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Tuesday, November 7, 2006

Election Discussion

Talk about the results here. CNN's results page is a start for getting info.

6:53:10 PM |   | Links | permalink | comment []


Ruminations on Republicans and Democrats and drug policy

A good discussion on yesterday's voting post, so I thought I'd continue it here (these are my own thoughts -- your mileage may vary). And since third party candidates are still mostly excluded by the system, I'm going to focus on the majors.

First of all, obviously if you've got a candidate from either party who is strongly in favor of drug policy reform, that's great. But for the vast majority of this country, this option doesn't exist. I can't count the number of times that I've gone to a candidate's website (when researching voting guides) and found nothing regarding drug policy.

Why? Because of us, mostly. Drug policy reform doesn't even show up on polls as an issue people care about. I was recently polled by an independent company and I had to select "other" and write it in, despite a list of about 30 issues from which to select. The public visibility of this issue, in my mind, is lower than the public interest. And the reason is that people won't talk about it.

How many of you are still afraid to tell your friends, your family that you support drug policy reform -- an end to prohibition -- even, gasp, legalization? How many other critical issues today cut this way? Can you imagine someone expressing an opinion that they are pro-choice, or pro-life -- "but don't use my real name -- I need to keep my job"? Oh, sure, it probably happens, but not nearly to the extent that people stay in the closet on ending prohibition.

Until we get a larger percentage of the population willing to go public about reform, we'll have a really tough time getting politicians of any flavor to do very much for us.

Given that reality, what can we expect from the two major parties? Both have been horrible in drug policy. Republicans through their law-and-order and moralizing planks, and Democrats from their Oh-yeah-well-I-can-be-just-as-law-and-order-as-you and protect-people-from-themselves planks (see Tip O'Neill).

Since we don't have the clout (or the will) to get the politicians' attention directly yet, we sometimes need to find ways to get in sideways. (This is why I think the state initiatives have been good things -- they bypass, to some extent, the politicians, and let the people actually have a greater voice than they are publicly willing to have, thereby sending the politicians a message and building public confidence in the issue.)

What does this mean with the parties?

Democrats

The sideways approach is probably all that is politically viable at this point. I have had Democrats tell me that they agree with me on drug policy, but it would be political suicide for the Democrats to support it and it would undermine their ability to protect a woman's right to choose.

However, as the old saying goes, organizing Democrats is like herding cats, and there's a whole lot of issues they love that can be exploited and made to connect to drug policy. The environment, health care (affordable health care), racism, the poor, the machinery of war, seniors, foreign policy, AIDS, etc. This allows a lot of possibilities for them to cast votes that are favorable to incremental drug policy reform without worrying about the attack ad showing they're soft on drugs.

Additionally, if the public ever gets to the point where they're willing to speak out in large enough voting numbers and demand reform, the Democrats, in my opinion, will go along.

Republicans

I, quite frankly, don't know what approach will work with the Republicans today other than a wholesale purge of the party leadership (which this election may precipitate). I've had plenty of Republicans tell me that they agree with me on drug policy, but these Republicans no longer have any power in their party.

There used to be all sorts of great sideways approaches to the Republicans -- limited government, states' rights, fiscal responsibility, individual responsibility, keep the damned gov'mint off my land, gun rights, foreign policy. But the current Republican leadership has completely scrapped all of those bedrock conservative principles in favor of the use of authoritarian and theocratic measures to maintain power.

Additionally, if the public ever gets to the point where they're willing to speak out in large enough voting numbers and demand reform, I'm not sure if the current Republican leadership would go along. If they think they need to buck the public to appeal to the theocratic base or protect the interests of the pharmaceutical contributors, they'll ignore the public's wishes.

Conclusion: This means that at this point in time it appears that the Democrats are the best choice.

A big win for the Democrats today means

  • split government for the next two years
  • better chance for things like the Hinchey amendment to pass
  • a potential shake-up in the Republican party that could mean a return to more traditional conservative roots, or cause libertarian conservatives to split off entirely

So for now, a Democratic win is good news for us.

Now, I know many of my loyal readers are unhappy when I talk about incremental reform, and I understand that, but I believe that major reform would require getting that majority of the population out of the closet and demanding it. Incremental reform softens up the population to counter decades of propaganda -- it gets them to start the process of questioning what they've been taught all their lives. It's hard to get a massive population to completely change overnight.

I would love to see major reform happen now without all the piecemeal efforts. I'm just not sure how.

10:53:26 AM |   | Links | permalink | comment []



Open Thread

VOTE!

9:01:40 AM |   | Links | permalink | comment []


Drugs implicated in death in Florida autopsies

Over at the Drug Czar's "blog", they say
A new autopsy report from Florida gives us another reason to continue our focus on reducing the non-medical use of prescription drug
Say what? Your focus? This, from the office that's been spending all its time in Nevada, Colorado, and South Dakota trying to defeat marijuana initiatives?

So I thought I'd take a closer look at the figures in Florida. Not a lot of surprises that I can see.

Drug Tracked # of Cases a cause of death present only
Cocaine 927 348 579
Methadone 428 312 116
Alprazolam 489 194 295
Oxycodone 377 185 192
Ethyl Alcohol 1,754 160 1,594
Morphine 289 106 183
Hydrocodone 346 106 240
Other Benzodiazepine 484 62 422
Diazepam 285 59 226
Fentanyl 85 51 34
Propoxyphene 155 38 117
Carisoprodol/Meprobamate 148 36 112
Heroin 36 29 7
Tramadol 59 18 41
Hydromorphone 63 13 50
Other Opioid 133 12 121
Methamphetamine 58 9 49
Meperidine 25 3 22
Amphetamine 51 3 48
MDMA 25 2 23
Nitrous Oxide 1 1 0
GHB 3 1 2
Other Methylated Amphetamine 5 1 4
MDA 18 1 17
Ketamine 1 0 1
Phencyclidine (PCP) 1 0 1
Cannabinoids 471 0 471
The vast majority of these 3,595 cases involved more than one drug listed in the report. The state's medical examiners were asked to distinguish between the drugs being the "cause" of death or merely "present" in the body at the time of death.
Notice the item at the bottom of this list? At least the medical examiners are honest enough to know that cannabis is not going to be the cause of death. The fact that it's even included in the list is silly.

Gee, I wonder why the Drug Czar didn't simply say:

Once again, Cannabis was not the cause of any drug-related deaths.
In fact, it's the safest drug on that list. By a long shot.

12:06:25 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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