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- Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs,alt.politics.libertarian,alt.politics.clinton,alt.society.resistance,alt.politics.reform,alt.activism
- From: borden@netcom.com (David Borden)
- Subject: Drug Policy Foundation Ad in New York Times
- Message-ID: <bordenCLz1rp.682@netcom.com>
- Date: Tue, 1 Mar 1994 05:54:59 GMT
-
- The following announcement comes to you courtesy of the Drug Reform
- Coordination Network (DRCNet). For more info, email "borden@netcom.com",
- or write to DRCNet, P.O. Box 381813, Cambridge, MA 02238-1813.
-
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-
- On Sunday, February 27, a full page ad from the Drug Policy Foundation
- appeared on the back page of the Week in Review section of the New York
- Times. This ad, entitled "Will the Next $159 Billion Make You Safer?",
- sums up the ways in which prohibition has failed us, and calls for a
- decisive shift in policy. DPF is offering free 11x17 copies of the ad
- for the purposes of increasing its range of distribution. If you think
- you can give away a few copies to people who will read it, or to join
- DPF, please contact the
-
- Drug Policy Foundation
- 4455 Connecticut Ave, NW, Suite B-500
- Washington, DC 20008-2302
- 202/537-5005
- 202/537-3007 (fax)
- compuserve: 76546,215 (76546.215@compuserve.com from internet)
-
- Here is the text of the ad:
-
-
- Q: WILL THE NEXT $150 BILLION MAKE YOU SAFER?
-
- A: Not if we spend it on the same old strategy.
-
-
- Since 1981, well over $150 billion of our tax dollars have gone to fight
- the war on illegal drugs. Annual spending has grown so fast that the next
- $150 billion will be spent by 1997.
-
- But if we do not change our basic drug strategy, it is unlikely that we
- will be any safer. Current drug policies cannot deal with the excess crime,
- violence and disease caused by drug prohibition.
-
- FACT: According to FBI data, 1 out of 3 robberies and burglaries is
- committed to obtain money for high-priced, black market drugs.
-
- FACT: Up to 40 percent of the murders in major cities and 20 percent of
- the killing nationwide occur in the drug trade. Innocent children
- and police officers are often caught in the crossfire.
-
- FACT: 1 out of 3 U.S. AIDS cases is traceable to the sharing of infected
- needles by drug users. Criminalizing these users and prohibiting
- access to clean needles worsens the deadly AIDS epidemic.
-
- These are just a few of the costs and consequences of maintaining strict
- drug prohibition policies. This great nation can do better. With less
- waste. With more success dealing with hard-core users. And without fueling
- a war in our cities.
-
- What should new policies look like? As Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders
- recently suggested, we must study the legalization of drugs. Support for
- this position comes from across the political spectrum.
-
- Full legalization is not the only alternative. Different policies might
- make sense for different drugs. Many options are available, including
- decriminalizing user only, permitting doctors to prescribe some drugs to
- addicts to undercut the black market, borrowing elements of the European
- public health model, or shifting the allocation of anti-drug resources to
- focus mainly on treatment and prevention rather than drug law enforcement.
-
- No on claims to know precisely what is best - not legalization advocates,
- not prohibition's partisans. We all share concern over the problems caused
- by drug abuse in our society, but we must also concern ourselves with the
- harms caused by our policies. The question of pursuing alternatives must be
- fully and realistically investigated and debated.
-
- What we cannot do is sit idly by while our nation continues to pursue
- misguided drug policies. Much like alcohol prohibition did, our modern
- prohibition:
-
- - Enriches gangsters. At least $40 billion each year goes to the criminal
- underworld as proceeds from drug sales.
-
- - Endangers and corrupts police. Police officers risk their lives
- enforcing prohibition - but each drug dealer is immediately replaced.
- Drug profits have tempted too many public servants to become criminals
- themselves.
-
- - Fails to protect our children. Banned drugs are often easier for our
- kids to get than regulated drugs like alcohol and tobacco. Pushers have
- a financial incentive to draw children into the drug trade and to
- initiatie them into drug use.
-
- As a candidate for president, Bill Clinton defined insanity as "doing the
- same thing over and over againg and expecting a different result." Despite
- some recent, commendable shifts in strategy, that is what our nation is doing
- now in drug policy.
-
- IT'S TIME FOR CHANGE.
-
-
- (Following this appears the Drug Policy Foundation's Board of Directors,
- Board of Advisors, and additional signatories to the advertisement.
- Interestingly, probably not coincidentally, on the other side of the
- page are the editorials, including nobel prize winning Latin-American
- author Gabriel Garcia-Marquez's manifesto calling for international
- legalization of drugs.)
-
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-
- DRCNet is a non-profit entity dedicated to getting the word out to activists
- on what you can do to work for reform of the nations drug laws and other
- related laws and policies. DRCNet solicits information from national and
- state level activist groups on how people can help them work for reform, and
- makes frequent announcement by email and fax to its "rapid-response team".
- Beginning this April, DRCNet will publish a monthly "what-you-can-do"
- newsletter. For more information on joining DRCNet, write to:
-
- DRCNet
- P.O. Box 381813
- Cambridge, MA 02238-1813
-
- or email "borden@netcom.com".
-
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