• Focus Alerts

    #360 John Walters Caught Lying – Again

    Date: Thu, 24 Jan 2008
    Subject: #360 John Walters Caught Lying – Again

    JOHN WALTERS CAUGHT LYING – AGAIN

    *********************PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE*************************

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #360 – Thursday, 24 Jan 2008

    One of the U.S. government’s most persistently dishonest appointed
    officials – John Walters, the Director of the Office of National Drug
    Control Policy (ONDCP) – has been caught in yet another outright lie
    to the North American media.

    His office’s first major press release of 2008 made a disturbing
    announcement. According to Drug Czar Walters, there is a “dangerous
    new drug threat coming from Canada.” The drug? – so called “Extreme
    Ecstasy.”

    In a news release distributed in the U.S. and Canada, Walters warned
    that the use of ecstasy is being fueled by Canadian producers
    smuggling the illegal designer drug — which is increasingly laced
    with crystal meth — into the U.S.

    “Historic progress against ecstasy availability and use is in jeopardy
    of being rolled back by Canadian criminal organizations” Walters said
    in the release.

    Scott Burns, the primary spokesperson for Walters’ ONDCP office,
    echoed the alarming cry with “They are remarketing and packaging it
    and trying to glamorize it.”

    Certainly gives the guise of being important information for Americans
    – especially parents of teenagers, right? Unfortunately, it seems that
    John Walters and the ONDCP created “extreme ecstasy” out of their own
    imaginations.

    The U.S. Drug Czar has been caught lying – again. And this time, the
    direct rebuttal of his lies comes from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

    Less than two weeks after the January 4th ONDCP press release, the
    head of the RCMP’s national drug branch sternly rebuked the ONDCP claims.

    Supt. Paul Nadeau said he doesn’t know why Walters would make such
    fictional statements without checking facts with Canadian officials.
    He added that he himself has never heard of “extreme Ecstasy…. it
    would appear that it’s a term that somebody came up with in a
    boardroom in Washington, D.C.”

    Please write a letter to newspapers that carry coverage of the false
    claims.

    Let your local and state or provincial media know that the United
    States Drug Czar is a very unreliable and frankly dishonest source of
    accurate information.

    **********************************************************************

    Wire services sent versions of the RCMP rebuttals of the ONDCP claims
    to Canadian and United States media this past Monday, January 21st.
    The Canadian Press wire service version:

    VANCOUVER (CP) – The head of the RCMP’s national drug branch is
    debunking claims by the U.S. drug czar, who claims organized crime
    rings in Canada are dumping dangerous, methamphetamine-laced “extreme
    ecstasy” into his country.

    Supt. Paul Nadeau said he doesn’t know why John Walters, of the White
    House Office of National Drug Control Policy, would make such
    statements in a widely distributed news release without checking facts
    with Canadian officials.

    “I shook my head when I read the release that they put out,” said
    Nadeau, who’s never heard of extreme ecstasy.

    “That term is unknown to us, certainly in Canada, and I can tell you
    that I’ve spoken to law enforcement people in the U.S. and they’ve
    never heard of it either so it would appear that it’s a term that
    somebody came up with in a boardroom in Washington, D.C.”

    The release has generated huge media buzz in the U.S., with some news
    outlets using names such as “turbo-charged ecstasy,” which is
    supposedly flowing across the border from Canada.

    In the release, Walters warns public health and safety leaders that
    more than 55 per cent of ecstasy samples seized in the U.S. last year
    contained meth, a stimulant that affects the central nervous system.

    “This extreme ecstasy is a disturbing development in what has been one
    of the most significant international achievements against the illicit
    drug trade,” Walters said.

    “Cutting their product with less expensive methamphetamine boosts
    profits for Canadian ecstasy producers, likely increases the addictive
    potential of their product and effectively gives a dangerous
    ‘facelift’ to a designer drug that had fallen out of fashion with
    young American drug users.”

    Nadeau said there’s nothing new about ecstasy – the so-called love
    drug that gained popularity during the 1990s rave scene – being laced
    with methamphetamine or other stimulants and that it’s been happening
    for the last decade.

    **********************************************************************

    The following links find news clippings about ecstasy and the Drug Czar:

    http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm

    http://www.mapinc.org/walters.htm

    **********************************************************************

    Prepared by: The MAP Media Activism Team www.mapinc.org/resource

    =.

  • Focus Alerts

    #359 Marc Emery Needs Your Support

    Date: Wed, 16 Jan 2008
    Subject: #359 Marc Emery Needs Your Support

    MARC EMERY NEEDS YOUR SUPPORT

    *********************PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE*************************

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #359 – Wednesday, 16 Jan 2008

    Newspapers across Canada and in the United States have been publishing
    items about Marc Emery, Vancouver’s self-styled Prince of Pot. While
    there is hope that a deal may be reached to allow Marc to serve five
    years jail time in Canada as opposed to perhaps a decades long term in
    United States, the deal is not final as of the date of this alert. He
    hopes that a deal will also save his two co-defendants, Michelle
    Rainey and Greg Williams, from prison time.

    Columnist Ian Mulgrew wrote in the Vancouver Sun:

    “He has run in federal, provincial and civic elections promoting his
    pro-cannabis platform. He has championed legal marijuana at
    parliamentary hearings, on national television, at celebrity
    conferences, in his own magazine, Cannabis Culture, and on his own
    Internet channel, Pot TV.

    “Health Canada even recommended medical marijuana patients buy their
    seeds from Emery. From 1998 until his arrest, Emery even paid
    provincial and federal taxes as a “marijuana seed vendor” totalling
    nearly $600,000.

    “He is being hounded because of his success. The political landscape
    has changed dramatically as a result of Emery’s politicking for
    cannabis. Emery challenged a law he disagrees with using exactly the
    non-violent, democratic processes we urge our children to embrace and
    of which we are so proud.”

    DEA administrator Karen Tandy in a press release on the day of
    Emery’s, July 29th, 2005, stated:

    “Today’s DEA arrest of Marc Scott Emery, publisher of Cannabis Culture
    magazine, and the founder of a marijuana legalization group, is a
    significant blow not only to the marijuana trafficking trade in the
    U.S. and Canada, but also to the marijuana legalization movement….
    Drug legalization lobbyists now have one less pot of money to rely
    on.”

    Tandy’s statement is accurate. Though there are hundreds of vendors
    selling marijuana seeds in Canada, Marc was unique in his superb
    financial support of marijuana legalization efforts on both sides of
    the border. Thus in the time of need of Marc and his co-defendants
    your letters of support to newspapers may help make a difference.

    MAP has already archived news coverage on this ruling from across
    North America. These, and additional clippings during the days ahead,
    may be found at:

    http://www.mapinc.org/people/Marc+Emery

    Your letters to newspapers that print anything about Marc will help
    send a signal about simple justice.

    **********************************************************************

    Additional suggestions for writing LTEs are at our Media Activism Center:

    http://www.mapinc.org/resource/#guides

    Or contact MAP’s Media Activism Facilitator for personal tips on how
    to write LTEs that get printed.

    [email protected]

    **********************************************************************

    PLEASE SEND US A COPY OF YOUR LETTER

    Please post a copy of your letter or report your action to the sent
    letter list ( [email protected] ) if you are subscribed, or by
    E-mailing a copy directly to [email protected] if you are not
    subscribed. Your letter will then be forwarded to the list so others
    can learn from your efforts.

    Subscribing to the Sent LTE list ( [email protected] ) will help you
    to review other sent LTEs and perhaps come up with new ideas or
    approaches as well as keeping others aware of your important writing
    efforts.

    To subscribe to the Sent LTE mailing list see

    http://www.mapinc.org/lists/index.htm#form

    **********************************************************************

    Prepared by: The MAP Media Activism Team www.mapinc.org/resource

    =.

  • Focus Alerts

    #358 Drug Cop Kills Woman, Wounds Baby

    Date: Tue, 8 Jan 2008
    Subject: #358 Drug Cop Kills Woman, Wounds Baby

    DRUG COP KILLS WOMAN, WOUNDS BABY

    *********************PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE*************************

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #358 – Tuesday, 8 Jan 2008

    The War on Drugs and a relentless policy of drug prohibition does not
    just increase violence in our communities among those involved with
    the illicit drug trade. It also increases undue violence and death
    among police and innocent bystanders. Over the past two decades,
    police forces across the USA have revamped their operations so that
    even routine search warrants are carried out by paramilitary SWAT teams.

    On Friday, Jan 4, the paramilitary SWAT unit of the Lima OH police
    department (city population 41,000) elected to serve a warrant at a
    home where they knew in advance that children were present. Still,
    they decided to go forward with the nighttime raid just after 8 p.m.
    Friday.

    The result was deadly.

    A SWAT team officer shot and killed Tarika Wilson. Her 1-year-old
    son, Sincere Wilson, also was shot.

    The man wanted in the arrest warrant was found immediately upon entry
    by the officers and arrested. An unidentified officer then ascended
    stairs to the second floor where he encountered Ms. Wilson holding her
    baby in her arms. He then shot and killed her, while wounding the
    infant.

    Such shooting by police of unarmed civilians nationwide continues to
    be reported far too often for the interest of general community health
    and safety. Further, the majority of such killings by police are
    waged against minority race civilians, despite the fact that all races
    use illicit drugs in virtually equal percentages.

    Perhaps the worst consequence of these police shootings of unarmed
    civilians is that it is very rare for the shooter cops to either be
    charged with a crime or even disciplined. Most police agencies seem
    to view such killing and injury to civilians as simple “collateral
    damage” in the never-ending War on Drugs.

    Please consider writing and sending a Letter to the Editor directed to
    the newspapers covering this story. Please use appropriate language
    to criticize the excessive force used by local police departments and
    encourage the newspapers to persist with coverage of the story in as
    much detail as possible.

    If you elect to write to more than one newspaper, we strongly suggest
    at least some modification of your message so that each newspaper
    receives a unique letter.

    Letters of 200 words or less have the best chance of print unless
    otherwise noted in MAP headers.

    Thanks for your effort and support.

    It’s not what others do it’s what YOU do.

    **********************************************************************

    MAP is archiving news and opinion coverage about this breaking news
    story which may be found at a link which updates every 24 hours:

    http://www.mapinc.org/people/Tarika+Wilson

    Radley Balko of Reason magazine is one of many notable national
    writers who has carefully detailed the rising use of paramilitary
    actions by U.S. police against civilians in the name of drug
    prohibition.

    His July 2006 report for The Cato Institute – “Overkill – The Rise of
    Paramilitary Police Raids In America” may be found here:

    http://drugsense.org/url/29ukwQCK

    **********************************************************************

    Additional suggestions for writing LTEs are at our Media Activism Center:

    http://www.mapinc.org/resource/#guides

    Or contact MAP’s Media Activism Facilitator for personal tips on how
    to write LTEs that get printed.

    [email protected]

    **********************************************************************

    PLEASE SEND US A COPY OF YOUR LETTER

    Please post a copy of your letter or report your action to the sent
    letter list ( [email protected] ) if you are subscribed, or by
    E-mailing a copy directly to [email protected] if you are not
    subscribed. Your letter will then be forwarded to the list so others
    can learn from your efforts.

    Subscribing to the Sent LTE list ( [email protected] ) will help you
    to review other sent LTEs and perhaps come up with new ideas or
    approaches as well as keeping others aware of your important writing
    efforts.

    To subscribe to the Sent LTE mailing list see

    http://www.mapinc.org/lists/index.htm#form

    **********************************************************************

    Prepared by: The MAP Media Activism Team www.mapinc.org/resource

    =.

  • Focus Alerts

    #357 2007 In Review

    Date: Mon, 31 Dec 2007
    Subject: #357 2007 In Review

    2007 IN REVIEW

    *******************PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE***********************

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #357 – Monday, 31 December 2007

    2007 saw almost fifteen thousand new news clippings added to the
    www.mapinc.org archives.

    Over a half million different readers from about 125 countries
    accessed the clippings during the year. Based on a formula which
    recognizes that older clippings may have been accessed more than the
    more recent ones, selections of the 600 most read clippings by areas
    of the world are provided at the following links:

    http://mapinc.org/find?369 2007 in Review – Australasia

    http://mapinc.org/find?370 2007 in Review – Asia

    http://mapinc.org/find?366 2007 in Review – Canada

    http://mapinc.org/find?368 2007 in Review – South
    America

    http://mapinc.org/find?367 2007 in Review – United
    Kingdom

    http://mapinc.org/find?365 2007 in Review – United
    States

    The year 2007 was good for our Letter to The Editor writing activists,
    with about 2,230 letters printed that we know of as shown at
    http://mapinc.org/lte/

    The year also saw a nice upgrade in the online look of the DrugSense
    Weekly http://www.drugsense.org/current.htm

    Among the best kept secrets in the reform community is the 30,000 plus
    record Media Contact On Demand database, which received a facelift
    during 2007 for ease of use and for which the data is continuously
    crawled – computer programs are checking the web for changes – and
    updated http://www.mapinc.org/mcod/

    During the year DrugSense switched from using Paltalk to TeamSpeak for
    on line voice chats because the server software resides on our own
    server and because the program works as well on MAC and Linux
    computers as on Windows PCs. Besides MAP/DrugSense meeting rooms, both
    Law Enforcement Against Prohibition and the Ohio Patient Network have
    meeting rooms. Details about the software are at http://www.mapinc.org/resource/teamspeak/

    It has also been a busy year for the DrugSense webmastering/website
    hosting team supporting 125 reform websites and over 200 email lists
    and forums. Among the major projects of the year were these:

    – Major upgrades of The Drug Truth Network http://www.drugtruth.net
    and the LEAP websites http://www.leap.cc

    – Adding new websites http://thepotlawhasfallen.ca/,
    http://compassionatecanadians.com/, http://www.illinoisnorml.org/, and
    http://chemicalbigotry.org/, with others in the works.

    Oh, we have probably left out something we did during the past year
    that is important to you, but it is hard to keep on top of all that
    happens at DrugSense.

    On behalf of the MAP/DrugSense family of activists we wish you all the
    best for the New Year!

    **********************************************************************

    Prepared by: The MAP/DrugSense Family of Activists

    =.

  • Focus Alerts

    #356 Crack Vs Powder Disparity

    Date: Sat, 29 Dec 2007
    Subject: #356 Crack Vs Powder Disparity

    CRACK VS POWDER DISPARITY

    *********************PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE*************************

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #356 – Saturday, 29 December 2007

    The past month realized a long overdue alteration in federal
    sentencing guidelines pertaining to drug law offenders convicted of
    possession and/or distribution of cocaine.

    For two long decades, federal laws have mandated that those offenders
    found with crack cocaine – should be sentenced to much more draconian
    prison time than those who were convicted of involvement with the more
    commonly used powder form of cocaine. Most notably, sentencing
    guidelines were founded on the basis of product weight. Crack-related
    sentences on par to powder sentences were triggered by weights as
    small as a 1/100 ratio.

    Most defense lawyers and civil rights advocates say the lopsided
    perception of crack versus cocaine is rooted in racism. Four out of
    every five crack defendants are black, while most powdered-cocaine
    defendants are white.

    MAP has been archiving news and opinion coverage on this important
    story line over the past few weeks. Additionally, fresh coverage is
    seeing print across the U.S. this week.

    Please consider writing and sending a Letter to the Editor directed to
    the newspapers closest to your hometown which have printed coverage of
    this story line and to the major newspapers as the articles and
    opinions are printed.

    Target news clippings may be found at this MAP Bookmark:

    Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Sentencing+Commission

    If you elect to write to more than one newspaper, we strongly suggest
    at least some modification of your message so that each newspaper
    receives a unique letter. Letters of 200 words or less have the best
    chance of print unless otherwise noted in MAP headers.

    As a number of the clippings suggest, the disparity will not be
    totally removed until congress acts. Please inform your members of
    congress about your views.

    Thanks for your effort and support.

    It’s not what others do it’s what YOU do

    **********************************************************************

    Additional suggestions for writing LTEs are at our Media Activism Center:

    http://www.mapinc.org/resource/#guides

    Or contact MAP’s Media Activism Facilitator for personal tips on how
    to write LTEs that get printed.

    [email protected]

    **********************************************************************

    PLEASE SEND US A COPY OF YOUR LETTER

    Please post a copy of your letter or report your action to the sent
    letter list ( [email protected] ) if you are subscribed, or by
    E-mailing a copy directly to [email protected] if you are not
    subscribed. Your letter will then be forwarded to the list so others
    can learn from your efforts.

    Subscribing to the Sent LTE list ( [email protected] ) will help you
    to review other sent LTEs and perhaps come up with new ideas or
    approaches as well as keeping others aware of your important writing
    efforts.

    To subscribe to the Sent LTE mailing list see

    http://www.mapinc.org/lists/index.htm#form

    **********************************************************************

    Prepared by: The MAP Media Activism Team www.mapinc.org/resource

    =.

  • Focus Alerts

    #355 Volunteers Needed

    Date: Thu, 25 Oct 2007
    Subject: Volunteers Needed

    WHAT: Editor Cyber Training Session

    WHO: Media Awareness Project, Inc (www.MAPinc.org)

    WHERE: From the Comfort of Your Keyboard

    WHEN: NOW! As soon as a few volunteers are ready.

    WHY: Reform Drug Policy!

    Our Drug News Archive grows by 30 to 70 articles per day using a
    well-tuned, semi-automated process. Our Editors are the dedicated
    people who process the hundreds of articles that are sent to us.

    We are currently organizing a training session by collecting a list of
    volunteers interested in becoming a part of our team. Our web-based,
    self-paced training course makes it easy to learn the few steps it
    takes to receive and process articles.

    Please contact Jo-D Harrison, [email protected] , if you would like
    additional information.

    **********************************************************************

    The emailed version of this request contains an additional appeal that
    is automatic and may be disregarded.

    **********************************************************************

    Prepared by: The editors at MAP team.

    =.

  • Focus Alerts

    #354 Chronic Pain Patient Pardoned!

    Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2007
    Subject: #354 Chronic Pain Patient Pardoned!

    CHRONIC PAIN PATIENT PARDONED!

    *********************PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE*************************

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #354 – Saturday, 22 Sep 2007

    On Thursday, Sep 20, in a 4-0 vote, Florida Governor Charlie Crist and
    the Florida Cabinet issued a full pardon to chronic pain patient
    Richard Paey. He was serving a mandatory minimum sentence of 25 years
    for a “drug trafficking” conviction when in fact he sold no drugs illegally.

    Please read what happened in his own words at http://www.november.org/thewall/cases/paey-r/paey-r.html

    Paey had served almost four years during which time his family and
    attorneys filed multiple unsuccessful appeals up to the level of the
    Florida Supreme Court. His last possibility at having his sentence
    commuted was thus laid in the hands of Governor Crist and the Cabinet.
    Together, these four men made their unanimous decision after just 40
    minutes to not only commute Paey’s sentence, but to give him a 100%
    pardon of his misguided conviction.

    Millions suffer needless pain because of federal and state laws and
    those who enforce them get between doctors and patients.

    Florida law currently deems prison cells to be a suitable location for
    otherwise law-abiding citizens whose only ‘crime’ is having one or
    more medical conditions which call for treatment with opiod drugs.
    Such misguided laws and policies will only be changed when enough
    citizens stand up and demand change. The best way to do that is to
    contact your state and federal elected officials and to educate your
    local media.

    Please consider sending a Letter to the Editor of the St. Petersburg
    Times – the largest newspaper in Florida and the newspaper closest to
    Paey’s home. Their Friday coverage is here: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v07.n1081.a04.html

    Please also consider sending letters to other newspapers which are
    covering this story. News clippings, with new clippings being added
    daily, may be found at http://www.mapinc.org/people/Richard+Paey

    Thanks for your effort and support.

    It’s not what others do it’s what YOU do.

    Richard thanks the many organizations and individuals who supported
    him. In a message to the November Coalition http://www.november.org/
    he wrote:

    Tom & Nora & My Good Friends at TNC:

    Free at last!

    Free at last!

    And it wouldn’t have happened without TNC.

    I struggle to find the words.

    Thank you so very much.

    Sincerely,

    Richard Paey

    Former Florida Prisoner #R29228

    **********************************************************************

    Additional suggestions for writing LTEs are at our Media Activism Center:

    http://www.mapinc.org/resource/#guides

    Or contact MAP’s Media Activism Facilitator for personal tips on how
    to write LTEs that get printed.

    [email protected]

    **********************************************************************

    PLEASE SEND US A COPY OF YOUR LETTER

    Please post a copy of your letter or report your action to the sent
    letter list ( [email protected] ) if you are subscribed, or by
    E-mailing a copy directly to [email protected] if you are not
    subscribed. Your letter will then be forwarded to the list so others
    can learn from your efforts.

    Subscribing to the Sent LTE list ( [email protected] ) will help you
    to review other sent LTEs and perhaps come up with new ideas or
    approaches as well as keeping others aware of your important writing
    efforts.

    To subscribe to the Sent LTE mailing list see

    http://www.mapinc.org/lists/index.htm#form

    **********************************************************************

    Prepared by: The MAP Media Activism Team www.mapinc.org/resource

    =.

  • Focus Alerts

    #353 Washington Newspapers Print Two Important OPEDs

    Date: Tue, 21 Aug 2007
    Subject: #353 Washington Newspapers Print Two Important OPEDs

    WASHINGTON NEWSPAPERS PRINT TWO IMPORTANT OPEDS

    *********************PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE*************************

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #353 – Tuesday, 21 August 2007

    Below are excerpts from the OPEDs printed Sunday and
    Monday.

    Unfortunately, with Congress in recess, your congresscritters may not
    see them — unless you make an effort to get them copies and tell them
    you agree with the OPEDs and they should have the courage to act on
    their recommendations — either in their district/state offices now,
    or in Washington when they return.

    Both are appropriate targets for your LTEs.

    It’s not what others do; it’s what YOU do.

    **********************************************************************

    Pubdate: Sun, 19 Aug 2007
    Source: Washington Post (DC)
    Page: B01
    Copyright: 2007 The Washington Post Company
    Contact: [email protected]
    Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/
    Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491
    Author: Misha Glenny
    Note: Misha Glenny is a former BBC correspondent and the author of
    “McMafia: A Journey Through the Global Underworld,” to be published next year.

    THE LOST WAR

    We’ve Spent 36 Years and Billions of Dollars Fighting It, but the Drug
    Trade Keeps Growing

    Poppies were the first thing that British army Capt. Leo Docherty
    noticed when he arrived in Afghanistan’s turbulent Helmand province in
    April 2006. “They were growing right outside the gate of our Forward
    Operating Base,” he told me. Within two weeks of his deployment to the
    remote town of Sangin, he realized that “poppy is the economic
    mainstay and everyone is involved right up to the higher echelons of
    the local government.”

    [snip]

    Thirty-six years and hundreds of billions of dollars after President
    Richard M. Nixon launched the war on drugs, consumers worldwide are
    taking more narcotics and criminals are making fatter profits than
    ever before. The syndicates that control narcotics production and
    distribution reap the profits from an annual turnover of $400 billion
    to $500 billion. And terrorist organizations such as the Taliban are
    using this money to expand their operations and buy ever more
    sophisticated weapons, threatening Western security.

    [snip]

    The trade in illegal narcotics begets violence, poverty and tragedy.
    And wherever I went around the world, gangsters, cops, victims,
    academics and politicians delivered the same message: The war on drugs
    is the underlying cause of the misery. Everywhere, that is, except
    Washington, where a powerful bipartisan consensus has turned the issue
    into a political third rail.

    The problem starts with prohibition, the basis of the war on drugs.
    The theory is that if you hurt the producers and consumers of drugs
    badly enough, they’ll stop doing what they’re doing. But instead, the
    trade goes underground, which means that the state’s only contact with
    it is through law enforcement, i.e. busting those involved, whether
    producers, distributors or users. So vast is the demand for drugs in
    the United States, the European Union and the Far East that nobody has
    anything approaching the ability to police the trade.

    Prohibition gives narcotics huge added value as a commodity. Once
    traffickers get around the business risks — getting busted or being
    shot by competitors — they stand to make vast profits. A confidential
    strategy report prepared in 2005 for British Prime Minister Tony
    Blair’s cabinet and later leaked to the media offered one of the most
    damning indictments of the efficacy of the drug war. Law enforcement
    agencies seize less than 20 percent of the 700 tons of cocaine and 550
    tons of heroin produced annually. According to the report, they would
    have to seize 60 to 80 percent to make the industry unprofitable for
    the traffickers.

    [snip]

    According to the Government Accountability Office, 70 percent of the
    money allotted to Plan Colombia never leaves the United States. It is
    used to buy U.S.-built helicopters and other weapons for the military,
    and a large chunk is paid to the security firm DynCorp. Britain and
    other E.U. countries have so far resisted spraying Afghan poppy fields
    with chemicals. But for several years, DynCorp has been spraying the
    herbicide glyphosate on thousands of acres of coca in Colombia.

    [snip]

    And now the U.S. government wants to repeat this “success” in Mexico.
    There’s talk in Washington about a $1 billion aid package for the
    government of President Felipe Calderon to back his own war against
    drugs. And in Mexico, it’s definitely a war: Calderon has mobilized
    the army to fight traffickers. In the first half of this year, more
    than 1,000 people were gunned down by rival drug cartels. Among the
    dead were newspaper reporters, narcotics police investigators, judges
    and politicians.

    [snip]

    An avalanche of B.C. Bud rolls southward into the United States every
    day, dodging U.S. customs in myriad imaginative ways. But as the Hells
    Angels and other syndicates get stronger and their control over the
    port of Vancouver tightens, the ability of U.S. and Canadian
    authorities to monitor the border becomes ever weaker.

    Could anything replace the war on drugs? There’s no easy answer. In
    May, the Senlis Council, a group that works on the opium issue in
    Afghanistan, argued that “current counter-narcotics policies . . .
    have focused on poppy eradication, without providing farmers with
    viable alternatives.” Instead of eradication, the council, which is
    made up of senior politicians and law enforcement officials from
    Canada and Europe, concludes that Afghan farmers should be permitted
    to grow opium that can then be refined and distributed for medical
    purposes. (That’s not going to happen, as the United States has
    recently reiterated its commitment to poppy eradication.)

    Others argue that the only way to minimize the criminality and social
    distress that drugs cause is to legalize narcotics so that the state
    may exert proper control over the industry. It needs to be taxed and
    controlled, they insist.

    In Washington, the war on drugs has been a third-rail issue since its
    inauguration. It’s obvious why — telling people that their kids can
    do drugs is the kiss of death at the ballot box. But that was before
    9/11. Now the drug war is undermining Western security throughout the
    world. In one particularly revealing conversation, a senior official
    at the British Foreign Office told me, “I often think we will look
    back at the War on Drugs in a hundred years’ time and tell the tale of
    ‘The Emperor’s New Clothes.’ This is so stupid.”

    How right he is.

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v07/n969/a02.html

    **********************************************************************

    Pubdate: Mon, 20 Aug 2007
    Source: Washington Times (DC)
    Copyright: 2007 News World Communications, Inc.
    Contact: [email protected]
    Website: http://www.washingtontimes.com/
    Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/492
    Author: Arnold Trebach
    Note: Arnold Trebach is a professor emeritus at American University.
    Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v07/n959/a01.html

    FATAL ALLIANCE

    A recent article in The Washington Times by Sara A. Carter show the
    frightening importance of the alliance between Arabic terrorists and
    Mexican drug cartels. It documents how well known this dangerous
    situation has been for several years, for which no effective action
    had been taken by the Department of Homeland Security or local officials.

    [snip]

    In the longer run, our government must start taking even more
    courageous actions that account for the dynamics underlying this
    lethal alliance. That alliance is based on the fact that American drug
    laws and strategies have managed the majestic alchemy of converting
    relatively worthless plants into substances often worth more, ounce
    for ounce, than gold and diamonds. If we assume that the Arabs are
    jihadists planning to harm this country, then it follows that they
    have no interest in the drugs but rather in the great treasure to be
    made and the access to our cities and nuclear plants to be gained by
    associating with the Mexican gangs.

    [snip]

    In my latest book, “Fatal Distraction,” I went over all the evidence
    that proved the war on drugs was indeed a fatal distraction. By that I
    meant that the drug war has never worked and now diverts limited
    resources from combating more deadly menaces — bombs, not bongs.
    Today, in the Drug Enforcement Administration alone, a total of 10,891
    federal officials are employed to save us all from drugs — usually
    marijuana — at an annual cost of $2.5 billion.

    [snip]

    Of course, Congress and the president must soon demonstrate the
    political courage to repeal the drug laws, dismantle the expensive
    drug-control bureaucracy and create a new legal system to control the
    formerly illegal drugs. That’s no small task, but stopping another
    September 11 demands guts and imagination.

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v07/n976/a04.html

    **********************************************************************

    Additional suggestions for writing LTEs are at our Media Activism Center:

    http://www.mapinc.org/resource/#guides

    Or contact MAP’s Media Activism Facilitator for personal tips on how
    to write LTEs that get printed.

    [email protected]

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    E-mailing a copy directly to [email protected] if you are not
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    Subscribing to the Sent LTE list ( [email protected] ) will help you
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    Prepared by: The MAP Media Activism Team www.mapinc.org/resource

    =.

  • Focus Alerts

    #352 Just Say NO To ‘Plan Mexico’

    Date: Thu, 16 Aug 2007
    Subject: #352 Just Say NO To ‘Plan Mexico’

    JUST SAY NO TO ‘PLAN MEXICO’

    *********************PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE*************************

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #352 – Thursday, 16 August 2007

    On Tuesday, Aug 14th, The New York Times featured an updated summary
    of ongoing discussions between the federal government of Mexico and
    the United States government. On the agenda are intensive talks to
    develop a plan for the United States to provide billions of dollars to
    Mexico to support its fight against drug cartels.

    Since 1970 the U.S. has spent over a trillion dollars in the war on
    drugs. Now they are negotiating to spend another $1.2 billion over the
    next 3 years to fight the “Nuevo Laredo-style” violence in Mexico.

    Dubbed “Plan Mexico”, this further escalation of the North American
    War on Drugs seems rather unlikely to be any more successful than the
    counterproductive Plan Colombia which the U.S. has funded with tens of
    billions of dollars over the past decade.

    According to the U.N. “with 2 to 3 million displaced persons, Colombia
    presents the highest number of internally displaced people in the
    Western Hemisphere, and the second largest displaced population in the
    world after Sudan.” If the success of Plan Mexico relies on the U.S.
    continuing more failed Prohibition style policies, no wall or fence
    will be able to stem the tide of Mexicans seeking entry into the U.S.

    The NY Times coverage is shown following the below. Meanwhile,
    continuing coverage of this news story may be followed by visiting
    either of these links:

    Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Plan+Mexico (Plan Mexico)

    Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Felipe+Calderon

    Please consider sending a Letter to the Editor to the New York Times
    expressing your opinions regarding the proposed Plan Mexico and why it
    is a bad idea for both the U.S. and Mexico. Please consider sending
    letters to other newspapers which have covered this story. If you
    elect to write to more than one newspaper, we suggest at least some
    modification of your message so that each newspaper receives a unique
    letter.

    Letters of 200 words or less have the best chance of print unless
    otherwise noted in MAP headers.

    Note that the New York Times requires letters to be no more than 150
    words.

    Thanks for your effort and support.

    It’s not what others do it’s what YOU do

    **********************************************************************

    Pubdate: Tue, 14 Aug 2007
    Source: New York Times (NY)
    Copyright: 2007 The New York Times Company
    Contact: [email protected]
    Author: James C. McKinley Jr.

    U.S. MAY PROVIDE BILLIONS TO MEXICO TO FIGHT DRUG CARTELS

    MEXICO CITY — Mexico and the United States are holding intensive
    talks to develop a plan for the United States to provide billions of
    dollars to Mexico to support its fight against drug cartels, but the
    negotiations are not likely to produce an agreement before next week’s
    trilateral meeting with Canada, officials from both countries said.

    Both sides are trying to keep the details of the talks secret, but
    officials with knowledge of the issue said the aid would include money
    and training for the Mexican police, as well as advanced
    eavesdropping, surveillance and other spying technology.

    Mexican officials insisted that any agreement would not involve
    operations by the United States military or drug enforcement agents on
    Mexican soil, as has happened in Colombia and Peru.

    “The bottom line is precisely some help with equipment so we can do
    our job from a more solid perspective,” said Eduardo Medina Mora, the
    Mexican attorney general, in an interview with Radio Formula last
    week. “What are the concrete components? That is obviously on the
    table, but always obviously with the principle of respect for our
    sovereignty.”

    Mexican officials said the negotiations began in March, around the
    time that President Bush met for talks with President Felipe Calderon
    in Merida, Mexico. The new discussions come as Mr. Calderon has
    started using federal troops in a major offensive against drug cartels
    and has begun extraditing top drug traffickers to the United States, a
    break with past practice.

    In general, Mexico is seeking money, training and advanced technology
    for its state and federal police forces. One problem for Mexican
    antidrug officials has been the rampant corruption in municipal police
    departments.

    Recently released tapes of police radio conversations in Tijuana, for
    instance, suggested that officers had been working hand in hand with
    gunmen for the Arellano Felix drug cartel to allow them to slip away
    from federal agents.

    But Mexican officials also want the United States to do more to reduce
    the consumption of drugs at home and stop the flow of arms and
    ill-gotten cash back into Mexico. “We don’t see this as an assistance
    package,” said one high-ranking official in the president’s office,
    who requested anonymity because of the delicate nature of the
    negotiations here. “We see this as increased cooperation.”

    Mr. Medina Mora, the attorney general, said in the radio interview:
    “There is a flow, of course, of drugs from the south to the north, but
    there is also an important flow of arms and money from the north to
    the south.”

    While discussions so far have taken place between top diplomats and
    security experts in the executive branches of both countries, any
    major aid package for Mexico would probably have to have Congressional
    approval, officials from both sides said.

    Representative Henry Cuellar, a Texas Democrat who represents a border
    district that includes Laredo, said he supported the proposal, saying
    it would mark a “historic shift in policy” by giving Mexico an array
    of tools to crack down on drug dealers. On the table are tools such
    as surveillance equipment, aircraft, and advanced radar and
    telephone-tapping equipment, Mr. Cuellar and Mexican officials said.

    “It’s equipment and technology to make sure they are able to match the
    power of the drug cartels,” Mr. Cuellar said in a recent interview.

    Mr. Cuellar was part of a delegation from the House Homeland Security
    Committee that visited Mexico in April and heard from high-ranking law
    enforcement officials about the hurdles they faced in fighting
    well-financed drug cartels.

    The official in the Mexican president’s office, however, said it might
    be weeks before a deal could be presented to lawmakers, while United
    States officials voiced doubt that an agreement would be reached
    before the Aug. 20 trilateral meeting in Montebello, Quebec.

    “There is no final deal,” the Mexican official said. “There are many
    things on the table right now and many of those things involve what
    the U.S. will do in their territory. This has been going on for
    several weeks. There is no deadline for this.”

    **********************************************************************

    Additional suggestions for writing LTEs are at our Media Activism Center:

    http://www.mapinc.org/resource/#guides

    Or contact MAP’s Media Activism Facilitator for personal tips on how
    to write LTEs that get printed.

    [email protected]

    **********************************************************************

    PLEASE SEND US A COPY OF YOUR LETTER

    Please post a copy of your letter or report your action to the sent
    letter list ( [email protected] ) if you are subscribed, or by
    E-mailing a copy directly to [email protected] if you are not
    subscribed. Your letter will then be forwarded to the list so others
    can learn from your efforts.

    Subscribing to the Sent LTE list ( [email protected] ) will help you
    to review other sent LTEs and perhaps come up with new ideas or
    approaches as well as keeping others aware of your important writing
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    To subscribe to the Sent LTE mailing list see

    http://www.mapinc.org/lists/index.htm#form

    **********************************************************************

    Prepared by: The MAP Media Activism Team www.mapinc.org/resource

    =.