Drug WarRant by Pete Guither Heading Image

Last updated:
6/15/07; 8:59:35 PM


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Friday, October 27, 2006

Colombia advertising the drug war!

OK, this is just bizarre. Via the drug czar's "blog" comes this truly surreal item:
Colombia will launch a hard-hitting advertising campaign in London next week aimed at raising awareness that cocaine use in Europe is killing hundreds of children and wiping out pristine rain-forests in South America.

The "cocaine curse" campaign will be unveiled at a conference of European anti-drugs officials and police chiefs on Thursday.

So our government, which has been so incredibly inept with its media campaign drug war advertising, continues to send millions of dollars to Colombia to pay for and promote an effort that has not only failed, but has actually fueled the crime and destruction. And now Colombia is advertising this "effort" in Europe?

My head hurts.

Given the fact that the drug czar appears pleased by this, how much you want to bet that the ONDCP was behind the advertising campaign in some way? And if so, I expect that the ads will be hilarious.

7:42:33 PM |   | Links | permalink | comment []



10 Steps to End the Drug War from DrugSense

An interesting message from Mark Greer at DrugSense:
While the main purpose of DrugSense is to encourage accuracy and honesty in the media with respect to illegal drugs, our goal is ultimately to stop the costly and ineffective drug war. Through our extensive archive of more than 170,000 articles on all aspects of drug policy, we have identified 10 specific steps that would result in ending prohibition as we know it.

1. Grant agronomist Lyle Craker a license to grow medicinal-grade cannabis at the University of Massachusetts.

Effect: End the federal government's monopoly on growing marijuana to meet the FDA's requirement for an independent, high quality cannabis supply for approved cannabis-based research and product development.

2. Pass the Hinchey-Rohrbacher Amendment.

Effect: End the costly DEA harassment of California dispensaries and allow states in which medical cannabis is legal to begin regulated access without federal interference.

3. Accept the Petition to Reschedule Cannabis.

Effect: Remove cannabis from the restrictive Schedule I designation of the Controlled Substances Act (CSA) and permit its prescription by physicians like pharmaceuticals.

4. Make Afghani opium available to pharmaceutical companies.

Effect: Develop a licensing system so that opium grown in Afghanistan can be legally sold to make narcotic pain relievers, thereby alleviating a worldwide shortage of these medications.

5. Defund the National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign.

Effect: Save taxpayers hundreds of millions by eliminating this campaign, which has only resulted in making drug use more attractive to teens.

6. Increase funding for needle exchange and safe consumption sites.

Effect: Prevent overdoses, reduce drug-related hospital admissions, and slow the spread of HIV/AIDS and hepatitis C.

7. Eliminate Mandatory Minimum Sentencing.

Effect: Reduce the non-violent prison population, and end the racial disparity in sentencing that has resulted in one in three black men between the ages of 20 and 29 being under correctional control.

8. Free non-violent drug prisoners and stop the Federal trials of Marc Emery and Ed Rosenthal.

Effect: Save the taxpayers the wasted time and expense spent trying these non-violent individuals on unpopular charges.

9. Develop citizen oversight boards for SWAT squads.

Effect: Save lives and property that are needlessly disrupted through the use of a violent techniques for non-violent situations, which are too often drug raids based on bad information.

10. Pass as many lowest-priority marijuana initiatives as possible.

Effect: Help the government understand that citizens want to be protected from violent terrorists, not non-violent marijuana consumers. Public officials, including police, need to prioritize their scarce dollars and resources according to that which is most dangerous and most urgent to public health and safety.

Of course, we at DrugSense know that many more steps need be taken to move away from drug policies based on fear, prejudice, and misinformation, and toward policies grounded in science, reason, and compassion. If you have an idea or step that could be added to this list, please post it here.

Some people have, at times, questioned the apparent fractured structure of the drug policy reform community and wondered if it could be better accomplished if all the various organizations and efforts combined their resources into one. I think this list helps to show the value and importance of a multi-pronged approach in ending the drug war. No one effort can do it -- it takes chipping away at a host of different, yet related issues.

8:18:20 AM |   | Links | permalink | comment []



Open Thread

I'm a bit busy right now with photography (doing 75 actor head shot sessions and two theatre production photography shoots in three days), so talk amongst yourselves. Here are a couple of things to check out.

bullet image Daksya notes what could possibly be the biggest advance related to opiates in the last 30-40 years. It involves a technique that can retain all the pain-relieving and euphoric properties of opioid-based drugs, while eliminating the negative tolerance and withdrawal effects.

bullet image With Beheadings and Attacks, Drug Gangs Terrorize Mexico and Graft takes root along border. Two articles take a look at the problems related to our neighbor to the south (thanks to a couple of readers). The corruption and violence cannot be solved as long as the drug war is there to make criminal trafficking so profitable. Reader Lee suggests: "End the drug war, secure our borders" as a possible slogan.

bullet image Radley has another drug raid gone... right? A case that doesn't involve a wrong address sometimes shows even more clearly how bad the policies are regarding SWAT-style raids. In this case, cops broke in with guns and a concussion grenade, caused $5,000 worth of damage and killed a golden lab named Shadow. And they found two joints.

8:08:59 AM |   | Links | permalink | comment []






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There's a war going on. It destroys lives and families, spawns violence, suspends civil liberties, tramples on the infirm, locks up millions of peaceful citizens, costs billions, and subjugates reason with fear. This blog looks at the front lines of the drug war, with news, analysis, and the occasional rant.

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