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News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Editorial: Gonzo drug czar
Title:Canada: Editorial: Gonzo drug czar
Published On:1998-06-29
Source:Ottawa Citizen (Canada)
Fetched On:2008-09-07 07:13:22
GONZO DRUG CZAR

If the world-wide war on drugs has a commander-in-chief, it is President
Bill Clinton's "Drug Czar," retired general Barry McCaffrey.

Those who still support the failed policy of drug prohibition should note
the latest musings of their leader.

Testifying before a U.S. Senate committee, Gen. McCaffrey sounded as if he
were auditioning for a part on the X-Files when he claimed, "There is a
carefully camouflaged, exorbitantly funded, well-heeled, elitist group
whose ultimate goal is to legalize drug use in the United States."

The general's comments followed the publication the previous week of a
two-page newspaper ad calling for an end to the war on drugs. The letter
was signed by more than 500 prominent individuals from around the world,
and included subversives like George Shultz, Ronald Reagan's Secretary of
State, former UN Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar, Nobel-laureate
Milton Friedman, and journalist Walter Cronkite. The general's Senate
audience knew exactly what and whom he was getting at.

Was this petition "carefully camouflaged"? It was organized -- quite openly
- -- by the Lindesmith Center. That this American institute is funded by
billionaire financier George Soros is well-known. And Mr. Soros is hardly a
shadowy character: His philanthropic efforts, including assistance for
former communist countries making the transition to freedom, have been
impressive. He deserves better than the general's innuendo.

What about the claim that the legalization movement is "exorbitantly
funded"? Exorbitant is a relative thing. The United States spends $30
billion a year on its drug war and accompanying propaganda. Relative to
that $30 billion, its funding is insignificant.

As for the charge of elitism, that is an example of the worst sort of
political rabble-rousing, a cheap shot not worth comment.

But the drug-warrior-in-chief wasn't done. He went on to tell the Senate
that drug reformers had, "Through a slick misinformation campaign, E
[perpetrated] a fraud on the American people, a fraud so devious that even
some of the nation's most respected newspapers and sophisticated media are
capable of echoing their falsehoods."

In other words, it's inconceivable that journalists could look at the facts
and reasonably come to a conclusion different than the general's. Every
publication that disapproves of drug prohibition -- among them National
Review, The Economist, and yes, this newspaper -- has simply been duped by
the conspiracy.

General McCaffrey's bitter, paranoid attacks, coming as they did hard upon
the UN conference on drugs and the debate about drug prohibition that it
prompted, exposed just how empty the drug warriors' case really is.

Bereft of evidence, belied by experience, drug prohibitionists have few
rational arguments to make -- so they insult, vilify, and denounce.

It's an old rule in politics: When the facts are against you, throw mud in
their eyes.

Copyright 1998 The Ottawa Citizen

Checked-by: Mike Gogulski
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