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	<title>The Awareness Network&#187; drug war</title>
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		<title>Help Obama Reform Drug Policy</title>
		<link>http://www.awareness-network.com/2008/barak-obama-drug-policy/</link>
		<comments>http://www.awareness-network.com/2008/barak-obama-drug-policy/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 24 Nov 2008 21:21:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>AJ</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[drug laws]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[drug war]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alcohol abuse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[barak obama]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[definition of insanity]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[drug czar]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[drug policy alliance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[drug war policies]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[failed policies]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[medical marijuana]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[profound change]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[republican congressman]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sentencing disparity]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sentencing reform]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.awareness-network.com/?p=85</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I just now received an email from the Drug Policy Alliance requesting that I write a note to President-elect Obama in regards to who he chooses to be his drug czar. Below is a sample of my letter (based on the suggestions of the DPA). Feel free to copy it, augment it, or use it [...]<p>a</p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I just now received an email from the <strong><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drug_Policy_Alliance" target="_blank">Drug Policy Alliance</a></strong> requesting that I write a note to President-elect Obama in regards to who he chooses to be his drug czar. Below is a sample of my letter (based on the suggestions of the <a href="http://www.drugpolicy.org/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">DPA</a>). Feel free to copy it, augment it, or use it for fodder to create your own custom made letter and <a href="http://change.gov/page/s/yourvision" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">please send it to Barak Obama via his new website: www.change.gov</a>. </p>
<p>You make a difference. The more proactive you are, the bigger your impact. Please take a moment to send a letter like the one I wrote below and send it to <a href="http://change.gov/page/s/yourvision" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Barak Obama&#8217;s new website Change.gov</a>:</p>
<h3>Sample Letter to Obama Regarding Drug Reform</h3>
<p>Dear President-elect Obama,</p>
<p>Please choose a drug czar who will champion reform. This is a very important step in delivering the change you and I and a majority of our great nation and the world so obviously desire&#8230; and need!</p>
<p>It&#8217;s easy to understand why you are considering to nominate Republican Congressman James Ramstad to be your &#8220;drug czar&#8221;. Rep. Ramstad is in recovery from alcohol abuse and has a track record in support of increasing access to drug treatment. However, Ramstad is still mostly married to the failed punitive drug war policies of the last 30 thirty years. This is a no-brainer. </p>
<p>These failed policies need to change. We must do something different. As you yourself have so boldly stated: &#8220;Doing the same things over and over again and expecting a different result is the definition of insanity&#8221;. We must do things differently in drug reform in order for profound change to occur. I know that you know this deep in your obviously good heart.</p>
<p>Ramstad has voted against medical marijuana five times. He has voted against making sterile syringes more available to reduce the spread of HIV/AIDS three times. Even though his colleagues are increasingly supporting sentencing reform, including eliminating the crack/powder sentencing disparity, he hasn&#8217;t stood up on the issue. Perhaps Ramstad is not the right choice.</p>
<p>Our nation&#8217;s next drug czar should be chosen based on the following criteria: </p>
<ol>
<li>Are they committed to enacting and supporting evidence-based policies? ONDCP should make decisions based on science, not politics or ideology.</li>
<li>Are they committed to reducing the harms associated with both drugs and punitive drug laws? We need a new bottom line for U.S. drug policy. </li>
<li>Do they think drug use should be treated as a health issue not a criminal justice issue? To paraphrase former Baltimore Mayor Kurt Schmoke, we need a surgeon general not a military general or police officer.</li>
<li>Do they welcome and encourage debate and research? We need a drug czar who is open-minded and willing to consider every alternative.</li>
<li>Are they committed to reducing the number of nonviolent offenders behind bars? Our country&#8217;s next drug czar should be fully committed to major sentencing reform.</li>
</ol>
<p>President-elect Obama, who you choose as your drug czar will affect everyone. Please nominate a drug czar who supports marijuana law reform, syringe availability and treatment instead of incarceration.</p>
<p>Thank you for your time and consideration,</p>
<p>Best regards and best of luck,</p>
<p><em>Your Name</em></p>
<p>a</p>

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		<title>Fighting Meth with Laws for Terrorism</title>
		<link>http://www.awareness-network.com/2007/meth-and-terrorism/</link>
		<comments>http://www.awareness-network.com/2007/meth-and-terrorism/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 07 May 2007 04:34:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>AJ</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[drug laws]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[drug war]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.awareness-network.com/2007/05/06/meth-and-terrorism/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Prosecutor fighting meth using law that punishes terrorism &#8220;The law reads, in part, that the term nuclear, biological or chemical weapon of mass destruction applies to &#8216;any substance that is designed or has the capability to cause death or serious injury and &#8230; is or contains toxic or poisonous chemicals or their immediate precursors.&#8217; &#8221; [...]<p>a</p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Prosecutor <a href="http://www.amphetamines.com/methlab-terrorism.html" target="_blank">fighting meth using law that punishes terrorism<br />
</a></p>
<blockquote><p>
&#8220;The law reads, in part, that the term nuclear, biological or chemical weapon of mass destruction applies to &#8216;any substance that is designed or has the capability to cause death or serious injury and &#8230; is or contains toxic or poisonous chemicals or their immediate precursors.&#8217; &#8221;</p>
<p class="source">District Attorney Jerry Wilson</p>
</blockquote>
<p><strong>NOTE:</strong> <em>This could be anything&#8230;rat poison, automotive emissions, McDonald&#8217;s &#8220;food&#8221;, almost any industrial facility, not to mention arms manufacturers, the medical profession&#8230; how silly, stupid, and crazy is all this getting?!</em></p>
<h3>Methamphetamine Laboratory</h3>
<p>BOONE &#8211; A Watauga County prosecutor is using a law intended to combat terrorism to fight the spread of methamphetamine laboratories in northwest North Carolina.</p>
<p>District Attorney Jerry Wilson has charged Martin Dwayne Miller, 24, of Todd with two counts of manufacturing a nuclear or chemical weapon in connection with a methamphetamine arrest Friday. Miller also is charged with eight other drug-related offenses.</p>
<p>He was being held in the Watauga County Jail under $505,000 bond.</p>
<p>&#8220;This is a two-edged sword,&#8221; Wilson said. &#8220;Not only is the drug methamphetamine in itself a threat to both society and those using it, but the toxic compounds and deadly gases created as side products are also real threats.&#8221;</p>
<p>In Buncombe County earlier this month, authorities found evidence of a drug lab at a Black Mountain motel.</p>
<p>State Bureau of Investigation agents searched a room at the Apple Blossom Motel on July 7. They found chemicals and glassware used to produce methamphetamines, according to a search warrant.</p>
<p>In May, officers charged a Swannanoa man with operating a meth lab in his bathroom. Paul Wilson, 38, faces four felony drug charges. The Metropolitan Enforcement Group, a local drug enforcement agency, conducted the investigation.</p>
<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re getting our first shock of it here now,&#8221; Lt. Scott Allen of the agency said of meth production in May.</p>
<p>The most serious drug charges related to methamphetamine carry much lighter sentences than the weapons of mass destruction law.</p>
<p>The law carries a sentence ranging from 12 years to life in prison on each count. Wilson said he decided to use it while researching ways to slow the advance of methamphetamine into the region.</p>
<p>The law reads, in part, that the term nuclear, biological or chemical weapon of mass destruction applies to &#8220;any substance that is designed or has the capability to cause death or serious injury and &#8230; is or contains toxic or poisonous chemicals or their immediate precursors.&#8221;</p>
<p>The chemicals used to manufacture methamphetamine are toxic and highly combustible.</p>
<p>Officials with the N.C. Administrative Office of the Courts and the N.C. Attorney General&#8217;s Office said they thought that the Watauga County charges are among the first filed under the weapons of mass destruction statutes. </p>
<p>a</p>

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		<title>Counting the Costs of the Drug War</title>
		<link>http://www.awareness-network.com/2007/drug-war-costs/</link>
		<comments>http://www.awareness-network.com/2007/drug-war-costs/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 04 May 2007 05:48:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>AJ</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[drug war]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.awareness-network.com/2007/05/03/drug-war-costs/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The costs of the war in Iraq can be measured daily in deaths, injuries and decreasing support for U.S. policies. But how do you measure the costs of America&#8217;s other war – the war on drugs? Each year, the U.S. government spends more than $30 billion on the drug war and arrests more than 1.5 [...]<p>a</p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The costs of the war in Iraq can be measured daily in<br />
deaths, injuries and decreasing support for U.S.<br />
policies. But how do you measure the costs of<br />
America&#8217;s other war – the war on drugs?</p>
<p>Each year, the U.S. government spends more than $30<br />
billion on the drug war and arrests more than 1.5<br />
million people on drug-related charges. More than<br />
318,000 people are now behind bars in the U.S. for<br />
drug violations. This is more than the total number of<br />
people incarcerated for all crimes in the United<br />
Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy and Spain combined.</p>
<p>At a May 6 forum sponsored by the Independent<br />
Institute, an Oakland, California, think tank,<br />
analysts tried to quantify the real costs of drug war.<br />
Have these efforts actually deterred drug abuse or<br />
reduced crime? Boston University economist Jeffrey A.<br />
Miron, who spoke at the forum, applied an economic<br />
analysis to determine whether drug prohibition is a<br />
more effective public policy than legalization – which<br />
would tax and regulate drugs. Miron, author of the new<br />
book Drug War Crimes, says the true costs of<br />
prohibition should be measured not just by the<br />
billions of dollars spent for enforcement of drug<br />
laws, but the overall impact on drug consumption,<br />
crime, public health and unseen moral consequences.</p>
<p>One of the major goals of prohibition is to increase<br />
the cost of drugs and thereby reduce demand and drug<br />
consumption. But Miron says this approach has failed.<br />
He points out that the price of drugs has actually<br />
fallen by 80% in the past 25 years. Despite millions<br />
of drug arrests, Miron says prohibition has had a<br />
relatively small effect on both the supply and<br />
consumption of drugs. He says the government&#8217;s claims<br />
of a fifty percent drop in consumption due to<br />
prohibition are exaggerated. &#8220;Prohibition reduces<br />
access of drugs to some people, but there is no<br />
evidence that suggests a large effect,&#8221; says Miron.</p>
<p>Miron also disputes claims by the federal Office of<br />
National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) that drug use<br />
makes people violent and contributes to crime. He says<br />
prohibition increases violence because people involved<br />
in the drug trade have no recourse to the legal system<br />
to settle their disputes and are more likely to settle<br />
it themselves with force. &#8220;There is no evidence that<br />
merely consuming drugs makes you go out and do<br />
criminal things,&#8221; says Miron.</p>
<p>Throughout history, Miron says periods of escalating<br />
violence have been sparked by attempts to prohibit<br />
certain commodities such as drugs, alcohol, gambling<br />
or prostitution. In instances where prohibition does<br />
increase the cost of drugs, he says drug users are<br />
more likely to steal or rob to pay for drugs. Police<br />
efforts to curtail violence are often diverted to<br />
enforcing drug laws.</p>
<p>Miron also notes that the drug trade enriches only the<br />
sellers, who are exempt from paying taxes on their<br />
products or minimum wages to workers. Drug sellers are<br />
not required to engage in quality control, which leads<br />
to more overdoses and accidental poisonings, says<br />
Miron. And he notes that there are other social<br />
consequences that make prohibition more costly than<br />
the legalization. &#8220;Because prohibition is a victimless<br />
crime, there is strong incentive for police to impede<br />
civil liberties and do racial profiling,&#8221; he says.<br />
Miron adds that resistance to needle exchange programs<br />
under prohibition also increases the spread of HIV.</p>
<p>The effects of drug use on third parties such as<br />
unborn children or those involved in drug-related<br />
traffic accidents are exaggerated, says Miron, and not<br />
significantly different from the negative effects of<br />
alcohol or forgoing sleep for late-night TV. As for<br />
those who think that drugs are inherently immoral,<br />
Miron argues that the concurrent violence, damage to<br />
civil liberties and decreased respect for law which<br />
follows prohibition have a larger negative moral<br />
impact on people who are innocent bystanders to the<br />
drug war. According to Miron, the paternalistic<br />
attitude that people need to be protected from<br />
themselves opens a Pandora&#8217;s box of government<br />
intervention.</p>
<p>&#8220;There is no reason to think that the benefits of<br />
reducing myopic drug use balances the costs that<br />
prohibition places on society,&#8221; says Miron. &#8220;The best<br />
policy is to legalize drugs and do it sooner rather<br />
than later.&#8221;</p>
<p>The Drug War Crimes forum also looked at the impact of<br />
prohibition on police forces. Joseph McNamara, former<br />
police chief of San Jose and now a research fellow at<br />
the Hoover Institution, says police have been greatly<br />
influenced by federal escalation of the drug war. He<br />
says financially strapped local police departments now<br />
receive significant funding and much of their training<br />
from federal officials who encourage them to continue<br />
to make drug arrests. &#8220;It is a jihad, it is a holy war<br />
you have to fight,&#8221; says McNamara.</p>
<p>McNamara says local police are also encouraged by city<br />
officials to seize the assets of suspected drug<br />
criminals to fund their departments. &#8220;In San Jose when<br />
I was given zero dollars in the budget they said &#8216;you<br />
guys seized four million dollars last year, I expect<br />
you to do better this year,&#8221;&#8216; says McNamara.</p>
<p>McNamara says police are under pressure from citizen<br />
groups who worry about the impact of open outdoor drug<br />
markets on children in the neighborhood. He emphasized<br />
that these concerns cannot be dismissed. But he says<br />
current drug policies have vastly increased police<br />
corruption, and created a culture of &#8220;gangster cops.&#8221;<br />
Protected by a code of silence and supported by an<br />
attitude from top officials that police should not be<br />
impeded in their duties, McNamara says prohibition<br />
gives rise to a range of police abuses. McNamara says<br />
this has been illustrated in series of police<br />
corruption scandals including one at his former<br />
employer, the New York City Police Department.<br />
Investigators there, he said, found that narcotics<br />
officers had been robbing drug dealers and stealing<br />
their drugs. Confronted by the reality that the<br />
country is still flooded with drugs, he says police<br />
sometimes develop the attitude that &#8220;it&#8217;s hopeless we<br />
can&#8217;t do anything about it, why shouldn&#8217;t we all<br />
benefit.&#8221;</p>
<p>Despite the impact on prohibition on the stability of<br />
social institutions, the US government rarely looks at<br />
the unintended consequences of the drug war, says<br />
Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the Drug Policy<br />
Alliance (DPA). &#8220;The absence of critical analysis on<br />
the part of the administration and Congress is worse<br />
now than ever,&#8221; says Nadelmann who once worked for the<br />
US State Department analyzing the laundering of drug<br />
money.</p>
<p>Nadelmann says the DPA has been building a political<br />
movement to shift public opinion concerning drug<br />
prohibition. &#8220;We want to end prohibition as we know it<br />
and reduce the harms of drugs,&#8221; says Nadelmann.<br />
&#8220;Nobody should be punished in any way for what we put<br />
in our bodies, that should be a fundamental human<br />
right and is sound public policy.&#8221;</p>
<p>According to Nadelmann, one of the greatest concerns<br />
about drug legalization is &#8220;loss of control.&#8221; He says<br />
that the government&#8217;s prohibition policies have<br />
resulted in greater overall loss of control and<br />
regulation and taxation of drugs is the answer to this<br />
concern. Since the majority of drug arrests take place<br />
for marijuana, he says the dismantling of prohibition<br />
has started there. He says the DPA has taken the<br />
initiative to the states and helped support the<br />
passage of state medical marijuana laws and asset<br />
forfeiture reform. DPA also helped pass California&#8217;s<br />
Prop. 36 which significantly reduced the number of<br />
people sent to jail for drug crimes by offering<br />
treatment as an alternative.</p>
<p>Nadelmann noted that countries with more permissive<br />
drug laws have not seen an increase in drug use. When<br />
an audience at the panel asked about age limits on<br />
drug access, Miron says there was support for age<br />
limits such as that which exist for alcohol and<br />
cigarettes. But he noted that children would still get<br />
access, as they do now to both drugs and alcohol, and<br />
it is important that these concerns be addressed by<br />
families.</p>
<p>Nadelmann says the marijuana reform movement mirrors<br />
the gay rights movement in that it is pushed forward<br />
by those who put a human face on the issue by coming<br />
out of the closet as marijuana smokers. He says this<br />
had helped shift public opinion in which 41% of those<br />
polled support the idea that marijuana should be taxed<br />
and regulated with numbers approaching 50% in Nevada<br />
and Alaska.</p>
<p>As an increasing number of states take steps toward<br />
regulating medical cannabis, Nadelmann says the next<br />
question will be &#8220;what is medical?&#8221; He notes that some<br />
people use cannabis to generate the same effect as<br />
Viagra, to treat depression, or to relax at the end of<br />
the day as one would with a cocktail.</p>
<p>According to Nadelmann, the next evolutionary step in<br />
the repeal of drug prohibition is the Oakland Cannabis<br />
Initiative, a ballot initiative in Oakland, Calif.<br />
which would make marijuana enforcement the lowest<br />
police enforcement priority and support a statewide<br />
effort to tax and regulate the drug. Supporters of the<br />
initiative are still gathering signatures to place it<br />
on the November ballot.</p>
<p>Another challenge for those who wish to overturn drug<br />
prohibition is to end policies that encourage the<br />
hatred of those who consume or distribute drugs.<br />
McNamara notes that under prohibition, these people<br />
are not only imprisoned, but they have property<br />
confiscated, driver&#8217;s licenses taken away and are cut<br />
off from access to educational funding. These<br />
measures, says McNamara, violate the right of<br />
Americans to life, liberty and the pursuit of<br />
happiness. He reminded the audience at the Drug War<br />
Crimes forum that the first laws supporting drug<br />
prohibition were put in place in 1914 by<br />
&#8220;fundamentalist groups who inserted their concept of<br />
sin into the penal code.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;It is not up to the government to tell us what rights<br />
they will dole out to us,&#8221; said McNamara as the<br />
audience cheered. &#8220;We were born with those rights.&#8221;</p>
<p>Ann Harrison is a freelance reporter working in the<br />
Bay Area.</p>
<p>a</p>

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