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News (Media Awareness Project) - US WA: The New Drug Czar Is Right, End the 'War on Drugs'
Title:US WA: The New Drug Czar Is Right, End the 'War on Drugs'
Published On:2009-05-16
Source:Seattle Times (WA)
Fetched On:2009-05-16 15:13:29
THE NEW DRUG CZAR IS RIGHT, END THE "WAR ON DRUGS"

FORMER Seattle Police chief Gil Kerlikowske is making headlines by
making clear the nation's new drug czar intends to scrap the frayed
and fractious "war on drugs" for a fresher description.

He is absolutely right, words do matter. The "war on terror" was more
than hyperbole for the Bush administration, which used the phrase to
invoke, and invent, all manner of executive powers and prerogatives
the country is still learning about.

Kerlikowske, the Obama administration's director of the White House
Office of National Drug Control Policy, wants to promote treatment
over sending drug users to jail:

"Regardless of how you try to explain to people it's a 'war on drugs'
or a 'war on product,' people see a war as a war on them," he told
The Wall Street Journal. "We're not at war with the people in this country."

Kerlikowske has his own long law-enforcement career to draw on, but
he was also exposed to successful use of drug courts in King County,
which work to steer those convicted toward help and away from being
locked up. National experience with diversion and drug courts found
them to be half as expensive as prison time.

Resources for law enforcement and the bricks and mortar of jails and
prisons is clearly an issue for the administration, and states and
local governments around the country. Locking people away yielded
dubious results at very high costs to public treasuries.

The Obama administration already decided not to go after
medical-marijuana facilities in states that changed local laws, laws
in tension with federal regulations. The president campaigned on
lifting a federal ban on needle-exchange programs that seek to reduce
HIV infections.

The United States is working through the consequences of three
decades of policy that was no more creative than lock 'em up,
forever. Columnist Neal Peirce has reported on an unintended
consequence to prison reform: politically powerful unions
representing tens of thousands of guards. Prisons are employment
centers in many states.

Kerlikowske raises important points about treatment versus
incarceration as he assumes his new job. He will accomplish none of
the good ideas -- including banishing the war on drugs -- without the
steady support of his new boss, President Obama.
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