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Semanal: Blogueando en el Bar Clandestino

“Ahora producen cocaína en Brasil también”, “DEA inaugura campamento de lucha contra la droga”, “Mark Souder auxilia sin querer labores de despenalización de la marihuana en Nuevo Hampshire”, “Secretario antidroga de la ONU se niega a contestar pregunta difícil”, “Usuarios de la Internet le dan a anuncios de utilidad pública antidrogas”, “Políticas de drogas de las escuelas secundarias: Luchando por bajos resultados”.
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Chronicle

Policial: Senado vota en devolución de fondos al Programa Byrne de Financiación de Destacamentos

Pese a que el gobierno Bush haya intentado varias veces reducir a cero los fondos para el programa de subvenciones del Ministerio de Justicia de EE.UU. que financia destacamentos antidrogas estaduales y municipales, el Congreso está intentando devolverlos a su sitio. La semana pasada, el Senado votó en la devolución de más de $900 millones en fondos en el presupuesto del ejercicio de 2009, pero aún hay mucho trabajo que hacer.
Chronicle

Policial: Oficial de la SWAT de Ohío que mató a joven madre en redada antidroga es acusado de delitos leves y puede recibir ocho meses como máximo

La comunidad negra en Lima, Ohío, clamó por justicia después que un integrante del equipo de la SWAT mató a Tarika Wilson e hirió a su bebe durante un allanamiento en enero. Esos clamores probablemente no serán silenciados ya que las autoridades municipales acusaron al disparador de la policía de dos delitos leves por el asesinato. Él puede recibir como máximo ocho meses de cárcel.
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Reseña de la Crónica de la Guerra Contra las Drogas: "Over the Influence: The Harm Reduction Guide to Managing Drugs and Alcohol", de Patt Denning, Jeanne Little y Adina Glickman (2004, Guilford Press, 328 págs., $16.95, edición en rústica)

Solemos reservar este espacio para libros nuevos, pero en el caso de "<em>Over the Influence</em>" hacemos una excepción. Este libro es suficientemente especial para que lo volvamos una prima para nuestros contribuidores y, considerando que publicamos un artículo esta semana sobre el número rápidamente creciente de las sobredosis de drogas, creemos que su importancia es evidente en sí.
Chronicle

En vez de arrestos masivos y tácticas de intimidación, estados cambian para abordaje de los “Cuatro Pilares” para hacer frente a la metanfetamina

Los abordajes actuales al consumo de metanfetamina en los EE.UU. han fracasado sobre todo y deberían ser reemplazados por un abordaje de los “Cuatro Pilares” que adopte la prevención, el tratamiento, la reducción de daños y la represión legal, de acuerdo con un informe lanzado el martes. Algunos estados ya han tomado esa dirección.
Chronicle

Muertes por sobredosis de drogas suben a las nubes - ¿Hay alguien viendo?

Mientras EE.UU. se preocupa por jugadores de béisbol que toman esteróides y adolescentes que fuman marihuana, una epidemia de sobredosis de drogas azota al país. Hay métodos para reducir el saldo, pero también hay muchos obstáculos, el menor de los cuales no es la indiferencia pública y oficial.
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Netherlands Rated More Stable and Prosperous Than U.S.

A new global study ranks the Netherlands 9th in the world in stability and prosperity. The U.S. follows at a distant 22nd. I'll give you one guess where I'm going with this. Ok, times up. If you said, "Scott will argue that superior quality of life in the Netherlands proves that an enlightened marijuana policy won't destroy society," you win a cookie.

Indeed, superior quality of life in the Netherlands proves that an enlightened marijuana policy won’t destroy society, and there are no complications which ought to prevent anyone from understanding this. A bunch of white Europeans have been prancing around for decades allowing one another to sell and smoke marijuana openly, culminating in their designation as the 9th best nation in the world. Not to mention their progressive policies on psychedelic mushrooms, safe injection sites, drug sentencing, and criminal justice spending, none of which have produced outcomes resembling those we've been told to expect should we abandon our obscenely harsh approach to these matters here in the U.S. The numbers speak for themselves.

If you ask a drug warrior about this, they will change the subject, but it is just a fact that you can allow adults to manufacture, distribute, and consume marijuana and everything will be fine.
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High Expectations: Are We Winning the War on Drugs?

The War on Drugs has been marching on since well before Richard Nixon coined the phrase in 1971, and it continues to be a battle – and a debate – for governments and policy makers around the world. The complexities surrounding the prohibition of drugs include a mixture of economic, health and wellness, and social and human rights issues. The argument is further fueled by morality, religion, race, law enforcement, and money. What has the War on Drugs accomplished in the thirty-seven years after Nixon’s declaration? Are there alternatives to the current drug laws and policies? Is this a war that has an end?
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Poisoning the Drug Policy Debate in 8 Simple Steps

One of the primary facts worth knowing about the modern drug war debate is that it has been contaminated for decades. Anyone endeavoring to advance this conversation must navigate a dense fog of false dichotomies, red herrings, racist demagoguery, and McCarthian fear-mongering that serves to amplify the absurd while obscuring even the most simple truths.

While discussing this matter yesterday with NORML's Paul Armentano, I learned of a marvelous ancient document which sets forth in basic terms the fundamental strategies that have long been employed to destroy the drug war debate. "Themes in Chemical Prohibition" by William L. White was published in 1979 by the National Institute on Drug Abuse. It is easily the most insightful material ever produced by that agency:
THE PROHIBITIONIST THEMES

A review of chemical prohibitionist literature reveals eight themes which appear to emerge from the tactics of most such movements. The tactics utilized to produce these themes are as follows:

1. The drug is associated with a hated subgroup of the society or a foreign enemy.

2. The drug is identified as solely responsible for many problems in the culture, i.e., crime, violence, and insanity.

3. The survival of the culture is pictured as being dependent on the prohibition of the drug.

4. The concept of "controlled" usage is destroyed and replaced by a "domino theory" of chemical progression.

5. The drug is associated with the corruption of young children, particularly their sexual corruption.

6. Both the user and supplier of the drug are defined as fiends, always in search of new victims; usage of the drug is considered "contagious."

7. Policy options are presented as total prohibition or total access.

8. Anyone questioning any of the above assumptions is bitterly attacked and characterized as part of the problem that needs to be eliminated.

After almost 30 years, this remains a complete inventory of the instruments one can expect to find in any prohibitionist's tool belt. It reads like the Bill of Rights of drug prohibitionist rhetoric, a universal guide that could well be found folded up within the coat pockets of drug war generals from Washington, D.C. to Vienna.

Only through strict adherence to these principles is it possible to effectively defend a drug war that destroys all which it claims to defend. Only under these rules could the continuation of costly and catastrophic public policies be considered politically viable, while even partial reforms bear a burden of presumed political suicide. Only in this climate of perpetual hysteria can our leaders be intimidated and stripped of their will to lead, forced instead by perceived orthodoxy to reluctantly, yet willfully, march us further into the drug war abyss.

This post isn't about how to end the drug war. I don’t quite claim to know that, although I've got a few ideas. Rather, this is an introduction, for anyone who may need it, to the rules of mainstream drug policy debate. We must know each of these rules by heart, because it is our duty to break them at any and every opportunity.

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