WAR ON DRUGS or is it a WAR ON US???

The War on Drugs, Marijuana, and People of Color

May 12

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One of the most hotly debated questions in contemporary American politics is whether or not marijuana should be legalized, or at least decriminalized, for medical and recreational purposes. As it stands, the federal government considers marijuana a serious public health risk, in the same legal drug classification as heroin, cocaine, and LSD. But restrictions against marijuana have softened in several states, beginning with California’s legalization of medical cannabis in 1996, and support for decriminalization has grown among the American people. The far-left faction of the Democratic Party leads this movement in Congress. Many conservatives, on the other hand, maintain that marijuana is dangerous and must remain outlawed. Both sides of this debate are somewhat lacking in credibility, however, because little scientific evidence is available to support either position. The strict federal regulation of marijuana makes it difficult to study medically, so it is hard to know whether such harsh policy is necessary for public health.

Though current legislation has prevented the scientific community from studying the medical effects of marijuana in depth in the United States, researchers are able to investigate its impact on various American communities. Studies into this issue indicate that the accessibility of marijuana relative to other drugs has led to it becoming the most prevalent illegal drug in the United States and the most common reason for drug-related arrests. These studies also show that the federal government’s stringent approach to marijuana has a disproportionate impact on racial minorities, with African Americans and Latinos representing a higher percentage of marijuana arrests than marijuana users.

Another problem affecting racial-minority communities is mass incarceration. The United States is infamous for having one of the largest and most unforgiving prison systems in the world. Where many other first-world countries have modernized their correctional institutions to focus less on punishment and more on rehabilitation, America’s prisons have become bigger, harsher, and more damaging to minority communities in particular.

How much of that is due to marijuana? This investigation will explore how marijuana criminalization has affected minority incarceration in the United States in addition to discussing possible approaches to marijuana policy that could mitigate the damage that incarceration inflicts upon minorities.

The role of laws in society, including those that criminalize marijuana, is to promote the well-being of the general public. Some believe that the current, punitive approach to marijuana achieves this goal, but this investigation has revealed to me the damaging effects of that approach on already disadvantaged communities.

To understand marijuana’s current role in American politics as an instrument of racial disparity, it helps to know why it was so harshly criminalized in the first place.

Many assume that the United States’ punitive approach to drug abuse is a misguided but well-intentioned attempt to improve public health. In reality, the primary motivation for the criminalization of marijuana and other drugs was never the well-being of the people, but rather a deceptive strategy that politicians have used to stoke racial resentment and alter the electorate in their favor.

Marijuana’s history as a political issue lies in the origins of the word “marijuana” itself. Today, many advocates for legalization insist on using its proper name, cannabis, due to the historically racist connotations of the more common term. At the dawn of the 20th century, “marijuana” or “marihuana” was a colloquial designation for cannabis, derived from Mexican Spanish. During and after 1898’s Spanish-American War, Mexicans and other Spanish-speakers became the object of fierce xenophobic sentiment that festered for decades.

Prohibition hawks like Harry Anslinger, chief of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics from 1930 to 1962, took advantage of white Americans’ resentment for Hispanics to further their prohibitionist agendas. Through official reports and propaganda campaigns, Anslinger and others tied the word “marijuana” to Hispanics by suggesting it was “sold by a hot tamale vendor… in a closely congested section of New York.” Marijuana policy expert John Hudak explains the effect of this strategy:

“These efforts by government officials… are clear in their intent: to linkmarijuana to unknown, mysterious, or feared groups from other parts of the world, and to link the usage of marijuana to lawlessness and serious criminal offenses. In effect, marijuana — not cannabis or hemp — was a scourge on society, brought to us by all the people we fear or should fear”
The biggest challenge to Anslinger’s anti-marijuana campaign came in the form of 1944’s La Guardia report, the end product of a committee formed by New York mayor Fiorello La Guardia. The committee found that marijuana was not addictive, did not motivate major crimes, and was not common among children. It declared “The publicity concerning the catastrophic effects of smoking marijuana in New York City is unfounded.”

Despite this blatant rebuttal to Anslinger’s claims, his prohibitionist movement triumphed. The success of his efforts indicates two things: First, that racial sentiment can be a tool more powerful than even data-driven analysis like the LaGuardia report; and second, that the institutionally racist elements of America’s history are closely tied to the history of marijuana policy. As such, one must consider the possibility that successive U.S. marijuana laws might have similarly ulterior motives.

The exploitation of xenophobia for political purposes did not stop with Harry Anslinger, nor with the marijuana debate. It became of an integral part of the Republican electoral strategy beginning in the late 1960s. With Civil Rights victories in the Supreme Court and the passage of the Voting Rights Acts in 1965, African-American voter turnout was at an all-time high. Due to their longtime Democratic leaning, both African Americans and blue-collar whites posed a threat to the Republicans’ electoral chances. Richard Nixon and his campaign staff sought to solve both problems simultaneously.

One of Nixon’s biggest domestic policy campaigns was his “war against crime.” Civil Rights activist Angela Davis alleges that this moniker is deceptive in nature, noting that “the word ‘crime’ begins to stand in for the word ‘race.’” The word “crime” became a masked umbrella term for the various groups of people Nixon saw as political threats, but his primary target was racial minorities. In one speech, Nixon said “We must wage total war in the United States against the evils that we see in our cities.” Nixon’s focus on cities in his supposed anti-crime, anti-drug campaign reflects modern politicians’ use of the words “urban” and “inner-city” to reference Latinos and African Americans, who often live in urban areas, without naming them outright.

This tactic is now known as the Southern strategy. Nixon’s veiled appeal to white Americans’ racial suspicions led working-class whites to “join the Republican Party in droves,” according to author and civil-rights advocate Michelle Alexander.

There is a reason the phrase “war on drugs” is more closely associated with Ronald Reagan than Richard Nixon. Nixon introduced the Southern strategy to persuade working-class whites to join the Republican electorate, but Reagan and his allies perfected it. Jelani Cobb, formerly of the University of Connecticut, explains that “Reagan promised tax cuts to the rich and to throw all the crack [cocaine] users in jail, both of which devastated communities of color but were effective in getting the Southern [white] vote.”

Reagan’s politically motivated attack on people of color took a multi-pronged approach. The fact that he is still hailed as a hero by many modern Republicans is largely due to his establishment of trickle-down economics and old-fashioned individualism as central tenets of the party. His administration scaled back government intervention in education, welfare, jobs, healthcare, and more of what Angela Davis calls “the institutions that are designed to assist human beings.” This platform led to the highest number of Americans living in poverty in two decades, which was even more disastrous for people of color considering that a far higher percentage of African Americans were impoverished than whites.

The second method that Reagan used to target communities of color was his realization of Nixon’s war on drugs. From 1980 to 1986, the percentage of U.S.’s combined state and federal prison populations represented by African Americans rose only 3 percent. However, by the end of Reagan’s presidency in 1988, the U.S.’s total number of prisoners had risen to 603,732 from around 315,974 in 1980, the largest increase in the 20th century at that point. This means that, despite the increase in the percentage of blacks in the prison population being somewhat small, there were nonetheless many more total African Americans incarcerated in 1988 than at the beginning of the Reagan era.

Furthermore, drug-related arrests grew by 80.3 percent from 1980 to 1987, which indicates that Reagan’s anti-narcotics initiative played a major role in the growth of the prison population under his administration.

The Southern strategy is, admittedly, a cynical narrative. It seems somewhat outlandish to claim that Nixon’s and Reagan’s wars on crime and drugs were not actually public-health initiatives, but complex electoral schemes. Conservative analysts have attempted to discredit this interpretation of late 20th-century Republican policy by pointing out that, on its surface, the Southern strategy sounds like a conspiracy theory. Without hard evidence, it would be. But top strategists from both administrations have admitted that is exactly what happened. President Nixon’s close adviser, John Ehrlichman, said in a 1994 interview that:

“We knew we couldn’t make it illegal to be either against the war or black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities. We could arrest their leaders, raid their homes, break up their meetings, and vilify them night after night on the evening news. Did we know we were lying about the drugs? Of course we did.”
Like Nixon’s staff, Reagan’s inner circle was also aware of the true intentions and consequences of their policies. Longtime Republican strategist and Reagan adviser Lee Atwater was once caught on tape saying:

“You start out in 1954 by saying ‘n*****, n*****, n*****.’ By 1968 you can’t say ‘n*****;’ that hurts you. It backfires. So you say stuff like forced-bussing, states’ rights and all that stuff. You’re getting so abstract now. You’re talking about cutting taxes. And all of these things you’re talking about are totally economic things, and the byproduct of them is blacks get hurt worse than whites.”
On its own, U.S. drug policy’s close association with racist politics is not enough to prove that marijuana criminalization has a major impact on the incarceration of racial minorities, but it does establish a historical relationship between the two and indicates that America’s current, flawed approach to drug abuse is not a misguided attempt at improving public health, but a politically motivated strategy to alter the electorate.

By the time of the 1992 presidential election, Republicans had controlled the White House for 12 years. Ronald Reagan had been popular not in spite of his covert racism, but partially because of it. Perhaps the most damaging aspect of his legacy was the fact that, “you couldn’t win [the presidency] without appearing tough on crime” due to Reagan’s wars on drugs and crime.

Some Democrats learned this lesson by the 1992 presidential campaign. Bill Clinton and Al Gore ran advertisements labeling themselves as “tough on crime,” openly distancing themselves from “the other Democrats.”

After Clinton was inaugurated, he followed through on his campaign promise of empowering law enforcement. Despite the fact that the wars on drugs and crime were devised by Republicans, it was Clinton who oversaw the largest surge in incarceration of any president in the 20th century — and in U.S. history. The prison population grew from 846,277 in 1992 to 1,331,278 by the end of his presidency in 2000.

The state of the U.S. criminal justice system today is largely the result of Clinton-era policies. The number of Americans in prison continued to rise under the second Bush administration, but not nearly as steeply as under his predecessor. It peaked at the beginning of Barack Obama’s presidency, in 2009, at 1,613,740. The incarcerated population declined during the Obama years, reaching 1,458,173 in 2016. It has never come close to pre-Clinton levels.

The past roughly 30 years of the U.S. prison system, known as the mass-incarceration era, have been damaging to the country as a whole. Studies suggest that mass incarceration has had little impact on declining crime rates since the 1990s, and that Clinton’s strict sentencing policies were both costly and unnecessary.

But the mass-incarceration era has been particularly damaging to some racial and ethnic minorities. The racial demographics of the U.S. criminal justice system do not reflect those of the general population. According to the Pew Research Center, non-Hispanic whites made up 64 percent of the total U.S. population in 2016 but only 30 percent of all those incarcerated in state and federal prisons. Hispanics made up 16 percent of the general population but 23 percent of the incarcerated. Most shockingly, African Americans make up 33 percent of the incarcerated population despite comprising only 12 percent of the general population. That is a statistically significant difference. To give further context for the sheer number of African Americans in prisons, there are more black males incarcerated in the United States than there are women incarcerated on Earth.

To counter claims of racial bias within the criminal justice system, some conservatives analysts cite the fact that African Americans are more likely to commit crimes than other racial and ethnic groups. Edwin S. Rubenstein of the New Century Foundation writes that “Asians have the lowest rates, followed by whites, and then Hispanics. Blacks have notably high crime rates. This pattern holds true for virtually all crime categories and for virtually all age groups.” But it is also true that Asian Americans have the highest median household income ($81,331 as of 2017) of any racial group, followed by whites ($68,145), then Hispanics ($50,486), and finally black Americans ($40,258). Could it be a coincidence that the racial sequence of crime rates aligns exactly with the racial sequence of median household income? Perhaps, but it more likely means that socioeconomic status is directly related to criminal activity.

To attribute higher crime rates among African Americans to some innate predisposition to crime would be both absurd and racist. There is every reason to believe that heightened crime rates among African Americans is the result of a historical socioeconomic disadvantage that originated with slavery and has persisted ever since. Members of less advantaged communities are more likely to become involved in criminal activity. This means that mass incarceration and draconian sentencing has a disproportionate impact on racial minorities.

Recidivism only exacerbates this problem. Being incarcerated for a first time in the United States, whose prison system is much more focused on punishment than rehabilitation, greatly increases the likelihood of being arrested and jailed again. Furthermore, since it is predominantly males who are incarcerated among African American communities (The chance of a black male born in 2001 being incarcerated is one in three, compared to one in 17 for white men and one in 18 for black women), their imprisonment often robs African American families of a key breadwinner, which causes significant economic strife for those families. This is especially true considering black and Hispanic households are more likely to be impoverished even without the influence of incarceration.

This is why the punitive, harsh judicial and legislative approach to low-level drug offenses like marijuana possessions are so destructive to ethnic and racial minorities. The result of the war on drugs, and the era of mass incarceration that followed, has been a devastating impact on the socioeconomic opportunities of minority communities.

Bill Clinton oversaw the largest surge in the prison population in American history. There is reason to believe that much of that 485,000-prisoner increase, and much of the excessively punitive approach to crime that defined the mass-incarceration era, manifested as a crackdown on low-level drug offenses — especially marijuana.

During his presidency, Clinton produced numerous bipartisan criminal-justice policies in collaboration with the Republican Party, which was still heavily influenced by the Reagans’ anti-drug fervor. Two such policies were particularly impactful on drug offenses and on America’s racial minorities.

The first was the introduction of mandatory-minimum sentencing. Federal judges were required to impose sentences no less stringent than those prescribed by the federal government. Often times, such requirements were extremely harsh, sometimes going as far as mandating life or decades-long sentences for low-level drug possession or sale. This filled America’s prisons with low-level offenders.

Clinton’s second and most important policy change is the transformation of Reagan’s war on drugs into a war on marijuana. A comprehensive 2006 study by Marc Mauer and Ryan S. King explains:

“Over the course of the 1990s… Law enforcement agencies arrested fewer people for cocaine and heroin offenses and began to arrest more people for marijuana possession and sale. By 1996, marijuana had once again surpassed heroin and cocaine as the primary drug of arrest, a gap which has widened since then.”
The Mauer-King study investigated the evolution of marijuana enforcement and arrests from the year 1990 to 2002. For eight of those 12 years, Bill Clinton was in the White House, meaning the trends noted in the study are largely due to his policies. An important change from Reagan’s war on drugs was that marijuana-related offenses, primarily use and possession, came to comprise the vast majority of drug arrests. The researchers found that, “of the 450,000 increase in drug arrests during the period 1990–2002, 82% of the growth was for marijuana, and 79% was for marijuana possession alone.” Due to Clinton’s stringent law-enforcement policies, many (roughly a third) of those who were arrested for and convicted of marijuana felonies ended up being sentenced to prison.

Perhaps the most important finding from the study is the role of race in marijuana enforcement. African Americans make up an estimated 14 percent of marijuana users, but 30 percent of marijuana arrests. This disparity speaks to a major bias in terms of which communities law enforcement targeted for marijuana offenses during the study period.

The percentage of Americans in federal prison for drug-related crimes peaked in 1994 at 61 percent. That number has fallen since the Clinton era, but the effects of the war on drugs in the late 20th century were so colossal that, even today, drug offenders still comprise 47 percent of convicted federal prisoners — or 82,000 people.

The figures are different when looking not only at the federal prison, but also state prisons and local jails. The majority — around 42 percent — of persons in all America’s prisons have been convincted of violent crimes, compared to 21 percent for drug offenses. But that is still over 450,000 people. The Mauer-King study reveals that “marijuana arrests now constitute nearly half (45%) of the 1.5 million drug arrests annually,” indicating that many thousands people are now in prison for marijuana-related crimes. It is likely that many of their sentences are both unjust and impractical, considering that the anti-drug and anti-crime agendas of recent American presidents were never motivated by a genuine interest in public health.

The sad truth of the war on drugs is that the politicians who devised it were willing to decimate entire communities of their constituents for the electoral gain that a tough-on-drugs agenda would bring them. Marijuana became central to that tactic during the 1990s due to its widespread usage and relative accessibility.

Under the federal government’s Controlled Substances Act, marijuana is classified as a Schedule I controlled substance. This is perplexing from a medical perspective because, in many cases, the health risk posed by cannabis is not nearly as dire as that of other Schedule I drugs like heroin and cocaine. This policy disparity is the work of people like Harry Anslinger and Nixon campaign strategists, who over several decades used marijuana to villainize racial minorities. Thanks to them, many American political leaders and citizens alike have the mistaken perception that marijuana poses a massive threat to public health.

That is not to say marijuana is a benign substance. In recent years, cultivators have increased the cannabis plant’s average content of its primary psychoactive compound, tetrahydrocannabinol, to levels much higher and more dangerous than in previous decades. Furthermore, there is data to suggest it can inhibit brain development in young adults, whereas there is little data available to assess claims some have made regarding its supposed medical benefits.

As such, the question of whether marijuana should be fully legalized for recreational and medical purposes is difficult to answer. But considering that marijuana’s harsh criminalization has contributed to the rise of mass incarceration in America, cost the country a great deal of money (an estimated $4 billion per year), and harmed racial-minority communities to a great degree, it is clear that marijuana should at least be decriminalized.

The United States treats drug abuse as a criminal issue rather than a medical one. One solution to our drug-imprisonment problems — and our vast and costly prison system — would be to look abroad. While recreational and medical marijuana are fully legalized in only two countries (Canada and Uruguay), there are not many modern nations that criminalize the drug as harshly as America does. Nations throughout Europe, such as the Netherlands, approach drug use — and criminal justice as a whole — rehabilitatively rather than punitively. In Germany, “the sole aim of incarceration is to enable prisoners to lead a life of social responsibility free of crime upon release.”

Given that medical data are currently so sparse, it might not be wise to legalize marijuana outright without first studying its medical effects in greater detail. However, the enduring legacy of marijuana criminalization as a central instrument of the war on drugs, which has harmed racial minorities in America to a great extent, makes it necessary to scale back restrictions and devise a policy aimed at helping those affected by marijuana — rather than punishing its users.
 
THE DRUG OF WHITE SUPREMACY
BY TREY LYON
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New initiatives are seeking to curb what is often portrayed as a growing epidemic of heroin use in America. But as Ekow Yankah wrote in a brilliant piece last month, titled “When Addiction Has a White Face," this new attention to the plight of the addicted and the justification from law enforcement that “these are people with a purpose in life” has only come when the faces of addicts are no longer black and brown, but white.

Crack devastated African-American communities and got a military-level police response. When white mortality drops because of heroin and opioid addiction, we deploy interventions, Lazarus drugs, and rehabilitation. White privilege and supremacy in plain view — The War on Drug Offenders vs. The War on Addiction.

And there are many of my white brothers and sisters who will once again read these headlines, or even my words here and believe there is nothing wrong. Accusations of “race-baiting” and “playing the race card” become the poison dart to sink any real efforts at coming to terms with white privilege within the majority culture. And yet there is an addiction, one that the vast majority of white Americans take in with every single breath. The drug of white supremacy has millions of addicts — and it is time for a recovery movement.

Of course, admitting you have a problem is the first step of recovery, and getting white folks to see that is no small task. W.E.B. DuBois famously recounts being at a ball and inviting a white girl to dance, only to be rejected because of his race. In that moment, he says it was as though a veil dropped, one through which he could see the other white couples dancing, but one that he could not break through. The task of admitting you have a problem is the task of seeing that the veil exists.

Earlier this month, I was honored to be a part of a conversation about Jim Wallis’ new book — America’s Original Sin: Racism, White Privilege and the Bridge to a New America. As I read the book, I was grateful for the ways Wallis lays out the evidence — from the legacy of slavery to police brutality and mass incarceration, and a powerful reflection on Ferguson and Baltimore as the parables of our day. But what is perhaps most helpful for the white reader of this book are the stories of Wallis’ own recovery — recognizing that his father went to college on the Montgomery GI Bill following WWII, a privilege not afforded to returning black veterans of the war; or getting an FHA loan to buy a house for their family in Detroit when the government did not extend the same financing to African Americans in those days.

Many white folks I know grew up like I did — thinking that white supremacy was for terrible, horrible people who wore funny white hats and burned crosses. Once I finished that family tree project and found out no one in my family was in the KKK or, as far I could tell, ever owned slaves, I could exhale and go about by suburban, white, middle-class existence, never realizing I was inhaling the drug of white privilege with the very next breath.

But on closer examination, there are institutions that I participated in — a childhood church that was part of the largest Protestant denomination in America, founded on the desire of Southern slaveholders to maintain slaves, and a college and seminary that once had ties to the same wealth and bounty that was immorally made on the backs of millions of slaves. During a recent invitation to preach at my seminary, it was painful for me to say, “behind the white Georgian columns of many of our churches lies the blood of our sisters and brothers.”

Recovery isn’t easy. It is painful to recognize that the things you have participated — even reveled in — has meant the suffering of others. As white folks, we have to examine the darker corners of our history and shine a light on the hard things, confront them and seek repentance.

My friends in the recovery movement remind me that they are always “in recovery” — that there is no cure or time when they will cease being in process. There is real truth to that in my own experience of whiteness. As Jim Wallis says in the book, “dying to whiteness” is an essential task, for I am French/English/German, not merely white, or the even more ambiguous categories of “Caucasian” or “Anglo.” Still every journey begins with a single step, and coming to terms with my/our own inexorable privilege is the first step on the path.

 
Race and the War on Drugs



Brent Duke
Poverty & Prejudice: Paradoxes of U.S. Drug Policies


INTRODUCTION

The “war on drugs” is a very interesting beast that our society has created, and as the “war” continues to gain momentum it becomes harder to decipher what its purpose is. Every year America spends billions of dollars on the “war on drugs” because politicians win votes with the stance of being hard on drugs. Although the rhetoric of the politicians does not include anything about unequal enforcement in black and white communities, this is the underlying issue that needs to be addressed. While only 13 percent of those using illegal drugs are African-American (exactly their proportion in the national population), blacks constitute 35 percent of those arrested for simple possession and a staggering 74 percent of those sentenced for drug possession (Wink, 1999). Although African Americans do not use drugs more than their white counterparts, blacks are punished disproportionately to whites. The purpose of this paper is to examine the reasons behind this differential treatment and discuss possible solutions to the clearly racist policies put forth by our government.

The concept of the “war on drugs” was political farce based on racism from the beginning. Nixon first declared a “war on drugs” during the 1968 campaign for the presidency because the silent majority was afraid of both hippies and blacks, both perceived to be into drugs. Nixon’s domestic policy advisor, John Ehrilichman later said, “We knew we were lying about the health effects of marijuana. We knew we were lying about the relationship between heroin and crime. But this is what we were doing to win the election. And it worked” (Wink, 1999).

THE FACTS

Although the “war on drugs” began as nothing more than a campaign trick, it was a successful one. Nixon’s success showed that politicians could be extremely successful in waging a war against the drug trade. Over the past 20 years, $500 billion have been thrown at the drug problem without securing any reduction in the drug trade (Wink, 1999). This huge amount of money has been spent appeasing voters, although it does not change the fact that drugs are just as readily available today as they have been anytime in the past. In 1995, the administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration, Thomas Constantine, said that drug availability of cocaine and heroin were at an all-time high (Falco, 1996).

The problem is that most of this money is spent on the supply-side of the drug trade. Politicians are convinced that the best solution to the drug problem is to attack drugs at the source. This method has yet to work and is clearly not the most efficient way to decrease drug use in America. Many recent studies indicate that treatment is the most effective way to deter drug abuse. Some estimates claim that treatment is seven times more cost-effective than domestic law enforcement, ten times more effective than interdiction, and 23 times more effective than attacking drugs at their source (Wink, 1999). But our government does not spend money on treatment. Only one third of the federal spending on the drug war is for treatment of addicts (Rowe, 1998). This means that as the “war on drugs” imprisons people, it does not also provide drug addicts with sufficient treatment for their problems.

The drug war began to escalate in the early 1980s and the number of people incarcerated for drug use has increased drastically over the past two decades. In New York in 1980, a drug crime was the most serious conviction offense of 11 percent of the state’s prisoners. By 1993, that fraction had risen to 44 percent (Dilulio, 1999). This holds true in many other states, and is evidence that the “war on drugs” is increasing prison populations exorbitantly. The discrepancy between the arrests and sentencing of minorities and whites for drug offenses are astonishing. In the same New York prisons in 1997, 95 percent of prisoners whose last and most serious conviction was for a drug offense were black or Hispanic (Dilulio, 1999). This clearly shows that the government is not fighting a color blind “war on drugs”, but is fighting a war against drugs that is inherently racist.


AN UNLEVEL PLAYING FIELD

Much of the disparity between the treatment of minorities and whites in the judicial system is economic. On average, white people earn more money than blacks, and because of this many white people can afford better legal representation than blacks. In 1997, the median income for a black family was $28,602, while the median income for a white family was $49,640. Not only is there a huge discrepancy in earnings, but 23.6% of African American families fall below the poverty line (US Census, 1999).

As part of my research for this paper, I interviewed a 40-year-old black man named “Stan” who has been in and out of prisons for most of this last decade for non-violent crimes. He has had three drug convictions for small amounts of drugs found in his car. Stan touched upon the issue of minorities being represented in courts saying, “Public defenders carry a heavy case load causing ineffective council, due mainly to lack of time for preparation. Only a paid attorney is going to investigate your case and provide witnesses on your behalf.” With so many African Americans falling below the poverty line, many cannot afford an attorney, leading to tremendous inequality in our judicial system. Stan then described plea-bargaining as a “modified form of coercion.” Many poor people accept plea-bargains because they know that they cannot win their cases in court without their own attorneys. The district attorney threatens people with longer sentences if the case goes to trial, leaving poorer individuals with no choice but to accept the plea bargain they are offered. Our judicial system clearly favors people who have money. Because many minorities do not have money, our current system is biased against them.


PROFILING: DWB

It is not only economics that leads to the disproportionate number of blacks arrested for drugs, but there are also social problems that go much deeper than money. Stan feels that “where the problem starts is with the police and their selective investigations, detainment, and harassment of minorities.” This part of the problem has nothing to do with economics, but everything to do with racism police force. Police pull over and search the cars of minorities at a much higher rate than white motorists, and cite a method known as “profiling”. Profiling is looking at the physical and behavioral indicators that make a person seem suspicious. The problem with profiling is that race is definitely an indicator used by the police.

Although “racial profiling” is illegal, police have always practiced profiling and never been held accountable. Modern day profiling stems from the practices of a highway patrol officer in Florida named Bob Vogel. In the early 1980s, Vogel pulled over vehicles because drivers gave him a bad feeling inside and simply looked like drug dealers. Vogel confiscated many drugs and weapons using this method. The courts decided that this ran counter to our Constitution’s promise against “unreasonable searches and seizures” (Webb, 1999), but Vogel was not willing to stop the practice he had perfected. He found a loophole in the court’s decision, and instead of pulling over drivers for looking suspicious, Vogel began pulling over suspicious looking drivers for minor traffic violations and then searching their vehicles.

He found them by the hundreds in the thick volumes of the Florida vehicle code; rarely enforced laws against driving with burned-out license-plate lights, out-of-kilter headlights, obscured tags, and windshield cracks. State codes bulge with such niggling prohibitions, some dating from the days of the horseless carriage (Webb, 1999).


This was the loophole that led to the creation of Operation Pipeline, a program now encompassing 301 police commands in forty-eight states. The obvious problems with Operation Pipeline are that many of these police searches come up with nothing and that most police officers seem to consider minorities to be suspicious looking.

On the same Interstate 95 where Operation Pipeline originated, 75 percent of the motorists and traffic violators along one stretch of the highway were white, but 80 percent of the searches were of minorities (Cannon, 1999). This problem is definitely not isolated to Interstate 95, but the Operation Pipeline method of racial profiling is now commonplace along nearly every highway in America. In New Jersey, 77 percent of motorists searched on the turnpike were black or Hispanic, even though 60 percent of those stopped were white (Taylor, 1999). 90 percent of the people arrested by the CHP’s Pipeline units during the last two years have been minorities (Webb, 1999). This phenomenon is known as “DWB”, short for “driving while black”. These statistics clearly point to police racism, not the singling out of shady looking individuals. Although an equal number of minorities and whites use illegal drugs, police seem to view very few whites as being suspicious enough to search.

Even Robert L. Wilkins, a Harvard-educated African American attorney from Washington D.C., was viewed by the police as being a suspicious individual. He was travelling with his family along Interstate 68 in Maryland and was pulled over by a state trooper. The trooper asked if he could search the car and when Wilkins refused, the trooper set loose a drug-sniffing dog. No drugs were found and Wilkins was “completely humiliated” (Cannon, 1999). Wilkins received a lawsuit from the Maryland State Police for $95,000, but the problem is that as long as “racial profiling” remains legitimate, many more innocent minority families will be harassed everyday. Any African-American who has teenage kids, especially male kids, has “had ‘the talk’ with them, about what to do when--not if, when--they are stopped. This is in the nature of instructions for survival” (Taylor, 1999).

Veteran California Highway Patrol sergeant, Curtis Rodriguez says, “It’s sheer numbers. Our guys make a lot of stops. You’ve got to kiss a lot of frogs before you find a prince.” Out of the 34,000 searches conducted in California by the highway patrol in 1997, only 2 percent of the people searched were carrying drugs (Webb, 1999). Not only are a very small number of the searches successful, most of “the frogs being kissed” are minorities.


UNFAIR LAWS & SELECTIVE PROSECUTING

Not only are police racist in their interpretation of certain laws, but there are also many laws that are inherently racist. One of the most blatant example of a racist law is the one stating that an individual selling five grams of crack cocaine receives the same five-year minimum penalty as a person selling 500 grams of cocaine powder (Skolnick, 1998). Economically disadvantaged individuals tend to use crack more than cocaine, while cocaine use is more prevalent amongst people in the middle and upper classes. Because many minorities are poor, crack use is higher for minorities than whites. Although crack is not exactly the same as cocaine, cocaine can very easily be turned into crack. It is illogical for these two drugs to carry such significantly different sentences.

The law is prejudiced against the economically disadvantaged who use crack more, but this does not explain the difference in the number of people prosecuted for crack related offenses. Many white people report having tried crack, but it is not very often that whites are prosecuted for the use of crack. 3.4 percent of blacks and 1.6 percent of whites report having used crack, but 83 percent of people sentenced for crack offenses are black (Skolnick, 1998). While only two times more black people use crack than white people, over four times as many black people are sentenced for crack related offenses. It is very clear that while the laws are racist, blacks and whites are also prosecuted unevenly.

Another law that was written which singled out African Americans was the 1986 Schoolyard Law. This law mandated enhanced sentences for people selling drugs within 1,000 feet of a schoolyard or 100 feet of a playground or video arcade. A defendant could receive a 20 year sentence in federal court for an offense that would bring only a six month term in state court (Weinstein, 1991). While the law itself does not seem racist, police enforcement of the law was racist. The police concentrated their enforcement more heavily around schools, playgrounds and arcades in minority neighborhoods, but made no efforts to enforce the new law in white neighborhoods. This became quite apparent, when 89 of the 93 people prosecuted under the law in 1988 and 1989 were black and Latino (Weinstein, 1991). This law was so obviously enforced along racial lines that in 1989 the law was brought before federal judges for review. The four judges noticed that most of the cases filed were in minority neighborhoods. They did not fully understand why there were no cases involving white defendants since it was “common knowledge that there was considerable drug dealing in some white neighborhoods and in some schools with predominantly white student bodies” (Weinstein, 1991).

Because there was no effort by police to enforce this law near schools, playgrounds, and arcades in white neighborhoods, there were virtually no arrests of whites made where the strict punishments of this law were applicable. On the few occasions when whites were arrested and could have been prosecuted under the federal law, the individuals were very rarely put up for federal prosecution. Seven whites were arrested during this same period in 1988 and 1989, but none of these individuals was referred for federal prosecution (Weinstein, 1991). This is a clear example of a double standard in our society that has nothing to do with economics and everything to do with racism.

A problem with this unfair treatment of blacks in the “drug war” is that African Americans become alienated.

When significant sectors of a community view the system as unjust, law enforcement is compromised…people are less willing to cooperate with the system, whether by offering leads to police officers, testifying as witnesses for the prosecution or entering guilty verdicts as jurors (Cole, 1999).


The unintended consequence of the unfair treatment of African Americans by the police is that our criminal justice system does not work properly. Without the full cooperation of all citizens, the American system of justice does not work.


POLICIES

It is time for our politicians to take a look at our government’s drug policies and create laws that are equal for all citizens, although fair laws cannot create fair enforcement and fair prosecution. In order for drug laws to actually be equal, the enforcement by the police must be the same in both black and white neighborhoods. And the laws still will not be equal unless prosecutors stop looking at economics and race before carrying out investigations, but look at the severity of crimes. Until our government can reach equality in enforcement of drug laws, two serious proposals that should be looked into are decriminalization or legalization.

There are many arguments for and against legalization, and it is difficult to make an informed decision with so much of the data on the topic being speculative. It is impossible to know the exact social and economic impact of drug legalization, but many have extrapolated data on crime and other statistics. The problem with the data extrapolated is that there are a lot of contradictions. Some argue that legalization would cause a decrease in crime. In one journal it is written that “drug prohibition promotes violence…The evidence that drug consumption induces violence, however, is weak” (Miron and Zwiebel, 1995). Some feel that violence would increase with the legalization of drugs. Many of these same individuals believe that legalization would also decrease the productivity in our society. Representative Bill McCollum, a Florida Republican, says that the Drug Enforcement Administration “estimates drug legalization would cost society between $140 billion and $210 billion a year in lost productivity and job-related accidents” (McCollum, 1998). But there have also been many studies done that counter this belief. Using wages as a rough estimate of productivity, one can assume that less productive members of society will earn lower wages. But according to a study done by Gill and Michaels in 1990, drug use (at least once in the prior year) appears to increase wages by about seven percent and hard drug use increases wages by as much as 20 percent (Niskanen 237). While this might be surprising, it is consistent with a study conducted by Berger and Leigh in 1988, finding that alcohol consumption up through two drinks a day also appears to increase wages (Niskanen).

Although the impact of legalization might be unclear, what is clear is that our current method of drug enforcement does not work and is very racist. There is a tremendous discrepancy between the drug enforcement in white and black communities. If drugs are not legalized, drug laws should be enforced as loosely in black America as they are enforced in white America. In many white communities drug use has basically been decriminalized, with very white few people being arrested for simple drug possession. A more extreme example of this is a policy known as the Dutch Model. This policy continues to “criminalize the supply of drugs while reducing or eliminating the penalties against possession and use” (Miron and Zwiebel, 1995). This is a much better policy than to continue filling our prisons with non-violent drug offenders.

Although the idea of decriminalization might seem absurd, upon taking a look at the danger of illegal drugs, the notion of decriminalization is much more reasonable. Alcohol and tobacco combine to kill 530,000 people every year. Heroin, morphine, marijuana and cocaine combine to cause 8,500 deaths per year (King, 1999). Although the deaths from illegal drugs would probably increase with decriminalization, it is impossible to estimate how significant this increase would be. This is mainly because it is impossible to estimate how much the use of illegal drugs would increase. It does not seem as though drug use should increase dramatically because most people can already get drugs easily. But, the huge decrease in the price of drugs might cause a significant increase in the demand for drugs. Estimates indicate that cocaine currently sells for at least 20 times its free market price (Miron and Zwiebel, 1995). Another issue is the stigma associated with illegal drugs and the people who do not use drugs solely because they are illegal. Upon legalization these individuals would begin to use drugs. There is no way to actually come up with data on decriminalization, because it is a situation that modern American society has never dealt with.


CONCLUSION

Because legalization would be extremely unpredictable, decriminalization seems to be the best immediate solution. Although there may be some negative externalities associated with decriminalization, they cannot be worse than what is happening with our current drug laws. With all of the crimes that have already been committed against minorities throughout the racist history of America, our society is now alienating minorities on the issue of drugs. Until a law is applied equally to blacks and whites, the law should not exist at all. It is not fair to have different sets of drug laws for whites and blacks. Not only is this incredibly unfair, it is also a waste of tax dollars. “Our annual layout for corrections is more than $35 billion, curving steadily upward even as crime rates drop” (King, 1999). Even as crime is decreasing, more money must be spent on prisons for drug offenders, most of whom are minorities. It is in my opinion that all Americans should live under the same laws, and this is clearly not happening. I believe that our society should be forced to take a look into the mirror and see exactly what we have become, and my guess is that most of us would be shocked.
 
Marijuana-the war on drugs was a race war that had nothing to do with the plant
Marijuana-Pot-Plant-Leaf-650X433.jpg

By Thomasina Copenhaver

Posted Wednesday, August 8, 2018 at 04:56pm EDT


The Drug War was officially declared on June 17, 1971 when President Nixon claimed drugs to be “Public Enemy Number One.” But was that really the case? Could there have been another far deeper, carefully calculated plan that had nothing to do with marijuana?

It was a different time. Or perhaps not. In a nation struggling with civil strife, poverty, racial inequality/tension, corporate domination, ecological disasters, and a hated, highly protested Vietnam War—sharing a little marijuana among friends hardly qualified as a heavily punishable federal offense, much less “public enemy number one.” Beginning in the 50’s, smoking marijuana was popularized by peace-loving, mostly white “hippies.” But with this proclamation, marijuana possession became illegal.

And if the President declared it to be so in a television message, it must be so. There were no Internet or cell phone videos, no “Google” instant searches– the public relied on TV and newspapers for information.

Walter Cronkite was “the most trusted man in America” on the CBS Evening News.

For centuries, cannabis had been used medicinally for a wide variety of conditions. Ancient Chinese doctors reduced the seeds to powder and mixed it with wine as an anesthetic before surgery. Egyptians used it for glaucoma, cataracts, hemorrhoids, and vaginal bleeding. In ancient India it was used for insomnia, headaches, G.I. disorders, and pain relief. It was even used for treating cancer. Imagine that! But no one ever heard about it on the evening news. Except when it was vilified as the enemy.

Somewhere Don Henley was singing “Dirty Laundry.”

“We got the bubble-headed-bleach-blonde

Who comes on at five

She can tell you ‘bout the plane crash

with a gleam in her eye.

It’s interesting when people die

Give us dirty laundry.”

Years before in the 1930’s, Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal social programs attracted black voters to the Democratic Party. John Kennedy supported civil and voting rights legislation, and along with the 24th Amendment (ending the poll tax) brought many blacks to the Democratic Party. The Democrats push toward civil rights angered southern whites. Cue Nixon’s “Southern Strategy”—welcoming the segregationist south to the party of Lincoln. Part one was about securing the white vote.

According to Wikipedia:

“In American politics, the Southern Strategy was a Republican Party electoral strategy to increase political support among white voters in the South by appealing to racism against African Americans.”

By the 1970’s, racist language was no longer acceptable. Nixon found a way to open the door to the former Confederates by appealing to angry southern whites. The problem was that in many southern states, more than 40% of potential voters were black. If they were now allowed to vote, and their votes were actually counted—the Democratic Party would hold the south with just a moderate amount of white support.

Cue the War on Drugs. Though reliable national arrest numbers from the seventies and beyond are difficult to obtain, Michelle Alexander does so with credible evidence from multiple academic studies and numerous legal decisions that she presents in her compelling and transformative book, The New Jim Crow (listed below in the resources). Her strength is in her research and ability to weave hundreds of references into one persuasive analytical argument about race in America.

More than 31 million Americans were arrested for drugs between 1980 and 2007. Additionally, between 2008 and 2014, another 9 million plus were arrested for drug possession. Justice Department statistics show that more than half of those were for simple possession of marijuana. 20 million African-American men have been sent to prison for non-violent crimes in the past 40 years.

Other than the KKK, nothing worked better to accomplish the primary political goal of suppressing the black vote and decimating the African-American community than the so-called war on drugs. By eliminating voter eligibility and suppressing black turnout, the drug war helped the GOP take control of the south. It also created a multi-billion-dollar-industry in prison construction and management—creating jobs for lawyers, prison guards, judges, etc. and creating enormous wealth for investors. Prisons are big business.

Government policies that target African Americans (and other minorities) are often made on the premise of Nixon’s national War on Drugs. Ronald Reagan signed an inmate Bill of Rights and pushed for prisoner rehabilitation when he was Governor of California—but changed his mind after the War on Drugs was declared. Bill Clinton signed the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, which stopped funding for 100,000 new police officers and 125,000 new cells in state prisons. During the Clinton administration, the ratio of African American to white inmates in federal penitentiaries doubled from 3:1 to 6:1.

Richard Nixon’s racism is well documented and recorded. If you were around during the Watergate scandal, you would remember that John Ehrlichman (Nixon’s domestic policy advisor) played a key role in the events leading up to the actual Watergate break-in. He was convicted of conspiracy, obstruction of justice, and perjury and spent a year and a half in prison, while Nixon managed to negotiate an immunity deal. Ehrlichman gave an interview to Dan Baum of Harper’s Magazine in 1994 (resource below) that pretty much sums up Nixon’s war on drugs:

“You want to know what this was really all about?” he asked with the bluntness of a man who, after public disgrace and a stretch in federal prison, had little left to protect. “The Nixon campaign in 1968, and the Nixon White House after that, had two enemies: the antiwar left and black people. You understand what I’m saying? We knew we couldn’t make it illegal to be either against the war or black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities. We could arrest their leaders, raid their homes, break up their meetings, and vilify them night after night on the evening news. Did we know we were lying about the drugs? Of course we did.”

“You don’t really need to find out what’s going on

You don’t really want to know just how far it’s gone

Just leave well enough alone

Eat your dirty laundry”

It’s time to wake up.
 
Why Is The Opioid Epidemic Overwhelmingly White?
November 4, 20175:43 PM ET
Heard on All Things Considered

The opioid epidemic is ravaging large parts of the American population. But some races are being hit harder than others. Dr. Andrew Kolodny, a drug abuse expert, explains why that might be the case.

NOEL KING, HOST:

An opioid epidemic is ravaging parts of this country. President Trump has declared it a public health emergency. Last year, overdoses killed some 64,000 people. It's being compared to the AIDS epidemic of the 1980s and '90s. The face of the opioid epidemic has been mostly white, and that's because we have seen a massive increase in drug overdoses among young white adults, often in rural areas. But what's been happening in black and Latino communities? For answers, we called up Dr. Andrew Kolodny. He's co-director of the Opioid Policy Research Collaborative at Brandeis. Dr. Kolodny, thanks for coming on.

ANDREW KOLODNY: Thanks for having me.

KING: So by the numbers, white communities do seem to be suffering the most from this epidemic or impacted the most. How is opioid addiction affecting black and Latino communities?

KOLODNY: So our new opioid addiction epidemic is sparing African-American and Latino communities, and it's striking when you look at the data. Whether you're looking at overdose deaths or emergency room visits for opioid use problems or treatment admissions for opiate addiction, it's very clear that this epidemic is overwhelmingly white. And it begs the question, why? I can share with you a theory, and it is a theory that's based on evidence.

Something that we do know is that doctors prescribe narcotics more cautiously to their non-white patients. It would seem that if the patient is black, the doctor is more concerned about the patient becoming addicted, or maybe they're more concerned about the patient selling their pills, or maybe they are less concerned about pain in that population. But the black patient is less likely to be prescribed narcotics, and therefore less likely to wind up becoming addicted to the medication. So what I believe is happening is that racial stereotyping is having a protective effect on non-white populations.

KING: Are doctors acknowledging that they're less likely to prescribe narcotics, pain medication, to black and Latino patients?

KOLODNY: I don't think they're aware of it. I think this happens on an unconscious level.

KING: This isn't, of course, the first time that the U.S. has faced a drug epidemic. There's crack cocaine in the '80s and '90s. That was often affecting black communities. Is the response to this crisis different?

KOLODNY: Very different.

KING: Why?

KOLODNY: What we saw from policymakers, what we got from policymakers was a message that we could potentially arrest our way out of the problem. What we got was a war on drugs and a crackdown on crime. What we're seeing now is a very different response now that we've got an addiction epidemic that's disproportionately white. What we're hearing from policymakers, even conservative Republican politicians when they talk about the opioid crisis, many begin by saying, we can't arrest our way out of this. We have to see that people who are addicted can access effective treatment. We didn't hear that during the crack cocaine epidemic. It's good that we're hearing it now. It's too bad we didn't hear it then.

KING: President Trump interestingly has declared this crisis a public health emergency but not a national emergency. If it was a national emergency, that would allow federal funding, even access to FEMA funds to go toward treating it. Does this fall short? Do you think of a national emergency? What's the difference?

KOLODNY: Well, you know, I don't know that the problem is so much the type of national emergency or public health emergency that was designated. My concern is that what we haven't received from the Trump administration is a plan for addressing the problem or a request from Congress for funding.

KING: What would a solution, what would a new system look like?

KOLODNY: One of the first things that we have to do is we have to prevent more people from becoming addicted to opioids, and that's not lecturing to kids, don't do drugs. More than anything else, that's about promoting much more cautious prescribing so that we don't directly addict patients and so that people don't indirectly become addicted because we've stocked everybody's home with a highly addictive drug. But we also have to recognize, now that the genie is out of the bottle, millions of Americans are suffering from opioid addiction. We have to see that they can access the most effective treatments very easily.

If you're opioid addicted, when you wake up in the morning you're going to need to use an opioid pretty quickly or you're going to be feeling very sick. We want that individual to be able to access effective outpatient treatment more easily than they can access pain pills, heroin or fentanyl. If that person wakes up and they've got $20 in their pocket and they know where to go get heroin, that is what they're going to do. We want that person to be able to walk into a treatment center, regardless of their ability to pay for their care, and to be started on treatment - outpatient treatment, that same day.

KING: Dr. Andrew Kolodny is co-director of the Opioid Policy Research Collaborative at Brandeis. Dr. Kolodny, thank you so much for joining us.

KOLODNY: Thank you for having me.
 
A new round of white denial: Drugs, Race and Reality in the 'burbs
By Tim Wise
In a time of multiple school and workplace shootings, middle-aged mass murderers, drug-saturated rave parties, and moms who drown their kids in tubs, lakes, or dump them in garbage cans, one question comes to mind. How long will suburban white America get away with expressing shock at the criminal proclivities of its progeny, without media exposing their presumption of incorruptibility as fallacious and patently racist? Especially when government statistics indicate deviance and dysfunction are quite commonplace with such folks and in such places.

On Sunday, August 12, the front page of the Washington Post brought us yet another story about white suburban youth, who, to the amazement of their parents, friends, and the media, turn out to be stone cold criminals. This time the headlines emanate from "nice neighborhoods," in Northern Virginia: places where sinister crimes aren't supposed to happen.

As authorities have discovered, one of the most significant drug operations in the region's history was being run from this "nice, safe" place. And not by dark-skinned street-hustlers preying on vulnerable teens and getting them hooked; but rather, by the former soccer-playing little leaguers who this nation grooms to run major corporations, hold political office, or merely typifies as normal, all-American boys.

In this particular drama, one of the principal players, named (I kid you not) Owen Merton Barber IV, stands accused of murdering Daniel Petrole Jr., one of his drug-dealing colleagues at the behest of yet another fellow-dealer, Justin Michael Wolfe. Seem implausible? Surreal even? Thanks to well-worn stereotypes about drug users, dealers, and criminals in general, we've come to expect the bad guys to look like them - black and brown people, not those who are white like us. When we have to protect ourselves from folks with names like Owen Merton Barber the Fourth, well, what is the world coming to?

Actually, although underreported, drug data has long confirmed that the stereotypes of users and dealers (poor, black or Latino, and urban-dwelling) are not only racist, but also wrong.
According to the National Institutes on Drug Abuse, the Centers for Disease Control, and the Department of Health and Human Services, whites are equally or more likely to use drugs than their African American counterparts, despite common misperceptions to the contrary.

Although blacks and Hispanics tend to try drugs for the first time at a slightly younger age than whites, by the end of high school, whites have caught up and surpassed them in every drug category. White seniors are a third more likely to have smoked pot in the past year, seven times more likely to have used cocaine, three times more likely to have used heroin, and nine times more likely to have used LSD. And it's not just that there are more white users, as this would reflect mere population percentages, but rather, that the white rate of use is that much higher than the rate for blacks.

It's the same story for young adults. Whites are 66% of 18-25 year olds, but 70% of drug users that age. Blacks are 13.5% of persons in that age cohort, but only 13% of young adult users, while Hispanics are nearly 15% of that age group, but only 12% of drug users 18-25.
When it comes to drug dealing, the picture changes only slightly. According to the Justice Department, drug users tend to buy from same-race dealers. So the nearly three-quarters of users who are white, mainly rely on white dope peddlers, not the Jamaicans or Dominicans of popular imagery. When it comes to drugs like ecstasy-a hot product for the Virginia cartel-the dealers and users have long been known to be mostly white, middle class males between 14 and 32.

One would know none of these things from reading the Post story on the recently uncovered suburban Drug Empire, or drug related articles in any other nationally prominent paper. Instead, white suburban dealers and users are presented as exceptions to an otherwise law-abiding rule.

In the instant case, the accused, from the Prince William County hamlets of Chantilly and Centreville are youths that reporter Josh White describes as "good kids," who "went bad." When was the last time a black or Latino drug dealer or gang-banger was described this way? To those who study media, implicit in most news coverage when they do it is the suggestion that it's because they were congenital criminals; it was their IQ or pathological underclass families. They don't "go" bad; they just are bad.

However, when stories are written about pale-faced killers or dealers, or in this case both, sympathetic adjectives fill the pages. Crime becomes human interest-a cautionary tale. We are encouraged to identify with the instigators of the mayhem in ways we never would be were they dark or poor.

For example, Kip Kinkel, 1998's poster boy for school shootings, was likened in the major media to MAD Magazine's Alfred E. Newman: freckle-faced, and the "boy next door." Similar descriptions were offered for the school shooters in Arkansas, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Mississippi and Tennessee. Even Columbine shooters Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris, described by classmates as "dark and brooding," were still referred to by many as "basically normal," and gave off no warning signs in the eyes of Littleton families, teachers, or law enforcement. Andrea Yates, the Houston suburban mom who killed her five kids in their bathtub was described by one major newsmagazine as having "loved her children too much," and having been "overwhelmed" by the responsibilities of keeping hearth and home together.

Listen to those quoted in White's story. First there is Prince William Detective Greg Pass who explains, "None of this happened in bad neighborhoods. It bothers everyone involved that in many ways these kids are mirror images of the detectives working the case, except they have chosen to go the wrong way." Sympathy, recognition, identification, and all of it, by the officer's admission, due to the fact that these kids are "mirror images" of the detectives themselves. What does one see in the mirror after all? One's face: one's white, middle class suburban face, to be precise.

Throughout the Post piece the ringleaders of this marijuana and ecstasy empire are described as kids who "went to church," "sold Christmas trees at the mall parking lot," were "polite, shy, friendly, non-threatening," "clean cut," "cautiously pensive," "kind and gentle," "fun-loving," "the class clown." The kind of boys "you'd want your daughter to date," and who have been known to nurse sick birds back to health, "romp down the soccer field," and whose hooliganism was limited to writing their names in wet cement.

The alleged shooter "relished fishing with his father along the Virginia coast, where the two would exchange high fives when reeling in a catch." Barber's father-that's Owen Merton the third for those keeping count-insists the family was solid and led a "normal life." Forced to contemplate what went wrong with his fishing buddy, he speculates that perhaps watching his mother die of cancer convinced his son "life wasn't important anymore." Again, sympathy conjured up for the wayward white youth in ways that would be highly unlikely for an inner-city kid: even one who had watched his mom die of cancer, as many have, or perhaps had friends who had been killed or jailed.

The young man accused of ordering the hit on Petrole is described as a "role model for his brother and sister," a "religious Catholic" who is intensely "spiritual." For his part, Justin Wolfe is presented as a helpful son, who assisted his single mom in caring for his younger siblings. When was the last time the child of a black, inner-city single mom was applauded for helping out around the house?

Throughout the story we learn that the parents of these budding gangsters never suspected anything, even as their early-20's offspring jet-setted to Hawaii or Atlantic City, and bought $200,000 townhouses with their own money. As an additional sign of the times and the stupendous denial that afflicts so many white upper-middle class families, Petrole's father actually believed that his son was able to buy his own home because he had been lucky dabbling in the stock market. After all, said Petrole Sr., his boy always wanted to be an entrepreneur. As indeed he was. So should we now expect national condemnation of the culture of affluence and the capitalist emphasis on moneymaking as being implicated in these crimes? Don't count on it. That kind of analysis we reserve for the "underclass" values of ghetto-dwellers.

As evidence of how strong the stereotypes are, consider that Justin Wolfe, at the height of his criminal activity, dated the daughter of the director for the DC regional office of the Drug Enforcement Administration and aroused no suspicions whatsoever. The agent, having no doubt memorized the darker profile of a drug dealer used by law enforcement, naturally had no clue. Wolfe, according to DEA agent Frank Chellino seemed "well-mannered" and "stable."

Perhaps white folks in the 'burbs need to stop listening to the voices of officialdom or the media, and start listening to the only folks who seem to know the score: the dealers themselves. As one associate of the accused explained: "American society doesn't want to face the fact that white kids deal and use drugs. They simply can't look in my face and see that a nice-looking white kid is selling drugs to their kids, because that would mean that their kids could do this too. The fact is, we do sell drugs to their kids, in their rich neighborhoods and in their rich schools."

Just as the media generally "deracializes" incidents of white deviance, portraying them as the aberrant, inexplicable acts of aberrant, inexplicable individuals, (unlike the same from the dark and poor which are often portrayed as group tendencies), so too did Josh White in his Post piece on Wolfe, Barber and Petrole. Instead of pointing out the fallacies of white suburban denial and the blindness that besets so many of the residents in these "nice" places, White and the Post offered up a quixotic melodrama: good kids gone wrong; sympathetic, misguided youths posing as hardened criminals and coming to a tragic end.

Powerful to be sure, but far too narrow a truth, lacking as it did the contextual information necessary to understand the common phenomenon of white substance abuse. Unfortunately, facts unspoken or unreported tend to remain hidden. The debilitating stereotypes they might unravel remain firmly in place. Those who have convinced themselves that it couldn't happen here remain in danger.
 
4 Things You Probably Didn’t Know About Crack, America’s Most Vilified Drug
written by Kristen Gwynne / AlterNet August 2, 2013


It's no secret that crack cocaine carries a stigma. While casual pot-smoking and cocaine use are tolerated in college dorms and clubs, crack cocaine is often considered to be on a different level — a "hard" drug, like heroin. Few well-off people would casually do, or suggest trying crack cocaine, and if they did, they'd likely get a litany of concerned responses from friends.


Powder cocaine use, however, maintains an element of glamor; it's associated with the culture of elites, from socialites like Paris Hilton to Wall Street traders. Crack, many people think, is such a hard drug that using it once could cause a user to act recklessly, even dangerously, become addicted, or die. But most of the claims about crack cocaine's potential for destruction have proven exaggerated or flat-out false.



As neuropsychiatrist and Columbia University researcher Dr. Carl Hart told AlterNet, the hype around crack has a lot more to do with political expedience — politicians cynically vilifying poor black people for electoral gain — than the drug's actual potential for harm. Dr. Hart, the author of a recent book, High Price, says targeting crack cocaine in black communities was easier than addressing more grave concerns like poverty, unemployment and dwindling federal aid for struggling families.


Crack rose to prominence in poor, black, urban environments (and not in the suburbs) not because of its overwhelming strength but because it was an affordable source of pleasure to communities deprived of basic resources. Crack caught on, certainly, but it did not ravage cities the way the media and politicians have claimed. Most people never become addicted, and those who do are likely vulnerable to the conditions in their environment that make addiction more likely.


Here are four myths about crack that arose thanks to drug war propaganda.

1. Crack in the ghetto. Despite racialized images of crack users, data from National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) reveals that people reporting cocaine use in 1991 were 75% white; 15% black, and 10% Hispanic. People who admitted to using crack were 52% white, 38% black, and 10% Hispanic. From a rational perspective, these numbers should not be surprising: whites are, after all, the majority, and have a long-standing tendency to use drugs at rates higher than blacks. Nonetheless, in 2009, the U.S. Sentencing Commission released data showing no drug matches crack in terms of racially biased convictions. According to the data, 79% of 5,669 sentenced crack offenders were black, 10% were Hispanic, and only 10% were white.


As far back as the early 20th century, cocaine use by African Americans was considered a threat to the safety of white America. A 1914 article in the New York Times warned, "Murder and Insanity Increasing Among Lower Class Blacks Because They Have Taken to 'Sniffing' Since Deprived by Whiskey Prohibition." The article, by Dr. Edward H. Williams, proclaimed:


Most of the negroes are poor, illiterate and shiftless…Once the negro has formed the habit he is irreclaimable. The only method to keep him away from taking the drug is by imprisoning him. And this is merely palliative treatment, for he returns inevitably to the drug habit when released.


[Cocaine] produces several other conditions that make the "fiend" a peculiarily dangerous criminal. One of these conditions is a temporary immunity to shock — a resistance to the "knock down," effects of fatal wounds. Bullets fired into vital parts that would drop a sane man in his tracks, fail to check the "fiend."


"In other words," Dr. Hart wrote of the passage in High Price, "cocaine makes black men both murderous and, at least temporarily, impervious to bullets."


"What shook me" about the article, Dr. Hart writes, "was how similar the article was to modern coverage of crack cocaine in the mid-1980s." He continues, "The message is that that crack users are irretrievable…The terms inner city and ghetto are now code words referring to black people."


"The language is not as egregious in the '80s, but we all knew what it meant," Dr. Hart told AlterNet.


Dr. Hart points to the popular 1986 documentary 48 Hours on Crack Street as an example of the racialized images of crack users. Even the New York Times noted the incessant focus on seemingly mentally unwell, poor black New Yorkers as the face of the crack trade. "We were meant to think the derelict was a crack addict; it was just as likely that he was an alcoholic," the Times remarked.


Dr. Hart said language commonly used to describe crack users—"poor," "troubled areas," "inner-city," "ghetto"—implies, "black people, and poor people, basically."


In 48 Hours on Crack Street Dr. Hart says, "All the people selling drugs and misbehaving were black, and so when you associate these images with black people, the only conclusion a viewer can draw is that these are the people using these drugs."


"The main thing we did with those images is make people believe the real problem was crack cocaine. Crack was making these people behave so poorly, and in ways we found egregious," Dr. Hart told AlterNet. "So, if the real problem is crack cocaine, all you have to do is get rid of crack. You convince the people that all of your efforts have to be placed on ridding the society of crack. Now you don't have to deal with issues like unemployment, lack of skills, job training—all you have to do is say we're going to rid ourselves of this drug in our society….Nobody asked about whether people were employed, or responsible before crack cocaine, committing crimes before cocaine."


Dr. Hart points out that problems associated with crack—children raised by family members other than their parents, violence and unemployment—existed before the height of the so-called epidemic, and continue to plague the same communities today.


"The unemployment rate for black folks before crack cocaine hit was nearly 20 percent. It was the highest before crack cocaine was introduced, and remains high today after crack cocaine is no longer considered this big problem," Dr .Hart told AlterNet.


Plus, how ravaging can a substance be that, during its peak years, never exceeded an annual use rate of 5% among high school seniors? Dr. Hart points out that "The daily rate—the one most likely to lead to addiction—never exceeded 0.2%." But because so few Americns had tried the drug, sensationalizing it was even easier than say, marijuana.


2. Crack vs. coke. The only difference between the crack and powder forms of cocaine is the removal of hydrochloride, which allows for a lower melting point, and the ability to be smoked.


Crack cocaine is typically produced by mixing powder cocaine with baking soda and water over heat. The process removes hydrochloride and allows for an oily freebase of cocaine to float above the liquid residue. Separated, the freebase cocaine dries into a rock-like shape. But on a molecular level, crack and powder cocaine are still nearly identical.



What makes crack cocaine more potent is not its form, but the method by which it is ingested. As with other substances, smoking creates a quicker, more intense high than snorting.


Nonetheless, the law treats crack as if it were far more potentially damaging or threatening to society than powder cocaine. Before the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010, federal criminal penalties for crack treated 1 gram of the drug as equal to 100 grams of cocaine.


Now, the disparity has been reduced to a still large 18:1 weight ratio.


3. Crack babies. Recent research has found that claims suggesting crack-exposed infants would grow up with severe mental or physical deficiencies were exaggerated and misinformed. Amid a surge in crack cocaine's popularity and the doom-and-gloom media frenzy surrounding it, a 1989 study in Philadelphia found that the mothers of nearly 1 in 6 babies born in Philly hospitals tested positive for cocaine. Crack paranoia led to wildly exaggerated claims about "crack babies" (and villainized black mothers as "crack whores"), including a social worker's televised prediction that crack-exposed infants would not reach an IQ past 50.


Amid the hype, in 1989, Hallam Hurt, then chair of neonatology at Albert Einstein Medical Center and now a pediatrics professor the University of Pennsylvania, began a nearly 25-year study on the effects of in-utero cocaine exposure on 224 babies born at Einstein between 1989 and 1992. Half were exposed in-utero; half were not. All of them, however, came from low-income families, and almost as many were black.


"We went looking for the effects of cocaine," Hurt told the Philadelphia Inquirer, but the two groups performed the same on development and intelligence tests. They were both, however, underperforming compared to the norm. "We began to ask, was there something else going on?"


As the Inquirer reported, "they found that 81 percent of the children had seen someone arrested; 74 percent had heard gunshots; 35 percent had seen someone get shot; and 19 percent had seen a dead body outside—and the kids were only 7 years old at the time. Those children who reported a high exposure to violence were likelier to show signs of depression and anxiety and to have lower self-esteem."


"Poverty is a more powerful influence on the outcome of inner-city children than gestational exposure to cocaine," Hurt told the Inquirer.


Still, she was not the first to draw such a conclusion. Doctors cannot tell the difference between crack-exposed and poverty-exposed infants. And among other studies, a 2001 comprehensive review of the effects of in-utero exposure determined: “[T]here is no convincing evidence that prenatal cocaine exposure is associated with any developmental toxicity difference in severity, scope, or kind from the [consequences] of many other risk factors.”


4. Crackheads. Even at the peak of crack's popularity, only between 10 and 20 percent of users became addicted—a rate similar to cocaine and other drugs. Users who do become addicted to crack are more affected by a combination of other factors, like a lack of positive reinforcement, financial stability, and a strong support network.


What's more, crack cocaine is not as unpredictable as some may think. Dr. Hart told AlterNet that claims that using crack for the first time can cause users to become addicted or violent are wildly imaginative. "We have given thousands of doses of crack cocaine in our lab, and we get predictable effects—increased drug dose, increased effects—and nobody has died or become violent."


As Dr. Hart explains in his book, any violence related to crack cocaine is more closely linked to the drug trade. In 1988 in New York City, for example, only 2 percent of crack-related murders were committed by addicts looking to score.


Crack does not make users sleepless bags of bones, either. "People have this notion in their minds that folks who smoke crack are very skinny, but it's actually a weak appetite suppresant," Dr. Hart told AlterNet, "The kids on Adderall are getting more of an appetite suppressant than cocaine."


Challenging the myth that crack causes users to go days without sleep, Dr. Hart said, "Certainly, when you smoke or take it, initially you'd be alert…But it's one of the best drugs to take and party at night because you can actually go to sleep."


Dr. Hart explained that the half-life for crack-cocaine is less than an hour, whereas amphetamines and marijuana have half-lives up to twenty-four hours. "The pharmacological effects are short-lived, so notions about appetite suppression and decreased sleep for long periods of time is just not consistent with pharmacology."
 
Michelle Alexander: More Black Men Are In Prison Today Than Were Enslaved In 1850

More black men are behind bars or under the watch of the criminal justice system than there were enslaved in 1850, according to the author of a book about racial discrimination and criminal justice.

Ohio State University law professor and civil rights activist Michelle Alexander highlighted the troubling statistic while speaking in front of an audience at the Pasadena Branch of the American Civil Liberties Union, Elev8 reports.

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Alexander, the author of “The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness,” reportedly claimed there are more African American men in prison and jail, or on probation and parole, than were slaves before the start of the Civil War.

More than 846,000 black men were incarcerated in 2008, according to U.S. Bureau of Justice estimates reported by NewsOne. African Americans make up 13.6 percent of the U.S. population according to census data, but black men reportedly make up 40.2 percent of all prison inmates.

The criminal justice system is the newest in a long line of societal structures that have disenfranchised people of color, Alexander argues in her book, according to ColorLines.


In an excerpt from her book published on her website, Alexander writes that despite today’s belief in “colorblindness,” our criminal justice system effectively bars African American men from citizenship, treating them as a separate caste:

Denying African Americans citizenship was deemed essential to the formation of the original union. Hundreds of years later, America is still not an egalitarian democracy. The arguments and rationalizations that have been trotted out in support of racial exclusion and discrimination in its various forms have changed and evolved, but the outcome has remained largely the same.

More African American men were disenfranchised due to felony convictions in 2004 than in 1870, “the year the Fifteenth Amendment was ratified prohibiting laws that explicitly deny the right to vote on the basis of race,” she wrote in a Huffington Post blog published last year.

Although crime rates have dipped in recent years, the number of African American men who are incarcerated has surged, mainly due to a single law enforcement policy, Alexander contends.

“Most of that increase is due to the War on Drugs, a war waged almost exclusively in poor communities of color,” she said in the Pasadena lecture, according to LA Progressive.

That crime-fighting measure “is a big part of the reason that a black child born today is less likely to be raised by both parents than a black child born during slavery,” she wrote in a 2010 Huffington Post bl
 
THE WAR ON DRUGS IS TOO HARSH FOR WHITE USERS



In a plea that smacks of hypocrisy, Governor Chris Christie is asking us to go easy on a certain kind of person struggling with addiction: affluent White suburbanites.

Stacey Patton Nov 9, 2015


Last Wednesday, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie released a video making an emotional plea for better treatment of drug users. It may have seemed shocking to see a member of the GOP showing an ounce of compassion, common sense, and critical thought about the disastrous war on drugs, and indeed it earned Christie tons of praise.

Brothers and sisters, don’t let your eyes and ears deceive you.

The New Jersey governor, like many in the GOP, is expressing compassion for some drug users, demanding leniency for a few, and alternatives for parts of America. Not coincidentally, he is asking for a new approach to deal with drugs at a moment when White suburbanites are becoming the new face of today’s heroin “epidemic.”

In his video, Christie compares drug addiction to his mother’s addition to cigarettes. He speaks movingly about her battle with lung cancer, and how hard she tried to quit smoking.

“We know the lung cancer was caused by the smoking,” Christie said. “But no one came to me and said: ‘Hey, listen, your mother was dumb. She started smoking when she was 16, then after we told her it was bad for her, she kept doing it. We’re not going to give her radiation. We’re not going to give her any of that stuff. You know why? Because she’s getting what she deserves.’ No one said that.”

Despite their similarities, drug users are viewed differently. “We say: ‘Well, they decided. They’re getting what they deserved,’” said Christie.

“I’m pro-life,” Christie declared, as he wound up for another opportunity to tighten his embrace of the #WhiteLivesMatterMore platform and assault a women’s right to choose. “And I think that if you’re pro-life, that means you’ve got to be pro-life for the whole life, not just for the nine months they’re in the womb. It’s easy to be pro-life for the nine months they’re in the womb – they haven’t done anything to disappoint us yet. They’re perfect in there. But when they get out, that’s when it gets tough. The 16-year-old teenage girl on the floor of the county lockup, addicted to heroin, I’m pro-life for her too. Her life is just as much a precious gift from God as the one in the womb.”

If only Christie’s pro-life stance extended to Black and Latinos living in Camden, Newark, and Trenton, where he has slashed aid to local school districts and cut social services to the poor while coddling the wealthiest residents. Never mind his support for the death penalty. Or the fact that his push for drug courts furthers the criminalization process, particularly for communities of color because these courts penalize relapse with incarceration and eject people who are unable to abstain from drug use for a period of time. Not to mention, there are racial disparities in completion rates due to greater unemployment rates and housing instability for Black and Latino users in recovery.

Christie’s critiques of the war on drugs may be longstanding, as he has pushed for treatment for first-time offenders in New Jersey, but like his GOP compatriots, the only thing consistent about him is his hypocrisy and inconsistencies. In a recent interview with conservative talk radio host, Hugh Hewitt, he expressed his opposition to legalization efforts in Colorado and Washington.

“Marijuana is a gateway drug. We have an enormous addiction problem in this country. And we need to send very clear leadership from the White House on down through the federal law enforcement. Marijuana is an illegal drug under federal law. And the states should not be permitted to sell it and profit from it,” he said.

Similarly, he has dragged his feet to implement the 2010 medical marijuana law in New Jersey, although recently claiming that he supports it. He calls for compassion even as he “vows to ‘crack down’ on marijuana as president.”

Despite the hypocrisy and contradictions, he is being lauded by the left and the right: MSNBC host Rachel Maddow touted the video, which the Huffington Post posted to Facebook on October 30. “Whether you like Chris Christie as a politician or not, whether you like him as a candidate or not, his kind of skill at communicating the way you saw him communicate there, on an issue like this, that’s why he still seems like he could be a contender,” Maddow said.

The National Reviews Jonah Goldberg wrote, “Whatever you think of the issues involved, you can see how this would leave a lasting impression, particularly in a state struggling with a major heroin problem. It’s also a good example of why I think he’s got a shot.”

He received a complimentary tweet from Vanity Fair writer Peter Sagal and NPR reporter Scott Simon called the moment “candid, moving,” and “utterly human.”

Now he wants compassion when the new face of America’s drug problem is a White, affluent suburban heroin user? And be clear, they have always been the face of drug use and drug distribution. Where was Christie’s “humanity” when these decades-old draconian drug war policies were destroying countless Black families, and eroding any economic gains in Black communities? Now those zero-tolerance and three-strikes-you’re-out and sentencing juveniles as adults policies are NOW too extreme and inhumane? GTFOHWTBS!

Having locked up so many people of color, and having ignored illegal drug use and drug dealing within white, affluent, and suburban communities for three decades, the GOP is now looking in the mirror only to see drugs as a White public health “problem,” one that deserves sympathy and kindness.

Days before Christie made his plea to be more empathetic to drug users, the New York Times published a story about how, now that 90 percent of new heroin users over the last decade are White, race and class are driving a different reaction to the opioid epidemic compared with previous drug crises. White parents are using their power and resources to lobby for the decriminalization of drugs even though those laws have rarely been applied to Whites, whose overdoses in “cocaine apartments” are covered in the media, whose drug dealing is neither policed nor punished, and where and how drug courts are available. The Times interviewed a White former undercover narcotics detective who said he is finding new ways to respond to drug users.. His job now is to reach out to people who have overdosed and help them get treatment.

“The way I look at addiction now is completely different,” he said. “I can’t tell you what changed inside of me, but these are people and they have a purpose in life and we can’t as law enforcement look at them any other way. They are committing crimes to feed their addiction, plain and simple. They need help.”

Marc Mauer, executive director of the criminal justice reform group the Sentencing Project, points to the power of White privilege because of how anti-Black racism and the Jim Crow nature of the war on drugs has concealed who indeed is getting high and selling drugs.

“Both the image and reality is that this is a White and often middle-class problem,” Mauer said.

Yet, ironically and further revealing the entrenched racism of the war on drugs and the systemic privileges of whiteness, Mauer celebrates how whiteness is fostering a conversation.

“We’re having a much broader conversation about prevention and treatment, and trying to be constructive in responding to this problem. This is good. I don’t think we should lock up White kids to show we’re being equal,” he said.

Indeed, but if compassion is necessary now, what about for those locked up in America’s prison cells? Where is the demand for second chances and sympathy for those on probation, who have to check “the box,” who can find themselves locked up for testing positive for alcohol or drugs? Is Christie and others going to fight for some retroactive compassion because there are millions of people, mostly black and Latino, who could use reparations for decades of tough-on-crime a.k.a. “tough on people of color” policies.

Data tells us that rates of drug use and selling are comparable across racial lines. However, people of color are far more likely to be stopped, searched, arrested, prosecuted, convicted, and incarcerated for drug law violations than are Whites. Arrest and incarceration rates for African Americans and Latinos are not higher because drug use or sales in these communities are higher, but rather because law enforcement focuses on urban areas, lower-income communities, and on communities of color as well as inequitable treatment by the biased criminal justice system which has led to the mass criminalization of people of color, particularly young Black men who have been suffering life-long penalties and exclusions that follow a drug conviction have created a permanent second-class status for millions of them. They can’t vote, get licensed, access public assistance, find employment, live in public housing, etc. The drug war has succeeded not in curbing drug use, abuse or sales, but in its REAL goal of supporting the lucrative criminal justice system and maintaining society’s racist dynamics.

The hypocrisy of these White parents, law-enforcement officers, drug-policy experts, and elected officials is breathtaking. They’re trying to frame this as a desire to help states save money after decades of expensive tough-on-crime policies. Don’t believe the hype! THIS is what White supremacy looks like, and it requires that White drug userss be decriminalized and viewed as flawed humans who simply need help, rather than as inherently bad, criminal, dangerous deviants who need to be locked up and held down in order for society to function.

Now that we are focused on the White girl or guy in the suburbs doing heroin, Percocet, oxycontin, and meth, it’s suddenly a national tragedy and health crisis, versus a societal scourge and crime issue like the crack epidemic that launched the war on drugs. Now that folks are paying attention to Becky and Conner shooting up, everybody wants to talk about prevention and treatment, and suddenly drug addiction is a disease instead of a crime, and the response must be understanding and empathy, not locking up and disenfranchising.

Wouldn’t it have been something if these folks who are now coming out to change the harsh penalizing policies of zero tolerance (at least in their Zip codes), had taken the same sympathetic, understanding, and pro-human approach when it was all about Black people abusing drugs? Black and Latino communities have been devastated by the harsh drug laws and policies designed to send them directly to jail, do not pass Go.

When people of color are using illicit drugs, it’s a character flaw, a lack of integrity, and maybe even an inherent criminality that simply requires the right substance and circumstance to become addiction. Where was the call for leniency then?

Even now, the racial scripts are clear in that the “criminals”—the drug dealers—are poisoning otherwise law-abiding White communities. For example, the emergent narrative around New Hampshire has been that heroin is coming from New York. In other words, those thugs and criminals from New York (read Black youth) are bringing drugs to those quiet suburban residential communities. Reframing the war on drugs—more police and harsher sentences—as one to protect White innocence from Black criminality is on full display here. Drug treatment and more police are about protecting White humanity.

Whether using or selling, there was no recognition of the humanity of people of color; no concern for their well-being. Instead, families and communities of color have been destroyed to feed the prison pipeline. Folks haven’t been addressing the issue of addiction and dependency until they migrated to the suburbs.

I wish the GOP would just be honest and own the fact that they only care about White people from politically important states going to prisons. And I wish the media would stop acting like White folks are actually going to prison en masse for drugs. That shit ain’t never happened and it ain’t never gonna happen. The real truth is that the laws need to be changed because they’ve already locked up so much of the Black and Latino population—you know, all those “disposable populations.”

Listen, don’t be naïve. This is racial bigotry unmasked. White drug users will get the help they need, but that same courtesy of sympathy and a more gentle touch will not be extended to users of color. The war on Black lives will continue because racial control of Black bodies and lives, contrasted with help, exoneration and redemption for Whites, is what White supremacy requires. And let’s be clear: The real drug here is White supremacy and America’s addiction is growing.

It’s not just about the stories. Journalism is also about who is telling them.


 
Attitudes and Stereotypes Toward Types of Drugs
HomeDrug AddictionAttitudes and Stereotypes Toward Types of Drugs
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Not all drugs are created equal. Some nudge open the door to addiction, and others break that door down. Some have innocuous origins, and others were crafted for no other reason than to poison and corrupt. Similarly, the attitudes and stereotypes towards different types of drugs are not all equal. Some drugs are welcomed and celebrated; others are avoided and pushed into the shadows. Some are associated with a particular demographic, and some can be found in every home. What society says about drugs, and the people who use them, says an equal amount (if not more) about the society itself.

How America Fell in Love with Marijuana
Marijuana is a good example of a drug that has undergone a cultural metamorphosis. Profiling the change, the Washington Post tells the story of how the TV show Beverly Hills 90210 (1990-2000) portrayed it in an “overwhelmingly” negative light, culminating in a peripheral character dying from a heroin overdose after starting with marijuana. But 90210 (2008-2013), the fourth television series in the franchise spawned by the original show, featured a popular high school teacher who smoked marijuana every day while he was in college. Parents unintentionally ate pot brownies, the results of which made for comic fodder. Two characters find love when they meet at a medical marijuana dispensary.[1]

Similarly, the character of Shaggy from the 1969 cartoon series Scooby Doo was often thought to be a nod to the burgeoning, drug-fueled counterculture movement of that decade. The character was unshaven, wore ill-fitting clothes, had a voracious appetite, was a slacker, and acts “a little goofy and high,” in the words of the actor who played Shaggy in the 2002 live action feature film Scooby Doo.[2]

Television, explains the Atlantic, “fell in love with marijuana.” While the big screen made no secret of its love of weed, with Cheech & Chong entertaining audiences as far back as 1978’s Up in Smoke, the changing message on television is what charts the course of the attitude shift towards marijuana.[3] Part of that change comes from ever-increasing numbers of people supporting moving marijuana into the cultural mainstream, either by calling for its use to be decriminalized, or outright legalized.

In 2013, 58 percent of Americans felt that the use marijuana should be made legal.[4] When Gallup first posed the question to survey respondents in 1969, only 12 percent answered the same way.[5] The change may be generational in nature. Describing the support for marijuana as “soaring,” a 2014 CNN/ORC International poll that showed people aged 18 to 34 supported marijuana legalization by 64 percent, while 39 percent of people aged 65 and older agreed with legalization.[6]

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As a sign of how much the ground has moved on the topic of marijuana legalization, Newsweek posited that the 2016 United States Presidential Election might be decided by candidates’ views on marijuana regulation and criminalization.[7]

Of course, not every attitude towards the march of marijuana is positive. In 2008, the conservative Parents Television Council said that the widespread acceptance of marijuana is a sign of “Prime Time [Going] to Pot,” decrying that the depictions of “moronic potheads” in film series like Harold & Kumar have now become the face of the American everyman. The “teen-targeted sex series” Gossip Girl “rightly condemns” the use of illegal drugs like cocaine, but, as the PTC sees it, turns a blind eye to underage teens drinking and smoking marijuana, and it is an example of how television has made marijuana usage look harmless and beneficial.[8]

Hard Drugs vs. Soft Drugs
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While perceptions of marijuana are swinging towards the positive, harder drugs still remain unpopular. A YouGov/Huffington Post poll from 2013 shows that only about 10 percent of Americans favor legalizing heroin and cocaine. Many of the people who support marijuana regulation draw a clear line between that and so-called “hard drugs.”[9]

The poll results are similar to those of a 2006 survey conducted on behalf of the Daily Telegraph and the Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts. Seventy-five percent of the 3,000 people interviewed in one of the largest surveys in Britain felt that the sale and possession of hard drugs, such as heroin or crack cocaine, warranted criminal prosecution; only 33 percent wanted the same penalties for “soft drugs” like cannabis.

Merely 17 percent of the survey’s respondents felt that drugs like heroin and cocaine could be consumed without significant risk, or that the risk was comparable to alcohol and smoking. By contrast, 64 percent felt that marijuana usage was comparatively harmless. Seventy-eight percent of the people responding to the survey felt that alcohol caused the most harm, with illegal drugs being cited by 55 percent.[10]

The Alcohol Ambivalence
The response indicates the curious position that alcohol occupies in popular culture. On the one hand, its dangers are well known, with numerous laws surrounding its distribution, sale and consumption. On the other, it is considered legally untouchable, a rite of passage and an inherent part of Western culture. Perhaps nothing can exemplify this better than the 2009 “beer summit” held at the White House and hosted by President Barack Obama, in the presence of Joe Biden, his Vice President, who abstains from alcohol because of having “too many alcoholics in [his] family.”[11],[12] Entire industries and genres of entertainment have sprung from the fascination that Americans have with distilling homemade liquor under the noses of the federal government, celebrating the presence of alcohol as a way of life and part of their culture.[13]

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But even alcoholics make up the biggest consumers of alcohol in America (more than 10 percent of drinkers drink more than half the alcohol drunk in a year[14]), and even as alcohol-related fatalities are the third most preventable cause of death in America (88,000 deaths a year[15]), there remains what The Fix calls a “near universal acceptance” of alcohol in American culture and society.[16]

‘The New Face of Heroin’
Alcohol may be in the middle of a cultural tug-of-war, but one of the substances mentioned in the YouGov surveys remains firmly on the margins. Like marijuana, heroin has evolved over the past generation; throughout the 1960s and 1970s, says LiveScience, heroin users were thought to be primarily inner-city men from ethnic minority backgrounds.[17] But the health commissioner for the city of Baltimore (the “heroin capital” of America, according to The Fix[18]) told USA Today that heroin addiction is not limited by demographic.

More women and middle-class people are falling under the sway of heroin, with the health commissioner saying that users include both teenagers and 60-year-old individuals.[19]

Most people, says The Economist, have the idea of a heroin addict looking like “a bum sitting under a bridge with a needle in his arm.”[20] However, according to Forbes magazine, the reality is that heroin users are often white and suburban. Ninety percent of new heroin users are white, according to a study published in the JAMA Psychiatry journal, and quite possibly getting addicted because they were introduced to opiates via prescription medication.[21]

Such is the scope of this particular scourge that it even has a name: hillbilly heroin. Now, a majority of heroin’s users aren’t poor minority people under bridges, but white people who developed a dependency on legal opioids (usually in the form of their prescription medication), then turned to heroin because they lost access to their drugs (either because the heroin is cheaper, or it doesn’t require a prescription).[22] What NBC calls “the new face of heroin” is “white, wealthy and living in the suburbs,” according to a Tech Times article.[23],[24]

Risk Factors Based on Race
The perception still persists that heroin is primarily an “ethnic” drug problem, partly due to disproportionately high arrest rates of African Americans. In 2009, the Human Rights Watch reported that black people were three times more likely to be arrested for drug possession than white people.[25] This occurs, even though, according to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, white people tend to use cocaine and heroin more than any other ethnic group.[26]

In the same year that SAMHSA released that report, the Bureau of Justice Statistics disclosed that 40 percent of the 225,242 inmates in state prison for drug-related crimes were black, and 30 percent were white.[27]
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The reason may be what the Chicago Sun-Times called the frequency with which police arrest people of low income and ethnic minorities. In Cook County, Illinois, for example, home to 5.24 million people and the city of Chicago, African Americans comprise 73 percent of arrestees, even though they make up only 25 percent of the county’s overall population.[28] Minority women in particular tend to be low income, have little to no education, and little to nothing by way of job skills. They usually have some form of mental health condition and have been abused sexually and physically, sometimes as children. They often do not have a family network (or if they do, it is not one from which they can derive much support). They generally have children to provide for, and if they are found with drugs, they tend to be convicted for possessing a relatively small quantity of drugs.[29]

Not coincidentally, heroin use has doubled among women and white people, according to data released from the Centers for Disease Control and reported by TIME magazine.[30]

As a result, black people have considerably more risk factors for the abuse of drugs than white people, which leads to arrest rates that are 10 times higher. This continues the stereotype that drugs are primarily a problem related to ethnicity, low income, or inner cities.[31]

Cocaine: ‘Outrageously Depraved’
While heroin has traditionally been considered a problem for people on the fringes of society, cocaine paradoxically has enjoyed a modicum of popularity, partly due to its associations. In celebrity culture, says the BBC, “partying” has become a euphemism for cocaine abuse.Cocaine is still considered a social lubricant. As a stimulant, it makes users feel confident, alert and active. Inhibitions are dulled, and in a fast-paced, sexually charged environment like a club or a party, that quality can be very attractive.[32]

Heroin, by contrast, is more associated with the numbing, blanket feeling of trying to escape from stress or hardship. The dichotomy may explain why cocaine use enjoys a level of acceptance, but heroin consumption is seen as a sign of trouble.[33]

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It’s not only that cocaine is used in popular, trendy settings, but that it’s also used in the right settings. In the worlds of fashion, entertainment, media and public relations, cocaine is a way of life. The Daily Beast describes the 2013 movie The Wolf of Wall Street as an “outrageously depraved orgy of sex [and] cocaine.”[34]

Cocaine’s dangers are well known, so much so that, as the YouGov surveys above indicated, the same people who would support the regulation of marijuana support the continued criminalization of cocaine. But in the same breath that the media decries it, says the BBC, the glamorization of celebrity culture can’t help but push cocaine into the spotlight.

That kind of attention gives cocaine an unlikely popularity, even in an era when celebrity deaths from cocaine overdoses become breaking news in a 24/7 news cycle.[35] According to the National Institute of Health and the BBC, respectively:

  • 9 million Americans reported using cocaine in 2008
  • 4 million people met the required criteria to be diagnosed with an addiction to cocaine[36]
  • 4 percent of 16 to 59 year olds reported using cocaine in England and Wales, up from merely 0.6 percent in 1996
Despite its well-documented deadliness (including severe psychosis, depression and death), cocaine is now the second-most popular drug in the world, provided by a $10 billion industry from Colombia.[37] The $170 price tag for a gram of cocaine (in 2000) adds to the allure.[38]

Cracking Cocaine
After the “sex, drugs and rock and roll” boom of the 1980s, cocaine proved so popular that demand exceeded supply. Cutting corners, cocaine manufacturers used baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) to strip the drug of its purity, rendering it cheaper to produce and procure. The process involved heating the cocaine to the point where it made a cracking noise. From that, the derivative of crack cocaine got its name.[39]

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But because crack is so easy to manufacture and cheap to sell, its clientele is primarily found among the lower income demographic. Similar to heroin, however, arrestees found with crack cocaine faced tougher sentences than arrestees found with comparable amounts of pure cocaine. Five grams of crack cocaine, for example, would net a mandatory minimum prison sentence of five years. For a person to receive five years for possession of pure cocaine, however, they would have to be arrested with 500 grams, a full 100 times more than crack.[40] This disparity existed even though both crack cocaine and cocaine do not cause significant differences in the potential for addiction; instead, says US News & World Report, the disparity existed due to race.

According to US Sentencing figures, crack cocaine is the most skewed drug when it comes to the number of offenses: in 2009, there were 5,669 sentenced crack cocaine offenders, and 79 percent of them were black; 10 percent were white, and 10 percent were Hispanic. For powdered (pure) cocaine, however, the 6,020 cases comprised of 17 percent white offenders, 28 percent black offenders, and 53 percent Hispanic offenders. People convicted because of offenses related to powdered cocaine spend an average of 87 months in prison, yet people who are convicted of crack cocaine offenses spend 115 months in prison.

The Los Angeles Times claimed that there never existed a scientific basis for the disparity in sentencing; only a perception that, since crack was easier for poorer people to obtain, poorer people were prosecuted more than wealthier (and potentially white) offenders.[41]As put by Senator Dick Durbin, the crack/powder disparity has resulted in African Americans being incarcerated at six times the rates of white Americans (for the same crime) and made the United States the world leader in incarcerations.[42]

The Fair Sentencing Act of 2010 reduced the disparity by increasing the amount of base

cocaine that is required for mandatory minimum prison terms to go into effect, thereby bringing crack cocaine closer to powdered cocaine in terms of the necessary criteria. The Act is expected to reduce prison populations by 1,550 between 2011 and 2015, saving $42 million in doing so. As much as this does to close the sentencing disparity, time is yet to tell whether the perception of crack cocaine being a drug for low-income minorities will erode, or whether the attitudes and stereotypes toward types of drugs and their users are too culturally ingrained to ever fully go away.
 
Fighting the Wrong War On Drugs
Taming the pharmaceutical companies, undercutting the cartels
Posted Aug 28, 2012

Since Richard Nixon was President, we have been fighting a drug war we can't possibly win. Meanwhile, we have barely begun to fight a different drug war we couldn't possibly lose.

The losing battle is against illegal drugs. Interdiction has been as big a bust as Prohibition of alcohol in the 1930s. Occasionally arresting a drug kingpin or confiscating a few million of dollars worth of contraband heroin or cocaine makes for a nice headline, but doesn't stop the flow.

The beneficiaries of our war on drugs have been the cartels and the narco-terrorists; the casualties are the failing states they can buy or bully. The Mexican government is fighting what amounts to an undeclared civil war against cartels armed to the teeth and flowing with money -- both from north of the border. We have unwittingly created a terrific business model for the drug dealers and a disaster for the states where they deal.

That other drug war, which we couldn't possibly lose, is against the excessive use of legal drugs that is promoted by our own pharmaceutical companies. Astounding fact: prescription drugs are now responsible for more accidental overdoses and deaths than street drugs.

Polypharmacy is rampant and uncontrolled with military personnel , the elderly, and children particularly vulnerable to its risks. Michael Jackson is just the most high profile poster victim of this growing epidemic of legal drug abuse. The drug cocktails are sometimes prescribed by dangerous high-flying doctors, sometimes by multiple doctors who just aren't aware of each other's existence, and prescription drugs are also widely available for purchase on the street.

There is not one cause of this mess, and there won't be one cure. Doctors, drug companies, patients, politicians and our fragmented health care system are all to blame. But the elephant in the room is Big Pharma. It has hijacked the practice of medicine, using its enormous profits to unduly influence physicians, physician groups, academics, consumer advocacy groups, the Internet, the press and the government. Misleading 'disease mongering' promotional programs saturate the media with direct-to-consumer drug advertising that is illegal everywhere else in the world except New Zealand and the developing nations.

The result: a ridiculously high proportion of our people have come to rely on antidepressants, antipsychotics, anti-anxiety agents, sleeping pills, and pain meds. Psychiatric meds are among the very top best sellers for the drug companies—over $16 billion for antipsychotics; almost $12 billion on antidepressants, and more than $7 billion for ADHD drugs. One in five Americans takes a psychiatric drug, one in five women is on an antidepressant.

Seventy percent of these pills are prescribed by primary care doctors with little training in their proper use, under intense pressure from drug salespeople and misled patients, after rushed seven minute appointments and subject to no systematic auditing.

The free market in drug salesmanship has led to promiscuous drug use, needless side effects and wasted resources—a kind of societal overdose.

The Government has unwittingly aided and abetted Pharma. The cash-strapped FDA is beholden to industry for funding.

And it gets worse. Big Pharma all too often also goes illegal to push even more product. The multi-billion dollar criminal and civil penalties recently levied on several different drug companies provide clear evidence of the pervasive extent of drug company wrongdoing—but have not been big enough to deter it. A billion dollars must seem like chump change—just the cost of doing business.

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Pretty bleak. But if we ever had the political will to begin it, we couldn't possibly lose a war to tame the dangerous use of legal drugs. The solutions are crystal clear and a cinch to implement—if we were really determined to solve the problem:

1) Sharply restrict drug company marketing and lobbying. Pharma now spends almost twice as much money pushing drug sales as on research—we would have better medicines and less legal drug abuse if this were reversed.

2) Make the punishments for marketing malfeasance much more of a deterrent to underhanded drug pushing. This could be done by levying much bigger mega-fines on the companies; by also holding the executives personally responsible and perhaps by reducing the period of product patent protection.

3) Develop a computerized real-time national system to identify and prevent polypharmacy. Credit card companies can abort a suspicious $100 transaction before the fact. Why can't we apply the same technology preemptively to prevent a patient from collecting potentially lethal pills?

4) Doctor's prescribing habits need to be closely monitored to correct or eject the Dr. Feelgoods.

5) It would greatly improve the quality of our health care system and greatly reduce its costs if all doctors, professional associations, consumer groups, and politicians were prevented from accepting drug company funding. Do drug companies really need this much 'free speech'? It makes no sense to have The Food and Drug Administration funded by drug companies.

What are the political prospects of my twin proposals—to begin the winable war against the over-use of legal drugs and to drop the losing war against illegal drugs?

You guessed it—zero and zero. The first will be doomed by Pharma's political punch; the latter by the irrational victory of hope and ideology over experience.
 
When White People Take Drugs, It Stops Being a “War”
by David Atkins


Chalk up another piece of evidence for the longstanding notion that the nation’s “War on Drugs” is simply another aspect of institutionalized racism: it seems that now that heroin addiction is raging through white middle-class families, the nation’s appetite for tough-on-crime tactics is waning.

When the nation’s long-running war against drugs was defined by the crack epidemic and based in poor, predominantly black urban areas, the public response was defined by zero tolerance and stiff prison sentences. But today’s heroin crisis is different. While heroin use has climbed among all demographic groups, it has skyrocketed among whites; nearly 90 percent of those who tried heroin for the first time in the last decade were white.

And the growing army of families of those lost to heroin — many of them in the suburbs and small towns — are now using their influence, anger and grief to cushion the country’s approach to drugs, from altering the language around addiction to prodding government to treat it not as a crime, but as a disease.

“Because the demographic of people affected are more white, more middle class, these are parents who are empowered,” said Michael Botticelli, director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, better known as the nation’s drug czar. “They know how to call a legislator, they know how to get angry with their insurance company, they know how to advocate. They have been so instrumental in changing the conversation.”

Apologists can try to claim that the racial disparity in understanding and treatment of the problem is due to people with more power having the ability to change the conversation.

But given the history of the enforcement of the drug war in the United States–starkly and painfully exemplified in the hysteria over “crack cocaine”–it’s a difficult stance to take.

The evidence suggests, rather, that American public policy has been centered around harsh punishment of populations that were at first openly and then more quietly assumed to be naturally subhuman and more prone to violence than whites. Racism, in other words. The drug war is another reflection of that same mentality. A large number of Americans harboring racial prejudice have an image of minority communities seething with chaos just under the thin veneer of civilization, with barbarism ready to strike at any moment in a toxic stew of drugs, handouts violence and uncouth music. The response is a war on drugs, tough-on-crime laws, hatred of taxes, and arsenals of guns for “protection.”

It’s no surprise, then, that when white people do drugs it’s not seen as the same kind of threat–because in minds of far too many Americans it’s not really the drug that is the problem, but the ability of the drug to release the supposedly natural tendencies of certain types of people. The same is true of guns: when a white person carries a gun they’re a patriot; when a black person does it they’re a criminal thug. Because it’s not about the gun, it’s about the person carrying it.

Racists don’t see this as a form of racism. They see it as a form of common sense. But it’s racism through and through. And unfortunately even for the racists, their public policy reactions in terms of gun proliferation, poor public safety nets and harsh criminal justice systems hurt not only minority communities but white ones as well.

America will make progress as a society only when we can move beyond these prejudices and realize that we’re all the same underneath, and we need policies of tolerance and understanding that reflect that fact.
 
The War On Drugs: Effect On The Prison Population
In the early 1970’s, President Nixon began the war on drugs. Throughout the 1980’s, President Reagan continued to support and strengthen the cause. In the past 40 years, the population of state and federal prisons increased from 218,466 in 1974, to 1,508,636 in 2014. That’s an increase of almost 600%. To compare, the U.S. population only increased by 51% in the during the same time.

These statistics originated from the Sentencing Project, an organization which advocates for criminal justice reform. The Project states that the current prison population is 2.2 million, which also includes jails.

But can we really blame the war on drugs? After all, people are also being incarcerated for plenty of other offenses.

The fact is, the prison population remained relatively stable in the early 1970’s before Nixon’s war on drugs ensued. Every year since, from the Reagan years all the way up to 2010, there have been significant increases in the incarcerated population.

Still, it’s difficult to gauge how much of an impact new drug laws had on these numbers. But there’s no question that the establishment of the Drug Enforcement Agency – as well as the creation of minimum drug crime sentences – had something to do with it.

For example, according to the Sentencing Report, in 1980, 41,000 persons were locked up for drug crimes. By 2014, that number was around 488,400 – a staggering increase of 1,000%.

Conversely, others point to violent offenders being responsible for prison population growth. But violent crime is also intricately connected to the war on drugs, as well. For example, if drug enforcement policies cause the price of drugs to increase, there will be more people engaging in illicit activities in effort to feed their habit. And wherever black markets flourish, violence and murder follow.

The Socioeconomic Effect
It’s a well-known fact that minorities are over-represented in prisons – in 2013, about 58% of all inmates were either black or hispanic. But these two group collectively only represent about 30% of the overall population

Research has also found that black people are more likely to be arrested for the same charges as white people. They are receive, on average, higher charges and longer sentences.

According to a 2014 article by Jonathan Rothwell of Gallup, white people are more likely to sell drugs than blacks, and equally likely to use them. Despite this fact, blacks are 3.6 times more likely than whites to be apprehended for selling drugs.

As far as how lower income persons are represented in the incarcerated population, in 2004, the Prison Policy Initiative analyzed a survey about prisoner’s income levels before their arrest. It was found that the prison population had an average income of $19,185 before incarceration. That is 41% less than non-incarcerated persons of the same age.
 
'The Truth' About The War on Drugs (War Against the People) "MUST READ"
Date: Saturday, 9-Dec-2017 15:40:19

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There is perhaps no issue that misleads, confuses and bedevils concerned citizens of all political stripes than the so-called "War on Drugs." The Republi-crat government oligarchy is well aware of this fact, and so it uses a trumped-up, false war on drugs to deceive the masses, to deceive and to wear out taxpayers, to paramilitarize and enlarge law enforcement and government, and to promote the two-party/left-right/conservative-liberal false paradigm.
The war on drugs is not a war by public officials against criminals at all, but a war for drugs. It is the way public officials profit from criminality, expand their kingdoms and overrule the rule of law and the Constitution. In my unending research into this conspiracy, I have learned that this kind of tyrannical control is possible only by mass deception. It is a total control over governmental and political processes to the detriment of the people in every category of the nation's and local interests. It is raw power exercised by today's single-party-dressed-as-two.
False, universal religion is the chief means of this mass deception, followed by the protection of particular elements to induce confusion, including drugs and the "war on drugs," a controlled mass media to spread government propaganda, and politics-as-usual non-solutions.
Government strategy is to invade our privacy and freedom under the pretext of protecting us from terrorism, drug traffickers and all kinds of booger bears. Politicians-as-usual all protect and enlarge the government's drug trade while pretending to do precisely the opposite. Such "opposite behavior" is the proof of a conspiracy against Americans.
Republican politicians, for example, profess pro-Christian, anti-big government ideals but join the Democrats in faith-destroying, socialist legislation to expand the welfare state. The "war on drugs" helps justify it. Democrats, for example, claim to protect the working man while joining Republicans and multinational mega-corporations to pass "free trade" legislation, thus destroying the middle class, farming families and the American industrial and agricultural sectors.

The war on drugs is used as justification for the passage of a host of liberty-stealing laws. A few among the many are these:
The federal government removed from circulation all bills above $100 and is moving stealthily toward eliminating cash altogether. In truth, this is not about fighting drug trafficking, but is about driving Americans into an economy in which all financial transactions are electronic transactions for tracking and taxing purposes.
Banks are required by law to file Suspicious Activity Reports on customers who engage in any "suspicious transaction relevant to a possible violation of law or regulation." What does this mean? The law compels banks to report any transactions that have no "apparent lawful purpose or are not the sort in which the particular customer would normally be expected to engage." This, of course, is an entirely subjective judgment, and banks are apt to err on the side of caution (which means that they can be expected to report anything and everything that seems the slightest bit out of the ordinary).

Banks are required by law to provide the federal government with "Currency Transaction Report" (CTR) forms on customers who engage in transactions involving $10,000 or more. And those suspect individuals who have several such reports filed on them may be audited by the IRS or investigated for dealing drugs.
Massachusetts lawmakers are considering a bill that would put a ban on adding hidden compartments to vehicles in order to secure private property like guns, money or other valuables. And the law would empower LEOs to seize any vehicle so outfitted. The law also includes a two-year mandatory prison sentence and five years for subsequent offenses.

In Oklahoma it is against the law to fortify a home "for the purpose of preventing or delaying entry or access by a law enforcement officer." According to the statute, it is illegal to "construct, install, position, use or hold any material or device designed ... to strengthen, defend, restrict or obstruct any door, window, or other opening into a dwelling, structure, building or other place to any extent beyond the security provided by a commercial alarm system, lock or deadbolt, or a combination of alarm, lock, or deadbolt."
The war on drugs has resulted in a rising militancy and militarized gestapo-like mindset among LEOs (legally entitled to oppress) from the local, small town street cop to the FBI to the Drug Enforcement Agency.

Attorney General Jeff Session is a big fan of asset forfeiture, the process by which LEOs confiscate people's money and property for their own personal use. Innocent civilians whose only crime is having in their possession more money that the LEOs think is warranted at the time, lose their cash, their cars and even their houses without ever being convicted — or even charged — with a crime; all under the auspices of the war on drugs.

The drug war corrupts the justice system. In 2013, workers at the Massachusetts crime lab were caught conspiring with prosecutors in that state by tampering with samples and intentionally forging signatures. As many as 40,000 cases may have had their evidence tainted. Chemist Annie Dookhan pleaded guilty to all 27 counts of altering drug evidence and obstructing justice that prosecutors had filed against her, was a crime lab chemist for nine years. Her tampered evidence has put thousands of innocent people behind bars, and thousands more have had their sentences lengthened based on her fake "evidence."

Following Dookhan's guilty plea, a second Massachusetts crime lab "chemist" was been fired after investigators determined she had fabricated her educational credentials. Kate Corbett worked alongside Dookhan and testified as a "chemistry expert" in dozens of court cases that led to convictions — even though her degree is in sociology. Defense attorneys argue that as many 180,000 Massachusetts drug cases may be tainted by the two women's actions.
The federal government has been known to pick winners and losers in the Mexico's drug war by allowing some cartels free reign to commit murder within the United States and transport multi-ton quantities of drugs across the U.S. border with impunity. These revelations come from emails hacked from the security firm Stratfor and released by WikiLeaks and from Federal court filings.

In the emails, a Mexican diplomat dubbed MX1 wrote that both Mexican and American authorities have been negotiating deals with the larger cartels, tolerating their cross-border trafficking and encouraging them to take out the smaller cartels in the belief that fewer cartels would be able to negotiate their differences peaceably. "They want the CARTELS to negotiate with EACH Other. The idea is that if they can do this, violence will drop and the governments will allow controlled drug trades," the email stated.
Another leaked email from a federal law enforcement supervisor stated: "Regarding ICE [U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement] screwing up informants: They [ICE] were handling big hit men from Juarez and letting them kill in the U.S."

In Federal court filings, Jesus Vicente Zambada-Niebla (said to be the "logistics coordinator" for Sinaloa, a major Mexican cartel) claimed the U.S. government had offered his organization virtual immunity to import tons of drugs across the border. He also claimed that in exchange for information on rival cartels, the Sinaloa cartel was armed by federal agents and aided in avoiding Mexican authorities.

The "Fast and Furious" gun running scandal under President Barack Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder also armed drug cartels, and those weapons have been used in numerous crimes including the murder of American border agents and the robbery and murder of American citizens in the U.S.
The U.S. military, since the beginning of the war in Afghanistan, has stood watch over Afghani poppy fields and turned a blind eye — when it wasn't directly facilitating them — to the operations of Afghan drug traffickers. Afghanistan provides 90 percent of the world's supply of opium poppy, making the U.S. government a co-conspirator in the rising U.S. opium epidemic along with the prescribing physicians and the legal U.S. drug cartel known as Big Pharma.
The CIA has a long history of trafficking in drugs to fund its operations.

The result of the war on drugs is that the U.S. has six to 12 times as many incarcerated people per capita as does Australia, Canada, France Germany, Japan or the United Kingdom. The U.S. has 5 percent of the world's population, 25 percent of its incarcerated people and half of the world's academically qualified lawyers. Those lawyers consume about 10 percent of America's gross domestic product.

There are about 2.3 million people populating America's 1,719 state prisons, 102 federal prisons, 942 juvenile correctional facilities, 3,283 local jails and 79 Indian Country jails as well as in military prisons, immigration detention facilities, civil commitment centers and prisons in the U.S. territories. In the U.S., people go to jail about 11 million times each year. Another 7 million are on parole or probation.
There is no question that America is a prison nation, and the overwhelming majority of people in prisons are there for non-violent crimes — about 20 percent of them for drug crimes. One in three Americans will be arrested by the age of 23.

The faux war on drugs has ensnared millions of Americans for the non-crime of possessing parts of a plant.
The war on drugs is sham and a scam and federal agents, federal agencies are corrupted by it, as are states and municipalities and their LEOs. Meanwhile, U.S. prisons and cemeteries are overflowing with the victims.

The constant success of government criminality in this regard is so staggering that one can only conclude that the DOJ and its controllers in Congress and the White House are satanic. The United States of the Constitution is dead; "Long live the United States!," cry the deceived masses and their rulers.
Dropping all pretense, the truth is that the government is at war with you. The criminal element is the excuse. Besides, the government and the criminal element are one. Otherwise, why would they protect criminals?

Yours for the truth,
Bob Livingston
 
How Will The "New" War On Drugs Impact Communities of Color?
By Victoria Kim 03/29/18
People of color already receive disproportionate penalties for drug crimes and the renewed drug war could make matters worse.

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Since President Trump announced his plan to address the national opioid crisis on March 19, drug policy experts have tried to unpack the president’s promises, and gauge where this "new" approach will take us.

One writer, Vann R. Newkirk II, who covers politics and policy at The Atlantic, analyzed Trump’s opioid plan from the viewpoint of Americans of color, the very people who were devastated by the “War on Drugs” declared by former President Richard Nixon in 1971.It’s important to ask how Trump’s War on Drugs 3.0 will impact communities of color in the United States.

Last Monday, Trump pledged to impose “tougher penalties”—including the death penalty—to punish some drug traffickers. While his plan also included efforts to expand access to substance use disorder treatment and limiting opioid prescriptions, the bit about ramping up punishments for drug dealers has gotten the most buzz.

Following Trump’s announcement, U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions followed suit, sending out a memo to U.S. Attorneys that read: “Congress has passed several statutes that provide the Department [of Justice] with the ability to seek capital punishment for certain drug-related crimes. I strongly encourage federal prosecutors to use these statutes, when appropriate, to aid in our continuing fight against drug trafficking and the destruction it causes our nation.”

Writer Newkirk predicts that new resources will be funneled “primarily to white communities” while law enforcement will heighten its focus on low-income, communities of color.

“Black and Latino people are already much more likely to be policed, arrested, and sentenced than their white counterparts,” wrote Newkirk, who acknowledged that some low-income white communities are just as vulnerable to the administration’s punitive approach.

This racial disparity in enforcing the War on Drugs has existed long before Nixon declared drug abuse “public enemy number one.”


“Police agencies have frequently targeted drug law violations in low-income communities of color… while substance abuse in communities with substantial resources is more likely to be addressed as a family or public health problem,” according to a 2009 report by the Sentencing Project.

While white and black Americans have comparable rates of illicit drug use, blacks and Latinos are arrested at higher rates. According to the U.S. Sentencing Commission, black men received drug sentences that were 13.1% longer than for white men between 2007-2009.

As a result, nearly two-thirds of drug offenders in state prisons are black or Latino.

While the Sentencing Project report suggests this trend may be waning, Trump’s call for harsher penalties for drug dealers may roll back that progress.

Even if the administration does not act on its promise of harsher penalties, Newkirk notes, Trump’s rhetoric may be just as damaging to people who use drugs and communities of color alike—by re-legitimizing the old way of thinking and moving us further away from the more compassionate and less punitive approach to dealing with drug abuse, that took years to get to.
 
10 Ways the Drug War Is Causing Massive Collateral Damage to Our Society
written by Tony Newman / AlterNet January 3, 2013


The war on drugs is America’s longest war. It has been 40-plus years since Nixon launched our modern “war on drugs” and yet drugs are as plentiful as ever. While the idea that we can have a “drug-free society” is laughable, the disastrous consequences of our drug war are dead serious. While it might not be obvious, the war on drugs touches and destroys so many of the issues we care about and the values we hold. Below are 10 collateral consequences of the drug war and reasons we need to find an exit strategy from this unwinnable war.


1. Racial Injustice



The war on drugs is built on racial injustice. Despite roughly equal rates of drug use and sales, African-American men are arrested at 13 times the rate of white men on drug charges in the U.S. — with rates of up to 57 times in some states. African Americans and Latinos together make up 29 percent of the total U.S. population, but more than 75 percent of drug law violators in state and federal prisons.


2. Denied Access to Education, Housing and Benefits


Passed by Congress in 1998, the Higher Education Act delays or denies federal financial aid to anyone ever convicted of a felony or misdemeanor drug offense, including marijuana possession. A drug offense will also get you and your entire family kicked out of public housing. Thirty-two states ban anyone convicted of a drug felony from collecting food stamps.




3. Wasted Taxpayer Dollars


U.S. federal, state, and local governments now spend $50 billion per year trying to make America “drug free.” State prison budgets top spending on public colleges and universities. The prison industrial complex is ever more powerful. Nevertheless, heroin, cocaine, methamphetamine and other illicit drugs are cheaper, purer and easier to get than ever before.


4. Unsafe Neighborhoods


Most “drug-related” violence stems not from drug use, but from drug prohibition. That was true in Chicago under alcohol kingpin Al Capone and it is true now. The mass killings in Mexico and in many U.S. cities are not from marijuana or other drug use, but because the plants are worth more than gold and people are willing to kill each other over the profits to be made.



5. Shredded Constitutional Rights


Armed with paramilitary gear, police break into homes unannounced, terrorizing innocent and guilty alike. Prosecutors seize private property without due process. Citizens convicted of felony offenses lose their right to vote, in some states for life. More and more Americans are subject to urine tests without cause. And the list goes on.


6. Bloodbath in Latin America


U.S. drug policies in Latin America have failed to reduce the supply of illicit drugs. Instead our policies have led to a bloodbath with more than 60,000 people killed in prohibition violence since 2006 in Mexico alone. Our policy and strategies have empowered organized criminals, corrupted governments, stimulated violence, assaulted the environment and created tens of thousands of refugees.


7. Compromising Teenagers’ Safety



The defenders of the failed war on drugs say that we can't discuss alternatives to prohibition because it would "send the wrong message to the kids." Ironically, the drug war is a complete failure when it comes to keeping young people from using drugs. Despite decades of DARE programs with the simplistic “Just Say No” message, 50 percent of teenagers will try marijuana before they graduate and 75 percent will drink alcohol. Young people also feel the brunt of marijuana enforcement and make up the majority of arrests. Arresting young people will often cause more damage than drug use itself. Teenagers need honest drug education to help them make responsible decisions. Safety should be the number-one priority.


8. Drug Treatment


Despite the government’s lip service to the need for treatment, most of the drug war budget still goes to criminal justice and military agencies. The majority of those who need treatment can’t get it. And for many, the only way to get treatment is to get arrested. We should never put people in a cage because they have a drug problem, and we should make treatment available to all who want it.



9. Public Health


Unsterile syringe sharing is associated with hundreds of thousands of HIV/AIDS infections in the U.S. among injection drug users, their sex partners and their children. Yet state paraphernalia and prescription laws limit access to sterile syringes in pharmacies, and the U.S. government stands alone among Western industrialized nations in refusing to fund needle exchange.


10. Destroyed Families


The number of people behind bars on drug charges in the U.S. has ballooned from 50,000 in 1980 to more than half a million today. That’s more than all of Western Europe (with a bigger population) incarcerates for everything. Millions of people in the U.S. now have a father, mother, brother, sister, son or daughter behind bars on a drug charge.



Momentum Builds to End Drug War


The war on drugs is really a war on people. It is hard to imagine an issue that has caused so much damage to so many people on so many fronts. Thankfully, momentum is building in this country and abroad toward a more rational drug policy based on science, compassion, health and human rights. States like Colorado and Washington just dealt a blow to marijuana prohibition by legalizing marijuana. World leaders, including multiple presidents in Latin America are calling for open debate on alternatives to drug prohibition. Many countries in Europe have implemented public health strategies like safe injection facilities and prescribing medical heroin to reduce HIV/AIDS and overdose deaths. Both red and blue states are reducing their prison populations by offering alternatives to jail for low-level drug offenses.


Everyone has a reason to oppose and be outraged by the failed drug war. We need to step up our efforts, grow our numbers, and continue to win hearts and minds because the casualties from the war continue to grow every day. And the war on drugs is not going to end itself.
 
Former U.S. Marshal and DEA agent was told not to enforce drug laws in white areas


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Matthew Fogg explaining the problem of race in the drug war
Former U.S. Marshal and DEA Agent Matthew Fogg has been speaking out against police brutality and racism and the drug war since he left law enforcement. The freethoughtproject breaks down part of an interview he did with Brave New Films. In it he discusses succinctly and with the clarity of a diamond one of the basic fundamental problems with how law enforcement policy works—and more specifically, policy around the war on drugs.
“We were jumping on guys in the middle of the night, all of that. Swooping down on folks all across the country, using these sorts of attack tactics that we went out on, that you would use in Vietnam, or some kind of war-torn zone. All of the stuff that we were doing, just calling it the war on drugs. And there wasn’t very many black guys in my position.
So when I would go into the war room, where we were setting up all of our drug and gun and addiction task force determining what cities we were going to hit, I would notice that most of the time it always appeared to be urban areas.

That’s when I asked the question, well, don’t they sell drugs out in Potomac and Springfield, and places like that? Maybe you all think they don’t, but statistics show they use more drugs out in those areas than anywhere. The special agent in charge, he says ‘You know, if we go out there and start messing with those folks, they know judges, they know lawyers, they know politicians. You start locking their kids up; somebody’s going to jerk our chain.’ He said, ‘they’re going to call us on it, and before you know it, they’re going to shut us down, and there goes your overtime.'”

What Fogg realized was that without the racial component, without the class component, there is no War on Drugs. Middle-class white people would not stand for the kind of abuses that were and are being routinely inflicted upon more urban areas.
 
The War On Drugs Has Screwed Black People and Now It's Coming for White People

We spoke to Eugene Jarecki about the slow-motion Holocaust taking place in America's prisons.
  • create a huge industry that allows big business to profit from the imprisonment of low-level criminals and vulnerable addicts.



    If there's one man you want to speak to about this, it's Eugene Jarecki. The acclaimed director of Why We Fight, Freakonomics and Reagan's latest documentary – The House I Live In – deals with the corporate exploitation of the American prison system.

    VICE: Hi Eugene. What made you want to make this film?
    Eugene Jarecki: Growing up in the wake of the civil rights movement, I anticipated a sort of post-racial America, where black people would be afforded the same opportunities as white people. As I got older, I started to understand that there's an invisible force blocking black progress in America – a huge part of which is the phenomenon of mass incarceration. The more I looked into it, the more obvious it became that the War On Drugs had reinvented, in a way, the kind of obstacles black people had triumphed over in the civil rights movement.

    Has it been like that from the start?
    Well, we know enough about Richard Nixon – the man who launched the War On Drugs – to know that he was racist and privately held some rather strong sentiments regarding race. Dealing with drug addiction was clearly a good intention, but it became very clear, very early on that there were going to be massive racial implications. Maybe that wasn't what was intended, but since it became clear to Congress, they haven't done anything about it. They don't find anything wrong with the massive racial bias that's emerged out of the drug war.

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    Shanequa Rock, a drug dealer featured in Jarecki's film.

    How exactly has America victimised racial groups by criminalising drugs in the past?
    The first thing we saw were opium laws in the 1800s that targeted Chinese immigrants and made it easier to stop, search and arrest them, as well as stopping them from making more of a success of themselves. The next chapter was at the turn of the 20th century, when people were still uncomfortable about the newly-freed Afro-American population, so started associating them with cocaine. There were headlines saying, "Drug Crazed Negroes Siege Southern Town" and that kind of thing, and there was this national idea that a black man on cocaine would take on super strength and rape all the women in your family.


    Perfectly logical.
    Right? The next thing we saw was Mexicans migrating into America, who we wanted to stop, search, seize and stigmatise, so we started calling hemp – which has been a beloved crop since the dawn of the republic – "marijuana", its Spanish name, which made it much easier to associate with Mexicans.

    The War On Drugs has gradually built its own thriving economy as well, right?
    Yeah. I went to a prison trade show where you could see the huge corporate interest invested in mass incarceration. From everyone making the best stun guns and restraint chairs to those selling Qurans and being paid to do the laundry. The list goes on and on, and you end up with a system that's designed to profit whichever company can get in with the local leadership. If I were to describe the situation to you without using the word "America", you'd have thought it was some far-away dictatorship that we'd soon plan to invade. But it's a legal form of corporate political corruption and has become the American way of life.

    Mandatory minimum sentencing seems to be a kind of corrupt way of keeping non-violent drug offenders imprisoned for far longer than they should be.
    Yeah, and judges have their hands tied with that. A federal judge in Iowa told me that if someone entered his courtroom on a drug charge of, say, five grams of crack, he's going to get a custodial sentence and the judge doesn't have the ability to change that. But if he walked in on a charge of 4.9 grams, the way the mandatory minimums are written, he wouldn't be getting jail time, he'd be walking. How can .1 gram make the difference between X amount of years and no years? How does that possibly make sense in making society better?


    How does the system affect people who do get released from prison?
    There’s a great old song by Tennessee Ernie Ford called "16 Tons", where he says, "If the left one doesn’t get you / then the right one will." If we miss you in one way in America, we get you in another. Even if we get you in one way, when you get out, we get you in a whole new way. We have a system that doesn't provide drug treatment and that means, even if your only offence is being caught with a little marijuana when you're 14 years old, you have to tick a box on job applications for the rest of your life. Your opportunities shrink and who will take you? The underground economies we've fostered by criminalising and therefore making a business of drugs, just like what happened with the prohibition.

    Surely new drug laws target white people as well?
    Somewhere in that prison trade show, there are people sitting round a table – like heads of any other industry do – discussing how they can grow profit on mass incarceration. They must have noticed at some point that the disproportionate targeting of black Americans was relegating their business to only a 14 percent share of all the potential clients in the United States.

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    A still from The House I Live In.

    And they've done something about it?
    Well, yeah – this sudden attention from law enforcement towards methamphetamine and other drugs, and the various demographic increases in incarceration figures, almost makes it look like the business itself decided to "diversify". We see growth in poor whites, women and Latinos, which suggests that the drug war is moving away from our long history of race relations in America and into something far more class-based.



    So will the War On Drugs change now that white people are being targeted?
    That relies on a dangerous assumption that power structures that incarcerate people for profit care any more about white people than they do black people. There's a small margin of preference there, sure, but those poor people are generally unwanted across the board. In my film, David Simon calls them "the extra Americans" – those we don't need any more because our factories are closed and we've shipped so many jobs overseas that these people have no function. So what do we do with them? Lock them up. And while locking them up, why not make a profit out of it?

    Your film compares the War on Drugs to the Holocaust. How do they fare against each other?
    The way that David Simon and the historian Richard Lawrence Miller talked about that idea in my film was extremely thorough and conscientious. They're not flat out saying the drug war is the same as the Holocaust, but David calls it "a holocaust in slow motion". It's identifying a group, ghettoising that group, confiscating their rights and concentrating them in prisons and exploiting them for financial gain. It's so disconcerting, and something that echoes throughout persecuted societies through history. But to think it's happening in America is mind-boggling.
 
Despite Liberalizing Marijuana Laws, the War on Drugs Still Targets People of Color



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New York City police officers stop a man for suspected K2 possession, July 14, 2016 on the border of the Bedford-Stuyvesant and Bushwick neighborhoods in the Brooklyn borough of New York City.

Photo: Drew Angerer/Getty Images

THE HUGE FAILURE we know as the “war on drugs” is back in full force under the Trump administration, thanks in no small part to Attorney General Jeff Sessions’s retrograde tough-on-crime approach to drugs. It’s not hard to understand why someone like Sessions, with a history of racism, would love the war on drugs: In reality, it was always a war on a very particular set of people — and you can probably guess who those people are. And yet despite Sessions’s best efforts, there’s been a lot of progress on legalizing marijuana; opinions are changing and, in a lot of places, so are laws.


At the intersection of these pushes to legalize weed and the so-called war on drugs, there are a bevy of major scandals unfolding, all of which are ravaging communities of color. And here’s the thing about these scandals: They can’t simply be blamed on President Donald Trump and his team. Instead, they’re deeply rooted in a bipartisan type of anti-blackness.

First, the lay of the land: Eight states and Washington, D.C., have now legalized recreational marijuana. Another 14 states have decriminalized recreational marijuana use, meaning you still can’t legally buy weed, but if you are caught with very small portions of it, you are supposed to either get a pass or a citation. Twenty-nine states have now legalized varying forms of medical marijuana.

All of this talk of legalization and decriminalization gave me the wrong impression: I had thought that we were working toward ending the war on drugs. But arrests and imprisonment for marijuana possession are still in full effect — even in places where it has been legalized or decriminalized. How did this happen?

In 2016, more people were arrested for simple marijuana possession in the United States than all violent crimes combined.
In 2016, more people were arrested for simple marijuana possession in the United States than all violent crimes combined. More than one person is arrested every minute for marijuana possession in this country. An astounding 574,641 people were arrested for simple marijuana possession in the U.S. in 2016 — that’s 89 percent of all marijuana-related arrests. These aren’t dealers, distributors, or kingpins. They are just everyday people with a little bit of weed.

The continuing arrests are part of a long pattern. From 2000 to 2010, an astounding 7,216,000 arrests were made in the U.S. for simple marijuana possession. How many lives were ruined as a result? How many people lost their jobs? Their right to vote? How many of those people lost their college financial aid? How many were jailed or sent to prison? How many of those people were moms or dads that were ripped away from their families?

What we do know is that they were black. In spite of countless studies showing that African-Americans and white people use marijuana at almost the exact same rate, African-Americans are 375 percent more likely to be arrested for it. In fact, if as few people of color were incarcerated as white people, America’s prison population would plummet by 40 percent.

Can anyone really believe this disparity is accidental? It’s not — that’s why it happens from coast to coast. America’s criminal justice policies — and their selective racial enforcement — are deeply rooted in racism and systemic white supremacy. This conclusion, thanks to Michelle Alexander’s book “The New Jim Crow” and Ava DuVernay’s documentary “13th,” is more widely accepted than it’s ever been, but the scandal continues. And isn’t a partisan one.




Police are viewed in an area which has witnessed an explosion in the use of K2 or “spice,” a synthetic marijuana drug, in East Harlem on Sept. 16, 2015 in New York.


Photo: Spencer Platt/Getty Images

TAKE NEW YORK CITY, where I live. The city’s leaders have openly bragged about the decriminalization of marijuana, but arrests for simple possession actually went up by 9 percent from 2015 to 2016, with 18,136 people arrested. In a 2016 interview, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said, “We stopped the arrest for low-level marijuana possession.” But that’s simply not true: 96 percent of those arrested in New York were busted for low-level possession. Over 50 people a day are still being arrested for it in New York City alone.

Most of those arrests, predictably, are happening in communities of color. The new numbers for New York City’s 2017 marijuana arrests just came out and they hardly budged — arrests declined by about 1 percent, disappointing many advocates and attorneys who took the mayor’s word on this issue.

Democrats dominate in New York. In addition to its liberal mayor, 47 of 51 city council members are Democrats. New York can’t blame arresting 50 people a day for low-level marijuana possession on Sessions or Trump.

New York can’t blame arresting 50 people a day for low-level marijuana possession on Jeff Sessions or Donald Trump.
Neither can most of America’s largest cities — where a huge percentage of these arrests go down — and where Democrats have ruled for decades.

This disparity extends to places that have legalized weed — and not just medical marijuana. As far as arrests go, the legalization wave has mainly helped white people. In Colorado, which legalized recreational marijuana, arrests of white people have plummeted, but arrests of African-Americans and Latinos have actually skyrocketed as much as 50 percent. One has to ask: For whom did Colorado make marijuana legal?

Then there is the economic justice side of things. Millions of African-Americans have gone to jail for marijuana possession and distribution; hundreds of thousands remain in jail at this very moment. And while African-Americans continue to pay an enormous price for marijuana prohibition, a legal weed economy is exploding. In California, the weed economy is worth about $7 billion, and it’s going to grow exponentially.

Who do you think owns these businesses? That’s right: The weed industry is dominated by white ownership. I recently picked up a magazine that was all about the marijuana industry. Not a single black or Latino face was in the entire magazine.

That people of color are largely shut out of the legal cannabis industry, after paying the heaviest price for it, is the definition of white privilege.

We’ve seen this sort of exploitation many times. We celebrate, as we should, Jackie Robinson entering Major League Baseball. But when MLB “integrated,” it only integrated the teams, not the front offices or ownership groups. The integration of baseball then meant the destruction of the Negro League and every black-owned franchise that came with it. Generations later, not a single team in baseball is black-owned. The same is true for basketball. Even the Harlem Globetrotters is owned by white people.

What we have right now is a type of marijuana apartheid, a de facto policy of segregation on this issue, in which one lived reality exists for white America on weed and a completely different, more punitive and costly reality exists for African-Americans. Of course it’s unfair, but it damn sure is as American as apple pie. Even if we’ve already passed the bygone golden years of bipartisan cooperation on criminal justice reform, it’s time for Democrats to lead on this issue. But judging by the fact that Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., has just one single co-sponsor for his progressive legislation on the matter, it doesn’t look like Democrats have a real plan here. Do they ever?

Correction: Jan. 26, 2018
Due to an editing error, an earlier version of this story said that closing the racial disparity of marijuana arrests would cause the prison population to drop by 40 percent. The story was corrected to say that closing the racial disparity of people incarcerated for all crimes would cause that drop in the prison population.
 
Prescription Drugs Are More Deadly Than Street Drugs(everything in this colony is ass backwards or told to us in reverse!! Everything that can kill you, is legal in this corporation and the things that grow from the earth with water, sun and dirt is the most dangerous things in this world!!)
Many unethical doctors enable their drug-addicted patients.
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Source: Wikipedia
What do Heath Ledger, Sage Stallone, Anna Nicole Smith, Keith Moon, Judy Garland, Dorothy Dandridge, Marilyn Monroe, Elvis Presley and Michael Jackson all have in common? They were high-profile celebrities who died from prescription drug overdoses.

When someone rich and famous dies from a prescription drug overdose, it brings renewed attention to a growing epidemic.

Drug overdose death rates in the United States have more than tripled since 1990 and have never been higher. At least 100 people die from drug overdoses every day in the U.S. More than 36,000 people die from drug overdoses annually and most of these deaths are caused by prescription drugs (1).

Contrary to popular mythology, prescription drugs are more lethal than illegal or street drugs. Prescription drug abuse and addiction kill far more people in the U.S. every year than all illegal drugs combined.

The unprecedented rise in overdose deaths in the U.S. parallels a 300 percent increase since 1999 in the sale of powerful painkillers such as Vicodin and OxyContin. These drugs were involved in 14,800 overdose deaths in 2008, more than cocaine and heroin combined (2).

The misuse and abuse of prescription painkillers was responsible for more than 475,000 emergency department visits in 2009, a number that nearly doubled in just five years (3).

More than 12 million people reported using prescription painkillers non-medically in 2010—that is, using them without a prescription or for the feeling they cause (4).

In 2011, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that the rate of antidepressant use in the United States rose by 400 percent between 1988 and 2008.

Although doctors prescribe painkillers, sedatives, tranquilizers and stimulants all the time, that does not mean they aren't addictive or dangerous if used the wrong way.

An estimated 20 percent of Americans have abused prescription drugs, according to a 2008 government survey. Even without abuse, prescription drugs, if mixed the wrong way or taken under the wrong conditions, can be deadly. The problem is getting worse and, frequently, medical doctors enable their drug addicted patients by frivolously filling prescriptions.

The high-profile murder trial of Dr. Conrad Murray in 2011 brought global attention to the connected problems of prescription drug abuse and medical negligence. Dr. Murray was found guilty of negligent manslaughter in the wrongful death of pop music icon Michael Jackson.


Conrad Murray should have known better than to administer the powerful surgical anesthesia, Propofol, as a sleep aid to Jackson in his home. The misuse of the drug resulted in Jackson’s death. Only anesthesiologists are typically allowed to administer Propofol, and only in controlled hospital settings. The heart rates of patients receiving it are continuously monitored with an EKG machine, which was reportedly not present in Jackson's home.

In addition, ABC News reported that Demerol and OxyContin were found in Michael Jackson's body following his death. Police discovered as many as 20 other powerful prescription drugs in Jackson's Los Angeles home, including Methadone, Percocet, Dilaudid, Vicodin and Fentanyl.

I believe that Conrad Murray, who was paid $150,000 per month by Michael Jackson to be his only patient, allowed greed to compromise his medical training and ethics. Stated differently, Dr. Murray was a highly paid, live-in drug dealer for Jackson.

Celebrities, in particular, are prone to prescription drug abuse because they are not able to venture out into the streets to buy illegal drugs like anonymous addicts. They instead rely on unethical doctors who are either too star-struck to turn down famous clients or simply too greedy to refuse signing the prescriptions (5).

Such doctors sometimes work with so-called pill mills—that is, clinics, such as the one to which Dr. Conrad Murray was linked at his Texas-based practice, which specialize in providing easy access to powerful painkillers. The medical doctors who serve insecure and drug-addicted celebrities are often their worst enablers (6).


However, to what extent is a prescription drug addict who overdoes, even accidently, responsible for his/her own fate? For example, despite his incredible musical talents, Michael Jackson was also a manipulative and desperate drug addict who reportedly begged Dr. Murray for Propofol and powerful painkillers. Wasn’t Jackson ultimately responsible for what he put into his own body? Similarly, weren’t Elvis and Marilyn Monroe also responsible for what they put into their bodies?

Of course, celebrities are certainly not the only ones susceptible to the powerful, addictive combination of prescription drugs and enabling doctors, as the overdose statistics demonstrate. Codependent relationships between immoral doctors and their drug-addicted patients are increasingly having unintended, tragic consequences.

In combination, prescription drug addiction and medical negligence create a “perfect storm” of corruption, misery and death in the U.S. As a society, we must address these growing and interconnected social problems which have reached epidemic proportions.

In my latest book, I examine the public’s fascination with serial killers in Why We Love Serial Killers: The Curious Appeal of the World’s Most Savage Murderers. To read the reviews and order it now, visit: Amazon product ASIN 1629144320
(1) CDC. Vital Signs: Overdoses of Prescription Opioid Pain Relievers—United States, 1999-2008. MMWR 2011; 60: 1-6.


(2) Ibid.

(3) Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. Drug Abuse Warning Network: selected tables of national estimates of drug-related emergency department visits. Rockville, MD: Center for Behavioral Health Statistics and Quality, SAMHSA; 2010.

(4) Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. Results from the 2010 National Survey on Drug Use and Health. Volume 1: Summary of national findings. Rockville, MD: Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Office of Applied Studies; 2011.

(5) Crime Library http://www.crimelibrary.com/notorious_murders/celebrity/celebrity_addict...

(6) Ibid.

Dr. Scott Bonn is Professor of Sociology and Criminology at Drew University and a media expert. He is the author of the critically acclaimed book Mass Deception: Moral Panic and the U.S. War on Iraq. Follow him @DocBonn on Twitter and Doc Bonn on Facebook.
 
In Florida, the Racist War on Drugs Rages on

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A new report from The Sarasota-Herald Tribune has found that drug enforcement in Florida treats Black people much more severely than white people. This follows a Tribune reportin 2015 exposing prejudice in Florida’s sentencing practices, showing that Blacks are punished with significantly longer prison sentences than whites convicted of the same crimes with similar facts.

Disturbing? Absolutely. Unjust? Completely. Surprising? Not at all.

The results of the Tribune’s investigation are sadly expected in America because the drug war has been a war against people of color since its inception decades ago. Data, studies, reports, and court decisions on stops, arrests, charges, pleas, and sentencing reach the same shameful conclusion: Blacks are treated far more harshly than whites.

The report found that in drug cases, Black people spend two-thirds more time behind bars than white people. Blacks were almost three times more likely to be charged with committing crimes in “drug free” zones than whites , which enhances the severity of a sentence. Again unsurprisingly, Black people account for two-thirds of such enhanced convictions statewide. This is partly because in many urban areas, schools, churches, and public housing are closely spaced, such that entire Black communities – and not by coincidence – are deemed “drug free” zones in which drug offenses are subject to more draconian punishments.

These racial disparities in the state continue to persist in the face of an opioid crisis that has had a particularly destructive impact on white Floridians. Eighty-three percent of deaths from opioid overdose in Florida are of whites — which mirrors nationwide data — yet drug law enforcement falls heaviest on Blacks, demonstrating just how deeply the racist roots of the drug war run.

The cause of such disparities lies not only with judges’ abuse of their sentencing power but with prosecutors’ abuse of their charging discretion. Prosecutors are less likely to seek drug-free zone sentencing enhancements and mandatory minimum sentences, and more likely to dismiss charges, in the cases of white defendants. Put another way, prosecutors are more likely to seek harsher sentences and go forward with cases against Black defendants.

This new data backs up the hard truth that the war on drugs is still raging in America, it is still racist, and it is still disproportionately devastating communities and people of color. In 2013, the ACLU published a national report on marijuana arrests and found that Blacks are almost four times more likely to be arrested for marijuana possession than whites despite comparable usage rates. The report called for the legalization of marijuana across the country.


Last year, the ACLU and Human Rights Watch issued a report on the harms of criminalizing drug possession in the United States — with someone arrested for drug possession every 25 seconds — and found that even though Black adults accounted for only 14 percent of those who use drugs, they represent one-third of those arrested for drug possession.

The racial injustice of the drug war is a primary reason the ACLU has called for an end to drug prohibition and demanded public health and economic solutions to what is a public health crisis. But beyond racism, the drug war itself has been a catastrophic fiasco. It has wasted billions of dollars, helped fuel the incarceration of millions, and caused devastating harm to people of all races. It has done this while failing to reduce drug abuse.

Several countries have already ended their wars on drugs, the best known of which is Portugal. Following drug law reform, overdose deaths dropped more than 85 percent in Portugal, which has the lowest drug mortality rate in Western Europe. Per one million people, there are 364 drug-related deaths every year in America. In Portugal, there are six per million. Enough said.

While ending the drug war won’t end other manifestations of racism in the criminal justice system, it will remove one of the system’s most frequently used and abused tools to harm and overcriminalize communities of color. Fighting for racial justice means reforming the criminal punishment system, and that has to include ending the war on drugs.
 
Prescription Drugs Now Kill More People than Illegal Drugs

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by Dr. Mercola

Death by medicine is a 21st-century epidemic, and America’s “war on drugs” is clearly directed at the wrong enemy!

Prescription drugs are now killing far more people than illegal drugs, and while most major causes of preventable deaths are declining, those from prescription drug use are increasing, an analysis of recently released data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) by the Los Angeles Times revealed.

The Times analysis of 2009 death statistics, the most recent available, showed:

  • For the first time ever in the US, more people were killed by drugs than motor vehicle accidents
  • 37,485 people died from drugs, a rate fueled by overdoses on prescription pain and anxiety medications, versus 36,284 from traffic accidents
  • Drug fatalities more than doubled among teens and young adults between 2000 and 2008, and more than tripled among people aged 50 to 69
Again, these drug-induced fatalities are not being driven by illegal street drugs; the analysis found that the most commonly abused prescription drugs like OxyContin, Vicodin, Xanax and Soma now cause more deaths than heroin and cocaine combined.

“Pharmageddon” is Upon Us
Pharmageddon is “the prospect of a world in which medicines and medicine produce more ill-health than health, and when medical progress does more harm than good” — and it is no longer a prospect but fully upon us. Those most at risk from dying from this new drug crisis are people you would least expect; the analysis revealed the death toll is highest among people in their 40s, but all ages, from teenagers to the elderly, and all walks of life are being affected. In fact, prescription drugs are now the preferred “high” for many, especially teens, as they are typically used legally, which eliminates the stigma of being a “junkie.”

And even if you don’t have your own prescription, drugs of all kinds can be found in the nearest medicine cabinet in most homes.

Yet, these drugs are also now being sold on the black market and on street corners, where people who have run out of prescriptions are willing to pay upwards of $80 a pill to get their fix. Many become addicted after using the drugs for headaches or back pain, and teens are increasingly taking the pills from their parents to use recreationally, under the false assumption that they are not dangerous.

As written in the Baltimore Sun:
“According to the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, prescription drugs are second to marijuana as the drug of choice for today’s teens. In fact, seven of the top 10 drugs used by 12th-graders were prescription drugs.

More than 40 percent of high school seniors reported that painkillers are “fairly” or “very” easy to get. They also reported that they believed that if they were to get caught, there was less shame attached to the use of prescription drugs than to street drugs. This mirrors the perceptions of their parents, who when queried said that they felt prescription drugs were a safer alternative to drugs typically sold by a drug dealer.”

How Many are Dying From Prescription Drugs?
Nearly 20 percent of Americans have used prescription drugs for nonmedicinal reasons, three-quarters of whom may be abusing them. Legal prescription drug abuse is a silent epidemic, and is part of the reason why the modern American medical system has become the leading cause of death and injury in the United States. Authored in two parts by Gary Null, PhD, Carolyn Dean, MD ND, Martin Feldman, MD, Debora Rasio, MD, and Dorothy Smith, PhD, the comprehensive Death by Medicine article described in excruciating detail how everything from medical errors to adverse drug reactions to unnecessary procedures caused more harm than good.

Seven years after the original article was written, an analysis in the New England Journal of Medicine November 25, 2010 piqued my interest — the researchers found that, despite efforts to improve patient safety in the past few years, the health care system hasn’t changed much at all. So, earlier this year I updated posted an update to the original Death by Medicine article, which, unfortunately, shows more of the same:

  • In a June 2010 report in the Journal of General Internal Medicine, study authors said that in looking over recordsthat spanned from 1976 to 2006 (the most recent year available) they found that, of 62 million death certificates, almost a quarter-million deaths were coded as having occurred in a hospital setting due to medication errors.
  • An estimated 450,000 preventable medication-related adverse events occur in the U.S. every year.
  • The costs of adverse drug reactions to society are more than $136 billion annually — greater than the total cost of cardiovascular or diabetic care.
  • Adverse drug reactions cause injuries or death in 1 of 5 hospital patients.
  • The reason there are so many adverse drug events in the U.S. is because so many drugs are used and prescribed – and many patients receive multiple prescriptions at varying strengths, some of which may counteract each other or cause more severe reactions when combined.
There are numerous repercussions to a society that eats, breathes and sleeps prescription medications, not the least of which is its impact on children. Between 2001 and 2008, there was a 36 percent increase in hospital admissions, and a 28 percent increase in emergency room visits, among children 5 and younger who had accidentally ingested medication. ER visits for ingestion of prescription opioid painkillers, such as Oxycodone, increased 101 percent!

And in 2009, there were nearly 4.6 million drug-related visits to U.S. emergency rooms nationwide, with more than halfdue to adverse reactions to prescription medications – most of which were being taken exactly as prescribed. When you add in the growing numbers of people who are using these drugs recreationally or due to addiction, you begin to see the magnitude of the problem that the pharmaceutical industry is propagating.

Unfortunately, this problem is now seriously impacting the next generation. When you were a teenager you may have snuck a beer or two at a party … nowadays teens will mix a variety of prescription pills together in a bowl and take a mouthful of them like candy! The kids think this is a safe way to get high, since they see their parents taking the same medications all the time, but it often turns out to be a literal prescription for disaster that can even be deadly.

The Real Thugs of the Drug World
The “war on drugs” has focused nearly exclusively on the illegal trafficking of drugs like cocaine, heroin and marijuana, while the most powerful drug dealers of all — the pharmaceutical companies — are allowed to grow their businesses with the U.S. government’s gold seal of approval.

But make no mistake – the leading pharmaceutical companies are also among the largest corporate criminals in the world, and they are really nothing more than white-collar drug dealers.

Although many fail to realize this, prescription drugs can be just as addictive as illegal drugs. In fact, in many cases there’s no difference between a street drug and a prescription drug. For example, hydrocodone, a prescription opiate, is synthetic heroin. It’s indistinguishable from any other heroine as far as your brain and body is concerned. So, if you’re hooked on hydrocodone, you are in fact a good-old-fashioned heroin addict.

But aside from the nature of their business, fraud, kickbacks, price-setting, bribery and illegal sales activities are all par for the course for big-name drug companies. Last year I set out to investigate some of the criminal activities that some of the largest pharmaceutical companies had been convicted of lately, and the amount of gross misconduct, fraud and deceit I found was so insidious, so massive, and so overwhelming that it shocked even me.

You can read the grim details in full here, but here is just a sampling of what the top drug companies are up to:

  • Merck: With a long list of deaths to its credit, and more than $5.5 billion in judgments and fines levied against it, it was five years before Merck made its $30-billion recall of the painkiller Vioxx that I warned my readers that it might be a real killer for some people. After the drug was withdrawn, and 60,000 had already died, Merck picked up the pieces painlessly by getting a new drug fast-tracked and on the market.That drug is Gardasil, a vaccine that so far has been linked to thousands of adverse events and at least 49 unexplained deaths. It’s a situation that the FDA and CDC have been denying repeatedly, keeping their heads buried in the sand even as the adverse reports mount.
  • Baxter: Dozens of recalls of products that caused deaths and injuries, at least 11 different guilty pleas to fraud and illegal sales activity, more than 200 lawsuits – many of them stemming from selling AIDS-tainted blood to hemophiliacs – and more than $1.3 billion in criminal fines and civil penalties.
  • Pfizer: In the largest health care fraud settlement in history, Pfizer was ordered to pay $2.3 billion to resolve criminal and civil allegations that the company illegally promoted uses of four of its drugs, including the painkiller Bextra, the antipsychotic Geodon, the antibiotic Zyvox, and the anti-epileptic Lyrica.
How Can You Avoid Being Killed by a Prescription Drug?
There is a risk of side effects every time you take a prescription drug. No one (except for those who intentionally overdose) expects these medications to kill them, but they can do just that, and it happens far more often than you might think! In a study recently released by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMSHA), officials emphasized that people should not assume there’s no risk in prescribed medicines. The truth is, the only way to avoid all risk, including death, from prescription drugs is to not take them at all.

It is your body, not your doctor’s and not your pharmacist’s, so it is up to you to make the decision of what drugs to take, if any. Be SURE you are aware of the risks of any medication prescribed to you, and weigh them against any possible benefit. Then you can make a well-informed decision of whether it’s a risk you’re willing to take.

Of course, of paramount importance is also taking control of your health so you can stay well naturally, without the use of drugs or even frequent conventional medical care. If you adhere to a healthy lifestyle, you most likely will never need medications in the first place. This includes:

  1. Proper Food Choices For a comprehensive guide on which foods to eat and which to avoid, see my nutrition plan. Generally speaking, you should be looking to focus your diet on whole, unprocessed foods (vegetables, meats, raw dairy, nuts, and so forth) that come from healthy, sustainable, local sources, such as a small organic farm not far from your home.For the best nutrition and health benefits, you will want to eat a good portion of your food raw. Personally, I aim to eat about 80-85 percent of my food raw, including raw eggs and humanely raised organic animal products that have not been raised on a CAFO (confined animal feeding operation).Nearly as important as knowing which foods to eat more of is knowing which foods to avoid, and topping the list is fructose. Sugar, and fructose in particular, acts as a toxin in and of itself, and as such drive multiple disease processes in your body, not the least of which is insulin resistance, a major cause of accelerated aging.
  2. Comprehensive Exercise Program, including High-Intensity Exercise like Peak Fitness Even if you’re eating the healthiest diet in the world, you still need to exercise to reach the highest levels of health, and you need to be exercising effectively, which means including not only core-strengthening exercises, strength training, and stretching but also high-intensity activities into your rotation. High-intensity interval-type training boosts human growth hormone (HGH) production, which is essential for optimal health, strength and vigor. I’ve discussed the importance of Peak Fitness for your health on numerous occasions, so for more information, please review this previous article.
  3. Stress Reduction and Positive Thinking You cannot be optimally healthy if you avoid addressing the emotional component of your health and longevity, as your emotional state plays a role in nearly every physical disease — from heart disease and depression, to arthritis and cancer. Effective coping mechanisms are a major longevity-promoting factor in part because stress has a direct impact on inflammation, which in turn underlies many of the chronic diseases that kill people prematurely every day. Meditation, prayer, social support and exercise are all viable options that can help you maintain emotional and mental equilibrium.
  4. Proper Sun Exposure to Optimize Vitamin D We have long known that it is best to get your vitamin D from sun exposure, and if at all possible, I strongly urge you to make sure you’re getting out in the sun on a daily basis. There is preliminary evidence suggesting that oral vitamin D may not provide the identical benefits, although it’s still better than none at all.Just keep in mind that it’s really best to get ALL your vitamin D from the sun. It appears that vitamin D plays a crucial role in sulfur metabolism and when you swallow it orally it may not have the same benefit as getting it from the sun.
  5. Take High Quality Animal-Based Omega-3 Fats Animal-based omega-3 fat is a strong factor in helping people live longer, and many experts believe that it is likely the predominant reason why the Japanese are the longest lived race on the planet.
  6. Avoid as Many Chemicals, Toxins, and Pollutants as Possible This includes tossing out your toxic household cleaners, soaps, personal hygiene products, air fresheners, bug sprays, lawn pesticides, and insecticides, just to name a few, and replacing them with non-toxic alternatives.
 
Prescription Drugs Now Kill More People than Illegal Drugs

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by Dr. Mercola

Death by medicine is a 21st-century epidemic, and America’s “war on drugs” is clearly directed at the wrong enemy!

Prescription drugs are now killing far more people than illegal drugs, and while most major causes of preventable deaths are declining, those from prescription drug use are increasing, an analysis of recently released data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) by the Los Angeles Times revealed.

The Times analysis of 2009 death statistics, the most recent available, showed:

  • For the first time ever in the US, more people were killed by drugs than motor vehicle accidents
  • 37,485 people died from drugs, a rate fueled by overdoses on prescription pain and anxiety medications, versus 36,284 from traffic accidents
  • Drug fatalities more than doubled among teens and young adults between 2000 and 2008, and more than tripled among people aged 50 to 69
Again, these drug-induced fatalities are not being driven by illegal street drugs; the analysis found that the most commonly abused prescription drugs like OxyContin, Vicodin, Xanax and Soma now cause more deaths than heroin and cocaine combined.

“Pharmageddon” is Upon Us
Pharmageddon is “the prospect of a world in which medicines and medicine produce more ill-health than health, and when medical progress does more harm than good” — and it is no longer a prospect but fully upon us. Those most at risk from dying from this new drug crisis are people you would least expect; the analysis revealed the death toll is highest among people in their 40s, but all ages, from teenagers to the elderly, and all walks of life are being affected. In fact, prescription drugs are now the preferred “high” for many, especially teens, as they are typically used legally, which eliminates the stigma of being a “junkie.”

And even if you don’t have your own prescription, drugs of all kinds can be found in the nearest medicine cabinet in most homes.

Yet, these drugs are also now being sold on the black market and on street corners, where people who have run out of prescriptions are willing to pay upwards of $80 a pill to get their fix. Many become addicted after using the drugs for headaches or back pain, and teens are increasingly taking the pills from their parents to use recreationally, under the false assumption that they are not dangerous.

As written in the Baltimore Sun:
“According to the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, prescription drugs are second to marijuana as the drug of choice for today’s teens. In fact, seven of the top 10 drugs used by 12th-graders were prescription drugs.

More than 40 percent of high school seniors reported that painkillers are “fairly” or “very” easy to get. They also reported that they believed that if they were to get caught, there was less shame attached to the use of prescription drugs than to street drugs. This mirrors the perceptions of their parents, who when queried said that they felt prescription drugs were a safer alternative to drugs typically sold by a drug dealer.”

How Many are Dying From Prescription Drugs?
Nearly 20 percent of Americans have used prescription drugs for nonmedicinal reasons, three-quarters of whom may be abusing them. Legal prescription drug abuse is a silent epidemic, and is part of the reason why the modern American medical system has become the leading cause of death and injury in the United States. Authored in two parts by Gary Null, PhD, Carolyn Dean, MD ND, Martin Feldman, MD, Debora Rasio, MD, and Dorothy Smith, PhD, the comprehensive Death by Medicine article described in excruciating detail how everything from medical errors to adverse drug reactions to unnecessary procedures caused more harm than good.

Seven years after the original article was written, an analysis in the New England Journal of Medicine November 25, 2010 piqued my interest — the researchers found that, despite efforts to improve patient safety in the past few years, the health care system hasn’t changed much at all. So, earlier this year I updated posted an update to the original Death by Medicine article, which, unfortunately, shows more of the same:

  • In a June 2010 report in the Journal of General Internal Medicine, study authors said that in looking over recordsthat spanned from 1976 to 2006 (the most recent year available) they found that, of 62 million death certificates, almost a quarter-million deaths were coded as having occurred in a hospital setting due to medication errors.
  • An estimated 450,000 preventable medication-related adverse events occur in the U.S. every year.
  • The costs of adverse drug reactions to society are more than $136 billion annually — greater than the total cost of cardiovascular or diabetic care.
  • Adverse drug reactions cause injuries or death in 1 of 5 hospital patients.
  • The reason there are so many adverse drug events in the U.S. is because so many drugs are used and prescribed – and many patients receive multiple prescriptions at varying strengths, some of which may counteract each other or cause more severe reactions when combined.
There are numerous repercussions to a society that eats, breathes and sleeps prescription medications, not the least of which is its impact on children. Between 2001 and 2008, there was a 36 percent increase in hospital admissions, and a 28 percent increase in emergency room visits, among children 5 and younger who had accidentally ingested medication. ER visits for ingestion of prescription opioid painkillers, such as Oxycodone, increased 101 percent!

And in 2009, there were nearly 4.6 million drug-related visits to U.S. emergency rooms nationwide, with more than halfdue to adverse reactions to prescription medications – most of which were being taken exactly as prescribed. When you add in the growing numbers of people who are using these drugs recreationally or due to addiction, you begin to see the magnitude of the problem that the pharmaceutical industry is propagating.

Unfortunately, this problem is now seriously impacting the next generation. When you were a teenager you may have snuck a beer or two at a party … nowadays teens will mix a variety of prescription pills together in a bowl and take a mouthful of them like candy! The kids think this is a safe way to get high, since they see their parents taking the same medications all the time, but it often turns out to be a literal prescription for disaster that can even be deadly.

The Real Thugs of the Drug World
The “war on drugs” has focused nearly exclusively on the illegal trafficking of drugs like cocaine, heroin and marijuana, while the most powerful drug dealers of all — the pharmaceutical companies — are allowed to grow their businesses with the U.S. government’s gold seal of approval.

But make no mistake – the leading pharmaceutical companies are also among the largest corporate criminals in the world, and they are really nothing more than white-collar drug dealers.

Although many fail to realize this, prescription drugs can be just as addictive as illegal drugs. In fact, in many cases there’s no difference between a street drug and a prescription drug. For example, hydrocodone, a prescription opiate, is synthetic heroin. It’s indistinguishable from any other heroine as far as your brain and body is concerned. So, if you’re hooked on hydrocodone, you are in fact a good-old-fashioned heroin addict.

But aside from the nature of their business, fraud, kickbacks, price-setting, bribery and illegal sales activities are all par for the course for big-name drug companies. Last year I set out to investigate some of the criminal activities that some of the largest pharmaceutical companies had been convicted of lately, and the amount of gross misconduct, fraud and deceit I found was so insidious, so massive, and so overwhelming that it shocked even me.

You can read the grim details in full here, but here is just a sampling of what the top drug companies are up to:

  • Merck: With a long list of deaths to its credit, and more than $5.5 billion in judgments and fines levied against it, it was five years before Merck made its $30-billion recall of the painkiller Vioxx that I warned my readers that it might be a real killer for some people. After the drug was withdrawn, and 60,000 had already died, Merck picked up the pieces painlessly by getting a new drug fast-tracked and on the market.That drug is Gardasil, a vaccine that so far has been linked to thousands of adverse events and at least 49 unexplained deaths. It’s a situation that the FDA and CDC have been denying repeatedly, keeping their heads buried in the sand even as the adverse reports mount.
  • Baxter: Dozens of recalls of products that caused deaths and injuries, at least 11 different guilty pleas to fraud and illegal sales activity, more than 200 lawsuits – many of them stemming from selling AIDS-tainted blood to hemophiliacs – and more than $1.3 billion in criminal fines and civil penalties.
  • Pfizer: In the largest health care fraud settlement in history, Pfizer was ordered to pay $2.3 billion to resolve criminal and civil allegations that the company illegally promoted uses of four of its drugs, including the painkiller Bextra, the antipsychotic Geodon, the antibiotic Zyvox, and the anti-epileptic Lyrica.
How Can You Avoid Being Killed by a Prescription Drug?
There is a risk of side effects every time you take a prescription drug. No one (except for those who intentionally overdose) expects these medications to kill them, but they can do just that, and it happens far more often than you might think! In a study recently released by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMSHA), officials emphasized that people should not assume there’s no risk in prescribed medicines. The truth is, the only way to avoid all risk, including death, from prescription drugs is to not take them at all.

It is your body, not your doctor’s and not your pharmacist’s, so it is up to you to make the decision of what drugs to take, if any. Be SURE you are aware of the risks of any medication prescribed to you, and weigh them against any possible benefit. Then you can make a well-informed decision of whether it’s a risk you’re willing to take.

Of course, of paramount importance is also taking control of your health so you can stay well naturally, without the use of drugs or even frequent conventional medical care. If you adhere to a healthy lifestyle, you most likely will never need medications in the first place. This includes:

  1. Proper Food Choices For a comprehensive guide on which foods to eat and which to avoid, see my nutrition plan. Generally speaking, you should be looking to focus your diet on whole, unprocessed foods (vegetables, meats, raw dairy, nuts, and so forth) that come from healthy, sustainable, local sources, such as a small organic farm not far from your home.For the best nutrition and health benefits, you will want to eat a good portion of your food raw. Personally, I aim to eat about 80-85 percent of my food raw, including raw eggs and humanely raised organic animal products that have not been raised on a CAFO (confined animal feeding operation).Nearly as important as knowing which foods to eat more of is knowing which foods to avoid, and topping the list is fructose. Sugar, and fructose in particular, acts as a toxin in and of itself, and as such drive multiple disease processes in your body, not the least of which is insulin resistance, a major cause of accelerated aging.
  2. Comprehensive Exercise Program, including High-Intensity Exercise like Peak Fitness Even if you’re eating the healthiest diet in the world, you still need to exercise to reach the highest levels of health, and you need to be exercising effectively, which means including not only core-strengthening exercises, strength training, and stretching but also high-intensity activities into your rotation. High-intensity interval-type training boosts human growth hormone (HGH) production, which is essential for optimal health, strength and vigor. I’ve discussed the importance of Peak Fitness for your health on numerous occasions, so for more information, please review this previous article.
  3. Stress Reduction and Positive Thinking You cannot be optimally healthy if you avoid addressing the emotional component of your health and longevity, as your emotional state plays a role in nearly every physical disease — from heart disease and depression, to arthritis and cancer. Effective coping mechanisms are a major longevity-promoting factor in part because stress has a direct impact on inflammation, which in turn underlies many of the chronic diseases that kill people prematurely every day. Meditation, prayer, social support and exercise are all viable options that can help you maintain emotional and mental equilibrium.
  4. Proper Sun Exposure to Optimize Vitamin D We have long known that it is best to get your vitamin D from sun exposure, and if at all possible, I strongly urge you to make sure you’re getting out in the sun on a daily basis. There is preliminary evidence suggesting that oral vitamin D may not provide the identical benefits, although it’s still better than none at all.Just keep in mind that it’s really best to get ALL your vitamin D from the sun. It appears that vitamin D plays a crucial role in sulfur metabolism and when you swallow it orally it may not have the same benefit as getting it from the sun.
  5. Take High Quality Animal-Based Omega-3 Fats Animal-based omega-3 fat is a strong factor in helping people live longer, and many experts believe that it is likely the predominant reason why the Japanese are the longest lived race on the planet.
  6. Avoid as Many Chemicals, Toxins, and Pollutants as Possible This includes tossing out your toxic household cleaners, soaps, personal hygiene products, air fresheners, bug sprays, lawn pesticides, and insecticides, just to name a few, and replacing them with non-toxic alternatives.
 
The Top 10 Most Startling Facts About People of Color and Criminal Justice in the United States
A Look at the Racial Disparities Inherent in Our Nation’s Criminal-Justice System

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AP/California Department of CorrectionsEliminating the racial disparities inherent to our nation’s criminal-justice policies and practices must be at the heart of a renewed, refocused, and reenergized movement for racial justice in America.


For a more recent version of this information, see “8 Facts You Should Know About the Criminal Justice System and People of Color” by Jamal Hagler.

This month the United States celebrates the Selma-to-Montgomery marches of 1965 to commemorate our shared history of the civil rights movement and our nation’s continued progress towards racial equality. Yet decades later a broken criminal-justice system has proven that we still have a long way to go in achieving racial equality.

Today people of color continue to be disproportionately incarcerated, policed, and sentenced to death at significantly higher rates than their white counterparts. Further, racial disparities in the criminal-justice system threaten communities of color—disenfranchising thousands by limiting voting rights and denying equal access to employment, housing, public benefits, and education to millions more. In light of these disparities, it is imperative that criminal-justice reform evolves as the civil rights issue of the 21st century.

Below we outline the top 10 facts pertaining to the criminal-justice system’s impact on communities of color.

1. While people of color make up about 30 percent of the United States’ population, they account for 60 percent of those imprisoned. The prison population grew by 700 percent from 1970 to 2005, a rate that is outpacing crime and population rates. The incarceration rates disproportionately impact men of color: 1 in every 15 African American men and 1 in every 36 Hispanic men are incarcerated in comparison to 1 in every 106 white men.

2. According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, one in three black men can expect to go to prison in their lifetime. Individuals of color have a disproportionate number of encounters with law enforcement, indicating that racial profiling continues to be a problem. A report by the Department of Justice found that blacks and Hispanics were approximately three times more likely to be searched during a traffic stop than white motorists. African Americans were twice as likely to be arrested and almost four times as likely to experience the use of force during encounters with the police.

3. Students of color face harsher punishments in school than their white peers, leading to a higher number of youth of color incarcerated. Black and Hispanic students represent more than 70 percent of those involved in school-related arrests or referrals to law enforcement. Currently, African Americans make up two-fifths and Hispanics one-fifth of confined youth today.

4. According to recent data by the Department of Education, African American students are arrested far more often than their white classmates. The data showed that 96,000 students were arrested and 242,000 referred to law enforcement by schools during the 2009-10 school year. Of those students, black and Hispanic students made up more than 70 percent of arrested or referred students. Harsh school punishments, from suspensions to arrests, have led to high numbers of youth of color coming into contact with the juvenile-justice system and at an earlier age.

5. African American youth have higher rates of juvenile incarceration and are more likely to be sentenced to adult prison. According to the Sentencing Project, even though African American juvenile youth are about 16 percent of the youth population, 37 percent of their cases are moved to criminal court and 58 percent of African American youth are sent to adult prisons.

6. As the number of women incarcerated has increased by 800 percent over the last three decades, women of color have been disproportionately represented.While the number of women incarcerated is relatively low, the racial and ethnic disparities are startling. African American women are three times more likely than white women to be incarcerated, while Hispanic women are 69 percent more likely than white women to be incarcerated.

7. The war on drugs has been waged primarily in communities of color where people of color are more likely to receive higher offenses. According to the Human Rights Watch, people of color are no more likely to use or sell illegal drugs than whites, but they have higher rate of arrests. African Americans comprise 14 percent of regular drug users but are 37 percent of those arrested for drug offenses. From 1980 to 2007 about one in three of the 25.4 million adults arrested for drugs was African American.

8. Once convicted, black offenders receive longer sentences compared to white offenders. The U.S. Sentencing Commission stated that in the federal system black offenders receive sentences that are 10 percent longer than white offenders for the same crimes. The Sentencing Project reports that African Americans are 21 percent more likely to receive mandatory-minimum sentences than white defendants and are 20 percent more like to be sentenced to prison.

9. Voter laws that prohibit people with felony convictions to vote disproportionately impact men of color. An estimated 5.3 million Americans are denied the right to vote based on a past felony conviction. Felony disenfranchisement is exaggerated by racial disparities in the criminal-justice system, ultimately denying 13 percent of African American men the right to vote. Felony-disenfranchisement policies have led to 11 states denying the right to vote to more than 10 percent of their African American population.

10. Studies have shown that people of color face disparities in wage trajectoryfollowing release from prison. Evidence shows that spending time in prison affects wage trajectories with a disproportionate impact on black men and women. The results show no evidence of racial divergence in wages prior to incarceration; however, following release from prison, wages grow at a 21 percent slower rate for black former inmates compared to white ex-convicts. A number of states have bans on people with certain convictions working in domestic health-service industries such as nursing, child care, and home health care—areas in which many poor women and women of color are disproportionately concentrated.

Theses racial disparities have deprived people of color of their most basic civil rights, making criminal-justice reform the civil rights issue of our time. Through mass imprisonment and the overrepresentation of individuals of color within the criminal justice and prison system, people of color have experienced an adverse impact on themselves and on their communities from barriers to reintegrating into society to engaging in the democratic process. Eliminating the racial disparities inherent to our nation’s criminal-justice policies and practices must be at the heart of a renewed, refocused, and reenergized movement for racial justice in America.

There have been a number of initiatives on the state and federal level to address the racial disparities in youth incarceration. Last summer Secretary of Education Arne Duncan announced the Schools Discipline Initiative to bring increased awareness of effective policies and practices to ultimately dismantle the school-to-prison pipeline. States like California and Massachusetts are considering legislation to address the disproportionate suspensions among students of color. And in Clayton County, Georgia, collaborative local reforms have resulted in a 47 percent reduction in juvenile-court referrals and a 51 percent decrease in juvenile felony rates. These initiatives could serve as models of success for lessening the disparities in incarceration rates.
 
Crack vs. Cocaine: A Black And White Problem


The Issue



Crack v. Cocaine: The Issue is Black & White

By Garrett Stanton



The Texas state judicial system has for decades been known to be one of the harshest on drug related crimes. In 2012, Texas had the third largest prison population among the most populous states including California, New York, and Florida with 166,372 people. Along with high incarceration rates, the percentage of minorities in the prison system continues to increase. In 2002, 7 out of 10 incarcerated individuals were either black or Mexican in the state of Texas[1]. The lopsided representation of minorities, specifically blacks, has largely to do with drug laws targeting African Americans in harsher manners than whites. Specifically, the difference between how the judicial system handles powder cocaine and crack cocaine magnifies the unfair treatment and racial injustice blacks receive compared to their white counterparts.



Drug crimes have continued to plague the nation nationally, filling prisons with people that need help, not punishment. In 2012, 1,552,432 arrests were made for drug related crimes. Comparatively, 521,196 arrests were made for violent crimes[2]. Texas, being part of the Mexico-US border, has many drug crimes annually. Because the state is so close to Mexico, many drug cartels bring cocaine and other substances into Texas, distributing drugs and affecting lives of Texans and citizens of other states. Specifically, the crimes surrounding drugs give rise to racial unfairness within the Texas state justice system.



To understand the problem blacks face with crack vs. cocaine, the fundamental differences between the two drugs must be articulated. Both crack and cocaine are derived from the same type of coca plant; however, the different drugs have different levels of refinement. Powder cocaine is the most pure form of the drug, containing the most pure ingredients and derives strictly from a plant. Crack cocaine is less pure, with infusions of sodium bicarbonate included, making it a drug that can be smoked to receive the high effects. Further, since crack cocaine is smoked, it takes less time for the drug to affect the user’s brain than it does for the user to snort powder cocaine. Also, baking soda can be infused with crack cocaine, creating impurities. Due to its impurities, crack cocaine is often a cheaper drug on the black market and is in more supply because less pure cocaine is needed than is needed in powder cocaine. Both drugs can be highly addictive, and often ruin the lives of people that get involved with these drugs[3].




Crack Cocaine is consumed through smoking, affecting the brain in nearly 8 seconds.

Powder cocaine, the most pure form of the drug, is snorted through the nose.


Further, the ethnic breakdown of users and sellers involved with crack cocaine and powder cocaine heightens the social divide between blacks and whites. According to the 2006 U.S. Sentencing Commission, 57.50% of crimes due to powder cocaine involved Hispanics, 27% included blacks, 14.30% whites, and 1.20% other. Hispanics are often involved in the initial trade and transportation of pure forms of cocaine because much of the cocaine used in the United States comes from Central America. It is still alarming that more blacks are being arrested for powder cocaine than whites. This statistic is more likely to result of leniency for whites while blacks are constantly facing full prosecution in state courts and racial profiling. For crack cocaine, in the same year 8.40% of arrests involved Hispanics, 8.80% of the arrests were accounted by white people, and 81.80% of the arrests included black people, while another 1% of arrests involved other races[4]. Many blacks each year are consumed by crack cocaine, and often face harsher penalties than powder cocaine users.







Drug arrests fall into various categories. Some people are simply users while others are looking to transport or profit off of the drugs. In 2005, the U.S. Sentencing Commission reported that 12.70% of powder cocaine arrests were of users while crack cocaine users made up 4.70% of crack arrests. The largest percentage of powder cocaine arrests at 33.10% represented smugglers, often including drug cartels. Dealers made up 7.3% of cocaine arrests. Street dealers were accountable for 55.4% of crack cocaine arrests in 2005 while smuggling was a low 1.4%. Often blacks are more associated with crack cocaine, allowing statistics to show that more blacks selling drugs are being arrested than whites. The authorities in many states, mostly southern, are more inclined to search a black man for drugs before a white man due racial profiling that continues around the nation. Although it is immoral to sell drugs, blacks are more likely to be incarcerated for doing so in comparison to whites, frequently due to racial stigmas and unfair assumptions.



Despite similarities in the drugs, crack cocaine is far worse to be charged with than cocaine. Although both drugs try to achieve a similar high, the drugs are seen as completely different drugs in the judicial system. Violators of crack cocaine laws will receive a sentencing of 100x worse than someone with the same amount of powder cocaine. For instance, if a person were to be charged with 100 grams of cocaine, they would be charged with around 21 to 27 months in prison. However, it will only take 1 gram of crack cocaine to receive a similar sentencing from the judicial system[5]. The effects of both drugs are very similar, yet the adding of baking soda makes crack cocaine a way worse offense. Crack cocaine affects the mind faster, giving users a less likely chance to escape the drug and the harsh penalties that follow it. However, it seems unreasonable to think adding baking soda makes the drug 100x more illegal. Crack cocaine is not 100x more addictive than powder cocaine, nor does it get you that much higher. A more clear reasoning for this difference is the ethnic breakdown for each drug, dividing blacks into mostly crack users and whites into powder cocaine users. Underlying social woes can be a dominating factor towards why blacks are more involved with crack cocaine. The discrepancy in prison sentences point to the underlying racial issues cocaine produces in the judicial system.





Cocaine, in powdered and crack form are harmful to citizens of all races, but the laws affecting both drugs heavily favor whites to blacks. Texas, a state leading in prison incarceration rates, must change the way in which they handle drug crimes and try to sentence incarcerated individuals in a colorblind manner. In order for future changes and justice, Texas must reexamine their cocaine laws, reduce the war on drugs, and invest further in correctional facilities for drug users such as rehabilitation, rather than prison. Additionally, the number of street dealers and other users can be reduced with higher spending in education, giving more people a chance to escape drug use and avoid selling drugs to survive. Texas must become a leading innovator with regards to how drug crimes are handled by reducing the racial injustice and longstanding inequalities blacks and other minorities continue to face in our nation today.

 
Sugar Addiction Kills More People Than Illegal Drugs


by Sahara RoseMay 19, 2019


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Calling All Sugar-Fiends!

Did you know that little white stuff you sprinkle into your coffee, that’s hidden in your granola bar and is filled in your dessert is as addictive of that white powder that’ll get you behind bars?

Sugar (street name: stardust, snow, crack, fairy dust, rock.. just kidding) gets you hooked through invoking in a feeling of euphoria triggered by dopamine, the pleasure-inducing chemical in our brain, according to Psychology Today.

Interestingly enough, the legal white powder, sugar, is causing more deaths in our population than the illegal substance, drugs.

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Dr. Lustig, who has conducted the toxic effects of sugar findings, has said 75% of diseases Americans face are preventable simply by improving our diets. And with every high comes a low.

Dr. Charles Raison, CNN’s mental health expert stated, “While processed sugars may produce a brief emotional high, several lines of evidence indicate that they affect our biology in ways that promote depression. For example, rates of depression in a country rise in lockstep with per capita sugar consumption.

Sugars- which are found in all sorts of processed foods we don’t typically think of as sweet- promote obesity, and obesity is a very powerful risk factor for the later development of depression.”

So How is Sugar Addictive?
Dr. Sanjay Gupta offered his brain as a test during his interview with Dr. Lustig about the toxic effects of sugar.

Having sips of coca cola increased the blood flow to certain regions of the brain- the same areas stimulated by a dose of cocaine or heroin. And just like an addict, you need more and more of that substance to get the same rush, which is why Americans are addicted to sugar.

Neuroscientist Eric Stice says that by scanning hundreds of volunteers, he’s noticed that those who regularly consume sweet foods like ice cream or soda, build up a tolerance, feeling less reward and needing to eat more and more each time.

He states, “If you overeat these on a regular basis, it causes changes in the brain. Basically it blunts your reward region response to the food, so then you eat more and more to achieve the same satisfaction you felt originally.”

So Why Are We Addicted?
Dr. Lustig explains that our craving for sugar is a result of evolution. Since in nature, no foods with fructose are poisonous, humans have adapted to think “if it’s sweet, it’s safe.” Our brain has adapted to stay away from the harmful stuff by making the sweet stuff taste so darn good.

CBS’s 60 Minutes explains, “Central to Dr. Lustig’s theory is that we used to get our fructose mostly in small amounts of fruit, which came loaded with fiber that slows absorption and consumption; after all, who can eat 10 oranges at a time?

But as sugar and high fructose corn syrup became cheaper to refine and produce, we started gorging on them.” Guess Darwin couldn’t have predicted in a thousand years time, sugar would become our poison of choice.
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They Say it Can’t Be So Bad if it Tastes So Good… Wrong.
Too much sugar causes the liver to convert fructose to fat, causing high cholesterol, clogged arteries, diabetes, metabolic syndrome, heart disease, obesity, breast and colon cancer.

Lewis Cantley, head of Beth Israel Cancer Center, has discovered that tumors actually feed off glucose, due to their insulin detectors. We are literally dying for sugar.

This dangerous substance isn’t just found in your sugar shaker- sugar is in places you’ll never imagine, like your peanut-butter, bread, sauces and yogurt; in fact, the average American eats 130 pounds of sugar a year!

Ditching dessert isn’t just going to do the trick; restaurants sneak sugar into savory dishes, even fish recipes like Miso Black Cod, to amplify it’s taste, keeping you hooked.

Dr. Lustig recommends that men should not consume more than 150 calories of added sugars a day and women, just 100. Thank god looking at Food Porn doesn’t have calories.

Now you don’t need to ban all sugar from your diet – I mean, what’s the point of life without a little bit of sweet stuff?

Just try to stay balanced and not overdo it. With portion control, it’s fine to have dessert every night, just stay active and try to eat as many natural sugars, like fruit and honey, as possible.

One of my favorite desserts when I’m craving something sweet are frozen grapes with a bit of dark chocolate.

Artificial sweeteners aren’t the solution either- they are filled with dangerous chemicals linked with causing cancer. Dr. Lustig’s key word was “overeat,” so you can make your cake and eat it too (just not the whole entire thing) and you’re addiction will be under control.
 
Secret ties between CIA, drugs revealed
BY ROSALIND MUHAMMAD

What's your opinion on this article?

For nearly a decade the CIA helped spread crack cocaine in Black ghettos



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[Note: This article was originally published in 1996 by then Final Call News West Coast Bureau Chief, Rosalind Muhammad.]


LOS ANGELES (FinalCall.com) - New evidence has surfaced linking the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency to the introduction of crack cocaine into Black neighborhoods with drug profits used to fund the CIA-backed Nicaraguan Contra army in the early 1980s.

This evidence has given credence to long-held suspicions of the U.S. government's role in undermining Black communities.


Thousands of young Black men are serving long prison sentences for selling cocaine -- a drug that was virtually unobtainable in Black neighborhoods before members of the CIA's army started bring it into South Central in the 1980s at bargain basement prices," wrote Mercury News reporter Gary Webb, in the first installment of the shocking series of reports.

According to a series of groundbreaking reports by the San Jose Mercury News, for the better part of a decade, a San Francisco Bay Area drug ring, comprised of CIA and U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency agents and informants, sold tons of cocaine to the Crips and Bloods street gangs of Los Angeles.

Millions of dollars in drug profits were then funneled to the Fuerza Democratica Nicaraguense (Nicaraguan Democratic Force), the largest of several anti-Communists commonly called the Contras. The 5,000-man FDN was created in mid-1981 and run by both American and Nicaraguan CIA agents in its losing war against Nicaragua's Sandinista government, the Cuban-supported socialists who had overthrown U.S.-backed dictator Anastasio Somoza in 1979.

This CIA-backed drug network opened the first pipeline between Columbia's cocaine cartels and the Black neighborhoods of Compton and Los Angeles, according to the Mercury News.

In time, the cocaine that flooded Los Angeles helped spark a "crack explosion" in urban America and provided the cash and connections needed for Los Angeles's gangs to buy Uzi sub-machine guns, AK-47 rifles, and other assault weapons that would fuel deadly gang turf wars, drive-by shootings, murders and robberies -- courtesy of the U.S. government, according to the article.

"While the FDN's war is barely a memory today, Black America is still dealing with its poisonous side effects. Urban neighborhoods are grappling with legions of homeless crack addicts. Thousands of young Black men are serving long prison sentences for selling cocaine -- a drug that was virtually unobtainable in Black neighborhoods before members of the CIA's army started bring it into South Central in the 1980s at bargain basement prices," wrote Mercury News reporter Gary Webb, in the first installment of the shocking series of reports.

Although the Mercury News details the activities of numerous Nicaraguan and American informants and ties involved in the drug-gun trade, three men are cited as key players: Norwin Meneses, a Nicaraguan smuggler and FDN boss; Danilo Blandon, a cocaine supplier, top FDN civilian leader in California, and DEA informant; and Ricky Donnell Ross, a South Central Los Angeles high school dropout and drug trafficker of mythic proportions, who was Mr. Blandon's biggest customer.



crack300x225.jpg

For years, writers, authors, activists, gang members and others have implicated the U.S. government in the deadly crack cocaine-gun trade. According to the Mercury News article, for the better part of a decade, "Freeway Rick," as he was nicknamed, was unaware of his supplier's military and political connections.


But together, the trio was directly and indirectly responsible for introducing and selling crack cocaine as far away as Cleveland, Cincinnati, Indianapolis, Dayton and St. Louis.

Ricky Ross' street connections, ability to obtain cocaine at low prices and deals that allowed him to receive drugs from Contra-CIA operatives with no money upfront helped him to undercut other dealers and quickly spread crack. He also sold crack wholesale to gangs across the country, said the Mercury News report.

Most of the information surrounding the CIA's involvement in the crack trade came from testimony in the March drug trafficking trial of Mr. Ross, 36, who, along with two other men were convicted of cocaine conspiracy charges in San Diego.

A federal judge indefinitely postponed Mr. Ross's Aug. 23 sentencing to grant his lawyer time to try to show that federal authorities misused DEA agent Mr. Blandon to entrap Mr. Ross in a "reverse" sting last year. Mr. Ross could receive life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Records show that Mr. Ross was still behind bars in Cincinnati in 1994, awaiting parole, when San Diego DEA agents targeted him for the reverse sting-- one in which government agents provide the drugs and the target provides the cash.

Though Mr. Blandon has admitted to crimes that have sent others away for life, the U.S. Justice Department turned him loose on unsupervised probation in 1994 after only 28 months behind bars and has paid him more than $166,000 since, court records show.

Mr. Blandon's boss in the FDN's cocaine operation, Norwin Meneses, has never spent a day in a U.S. prison, even though the federal government has been aware of his cocaine dealings since at least 1974, according to the Mercury News article.

For years, writers, authors, activists, gang members and others have implicated the U.S. government in the deadly crack cocaine-gun trade.

Many have charged the U.S. government with supplying gang members with these tools in an effort to undermine and eradicate the Black community through wanton murder, drug addiction and crime.

Some believe crack did not become an "American problem" until the drug began hitting white neighborhoods and affecting white children.

On Aug. 23, the Los Angeles City Council, responding to pressure by the Los Angeles Chapter of the Black American Political Association of California (BAPAC), asked U.S. Atty. Janet Reno to investigate the government's involvement in the alleged sale of illegal street drugs in Los Angeles' Black community to support the CIA-backed Contras.

BAPAC vice chairman Glen Brown told The Final Call that a federal agency monitored by a civilian advisory board is one way the government could investigate the matter because "we can't have people who are responsible for this investigate themselves."

BAPAC, a statewide coalition of political activists, has also demanded that the U.S. government provide the necessary funding, materials and labor to rebuild urban areas destroyed by crack cocaine, as well as the necessary medical care, education, counseling, and vocational training to restore shattered lives.

Long-term Los Angeles activists Chilton Alphonse, founder of the Community Youth Sports & Arts Foundation, which aids former gang members, said he briefly assisted Ricky Ross when the drug dealer was paroled from prison inn October 1994, after serving about half of a 10-year prison sentence in Cincinnati in exchange for his testimony against corrupt Los Angeles police detectives.

"He came back to Los Angeles and tried to get his life together," Mr. Alphonse said. "Rick was a legend in the streets. But he flipped (testified against law enforcement officers). He said they used him to skim money from him."

Mr. Alphonse was referring to Mr. Ross's 1991 testimony against Los Angeles Police Department narcotics detectives who had been fired or indicted along with dozens of deputies from the Los Angeles County sheriff's elite narcotics squads for allegedly beating suspects, stealing drug money and planting evidence.

Mr. Alphonse, who now resides in Alabama, said he has warned for years that the flood of crack cocaine and assault weapons into the Black community was not the doing of the Bloods and Crips.

"Inner city youth don't have the resources to manufacture cocaine or ship in guns," Mr. Alphonse said.

Others agree.

In December 1989, while head of the NAACP Los Angeles Chapter, Anthony A. Samad (then Anthony Essex) announced his findings that some Bloods and Crips members had implicated the U.S. government in the ruthless crack and assault weapons trade among Los Angeles street gangs. Mr. Samad said that he learned this after extensive interviews with gang members housed in Los Angeles County Jail. But he was largely ignored by Black elected officials, he said who sided with law enforcement.

"Gang members charged then that gang rivalry and drug wars were being perpetuated by the police and the government," said Mr. Samad, who is now president of Samad & Associates, a consulting firm.

Henry Stuckey, of Stop the Violence/Increase the Peace, said that government involvement in community drug trafficking was common knowledge in some circles.

"Obviously African American males didn't have planes and boats to move the guns and narcotics into the Black community." Mr. Stuckey said.

Mr. Stuckey said that Black and Latino youths must be appraised of the government's involvement in order to understand that their communities will continue to be the dumping grounds for guns and drugs unless the youths "do for self."

"I do think that the blame that was laid on the gangs was wrong," Mr. Stuckey said. "But I can't say that it vindicates them for their actions because they had a choice in the matter. (Still) it's horrible that the government targeted our youth."

Roland Freeman, a spokesperson for the Los Angeles Chapter of the International Campaign to Free Geronimo Pratt, is a former member of the Black Panther Party. The BPP was targeted and ultimately nullified by FBI counterintelligence programs.

Mr. Freeman said he knows firsthand of the deceit of which the government is capable; a government, he said, that tries to "set itself up as if it's higher than God when really it's lower than the devil."

"(They put) small pox in the Indian's blankets and gave them fire water," Mr. Freeman said. "They make drugs available to Blacks and other minorities. It only surprises me that (the CIA) got caught."
 
How the Myth of the ‘Negro Cocaine Fiend’ Helped Shape American Drug Policy

In 1914, a racist fiction helped sell one of the nation’s first drug laws; 100 years later, it’s still with us.

By Carl L. Hart


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(Reuters/John Gress/Files)


Negro Cocaine “Fiends” Are a New Southern Menace.That was the headline of an article I came across while doing research for my PhD in 1996. It involved trying to understand the neurobiological and behavioral effects of psychoactive drugs like cocaine and nicotine. So I read everything that seemed relevant.

The provocatively headlined article had appeared in The New York Times on February 8, 1914. I was surprised by the title, although I knew it was once acceptable to print such blatantly racist words in respectable papers. But what really shocked me was how similar it was to modern media coverage of illegal drugs and how, from early on, the racialized discourse on drugs served a larger political purpose.

The author, a distinguished physician, wrote: “[The Negro fiend] imagines that he hears people taunting and abusing him, and this often incites homicidal attacks upon innocent and unsuspecting victims.” And he continued, “the deadly accuracy of the cocaine user has become axiomatic in Southern police circles…. the record of the ‘cocaine ******’ near Asheville who dropped five men dead in their tracks using only one cartridge foreach, offers evidence that is sufficiently convincing.”

Cocaine, in other words, made black men uniquely murderous and better marksmen. But that wasn’t all. It also produced “a resistance to the ‘knock down’ effects of fatal wounds. Bullets fired into vital parts that would drop a sane man in his tracks, fail to check the ‘fiend.’”

Preposterous? Yes, but such reporting was not the exception. Between 1898 and 1914, numerous articles appeared exaggerating the association of heinous crimes and cocaine use by blacks. In some cases, suspicion of cocaine intoxication by blacks was reason enough to justify lynchings. Eventually, it helped influence legislation.

Around this time, Congress was debating whether to pass the Harrison Narcotics Tax Act, one of the country’s first forays into national drug legislation. This unprecedented law sought to tax and regulate the production, importation and distribution of opium and coca products. Proponents of the law saw it as a strategy to improve strained trade relations with China by demonstrating a commitment to controlling the opium trade. Opponents, mostly from Southern states, viewed it as an intrusion into states’ rights and had prevented passage of previous versions.

By 1914, however, the law’s proponents had found an important ally in their quest to get it passed: the mythical “negro cocaine fiend,” which prominent newspapers, physicians and politicians readily exploited. Indeed, at congressional hearings, “experts” testified that “most of the attacks upon white women of the South are the direct result of a cocaine-crazed Negro brain.” When the Harrison Act became law, proponents could thank the South’s fear of blacks for easing its passage.

With this as background, drug policy in the decades following takes on a sharper focus. Although the Harrison Act did not explicitly prohibit the use of opiates or cocaine, enforcement of the new law quickly became increasingly punitive, helping set the stage for passage of the Eighteenth Amendment (alcohol prohibition) in 1919 and, ultimately, all our narcotics policy until 1970. As important, the rhetoric that laced those early conversations about drug use didn’t just evaporate; it continued and evolved, reinventing itself most powerfully in the mythology of crack.

From its earliest appearance in the 1980s, crack cocaine was steeped in a narrative of race and pathology. While powder cocaine came to be regarded as a symbol of luxury and associated with whites, crack was portrayed as producing uniquely addictive, unpredictable and deadly effects and associated with blacks. By this time, of course, references to race in such a context were no longer acceptable. So problems related to crack were described as being prevalent in “poor,” “urban” or “troubled” neighborhoods, “inner cities” and “ghettos,” terms that were codes for “blacks” and other undesired people.

A March 7, 1987, New York Times article, “New violence seen in users of cocaine” offers a potent example. It describes an incident in which “a man apparently using cocaine held four people hostage for 30 hours in an East Harlem apartment.” That cocaine use was never confirmed was minimized; and since East Harlem was almost exclusively black and Latino, there was no need to mention the suspect’s race. The message was clear: crack makes poor people of color crazy and violent.

Over the next few years, a barrage of similar articles connected crack and its associated problems with black people. Entire specialty police units were deployed to “troubled neighborhoods,” making excessive arrests and subjecting the targeted communities to dehumanizing treatment. Along the way, complex economic and social forces were reduced to criminal justice problems; resources were directed toward law enforcement rather than neighborhoods’ real needs, such as job creation.

In 1986, Congress passed the infamous Anti-Drug Abuse Act, setting penalties that were 100 times harsher for crack than for powder cocaine convictions. We now know that an astonishing 85 percent of those sentenced for crack cocaine offenses were black, even though the majority of users of the drug were, and are, white. We also know that the effects of crack were greatly exaggerated; crack is no more harmful than powder cocaine. On August 3, 2010, President Obama signed legislation that reduced the sentencing disparity between crack and powder cocaine from 100:1 to 18:1. This is an important step, but any sentencing disparity in this case makes no sense.

Black males are no longer lynched for violating drug laws, but they are killed. (Ramarley Graham, the unarmed Bronx teen who was chased into his bathroom and shot because police officers believed he had drugs, is just one recent example.) More common is the insidious damage inflicted on black men by the selective enforcement of drug laws. Arrested, incarcerated and placed under criminal justice supervision, they wind up marginalized and deprived of an education. Incredibly, one in three black boys born today will spend time in prison if this country doesn’t alter its current approach.

One hundred years after the myth of the “Negro cocaine fiend” helped sell the Harrison Act to Congress, its legacy lives on. Yet we no longer have the excuse of ignorance for indulging these kinds of wild fictions. It is long past time to ensure that our drug policies reflect reality and morality, not racism.


Carl L. HartCarl L. Hart, an associate professor of psychology at Columbia University, is the author of High Price: A Neuroscientist’s Journey of Self-Discovery That Challenges Everything You Know About Drugs and Society.
 
The War on Drugs: Mexico Will Legalize Before the United States



America will soon become the only North American country without federally legalized cannabis.





We have the largest economy. We make the coolest cars. Our women dominate in soccer.
America is number one.
Right?
When it comes to legalizing cannabis at the federal level, the United States may be dead last.
Not in the world, but out of all the countries in North America, the States are falling behind.
Recently, it’s become even more likely that the United States will wind up being the third country to federally legalize cannabis. Provided it actually does, of course. Eventually.
The Order of Events
Canada officially legalized cannabis at the federal level in October of 2018.
The United States has seen a range of cannabis laws enacted at the state level.
Mexico is going through its own process.
In their system, five similar rulings in the courts set a jurisprudence. Since the Mexican courts have ruled five times that an outright ban on recreational cannabis is unconstitutional, the laws against recreational cannabis use are essentially null and void.
However, the laws remain on the books. While you could still be arrested for cannabis use in Mexico, any personal, recreational use wouldn’t be punished by the courts due to the jurisprudence already set.
Thankfully, those laws are about to be flipped upside down.
The Most Recent Legislative Move
The Mexican legislature was given a deadline of October 2019 to produce legislation that aligns with the courts’ decisions. Recently, the Senate has taken a major step towards legalizing cannabis at the federal levels in Mexico.
As first reported by Marijuana Moment, Senator Julio Menchaca Salazar filed legislation on Tuesday, September 3, 2019, that would officially legalize cannabis in Mexico.
For personal, recreational use of cannabis, the bill covers:
  • Cultivation
  • Possession
  • Consumption
The bill aims to amend the legal framework around cannabis in Mexico and the use of hemp in textiles.
Several other important Mexican senators have co-sponsored the bill and the country’s President has expressed his support for federal legalization in the past.
What does this mean for North America?
Predictions of Mexican Legalization
All of this means that Mexico is going to legalize cannabis before the US.
Of course, American politics are unpredictable and legalization could sporadically happen with the stroke of a giant sharpie.
However, pending any quick-moving upheavals, Mexico is on-course to put America in last place for cannabis legalization.
We asked Jorge J. Rubio Esconola—Chief of Staff at the ISSSTE, a Mexican health institution operated by the federal government, and a man deeply involved in the ongoing process—if legislation will be officially made law by the end of November.
Without pause, he replied, “yes, I think between October and late November.”
He is particularly excited about the regulation of hemp. In a recent podcast, he said that he believes Mexico will become a major player in the worldwide hemp industry.
While many believe the best cannabis comes from California or Canada, people often forget that Mexico has an ideal climate for growing a range of cannabis varieties.
Thanks to the new legislation, Mexico may soon change the face of cannabis in North America, making USA...number three.
 
Source: Washington Post

USA -- Most Americans — 2 out of 3 — say marijuana use should be legal, according to new data from Pew Research Center that builds on a decades-long trend line. The share of those opposed, meanwhile, has plunged 20 percentage points, to 32 percent, in the past decade.
Legalization is supported by 78 percent of Democrats and 55 percent of Republicans. It has roughly two-thirds support among every racial, gender and educational group in the U.S., according to the survey.

The data do show one significant demographic fault line, however: age. Legalization is supported by 63 percent of boomers, 65 percent of Gen Xers, and 76 percent of millennials. But among the silent generation— those older than 74 years — support is just 35 percent.
Partisan differences are heavily mediated by age as well. Among the silent generation, for instance, there is a 32-point gap in support between Democrats (53 percent) and Republicans (21 percent). Among millennials, more than 70 percent support legal marijuana, regardless of party affiliation.
In assessing support for marijuana, surveys have typically posed a simple question: “Do you think the use of marijuana should be made legal, or should NOT be made legal?” For this survey, however, Pew researchers posed a separate question to suss out whether Americans back recreational marijuana, medical marijuana, both or neither.
Fifty-nine percent said it should be legal for both medical and recreational purposes, a 10-point increase since fall 2016. Thirty-two percent said it should be legal for medical use only. Just 8 percent said it should not be legal at all, a steep drop from the 15 percent recorded in 2016.
As with many political issues, the public’s preferences on marijuana are well to the left of where the policy currently stands. The plant remains illegal for all purposes under federal law. Recreational marijuana is legal in 11 states plus D.C., in most cases because of voter-approved ballot initiatives. Most other states have some form of medical marijuana law, although in many cases there are severe restrictions on the conditions for which medical marijuana can be used, or on the types of marijuana that can be used.
According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, just four states — Idaho, South Dakota, Nebraska and Kansas — prohibit marijuana use in all forms.
“As more and more states have moved forward with their own marijuana liberalization policies in recent years, public support has only grown stronger,” Erik Altieri, executive director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, said in a statement. “At a time when the political divide is larger than ever, the issue of marijuana legalization is one of the few policy issues upon which most Americans agree.”
Legalization foes contend that marijuana use comes with negative health effects. This week, the group Smart Approaches to Marijuana (SAM) highlighted the results of a study in the journal JAMA Psychiatry showing a half-percentage-point increase in rates of problematic cannabis use among teens in states that have legalized recreational use.
“Legalization efforts are sending the message that marijuana use is safe and state sanctioned,” SAM President Kevin Sabet said in a statement. "No amount of marijuana use is safe for young people and more must be done to halt its normalization.”
Most of the Democratic presidential candidates support legalizing recreational use in some form or another. But there are notable outliers, among them former vice president Joe Biden, who long supported “tough on crime” legislation while he was in the U.S. Senate. He opposes legalization but has signaled a preference to reduce criminal penalties for pot use.
Billionaire Democratic hopeful Mike Bloomberg recently called marijuana legalization “the stupidest thing anyone has ever done.”
President Trump, meanwhile, has had little to say about marijuana one way or another during his time in office, though he did recently reiterate support for letting states decide their own policies.
Source: Washington Post (DC)
Author: Christopher Ingraham
Published: November 15, 2019
Copyright: 2019 Washington Post Company
Contact: letters@washpost.com
Website:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/
 
By Amanda Chicago Lewis
Source: Rolling Stone

USA -- A majority of the United States has legalized cannabis in some way, and it’s very exciting, I get it. Fewer people are being arrested, more people are getting off opioids, and accurately dosed pot chocolates might be the best thing to happen to weekends since the invention of television. But this state-by-state legalization thing that we’re doing is kind of a mess, mostly because federal prohibition hampers the whole thing from the get-go. And, since absurd restrictions still disproportionately affect vulnerable populations, as long as pot remains illegal on the federal level, your relationship to weed will continue to be, primarily, a function of your power.

Let’s start with the people who simply want to smoke a little pot, in a legal state like Washington or Michigan. Recall that there is no breathalyzer that can tell if someone is stoned: the best technology available will show use within the past three days. That means that “testing positive” for marijuana means you have used it recently, not that you were intoxicated at the time. Now consider all of the different ways that having weed in your system can still mess up your entire life if you are living in a so-called “legal” state: Your landlord can evict you for the joint you hit at a friend’s house. Your employer can fire you for the low-dose edible you tried on a Saturday night. Your gun rights could be taken away. You could be taken off an organ donation list. You can be kicked out of or denied public housing. You can lose your student loans, your food stamps, your Medicaid — any kind of federal benefits.
And what if you’ve heard about the so-called Green Rush, and are looking to invest or get a job in state-legal marijuana? Pot is the fastest growing industry in America, with nearly a quarter million workers. Investments in 2019 already dwarf the numbers from last year: $3.3 billion raised in North America in the first ten weeks of the year, a billion more than the same period in 2018. But even a low-level gig at a marijuana business can hurt your chance at a mortgage, affect your immigration status, and put your assets at risk. In one case, in Colorado, a lawful permanent resident with no criminal history was denied citizenship simply because he worked for a state-licensed marijuana company.
It’s hard to sympathize with Elon Musk, but the fact that the Tesla mogul may lose his security clearance for smoking pot on Joe Rogan’s podcast is indicative of the kinds of problems faced by federal employees and contractors everywhere. Folks at the Department of Defense and the Air Force recently panicked over the possibility that the security clearances necessary to do their jobs could be at risk over participation in certain retirement plans designed for federal employees, because the plans had started to include investments in both legal cannabis companies and mainstream companies with ties to cannabis, such as Marlboro cigarette parent company Altria. (The Department of Defense said they were looking into it.)
For anyone with grander ambitions, trying to create the ultimate marijuana chocolate bar or open up a legal dispensary, federal prohibition makes running a pot company far from safe, or easy. Marijuana businesses cannot legally use the banking system — forcing everyone into a shadowy, cash-dominant environment. The consequences of this banking issue cannot be overstated. Robberies are rampant. Obscured transactions and ownership are the norm. And only people with family money or good connections have access to enough capital to get off the ground.
In this way, federal prohibition exacerbates the persistent and cruelly ironic racial inequities in who controls the $40 billion marijuana market. After centuries of discrimination in education, housing, banking and employment, most people of color do not have the six-figure start-up sums necessary for a legal weed business just lying around. Progressive places like Oakland, New Jersey and Illinois are attempting to legislate economic opportunities for the communities most harmed by the war on drugs, but the fact that pot businesses can only be funded by private wealth is undermining the goals of these programs in a major way.
“The current laws make it nearly impossible to obtain financing if you don’t have a trust fund, or a quiet established relationship with a bank because of your friends’ business relationships,” says Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commissioner Shaleen Title, a leading advocate for equitable marijuana policies. Massachusetts has been rather ahead of the rest of the country in terms of designing and implementing a social justice-oriented marijuana policy, but as of late February, only two of the 112 pot businesses that had received cannabis business licenses in the state were minority-owned.

So sure, go on and celebrate the proliferation of state-legal weed! It’s all very fun and cool. It’s just not for everyone.
Source: Rolling Stone (US)
Author: Amanda Chicago Lewis
Published: May 8, 2019
Copyright: 2019 Straight Arrow Publishers Company, L.P.
Contact: letters@rollingstone.com
Website:
http://www.rollingstone.com/
 
By Trip Gabriel
Source: New York Times

Washington, D.C. -- People in Colorado still remember John Hickenlooper’s crack after the state legalized marijuana, a move he opposed: “Don’t break out the Cheetos or Goldfish too quickly.”
But Mr. Hickenlooper, the governor at the time of the 2012 initiative allowing recreational use of cannabis, eventually changed his mind. He acknowledged that fears of increased use by children did not materialize, and he boasted of the tax revenues for social programs that regulated sales delivered.

Entering the Democratic presidential race this month, Mr. Hickenlooper joined a field already jammed with pro-legalization candidates, a reflection of swiftly changing public opinion since Colorado became the first of 10 states with legal recreational marijuana.
The issue today is a pillar of progressive politics, but not because of graying hippies who like their Rocky Mountain High. Rather, for many Democrats, legalization has become a litmus test for candidates’ commitment to equal treatment for all races in policing and criminal justice as well as fighting economic inequality.
“A Democrat who is not on board with legalization or addressing it in terms of repairing harms brought by prohibition for decades is going to have a tough time convincing any voter they’re serious about racial justice,” said Vincent M. Southerland, executive director of the Center on Race, Inequality and the Law at New York University Law School.
Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey last month introduced the pointedly named Marijuana Justice Act, which would legalize the drug nationwide and expunge past convictions. Supporters note that African-Americans are almost four times more likely to be arrested for marijuana possession than whites, even though rates of use are similar.
“It’s not enough to legalize marijuana at the federal level — we should also help those who have suffered due to its prohibition,” Mr. Booker said in a tweet.
Other 2020 candidates in the Senate quickly signed on as sponsors, including Kirsten Gillibrand, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren and Kamala Harris.
Beto O’Rourke, who often hedges when asked about contentious policy issues, has endorsed the federal legalization of marijuana unequivocally. Asked about it Thursday — at his first event as a presidential candidate, in Keokuk, Iowa — Mr. O’Rourke framed his position as a matter of practicality and racial justice, given that people of color are imprisoned at disproportionate rates for drug offenses.
“I say this as the father of a middle school student, where middle schools are one of the fastest growing markets for marijuana sales today,” he told a coffeehouse crowd. “In the black market, they do not ID — they do not care — as long as they can make that sale.”
The 2020 Democratic hopeful who may be most vulnerable on marijuana policy is former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., who in the 1980s and 90s was a leader in the “war on drugs.’’ He championed laws that set tough mandatory minimum sentences for drug offenses, including possessing large amounts of marijuana. This led to an era of mass incarceration, with a lasting economic and social toll for minorities.
“In 1994 Biden had a fairly mainstream position, but in 2020 that position is so far from the mainstream of Democratic politics that it is almost offensive,” said John Hudak, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution who focuses on state and federal marijuana policy. He called Mr. Biden’s history on criminal justice issues “his biggest liability in the 2020 primary.”
Mr. Biden has apologized for parts of his record, calling a law from the 1980s requiring harsher penalties for crack cocaine than powder cocaine — the former was more popular with African-Americans and the latter with whites — “a big mistake.”
Spokesmen for Mr. Biden, who has told aides he is 95 percent committed to getting into the presidential race, did not respond to requests for comment.
Two Democratic senators opposed to legalizing marijuana at the federal level — Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, who entered the race last month, and Sherrod Brown of Ohio, who opted out of running this month — represent battleground states in the Midwest, whose politics are less progressive than the coastal states that led the way to legalizing cannabis for adults.
Ms. Klobuchar, who hopes to appeal to moderate voters, has said she supports the right of states to decide individually about legalization, rather than the approach of Mr. Booker, Mr. O’Rourke and others who want to shift policy at the national level.
In 2015, Ohio voters overwhelmingly defeated a referendum to legalize recreational marijuana.
Mr. Brown told an Ohio TV station last year that the jury was out on the experience of states that had legalized the drug, including whether it was a “gateway” to harder drugs.
Midwestern states have been devastated by opioid overdoses. Marijuana has been shown to lead in some cases to increased alcohol abuse, but the majority of users do not progress to harder drugs, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse. A study last year in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine found that after states legalized marijuana for medical use, prescriptions for opioids dropped nearly 15 percent.
Polling, which has found a rapid increase in support for legal recreational marijuana since 2000, including majorities in both parties, shows little regional variation. Support in the Midwest and South is about equal to the coasts. Legalization is most popular with young adults under 35, with nearly four out of five in favor — catnip to Democrats seeking to rally millennial voters, whose disapproval of Mr. Trump is higher than any other age group.
Experts said opposition is concentrated among social conservatives.
The racial demographics of support have also shifted from a time when whites favored adult recreational use and minority groups opposed it, said Jonathan P. Caulkins, a professor at Carnegie Mellon University, who has tracked marijuana policy for more than a decade. “Over the last 15 to 20 years, African-Americans have switched to favor legalization,” he said.
Ms. Harris, a former attorney general of California, who is black, exemplified the change. In 2014, she said it would be irresponsible for her as the state’s “top cop” to support California’s legalization of recreational cannabis, which passed in a referendum two years later.
By 2017, Ms. Harris declared the war on drugs a failure and called it “a war on poor communities more than anything.” In an interview last month, when pressed on whether she was anti-marijuana, she said she had smoked it in college. “Half my family’s from Jamaica,’’ she joked. “Are you kidding me?” (Her Jamaica-born father, Donald J. Harris, was not amused and called this a “fraudulent stereotype.”)
In last year’s midterm elections, Michigan voters made the state the first in the Midwest to legalize recreational marijuana. Meanwhile, Missouri, Oklahoma and Utah overwhelmingly approved medical marijuana, adding to a total of 33 states and the District of Columbia to do so. Democratic gains in state government are pushing several toward legalization this year, including New York and New Jersey.
Mr. Trump has been inconsistent on the issue, saying that legalization “should be up to the states, absolutely” during the 2016 campaign, but appointing Jeff Sessions as attorney general, who cleared the way to crack down on states that had legalized the drug.
Last year, Mr. Trump signaled support for a bipartisan bill introduced by Senators Cory Gardner, Republican of Colorado, and Ms. Warren to shield state-licensed cannabis businesses from federal prosecution.
The bill highlights that marijuana is not strictly a left-right issue, as does Mr. Biden’s history of supporting the drug crackdown.
Whether primary voters penalize Mr. Biden over his past remains an open question.
A recent poll of likely Democratic primary voters in New Hampshire by the Democratic firm Change Research seemed to suggest he may be putting the issue behind him. It found that even among those who called marijuana legalization their No. 1 priority, Mr. Biden was still the second-most popular candidate, after Mr. Sanders.
Matt Flegenheimer contributed reporting from Keokuk, Iowa.
Source: New York Times (NY)
Author: Trip Gabriel
Published: March 17, 2019
Copyright: 2019 The New York Times Company
Contact: letters@nytimes.com
Website:
http://www.nytimes.com/
 
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