News (Media Awareness Project) - US WA: Drug Warrior - Harm Reduction Advocate Comes To Seattle |
Title: | US WA: Drug Warrior - Harm Reduction Advocate Comes To Seattle |
Published On: | 2002-12-12 |
Source: | Stranger, The |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-21 17:32:26 |
DRUG WARRIOR: HARM REDUCTION ADVOCATE COMES TO SEATTLE
Prescribed medical marijuana. Deprioritized drug enforcement. Treatment,
not incarceration. Needle exchange. Safe injection sites. Heroin maintenance.
Such are the mantras of "harm reduction," the two-decade-old European
philosophy now finding support in America. Its advocates bluntly
acknowledge what is becoming increasingly evident: that the drug war has
failed, and causes at least as much suffering as addiction itself. It's not
an idea limited to pipe dreamers--not anymore.
Take Ethan Nadelmann, Harvard Ph.D. (and Harvard Law School grad, and
London School of Economics grad), who spoke at the fourth national Harm
Reduction Conference, which drew 1,300 people to Seattle last week.
Nadelmann gave up his Princeton professorship in 1994 to become one of the
drug reform movement's leading apostles. The head of the Drug Policy
Alliance, an anti-drug-war think tank, Nadelmann proposes that Seattle
become American exemplar of drug policy reform.
Interviewed after his December 3 speech to an enthusiastic crowd at the
downtown Sheraton, Nadelmann spoke optimistically about local change,
despite recent electoral reverses in Ohio, Nevada, and Arizona.
"Something really remarkable is happening here," Nadelmann says. The
American Civil Liberties Union of Washington is the only chapter in the
country with a staffer, Andy Ko, dedicated to drug reform work. Former
Seattle police chief Norm Stamper was the only top cop in the country to
publicly proclaim harm reduction a "moral imperative." The King County Bar
Association has been studying the drug war's impact, and educating the
legal community about their pro-reform findings. Even Norm Maleng, King
County's "hard-ass prosecutor," understands the need for harm reduction
measures.
Ko says the first item on his wish list is the passage next year of I-75,
an initiative requiring Seattle police to deprioritize enforcement of pot
laws. And he points to Vancouver--where the new mayor, a former drug cop,
just won a handy victory on a drug reform platform--and says he hopes to
bring Canadian reformers down to Seattle to educate local and state
politicians about their efforts. Change is coming, Ko says, but it will
take time and education.
Prescribed medical marijuana. Deprioritized drug enforcement. Treatment,
not incarceration. Needle exchange. Safe injection sites. Heroin maintenance.
Such are the mantras of "harm reduction," the two-decade-old European
philosophy now finding support in America. Its advocates bluntly
acknowledge what is becoming increasingly evident: that the drug war has
failed, and causes at least as much suffering as addiction itself. It's not
an idea limited to pipe dreamers--not anymore.
Take Ethan Nadelmann, Harvard Ph.D. (and Harvard Law School grad, and
London School of Economics grad), who spoke at the fourth national Harm
Reduction Conference, which drew 1,300 people to Seattle last week.
Nadelmann gave up his Princeton professorship in 1994 to become one of the
drug reform movement's leading apostles. The head of the Drug Policy
Alliance, an anti-drug-war think tank, Nadelmann proposes that Seattle
become American exemplar of drug policy reform.
Interviewed after his December 3 speech to an enthusiastic crowd at the
downtown Sheraton, Nadelmann spoke optimistically about local change,
despite recent electoral reverses in Ohio, Nevada, and Arizona.
"Something really remarkable is happening here," Nadelmann says. The
American Civil Liberties Union of Washington is the only chapter in the
country with a staffer, Andy Ko, dedicated to drug reform work. Former
Seattle police chief Norm Stamper was the only top cop in the country to
publicly proclaim harm reduction a "moral imperative." The King County Bar
Association has been studying the drug war's impact, and educating the
legal community about their pro-reform findings. Even Norm Maleng, King
County's "hard-ass prosecutor," understands the need for harm reduction
measures.
Ko says the first item on his wish list is the passage next year of I-75,
an initiative requiring Seattle police to deprioritize enforcement of pot
laws. And he points to Vancouver--where the new mayor, a former drug cop,
just won a handy victory on a drug reform platform--and says he hopes to
bring Canadian reformers down to Seattle to educate local and state
politicians about their efforts. Change is coming, Ko says, but it will
take time and education.
Member Comments |
No member comments available...