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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: OPED: Happy 40th, Drug War
Title:US CA: OPED: Happy 40th, Drug War
Published On:2011-07-14
Source:Chico News & Review, The (CA)
Fetched On:2011-07-15 06:01:50
HAPPY 40TH, DRUG WAR

All Those Years, and We're No Closer to Winning

On June 17, we celebrated the 40th anniversary of President Nixon's
announcement of his so-called "War on Drugs." It has proven to be our
most colossal blunder since slavery.

Nixon commissioned his secret army, the Drug Enforcement
Administration, and applied it against his political enemies on the
left: the non-white, as well as those pasty anti-war hippies. Also,
he mounted the Shafer Commission to give some legitimacy to his efforts.

The Shafer Commission's report, "Marihuana, A Signal of
Misunderstanding," indicated that criminalization of cannabis was the
wrong path to follow. Nixon refused to read the report.

Now we have an august body assembled as the Global Commission on Drug
Policy, releasing its report saying the same thing. And once again we
have a president rejecting it out of hand, his minions citing a small
sack of statistics that show how we are actually winning the war.

Meanwhile, reports of the DEA quietly licensing cannabis cultivation
by big pharmaceutical firms are leaking out. It is a fact that our
one federal legal cannabis grow is upping its output 900 percent this year.

Our leadership has been able to coalesce around the central lie of
prohibition-that it might actually work. It is a fool's errand, well
suited to gumming up the wheels of a great people.

After serving honorably in the Vietnam conflict, I felt ill about the
sellout of my values for what turned out to be a lie. Never again. I
became and remain a conscientious objector to the War on Drugs.

End it! We euphemistically refer to illegal drugs as "controlled
substances." Prohibition yields any control of the substances to the
underworld. It is the rawest form of capitalism: They won't card your kids.

Regulate, educate, and of course tax them. A chit in the package of
drugs (think cigarette pack) would entitle the user to admission to a
treatment-and-recovery situation. This will require the use of the
"L" word: legalization.

Be brave, Americans. We can do it! It should probably start with
California sticking its thumb in Uncle Sam's eye, repealing all of
the state's drug laws retroactively. Our prison-crowding problem is solved.

We pretty much solved the air-quality issues in L.A. by ourselves; we
dropped our tobacco addiction in half by ourselves: The evidence is
that we Californios can do it.
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