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MerryBlooms

(11,769 posts)
Tue Mar 22, 2016, 05:24 PM Mar 2016

Nixon Policy Adviser Admits He Invented War On Drugs to Suppress ‘Anti-War Left and Black People’

At the time, I was writing a book about the politics of drug prohibition. I started to ask Ehrlichman a series of earnest, wonky questions that he impatiently waved away. “You want to know what this was really all about?” he asked with the bluntness of a man who, after public disgrace and a stretch in federal prison, had little left to protect. “The Nixon campaign in 1968, and the Nixon White House after that, had two enemies: the antiwar left and black people. You understand what I’m saying? We knew we couldn’t make it illegal to be either against the war or black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities. We could arrest their leaders, raid their homes, break up their meetings, and vilify them night after night on the evening news. Did we know we were lying about the drugs? Of course we did.”

I must have looked shocked. Ehrlichman just shrugged. Then he looked at his watch, handed me a signed copy of his steamy spy novel,The Company, and led me to the door.

Bold mine.

That drugs have been used as a tactic to marginalize and imprison peoples who are inconvenient, so to speak, for conservatives and neo-cons doesn’t really come as a surprise—and not just because Nixon was a noted racist. The War on Drugs was a Nixon invention but, as Baum explains, it’s been useful for every president thereafter, and its function as a suppressive tool didn’t exactly wane—recall the way it defined Reagan’s crack era, which was funneled into black neighborhoods by the CIA and then used to decimate an entire generation. Or the way relatively minor drug offenses are the main contributor to the current mass incarceration crisis, which disproportionately affects young black and brown men.

Adjacent to this, Baum lays out a clear and logical argument for the way legalization could work, using Portugal and the Netherlands as precedents, and advocating for it to remain in the control of the state—a “state-run monopoly”—rather than free markets, lest addiction become a market incentive the way it has with alcohol and cigarettes. (Of course, the deeper problem of racial prejudice remains strong in this scenario too—the legal weed market has already locked out people of color to a dramatic and unfair degree, and black people are much more likely to be arrested for pot-related offenses even in states where it’s legal.) Baum cites the way marijuana is regulated in his home state of Colorado (of course this dude is from Boulder), but also makes the case that weed is the path to killing the drug war, in its capacity as an admitted racist and antiliberal Nixonian tool:

The citizens of the U.S. jurisdictions that legalized marijuana may have set in motion more machinery than most of them had imagined. “Without marijuana prohibition, the government can’t sustain the drug war,” Ira Glasser, who ran the American Civil Liberties Union from 1978 to 2001, told me. “Without marijuana, the use of drugs is negligible, and you can’t justify the law-enforcement and prison spending on the other drugs. Their use is vanishingly small. I always thought that if you could cut the marijuana head off the beast, the drug war couldn’t be sustained.”


http://www.itakelibertywithmycoffee.com/2016/03/nixon-policy-adviser-admits-invented-war-drugs-suppress-anti-war-left-black-people/

Dear Politicians: Stop with the fucking bullshit and legalize marijuana.
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Nixon Policy Adviser Admits He Invented War On Drugs to Suppress ‘Anti-War Left and Black People’ (Original Post) MerryBlooms Mar 2016 OP
That just wouldn't be the "third way..." villager Mar 2016 #1
Private prison industry is directly related to this shit. MerryBlooms Mar 2016 #6
Perhaps then "Third Way" is simply a subset of the more accurate... villager Mar 2016 #19
K&FuckinR. nt Guy Whitey Corngood Mar 2016 #2
! MerryBlooms Mar 2016 #8
President Obama needs to pardon everyone in jail on non-violent drug charges. Dont call me Shirley Mar 2016 #3
I'm with you, but is that even possible? How would it be done? MerryBlooms Mar 2016 #4
Like Nike says "Just Do It". It may take a while to process everyone out but it needs to be done. Dont call me Shirley Mar 2016 #15
You touch on something I've always thought should be, and that's MerryBlooms Mar 2016 #16
Agreed on both points! Plus the additional tax revenue from adding productive members to the Dont call me Shirley Mar 2016 #18
Sharing….. blm Mar 2016 #5
. MerryBlooms Mar 2016 #7
Having been one of those "anti war pot-smoking hippies" in those days, Blue_In_AK Mar 2016 #9
A little before my time, I was born in 1963, but MerryBlooms Mar 2016 #10
"If the American people knew what we have done, they would string us up from the lamp posts." Rex Mar 2016 #11
Indeed. MerryBlooms Mar 2016 #12
Those rotten bastards know the damage they've done, yet they get to hide behind the M$M Rex Mar 2016 #13
Not only hiding behind the M$M, but also MerryBlooms Mar 2016 #14
Water is wet (nt) pokerfan Mar 2016 #17
 

villager

(26,001 posts)
1. That just wouldn't be the "third way..."
Tue Mar 22, 2016, 05:26 PM
Mar 2016

There are interests -- special ones! -- to protect, y'know....

MerryBlooms

(11,769 posts)
6. Private prison industry is directly related to this shit.
Tue Mar 22, 2016, 06:05 PM
Mar 2016

I don't know that I would call it, 'third way', as much as I would call it opportunistic pieces of shit making money off racist bogus laws. The support for this heinous shit isn't party exclusive.

 

villager

(26,001 posts)
19. Perhaps then "Third Way" is simply a subset of the more accurate...
Tue Mar 22, 2016, 07:58 PM
Mar 2016

..."opportunistic pieces of shit."

Dont call me Shirley

(10,998 posts)
15. Like Nike says "Just Do It". It may take a while to process everyone out but it needs to be done.
Tue Mar 22, 2016, 06:42 PM
Mar 2016

Also retro-pardon those with non-violen drug charges. Maybe the people released from prison could be trained and hired into the jobs of deleting records and releasing inmates. Take the money which was used to house the prisoners to create real rehabilitation centers and job retraining.

Now that the right wing program of deceit and ciminality has been laid bare, retribution for those disaffected needs to happen now. This is a 45 year old crime, anyone involved in the initial creation of this "War On Drugs" needs to be prosecuted.

Releasing half their prisoners at once would put a dent in the ccc and geo profit base

MerryBlooms

(11,769 posts)
16. You touch on something I've always thought should be, and that's
Tue Mar 22, 2016, 06:56 PM
Mar 2016

a Federal prison transition program. Shelter/counseling/health care/job training/etc. I believe a true rehab approach has got to be cheaper and more beneficial than our current crappy system.

I'm also in the opinion that Joe Arpaio should be charged with crimes against humanity. That evil fucker should be behind bars.

Dont call me Shirley

(10,998 posts)
18. Agreed on both points! Plus the additional tax revenue from adding productive members to the
Tue Mar 22, 2016, 07:00 PM
Mar 2016

workforce.

Arpaio is vile.

Blue_In_AK

(46,436 posts)
9. Having been one of those "anti war pot-smoking hippies" in those days,
Tue Mar 22, 2016, 06:23 PM
Mar 2016

this doesn't surprise me in the least. Even at the time, I sensed that this was true.

MerryBlooms

(11,769 posts)
10. A little before my time, I was born in 1963, but
Tue Mar 22, 2016, 06:28 PM
Mar 2016

I've always thought the war on drugs was government bullshit. Add the for-profit prisons to the archaic laws... yeah, you, me and a whole lot of, 'crazy conspiracy nuts', were right on the money.

 

Rex

(65,616 posts)
11. "If the American people knew what we have done, they would string us up from the lamp posts."
Tue Mar 22, 2016, 06:31 PM
Mar 2016

George H. Bush.

 

Rex

(65,616 posts)
13. Those rotten bastards know the damage they've done, yet they get to hide behind the M$M
Tue Mar 22, 2016, 06:35 PM
Mar 2016

which is just a guilty imo if not more since their only job is objectively reporting the news!

MerryBlooms

(11,769 posts)
14. Not only hiding behind the M$M, but also
Tue Mar 22, 2016, 06:42 PM
Mar 2016

eagerly shuffled under the traditional politic rug of, 'We need to move forward', which is absolute rubbish.

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