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News (Media Awareness Project) - US TX: Column: Weed Watch: Walters' Propaganda Won't Hold Water
Title:US TX: Column: Weed Watch: Walters' Propaganda Won't Hold Water
Published On:2005-05-20
Source:Austin Chronicle (TX)
Fetched On:2008-01-16 12:57:15
WEED WATCH: WALTERS' PROPAGANDA WON'T HOLD WATER

So far, May has not been a good month for federal drug czar John
Walters. During a May 3 press conference, Walters, head of the White
House Office of the National Drug Control Policy, once again trotted
out his tired-ass lines about the scourge of marijuana, claiming that
the July suicide of 15-year-old Christopher Skaggs in Colorado is an
example of the "growing body of evidence" that "smoking marijuana can
increase the risk of serious mental health problems," including
depression, suicidal thoughts, and schizophrenia. Walters was backed
up by Skaggs' mother, who told the Rocky Mountain News that her son's
counselor said that marijuana use contributed to her son's depression.
"This press conference," Walters told reporters, "is a public health
warning." Marijuana, he repeated, is a "very dangerous drug."

Unfortunately for Walters, it isn't entirely clear that the Skaggs
story backs up his claim.

Later that week, during an interview on a Denver talk-radio program,
Skaggs' parents said that Skaggs was drug tested regularly in the
months leading up to his suicide, but did not test positive for pot,
and that postmortem toxicology results found "nothing in his system
but alcohol at that time." On May 12, the Marijuana Policy Project
cried foul, lashing out at Walters for misleading the press about the
circumstances of Skaggs' death. "Walters should be ashamed for
exploiting this family's suffering to perpetrate a fraud on the media
and the public," said MPP's Steve Fox in a press release. "The
evidence connecting alcohol abuse to suicide and depression is
overwhelming, but he simply ignored it in order to further his
obsession with marijuana." Still, Skaggs' parents told the Rocky
Mountain News that they stand by their conclusion that marijuana
played a part in their son's death -- a conclusion solidly, and not
surprisingly, supported by Walters' office. "It truly is despicable to
belittle [the Skaggs'] very courageous and important contribution to
this public health effort," said an ONDCP spokeswoman.

Meanwhile, on May 11, Walters' office was dubbed a "federal wasteland"
by the nonpartisan watchdog group Citizens Against Government Waste.
According to a new report by the group, the ONDCP has wasted billions
of taxpayer dollars fighting the "war on drugs" -- including about $2
billion per year since 1996 to thwart state efforts to regulate
medical marijuana.

In 2002 alone, Walters spent $96 million to place anti-marijuana ads
in states with medi-pot initiatives on the ballot.

While the so-called National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign (created
in the wake of successful medi-pot ballot initiatives in Arizona and
California) was supposedly created to educate youth about the dangers
of drugs, the CAGW report charges that in reality it is nothing more
than a "thinly-veiled propaganda scheme focused on curtailing further
medicinal marijuana initiatives on state ballots." Indeed, the
National Institute on Drug Abuse reports that since 1998, the media
campaign has had no tangible effect on drug use. "It is irresponsible
of the ONDCP to use taxpayer dollars to fly around the country pushing
for states to vote no on marijuana initiatives," the CAGW concludes.
"When the federal government infringes upon states' rights and
influences ballot decisions, it undermines the 10th Amendment."
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