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- From: resister@clark.net (P.Scott)
- Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs
- Subject: Atlanta Conference Hilights (1st 1/2)
- Date: Mon, 22 May 1995 20:30:38 +0000
- Message-ID: <resister-2205952030380001@168.143.7.131>
-
- Subject: Atlanta Conference Hilights(2nd 1/2)
- Message-ID: <resister-2205952031370001@168.143.7.131>
-
- I thought I would give ya'll some highlights of the
- "Treatment-And-Prevention-Are-The-New-Codewords Convention", otherwise
- known as American Cities Against Drugs.
-
- The conference must have cost megabucks, and I plan on making a Freedom of
- Information Act (FOIA) inquiry to deteremine how many taxdollars were
- spent on the pep rally.
-
- I have a couple of hours of the conference on audiotape, and I'm working on
- transferring it to text. There was a video camera from "our side" in the
- conference, so I assume it will be available soon enough.
-
- It would have been quite easy to get into the conference for practically
- anyone. Just tell 'em you're from the press and they would happily write
- you a pass for the day's events.
-
- On Monday, I missed the drug czar and the mayor of Atlanta and came in when
- the former mayor of Stockholm, Carl Cederschiold started his speech. He
- was bemoaning the fact that Europe was becoming too liberal on drugs, with
- a few sarcastic remarks about "harm reduction." The prohibitionists
- consider harm reduction to be legalization and "pro-drug." Goes on to talk
- about how destructive drug use is.
-
- Next was the Vice Mayor of Stockholm, Lena Nyberg. She says drug use is
- bad, destructive. Use treatment, prevention to combat drug use and abuse.
- She and the mayor of Stockholm were two of the five Europeans who spoke at
- the conference. The others included an Italian, Pietro Corsi, who made a
- presentation on "Drugs and the Brain", and Elisabeth de Marees van
- Swinderen of the Dutch National Board of Drug Prevention, who spoke at the
- evening reception on Sunday, and at a workshop on "The European Drug Scene
- and What People Are Doing to Fight It." The Dutch National Board is NOT a
- part of the Dutch government and is supposedly a religious group. Another
- European at the conference was Torgny Peterson, director of European Cities
- Against Drugs.
-
- Undersecretary of State for Global Affairs, Timothy E. Wirth came next.
- Some items included in his speech:
-
- "The drug trade threatens our national security."
- "The cities have 'succumbed' to narcotics and money."
- More prisons are needed.
- Attack the source countries because "crops don't move quickly."
- The Cali cartel is "ruthless and vicious."
- Burma's government is repressive with many human rights abuses.
- Legalization arguments are "dangerous." Drugs are "more powerful than the
- human will."
- How to succeed in fighting drugs? Stay away from corruption.
- Clinton stands with you.
-
- Jim Burke, president of the Partnership for a Drug Free America then spoke.
- According to Burke, in 1962, 4 million people had tried illegal drugs. By
- 1993, 80 million people had. In the 1960's and 1970's, very little
- sanctions were brought against drug users. The 60s and 70s was America's
- experiment in drug decriminalisation. This was America's "normalisation."
- The American people "have allowed for drug use to rise" recently. After
- showing a chart of the number of 13 year olds who have used marijuana he
- asked, "Are we going to legalize for 13 year olds? Are we going to
- decriminalize for 13 year olds?" He mentioned Join Together. Drug use is
- a preventable behavior and drug addiction is a preventable disease. We
- also need more treatment.
-
- No questions for the first set of speakers.
-
- During the break I got loads of stuff from the display booths. Mostly
- treatment, prevention. DARE didn't show. The National Guard was there
- with "prevention" items. Yes, even the National Guard is into
- "prevention". (Prevention thru coercion, no doubt.) Saw Rick Doblin of
- MAPS. I proceeded to get juiced up on coffee.
-
- After the break, Alan Leshner, director of NIDA was the first speaker.
- Leshner had the gall to start things off by saying LEGALIZERS distort
- science. And this is coming from a guy who refused to give Dr. Abrams
- marijuana for scientific research. He proceeded to go on a schpeal about
- drug addiction as a brain disease. "Drug use is a choice, drug addiction
- is not." Drugs cause "relatively permanent" changes at the molecular and
- cellular level in users' brains. Believe it or not, NIDA's goal for the
- year 2000 is "to have science replace ideology" in the war on drugs. These
- people never cease to amaze me with their hypocrisy.
-
- Lloyd Johnson, the guy who is in charge of the Monitoring the Future
- survey, spoke after Leshner. He admitted that legal drugs are damaging and
- if the drugs that are illegal now were legalized, they wouldn't cause more
- deaths than alcohol and tobacco. He was also critical of our current
- policies that stress incarceration and ignore treatment.
-
- Ray McKinnon, DEA field administrator from Georgia, gave a speech for
- Constantine, who didn't show up. Ray says that "the DEA will not stand by
- and let legalization take place." Does this mean that the government is
- willing to stand in the way of the will of the people if they choose to
- legalize drugs? Will the DEA invade Congress? According to Ray, $77.4
- billion in federal entitlements are due to drug abuse, 20,000 deaths due to
- illegal drugs, and 28% of SSI recipients are drug addicts. He outlined
- what legalization would be like, failing to mention that less harmful forms
- of drugs such as coca leaves, edible marijuana, opium, drugs with regulated
- purity would be available.
-
- Joe Califano from CASA was next with his take on "Legalization: The
- Reality." One of his assistants was passing the speech out, so this is
- available in hard copy. When I told her I was with the Drug Policy Letter,
- she said, "Oh, you want to legalize drugs." I corrected her simplistic
- notion and received a response of, "Yea, whatever." Califano starts by
- blaming all of society's problems on substance abuse, then plugs the Center
- on Addiction and Substance Abuse as the nation's savior from substance
- abuse. If you were wondering where DEA Ray got the figure that $77.4
- billion in entitlements due to drug abuse, Califano provides the answer:
- $11.2 billion for public assistance recipients who are drug and alcohol
- abusers and addicts- those who use drugs at least monthly and who binge on
- five or more drinks at a single sitting at least weekly; $44 billion due to
- disease, disability from smoking tobacco; $12 billion due to alcohol; and
- $10 billion due to illegal drugs. "Legalization of drugs in the United
- States is a policy of despair, one that would write off millions of our
- citizens, a disproportionate number of them black and Hispanic." He goes
- on to show how "drug legalization" in Europe has failed: 250% increase in
- adolescent marijuana use from 1984 to 1992 in the Netherlands, while down
- 66% in the U.S; 30% increase in registered cannabis addicts from 1991 to
- 1993. "Indeed, Amsterdam authorities and citizens are so infuriated by the
- number of 'coffee' shops dealing cocaine and heroin that many have been
- shut down." He then says how the British system failed, and now only has
- "a handful of specially licensed doctors has been allowed to prescribe
- cocaine and heroin; less than 20 do, and most of them prefer to dispense
- methadone. Throughout England, these doctors maintain only 400 addicts on
- heroin." Claims that maintaining a few hundred addicts reduces crime is
- "preposterous." Italy's decriminalisation of heroin has caused the
- Italians to have the highest rate of heroin addiction in Europe. Needle
- park in Zurich was mentioned of course, as was Sweden's experiment in
- prescribing drugs to addicts. According to Califano: "My point is simple:
- we need not experiment with drug legalization in the United States. There
- is ample evidence of its failure in similar nations." He continues: "The
- nation's lopsided obsession with law enforcement and interdicition feeds
- the despair that tilts some Americans to throw up their hands in gestures
- toward legalization. Of course we need firm law enforcement and we need
- to make it difficult and expensive, if not impossible, to get drugs into
- this country or produce them here." And, "the Congress is fueling the
- furnaces of those who propose legalization of drugs with policies that
- withold treatment from substance abusers who need it." What this all comes
- down to is that we should continue criminalisation with more $$$ for
- treatment, prevention, research.
-
- Finally, the last speaker before lunch was Jessica Hulsey, student at
- Princeton University. She was the posterchild of the conference. Her
- parents were fuckups and heroin addicts and ended up ODing. Her uncle, who
- she talked highly of, blew himself up trying to manufacture
- methamphetamine. Alot of her problems seemed to be due to prohibition,
- actually. Rumor has it that Ethan Nadelmann got her to say she supported
- needle exchange- not in public, however.
-
- The mayors then signed the Atlanta Resolution. I'm still waiting to get a
- list of cities who signed.
-
- This all happened on Monday.
-
- Tuesday consisted of alot of workshops which I didn't attend. Some of the
- highlights included: "Media and Communications" which urges participants
- to use the RADAR network and Join Together online. For more info. on RADAR
- write or call: Nat'l Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information
- P.O.Box 2345 Rockville, MD 20847-2345; 800-729-6686, (TDD) 800-487-4889 or
- info@prevline.health.org. PREVline links 700 prevention specialists around
- the world. You can access it by calling 301-770-0850 or via the Internet
- (path: telnet ncadi.health.org.)
-
- Another workshop was: "Legalizers and How to Debate Them." This meeting
- was run by Steve Morreale of the DEA; Stephanie Haynes, president of Drug
- Watch International, and Tom Pool of the DEA. According to the program,
- "This presentation is designed to provide information to counter the
- various issues raised by advocates of drug legalization. Workshop
- participants will learn about the organizations, individuals and the
- funding sources behind the current pro-drug 'liberalization' or
- 'harm-reduction' movement. They will also receive current facts and
- statistics on the drug subculture useful in debates against drug
- legalization and liberalization."
-
- Finally, there was the workshop "The European Drug Scene and What People
- Are Doing to Fight It." James Dandridge of the Bureau of Int'l Narcotics
- and Law Enforcement Affairs, US State Dept., Sylvie Alpert Bryant of the UN
- Drug Control Programme in New York, Franziska Haller of the Association for
- the Advancement of Psychological Understanding of Human Nature, Elisabeth
- de Marees va Swinderen of the Dutch National Board of Drug Prevention, and
- Torgny Peterson, director of European Cities Against Drugs were all
- presenting stuff. The program reads, "Overviews on the failure of
- 'liberalization', 'decriminalization', and 'harm reduction' policies in
- both Western and Eastern Europe will be shard by a panel of presenters
- active in the European drug control and anti-legalization campaigns.
- Workshop participants will learn about UN efforts in demand reduction, and
- hear firsthand the facts on European drug policy, the reality of Zurich's
- open drug scene and Amsterdam's coffeehouses, and the progress of European
- Cities Against Drugs."
-
- That's all I've got for now. More to come later...
-
-
- --Scott
-
-
-