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123 lines
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Plaintext
123 lines
8.4 KiB
Plaintext
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...START DOKS
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^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^
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^THE WAR ON DRUGS HAS BEEN LOST.^
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^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^
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_________________________________________________________________________
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
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Despite decades of interdiction and enforcement efforts that have cost
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illions of dollars, there are more drugs and more blood on the streets than
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ver before. Our courts and prisons are crowded beyond capacity, corruption is
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ampant at home, and governments abroad are under siege.
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With all the hysteria and hypocrisy surrounding the issue of drugs, we
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ave ignored the clear lessons of history. Prohibition financed the rise of
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rganized crime and failed miserably as effective legal and social policy.
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ikewise, the war on drugs has created new, highly financed criminal
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onspiracies.
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The latest round of antidrug hysteria has created a climate akin to the
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nti-Communist witch hunts of the McCarthy era. Judge Douglas Ginsburg, a
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onservative legal scholar from Harvard University, was forced to withdraw from
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onsideration for the Supreme Court after admitting he had smoked marijuana.
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he constitutional guarantee against unreasonable search and seizure is being
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outinely breached by judges across the country who uphold questionable
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earches. Those courts, says University of Indiana law professor Craig Bradley,
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Come on... Ain't Got All Day!! are influenced by the drug scare in much the same way courts were influenced
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y the Red scare." And Bush's drug czar, William Bennet, has encouraged school
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hildren who turn in friends and family suspected of taking drugs.
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A society cannot long afford to have its laws widely and openly broken.
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he urge to use some form of mind-altering substance is deeply ingrained in
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uman nature. Attempting to legislate it out of existence can only lead us to
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rant government the kind of power it should not have in a free society.
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U.S. drugs laws are outdated and need total revamping. The arguments
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gainst legalization are tired and invalid. Legalization does 'not' imply
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overnment approval of drug use. It would not increase availability or result
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n a massive wave of new addicts. Legalization 'would' eliminate inner-city
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iolence associated with competitive drug dealing and allow billions of dollars
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o be rechanneled for treatment, antidrug education and economic assistance for
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ob training, day care and better schools.
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Despite Richard Nixon's attempts to eradicate marijuana production in his
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ountry, some 6O million Americans have smoked pot, and 21 million now smoke it
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egularly. Eleven states have decrimminalized personal use, and not a single
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eath has been attributed to a marijuana overdose. Yet as late as 1988, an
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stimated $986 million in federal funds was used for anti-marijuana
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nforcement. That same year, 391,6OO people were arrested for marijuana
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ffenses, according to the FBI.
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Attempts to control cocaine in the 198Os have likewise failed. In a
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extbook case of innovative marketing, cocaine -- once considered a drug of the
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lite -- trickled down to the poor in the form of crack, a cheap, potent high
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nd a profitable, easily transportable product for the young entrepreneur. Even
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hough cocaine prices fell throughout the Eighties, consumption increased so
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reatly that crack profits made the drug barons of Latin America among the
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ichest men in the history of the world.
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The primary argument against legalization is that if drugs were suddenly
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egalized, the result would be a significant increase in new addicts. With
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rack, this arguments is simply irrelevant. Crack is abhorred by society at
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arge, and its ready availability would not result in a meaningful increase in
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ts use. In the areas where a large market exists, legalization would not
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Come on... Ain't Got All Day!! ncrease availability in the least. The absurdity of this argument is apparent
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o anyone who has seen the street-side dealing in the twenty-four hour,
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pen-air drug bazaars in the major urban centers.
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If the legalization of drugs results in a slight increase in the number of
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busers, let us accept the consequences. Most middle-class Americans have
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ccess to a social safety net that includes family, employers and social
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ervices, as well as health insurance, education and treatment facilities.
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In the ghettos, where the drug war is being wages, things are far more
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esperate. The residents of inner cities are faced with harsh realities. Realm
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ages for poor black men dropped fifty percent during the 197Os. Approximately
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ne-third of black men from poor areas are arrested on drug charges bu the age
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f thirty. Nearly one in four black males between the ages of twenty and
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wenty-nine is in prison, on probation or parole, or awaiting trial.
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Increasingly, the residents of our inner cities are losing hope. The
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isintegration of the family structure, the poor job outlook, inadequate
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ducation and government abandonment have left these citizens with few
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lternatives. While middle-class white communities possess most of the things
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hat the urban poor are lacking, while lawmakers have been slow to assist
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inorities in achieving a kind of social parity. And this abandonment is
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reating a permanent underclass of unemployable ghetto youths whose lives
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ecome hopelessly interwoven with drug crime and who in turn are becoming
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arents to another generation of seriously dysfunctional children.
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The government's response to the plight of the poor has been far from
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inisterial. Bush and Bennett's national drug strategy calls for an increase in
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aw-enforcement officers and a massive increase in prison space. Indeed, the
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99O drug-war budget of $9.5 billion allots $1.5 billion for prisons -- a 1OO
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ercent increase -- and $876 million for the military's involvement.
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Come on... Ain't Got All Day!! It is time for the government to offer more than punitive assistance to
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his segment of society. The residents of inner cities don't need more police
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fficers to help them obey the law or prison space to house them when they fail
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o do so. They need opportunity and equality. Spend the billions that will
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esult from a drug-peace dividend on education, job assistance, child care and
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conomic redevelopment.
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Legalizing drugs would also eliminate the bloodshed associated with all
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evels of drug dealing and smuggling. Federal judges would find some 15,OOO
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ewer cases a year on their dockets -- which is a small fraction of the burden
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hat would be lifted from state and local courts. And since nearly fifty
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ercent of all federal prisoners are now serving time for drug-related
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ffenses, the national prison crisis would be forestalled. In addition, the
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isk of death by overdose, hepatitis, AIDS and other illnesses resulting from
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he use of street drugs would ne greatly reduced. Eliminating the black market
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n illegal drugs would dry up the estimated $5O to $6O billion a year in
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rofits for organized crime.
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_________________________________________________________________________ |
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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In seventy-five years of trying, the government has failed to control
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rugs through prohibition. For the traffickers and barons, each successive wave
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f hysteria has only increased their profits and power. Legalization can take
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hese away and dethrone the dealer in his neighborhood. Let's strip away the
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ypocrisy implicit in laws that are only enforced against the poor and
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inorities.
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Come on... Ain't Got All Day!! At the beginning of the Reagan administration, the United States spent $1
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illion to enforce laws against all drugs. Next year, Bush's drug war will cost
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ver into an escalating, hopeless war, perhaps the history lessons can begin:
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Like Vietnam, this is a quagmire. We are in a war that is tearing apart
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he fabric of our country. There is no light at the end of the tunnel. And it
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s time to admit we are wrong. And perhaps we can behave as a kinder, gentler
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nd more mature society.
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-Jann S. Wenner
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An ASCII copy of a Rolling Stone editorial, June 199O.
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Typed by ROM [onstruct, for the ESLF.
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4:51 pm (June 24, 199O)
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...END DOKS
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[23] Tfiles: (1-36,?,Q) : |