAR ON DRUGS REACHES A CRUCIAL TURNING POINT: ADMISSION OF FAILURE

A Turning Point In The War On Drugs

How long do you keep the lie going? This is the unstated question in the
blossoming drug-war debate. Speaking last week at the Shadow Convention in
Philadelphia, the Rev. Edwin Sanders of Nashville's Metropolitan Church was
unequivocal in his answer: "This needs to be the time when we collectively
raise our voices and say that this is the end."

Sanders' speech was part of a breakthrough day in the drug-policy-reform
movement. Speakers as varied as the Rev. Jesse Jackson, one of the biggest
cheerleaders for the drug war in the 1980s, and Republican Gov. Gary
Johnson of New Mexico, the highest-ranking elected official ever to
challenge our national drug policy, took to the stage to echo Sanders'
sentiment that the time has come to declare an end to a war that has
destroyed far too many lives.

In the audience, hundreds of parents, children and spouses of those
incarcerated on nonviolent drug charges held placards with the pictures and
stories of their loved ones. They had arrived on buses from around the
country, representing millions of Americans whose world has been torn apart
by this disastrous war.

People like 21-year-old Julie Colon, whose mother is serving a sentence of
15 years to life for a first-time drug offense. "The last time I lived with
my mother," said Colon, "I was 9 years old." Or 74-year-old Eileen
Flournoy, whose daughter Veronica was arrested on drug charges while she
was pregnant with her second child and fell under the mandatory sentencing
laws. "At my age, I sure didn't expect to be raising my 4-and 5-year-old
granddaughters," she told me.

"We have absolutely become numb to what's going on in this country," Gov.
Johnson, a triathlete and teetotaler, told the Shadow Convention crowd.
"The bottom line is, we need a new drug strategy. Why don't we see if we
can have fewer nonviolent drug offenders in jail? The message that needs to
resonate to kids and adults is 'Just Say Know to Drugs. K-N-O-W.' "

Because the fact is we do know. We know what works -- treatment. And we
know what doesn't work -- incarceration. About the only thing we don't know
is how to convince our politicians of the truth of what almost everybody
else now seems to know.

But we're getting closer.

Jesse Jackson knows. He railed against our "failed drug policy whose
friendly fire is killing Americans rather than helping Americans -- a
policy whose unintended consequence is to build an ugly, shameful jail
industrial complex, a policy driven by fear, race and greed."

Pointing to the 75 percent recidivism rate of drug offenders, Jackson
brought the crowd to its feet with his trademark cadenced delivery: "They
go into jail sicker and come out slicker and return quicker and around and
around and around they go . . . Because if you are young, poor, brown or
black or don't have a lawyer there is no category called youthful
indiscretion."

Drug-policy reform is moving from the fringes to the mainstream. And for
every public figure who speaks out, dozens more are waiting in the wings
until they consider it safe enough to say openly what they now dare say
only privately. Two elected officials speaking out are Rep. Tom Campbell,
R-Stanford, now running for the Senate, and Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Los
Angeles. In one of the unexpected alliances produced by the fight against
the drug war, they have joined forces in favor of Proposition 36 -- a major
policy shift from incarceration to treatment.

Campbell offered the Shadow Convention crowd a stinging bit of history from
the drug war: "The street price of heroin and cocaine is less than
one-fourth of what it was in 1981. The purity of heroin available on the
street has increased more than fourfold since 1981. Incarceration for drug
arrests has risen tenfold since 1981. The number of drug-overdose deaths
has increased more than fivefold since 1981. The proportion of high school
seniors reporting that drugs are readily available has doubled since 1981.
This is not victory. This is failure."

But the greatest indicator that we are, as Ethan Nadelmann, director of the
Lindesmith Center, put it, "at the beginning of a new anti-war movement, a
new movement for political and social justice," came not at the shadow
gathering but at the Republican convention. Colin Powell, in the one bit of
truth shining through the phony multicultural fog, made it clear that it
was time to rethink America's drug-war policy, which has led to more than 2
million Americans behind bars: "If you want to solve our drug problem, you
won't do it by trying to cut off supply and arresting pushers on the street
corners alone . . . It's time to stop building jails in America and get
back to the task of building our children."

It's a conclusion shared by an overwhelming majority of Americans: more
than 70 percent are now in favor of treatment over incarceration for those
convicted of nonviolent drug charges. And the media -- in a growing number
of editorials, columns and news stories -- have begun to actually shine a
light on the drug war's casualties and call for new policies.

Yet George W. Bush did not have one compassionate word to say on the
subject beyond grandiloquently promising to "tear down that wall" that
traps our citizens in "prison, addiction and despair."

And you can bet that, come next week, Al Gore will be equally silent on the
subject.
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