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Rights and Liberties

President Obama And Gov. Paterson Get Love For Recent Drug Policy Reforms

By Tony Newman, AlterNet. Posted October 24, 2009.


We are obviously a long way from elected officials being honest and principled when it comes to dismantling the disastrous drug war. But the tides seem to be turning.
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For as long as I can remember, the conventional political wisdom has been that elected officials, especially Democrats, can't touch drug policy reform with a ten-foot pole because they'll be portrayed as "soft on crime" and jeopardize their careers. Of course, there were politicians who acknowledged privately that the war on drugs was not working and that it didn't make sense to put people in a jail cell for substance abuse problems, but they were largely silent in public when it came to actually challenging the inhumane laws. In fact too many elected officials, especially Democrats, tried to look tough by voting for harsh lock'em up drug laws even though they knew they wouldn't work.

Fortunately, there appears to be change in the air. Bucking the trend over the last month, both Governor David Paterson in New York and President Barack Obama have received public accolades for reforming inhumane drug laws. Earlier this year, New York put to rest the draconian Rockefeller Drug Laws, which mandated exceedingly long sentences for low-level nonviolent drug offenses. The reforms have set in motion the re-sentencing of 1,500 low-level, nonviolent drug offenders. The new law also gives judicial discretion back to judges, who can now determine whether someone should get treatment for his addiction instead of a jail cell. No one did more to end the Rockefeller laws than Gov. Paterson. He has worked tirelessly, first as a state senator from Harlem and then as governor, to make these reforms happen. He was rewarded with statewide and even national praise in the media for his leadership in ending these laws. Gov. Paterson is still struggling with New York voters, but it is for a wide range of reasons and the Rockefeller reforms have turned out to be something he touts when he talks about his record.

This week President Obama made headlines by following through on his campaign promise to stop harassing and arresting medical marijuana patients and their caregivers who abide by their state's marijuana laws. His break from the Bush and Clinton war on sick patients was front page news around the world. President Obama, like Governor Paterson, has received almost universal praise from editorial boards around the country, from the New York Times and USA Today to the San Francisco Chronicle and Pittsburgh Tribune.

Democrats aren't the only ones speaking out. Earlier this year, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger also made international news when he said that we should debate taxing and regulating marijuana. Again, no negative consequences from the public - and in fact, the news made Gov. Schwarzenegger look courageous and independent.

We are obviously a long way from elected officials being honest and principled when it comes to dismantling the disastrous drug war. There are still only a handful who are willing to call for a true debate on the failures of prohibition and the need for an alternative strategy. But the tides seem to be turning. Let's hope that one day soon politicians see that it is the public best interest and career's best interest to be smart on crime, not "tough on crime."


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See more stories tagged with: drug reform, barack obama, david paterson, rockefeller drug laws, sentencing

Tony Newman is communications director for the Drug Policy Alliance.

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Obama's Afghan Drug Lord Assassination Policy
Posted by: aahpat on Oct 26, 2009 6:53 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The real reason that President Obama issued that "advisory" medical marijuana memo, that has no real force of law, was to divert and divide drug reformers from the real news that he knew was coming out last week. He has authorized an ASSASSINATION list of Drug Lords in Afghanistan.

The Washington Post reported:

Afghans oppose U.S. hit list of drug traffickers
PUBLIC OUTRAGE FEARED Justice system will be undermined, officials say

By Craig Whitlock
Saturday, October 24, 2009

KABUL -- A U.S. military hit list of about 50 suspected drug kingpins is drawing fierce opposition from Afghan officials, who say it could undermine their fragile justice system and trigger a backlash against foreign troops.

The U.S. military and NATO officials have authorized their forces to kill or capture individuals on the list, which was drafted within the past year as part of NATO's new strategy to combat drug operations that finance the Taliban. The list is thought to include people with close ties to the Afghan government and others who have served as intelligence assets for the CIA and the U.S. military, according to current and former U.S. and Afghan officials.

========

What goes around comes around. This is why America does not use assassination as a political of police tool.

This is a depraved contempt for the rule of law by the Obama administration. Drug law reformers missed it entirely being busy singing Obama's praises for doing nothing.

This act is an atrocity. An insult to the Nobel Peace Prize.

Where is the outrage?

Is America's left wing so blinded by Obama that no one is willing to apply the same moral values to his actions that America has applied since the assassinations of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King?

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