Orange County Register: ‘War on drugs’ is costing thousands of lives – WatertownDailyTimes.com

The following editorial appeared in the Orange County Register on June 9:

SANTA ANA, Calif. (Tribune News Service) While American foreign policy has for years fixated on the conflict in Syria and the Middle East, just across the border in Mexico and throughout Central America tens of thousands of people lost their lives last year because of the conflict between drug cartels competing to deliver illicit drugs into the United States.

According to a recent report from the International Institute for Strategic Studies, whereas approximately 50,000 lives were lost in Syria last year, approximately 39,000 were killed in Mexico, Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador, much of which is attributable to drug-war violence.

Mexicos homicide total of 23,000 for 2016 is second only to Syrias, and is only the latest development in a conflict that stretches back to 2006, when President Felipe Calderon deployed the military to combat drug cartels.

Although the exact number of people killed because of the drug war in Mexico is unlikely to ever be known, a recent report from the Congressional Research Service cited estimates from 80,000 to more than 100,000 in that country alone.

The cause of this violence is obvious, and it is a direct, predictable consequence of our failed policy of drug prohibition. In the near-half century since President Richard Nixon declared a war on drugs, hundreds of thousands of Latin Americans have been killed in conflicts fueled by a lucrative illicit drug trade made possible by our prohibition of drugs.

This is an insight a certain New York developer possessed 27 years ago. Were losing badly the war on drugs, Donald Trump said in 1990. You have to legalize drugs to win that war. You have to take the profit away from these drug czars.

While Trump may have since lost this insight, the fact remains that the war on drugs does more harm than drugs themselves.

Last year, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos used his Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech to call for a rethink of the drug war, which contributed to decades of conflict in Colombia that killed hundreds of thousands.

Rather than squander more lives and resources fighting a War on Drugs that cannot be won including in our inner cities the United States must recognize the futility and harm of its drug policies.

Visit the Orange County Register (Santa Ana, Calif.) at http://www.ocregister.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency. 2017 Orange County Register.

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Orange County Register: 'War on drugs' is costing thousands of lives - WatertownDailyTimes.com

Today’s Song: The War on Drugs Walk into Light with Holding On – Atwood Magazine (blog)

Indie rock band The War On Drugs is known for a very distinct sound. The all-enveloping, larger-than-life tracks in the bands repertoire hold a certain, unique emotion, falling somewhere between appreciation and wonder. Each long-lived guitar solo and hazy instrumental interlude fits like a puzzle piece in nearly every situation, giving the band an incredible strength when it comes to creating a memorable soundtrack. Their latest single release, Holding On, is no exception.

Perfectly cohesive with the bands previous album release, Lost In The Dream, Holding On stands for a new chapter in a very parallel world of depth and fluid musicality.

Much of the bands work can be considered musically multi-dimensional, many times feeling incredibly dense and thought-provoking. Holding On though, while comparative to any track in the bands past release, feels different in overall tone. The track screams with a new lightness, reminiscent of an upbeat summer drive rather than a reflective summer night.

A Deeper Understanding The War on Drugs

Held together by a contagious, sporadic drum beat, the track is energetic and fun. A playful keyboard and guitar add elements that make the track truly multi-dimensional, lyrical aspects falling on top of an already complete, nearly perfect combination of advanced instrumentals. The heartbroken ode tells the full story of a love built and lost, ending in the simple uplifting yet heartbreaking statement heart of hope.

Holding On captures everything there is to love about The War On Drugs. The band conquers an individualistic creativity responsible for a disconnected, yet perfectly packaged sound in every song. The elements of dreaminess hold a psychedelic element comparative to 70s rock while staying completely modern and understandable in todays rock music world. In Holding On, a less-improvised track, the band proves they can hold a unique individuality while still creating a track coherent enough to make the rock charts.

The War on Drugs Shawn Brackbill

The track can lead listeners to believe the bands upcoming album, A Deeper Understanding, to be released August 25 via Atlantic Records, will be a swift follow-up to Lost In The Dream.

The band released a single titled Thinking Of A Place just weeks before Holding On, which falls into the bands deeper, most complex side. It holds a slower tempo, encouraging in-depth internalization of emotions rather than the manifestation of something new. The two tracks, while similar in instrumental makeup, beautifully represent the multiple personalities of The War On Drugs incredible complexity. While the songs hold different audible emotions, they play well together, hyping the combinations to come on the bands unreleased collection.

cover Shawn Brackbill

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Today's Song: The War on Drugs Walk into Light with Holding On - Atwood Magazine (blog)

The War On Drugs share the video for ‘Holding On’ – DIY Magazine

The War On Drugs are back and are set to release their fourth full-length album A Deeper Understanding on 25th August.

Theyd already shared its lead single, Holding On, and now its got a new video, which stars Frankie Faison (best known from The Wire) alongside Adam Granduciel, and directed by Brett Haley. Adding to that star line-up is Krysten Ritter (aka Jessica Jones), who provided the concept.

Its a heart-warming clip where Frankie plays a man who returns to his town after a long absence. There, hes greeted warmly by his neighbours, who are glad to see him out and about.

In November, The War On Drugs are set to go on a tour of the UK as part of a wider run, and two shows in Glasgow and Manchester have already sold out. Tickets are on sale for their other dates though!

Watch the video for Holding On and see all of The War On Drugs upcoming UK tour dates below.

NOVEMBER

09 Glasgow, Barrowlands 10 Glasgow, Barrowlands (sold out) 12 Manchester, O2 Apollo (sold out) 13 Manchester, O2 Apollo 14 London, Alexandra Palace

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The War On Drugs share the video for 'Holding On' - DIY Magazine

Thousands killed in Philippines since Duterte’s war on drugs began – TRT World

Many small-time users and dealers have been killed in the Philippines since Duterte took office on June 30. Police say about one-third of the victims were shot by officers in self-defence during legitimate operations.

Photo by: Reuters

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte speaks during a meeting with soldiers at Camp Capinpin in Tanay, in this file photo.

Human rights groups say around 9,000 people have been killed in the Philippines since President Duterte announced his war on drugs last year.

They were killed during police drugraids or by unidentified assailants.

More recently, senior officials such as police officers and politicians believed to be involved in drug trafficking, have also been targeted.

Many areas where drug dealing was rife have now become safe.

TRT World's Asia Reporter Shamim Chowdhury reports from the country's capital, Manila.

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Thousands killed in Philippines since Duterte's war on drugs began - TRT World

War on Drugs doesn’t need a surge – Allentown Morning Call

The War on Drugs has been one of the most lopsided defeats ever.

We're talking Grenada vs. U.S. Custer vs. Sioux. Phillies vs. Everyone.

We've spent well over a trillion dollars and several decades in return for overflowing prisons, dead law enforcement officers, thriving drug dealers, urban battlegrounds controlled by gangs of thugs, grossly inadequate rehabilitation efforts and no reduction of drug use.

More and more people have figured this out. According to Gallup polling, a majority of Americans supported legalizing marijuana by 2013, and that number had reached 60 percent by last year. These attitudes have been playing themselves out in state legislatures all over the country.

Pennsylvania finally legalized medical marijuana last year, making it one of 29 states and the District of Columbia to do so. Eight states and the District of Columbia have legalized recreational use, and other states have decriminalized the possession of small amounts.

I was a passionate advocate for Pennsylvania's medical marijuana law, and I thought it was important not to muddy the waters by injecting recreational use into that discussion. But I've been clear about where I stand on that subject. As I wrote years ago, decriminalizing marijuana is a good start, but I wouldn't stop there.

If we legalized, regulated and taxed marijuana and other drugs, we not only would have a hefty injection of new funding for desperately needed treatment and educational programs from those tax revenues, but we'd also reap a windfall from savings in prison and law enforcement spending. Gangs and other criminals that depend so heavily on drug-dealing would find themselves out of business or operating at a severe competitive disadvantage.

Noting the monumental task facing state budget negotiators this year in the face of a growing deficit, Auditor General Eugene DePasquale said at a Capitol press conference, "If I told you that the budget negotiators from the Legislature and the governor's office will have $200 million of found money that does not harm one other state program or one other state tax, would they throw that money out the window or find a way to utilize it?"

He said, "The one area ... that will bring in revenue and actually cut costs at the exact same time would be the regulation and taxation of marijuana."

Former Allegheny County prosecutor, now criminal defense attorney Patrick Nightingale of the nonprofit Law Enforcement Action Partnership, an organization of criminal justice professionals who advocate for solutions across a broad range of drug policy and criminal justice issues, argued that DePasquale is underestimating the windfall when you consider the savings in incarceration and law enforcement costs.

He concluded, "It's a win win win for Pennsylvania if we can get out of our conservative reefer madness mentality."

LEAP, founded in 2002 as Law Enforcement Against Prohibition by five police officers dedicated to educating the public about the harms of drug prohibition, became Law Enforcement Action Partnership in January to broaden its areas of advocacy.

Even if recreational marijuana legalization is a bridge too far for some of you, I suspect the vast majority of readers would agree that we at least should decriminalize possession of marijuana, eliminate mandatory minimum sentences and clear our prisons of a lot of nonviolent offenders.

Two bills have been introduced in the state Legislature that would reduce a conviction for possession of small amounts of marijuana from a misdemeanor to a summary offense, punishable by a relatively low fine instead of potential jail time.

Unfortunately, as with many other areas of progress in our society, this growing realization that drug policies of the past aren't working hit a big, not-so-beautiful wall with the election of Donald Trump and his appointment of troglodytic Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

Far from approving the trend toward scaling back the War on Drugs, Sessions wants a troop surge that would include prosecuting more drug cases, seeking more mandatory minimum sentences and directly confronting what he considers a deadly trend toward legalization of the evil weed.

Sessions said at a Senate hearing last year that our elected leaders should make it clear they take marijuana prevention efforts seriously, by "the creating of knowledge that this drug is dangerous, you cannot play with it, it is not funny, it's not something to laugh about ... and trying to send that message with clarity that good people don't smoke marijuana."

Nightingale told me, "It's as if we woke up in 1983 with Jeff Sessions. 'Good people don't use marijuana.' 'It's a gateway drug.' 'I don't believe it has medical value.'"

Nightingale, who also is executive director of the Pittsburgh branch of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, said, "We can look at three, four years' worth of data from Colorado to understand that loosening marijuana laws is not resulting in an increase of criminality, it's not resulting in an increase in hard drug use. In fact, it's the opposite."

He was particularly critical of a memo Sessions sent out last month to federal prosecutors that reversed the Obama administration approach to low-level drug crime. Sessions wants prosecutors to charge violators with the most serious offenses they can prove and seek the most substantial sentences.

Former Attorney General Eric Holder responded at the time, "The policy announced today is not tough on crime. It is dumb on crime. It is an ideologically motivated, cookie-cutter approach that has only been proven to generate unfairly long sentences that are often applied indiscriminately and do little to achieve long-term public safety."

Nightingale said Sessions thinks locking more people up for longer stretches will help solve our drug problems. "We absolutely know from 45 years of failed drug policy," he said, "that is not going to work."

This is no time for a troop surge. It's time for a carefully negotiated peace.

bill.white@mcall.com 610-820-6105

Bill White's commentary appears Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sundays

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War on Drugs doesn't need a surge - Allentown Morning Call

[Other view] ‘War on drugs’ is costing thousands of lives – The Korea Herald

While American foreign policy has for years fixated on the conflict in Syria and the Middle East, just across the border in Mexico and throughout Central America tens of thousands of people lost their lives last year because of the conflict between drug cartels competing to deliver illicit drugs into the United States.

According to a recent report from the International Institute for Strategic Studies, while approximately 50,000 lives were lost in Syria last year, approximately 39,000 were killed in Mexico, Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador, much of which is attributable to drug-war violence.

Mexicos homicide total of 23,000 for 2016 is second only to Syrias, and is only the latest development in a conflict that stretches back to 2006, when President Felipe Calderon deployed the military to combat drug cartels.

Although the exact number of people killed because of the drug war in Mexico is unlikely to ever be known, a recent report from the Congressional Research Service cited estimates from 80,000 to more than 100,000 in that country alone.

The cause of this violence is obvious, and it is a direct, predictable consequence of our failed policy of drug prohibition. In the near-half century since President Richard Nixon declared a war on drugs, hundreds of thousands of Latin Americans have been killed in conflicts fueled by a lucrative illicit drug trade made possible by our prohibition of drugs.

This is an insight a certain New York developer possessed 27 years ago. Were losing badly the war on drugs, Donald Trump said in 1990. You have to legalize drugs to win that war. You have to take the profit away from these drug czars.

While Trump may have since lost this insight, the fact remains that the war on drugs does more harm than drugs themselves.

Last year, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos used his Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech to call for a rethink of the drug war, which contributed to decades of conflict in Colombia that killed hundreds of thousands.

Rather than squander more lives and resources fighting a War on Drugs that cannot be won -- including in our inner cities -- the United States must recognize the futility and harm of its drug policies.

(Orange County Register)

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[Other view] 'War on drugs' is costing thousands of lives - The Korea Herald

Editorial: ‘War on drugs’ costing too many lives – Ventura County Star

Ventura 3:58 p.m. PT June 12, 2017

In this Jan. 12, 2014 file photo, men belonging to the Self-Defense Council of Michoacan, ride on a sandbag-filled truck while trying to flush out alleged members of The Caballeros Templarios drug cartel from the town of Nueva Italia, Mexico.(Photo: Eduardo Verdugo/Associated Press)

The following editorial appeared in The Orange County Register:

While American foreign policy has for years fixated on conflict in the Middle East, just across the border in Mexico and throughout Central America tens of thousands of people lost their lives last year because of drug cartels competing to deliver illicit drugs into the United States.

According to an International Institute for Strategic Studies new report, 50,000 lives were lost in Syria last year, while 39,000 were killed in Mexico, Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador, much of which is attributable to drug-war violence.

Although the exact number of people killed because of the drug war in Mexico is unlikely to ever be known, a recent report from the Congressional Research Service cited estimates of 80,000 to more than 100,000 in that country alone.

The violence is a predictable consequence of our failed policy of drug prohibition. In the near-half century since President Nixon declared a war on drugs, hundreds of thousands of Latin Americans have been killed in conflicts fueled by a lucrative illicit drug trade made possible by our prohibition of drugs.

Were losing badly the war on drugs, Donald Trump said in 1990. You have to legalize drugs to win that war.While Trump may have since lost this insight, the war on drugs is still doing more harm than the drugs themselves.

Rather than squander more lives and resources fighting a war that cannot be won, the United States must recognize the futility and harm of its drug policies.

Read or Share this story: http://www.vcstar.com/story/opinion/editorials/2017/06/12/editorial-war-drugs-costing-too-many-lives/391089001/

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Editorial: 'War on drugs' costing too many lives - Ventura County Star

EXCLUSIVE: This ‘The House on Coco Road’ Clip Explores How the … – ColorLines magazine

A new exclusive clip from directorDamani Baker's "The House on Coco Road" features his activist mother Fannie Haughton's explanation for how the sudden influx of narcotics duringthe Ronald Reagan-era War on Drugshurt their Oakland hometown.

"All of a sudden, the drugs came in so heavy. It was scary, and it destroyed the entire city of Oakland. I mean, there's a discussion now on where that came from," Haughton tells Baker in the segment above, following a clip of Reagan taking the oath of office. "Entire Black communities were destroyed," she continues over archival footage of East Oakland, the Black communitywhere she worked as a racial justice activist alongside Angela and Fania Davis.

"With all of my efforts to put you in a good school andtry to balance it, we could sit on that hill in East Oakland and hear gunfire all down the hill, all night," she says. "It was very disappointing to see all of the work that we'd done be overrun by drugs. It was not a happy time in the Black community, anywhere in the states. It was not an environment to raise children."

Baker says in an emailed statement that the clip sets up why his mother moved the family to Grenada, which was run by the Black-led,anti-colonial and leftist New Jewel Movement at the time:

Ronald Regan came into my consciousness as a young child because his actions affected the lives of people around us.

This is the first moment in the film where you hear my mother say that the conditions and the leadership had become so bad in the U.S., so antithetical to everything she believed and worked for, that she knew there must be a better way, a better place to live and raise her children.

Many people in the U.S., myself included, are asking themselves similar questions today. My mother's story isn't just about relocation, it's about imagination and, as Fania Davis says, "a migration that is beyond the physical."

The Davis sisters also appear in the documentary, which chronicles Baker's emigration to Grenada and how the family survived the Reagan-ordered 1983 invasion of the country.

Distributed viaAva DuVernay'sArray,"The House on Coco Road" streams on Netflix starting June 30. Visit the film's websitefor a list of screenings throughout June.

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EXCLUSIVE: This 'The House on Coco Road' Clip Explores How the ... - ColorLines magazine

‘War on drugs’ is costing thousands of lives – Manhattan Mercury (subscription)

While American foreign policy has for years fixated on the conflict in Syria and the Middle East, just across the border in Mexico and throughout Central America tens of thousands of people lost their lives last year because of the conflict between drug cartels competing to deliver illicit drugs into the United States.

According to a recent report from the International Institute for Strategic Studies, whereas approximately 50,000 lives were lost in Syria last year, approximately 39,000 were killed in Mexico, Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador, much of which is attributable to drug-war violence.

Mexicos homicide total of 23,000 for 2016 is second only to Syrias, and is only the latest development in a conflict that stretches back to 2006, when President Felipe Calderon deployed the military to combat drug cartels.

Although the exact number of people killed because of the drug war in Mexico is unlikely to ever be known, a recent report from the Congressional Research Service cited estimates from 80,000 to more than 100,000 in that country alone.

The cause of this violence is obvious, and it is a direct, predictable consequence of our failed policy of drug prohibition. In the near-half century since President Richard Nixon declared a war on drugs, hundreds of thousands of Latin Americans have been killed in conflicts fueled by a lucrative illicit drug trade made possible by our prohibition of drugs.

This is an insight a certain New York developer possessed 27 years ago. Were losing badly the war on drugs, Donald Trump said in 1990. You have to legalize drugs to win that war. You have to take the profit away from these drug czars.

While Trump may have since lost this insight, the fact remains that the war on drugs does more harm than drugs themselves.

Rather than squander more lives and resources fighting a War on Drugs that cannot be won including in our inner cities the United States must recognize the futility and harm of its drug policies.

Originally posted here:

'War on drugs' is costing thousands of lives - Manhattan Mercury (subscription)

Duterte, Focused on Drug Users in Philippines, Ignored Rise of ISIS – New York Times


New York Times
Duterte, Focused on Drug Users in Philippines, Ignored Rise of ISIS
New York Times
The government has largely been in denial about the growth of ISIS and affiliated groups, said Zachary M. Abuza, a professor at the National War College in Washington who specializes in Southeast Asian security issues. Duterte has been preoccupied ...
Philippines: Duterte focused on drugs, ignored rise of IS analystAsian Correspondent
The warning from Marawi for regional securityThe Straits Times
US Special Forces Help Philippines Fight Islamic MilitantsBloomberg
Rappler -BusinessWorld Online Edition
all 482 news articles »

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Duterte, Focused on Drug Users in Philippines, Ignored Rise of ISIS - New York Times

The Uncomfortable Link Between the War on Drugs and Violent Crime – Observer

On May 31, Ross Ulbricht lost his appeal with the Second Circuit appellate court. He will serve out the remainder of his life sentence, a sentence passed down in part due to allegations that he commissioned multiple murders-for-hire. Whether or not Ulbricht ordered these hits, his case illustrates how, by criminalizing drugs, the United States government has created an institution that incentives violence.

Ulbricht did not begin with violent intentions. He was an Eagle Scout who founded The Silk Road as a beacon of freedom. He agonized over the idea of a hit: As Wired reports, He had talked to Inigo [an employee] about how he just wishes the best for people, and loves them in the libertarian spiriteven Green [Ulbrichts first alleged target], in flagrante delicto. But for Ulbricht and others involved in the drug industry, violence was in his self interest.

Opponents of drug prohibition argue that the drug industry is by nature violent. However, buying and selling drugs isnt inherently more violent than is buying and selling alcohol. Rather, its black markets that create incentives for violence.

Black markets naturally attract criminals, in part because its difficult for convicted felons to find a career aboveboard. The black market for drugs offers lucrative opportunities that are especially attractive to those who have already committed violent crimes and are thus unlikely to find legal work.

Black markets also attract violent individuals because the crimes associated with selling drugs are proportionately less costly for those who already have a rap sheet. Legitimate businessmen are unlikely to sell drugs, because if they are caught they could face decades in prison. But for hardened criminals, the primary danger is in being caught, not in one more charge being added to an existing long list.

Additionally, black markets incentivize criminals to protect their secrecy. For many drug sellers, the most effective way to do so is to silence potential leaks. This was the context for Ulbrichts first alleged hit: He feared that if his victim (an employee of The Silk Road) werent silenced, the employee might report Ulbrichts crimes to the FBI. The difference between serving 10 years for drug trafficking and serving life for murder was a relatively small one compared to the difference between going to prison or remaining free.

Finally, black markets require violent dispute resolution. As Attorney General Jeff Sessions correctly argues, You cant sue somebody for drug debt; the only way to get your money is through strong-arm tactics, and violence tends to follow that. Faced with employees he suspected were cheating him, Ulbricht resorted to a seemingly violent resolution.

Ulbricht wasnt attracted to illicit sales by his background, but once in the industry, his incentives pointed towards violence.

Violence is inherent in black markets, not theoretical: History makes a strong case that prohibition encourages aggression. When the 18th Amendment was passed, alcohol transitioned from a legitimate business to a funding source for organized crime. Violent crime increased dramatically as sellers went to extreme lengths to protect themselves and their stake. The 18th Amendment was passed in 1919, and homicides rose steadily from 1920 to 1933. Writing in American Law and Economics Review, Harvard Professor of Economics Jeffrey Miron argues that drug and alcohol prohibition have substantially raised the homicide rate in the U.S. over much of the past 100 years.

By contrast, when goods are legalized, crime declines. Legitimate businessmen replace Mafia gangsters, and entrepreneurs lose their incentive to kill in order to protect themselves. After the 21st Amendment ended Prohibition in 1933, homicides diminished for 11 years straight. Part of this was due to improving economic conditions, but part was likely also due to the fact that legal markets discourage violence.

The same trend can be seen with regards to medical marijuana. Writing in the Journal of Drug Issues, researchers analyzed violent and property crime in 11 Western states and found, Significant drops in rates of violent crime associated with state MMLs [medical marijuana laws]. When drugs are legalized, violent crime declines.

Prohibition advocates argue that legalizing drugs might increase violent crime, as criminals move from the drug market into other illicit enterprises. This movement is plausible, but the net effect is still likely to be less crime. Prohibited substances fund criminal enterprises, and strangling this funding also strangles the organizations other activities.

Ulbricht began The Silk Road as a beacon of freedom and non-violence, but if reports about his activities are true, then he eventually embodied the violence of prohibition. Prohibition creates an incentive structure that encourages aggression. Black markets attract violent individuals, and move even decent people to brutality. If we want a safer and more peaceful world, we should learn a lesson from Ross Ulbricht and end the war on drugs.

Julian Adorney is a Young Voices Advocate and a FEE 2016 Thorpe Fellow. He currently works at Colorado SEO Pros. Hes written for a number of outlets, including National Review, the Federalist, the Hill, FEE, and Lawrence Reeds latest anthology Excuse Me, Professor.

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The Uncomfortable Link Between the War on Drugs and Violent Crime - Observer

War on drugs: Raw sewage testing shows drop in meth use across WA – Perth Now

NEW figures show methamphetamine use has plunged across WA, providing the first real evidence that the hundreds of millions of dollars being spent on combating the drug is paying off.

Tests in April that measured the concentration of the meth in raw sewage showed that consumption in Perth had almost halved since September when usage was at its peak.

It was also the best result since testing for meth in wastewater began two years ago, showing consumption had fallen about 25 per cent on the average recorded in the 2015-16 financial year when West Australians consumed about 2.1 tonnes of the drug.

Consumption is now estimated to have fallen by more than half a tonne.

The trend downwards in the past three test periods is obviously pleasing, but the sobering reality is WA still has a projected annual meth habit of 1.54 tonnes, with an estimated street value of just over $1.5 billion, State Crime Acting Assistant Commissioner Pryce Scanlan said.

No one is immune to this drug and it is still having a significant impact on the community.

While the sudden fall has been cautiously welcomed, it comes after a huge investment by the State and Federal governments to help tackle the supply and demand of the drug.

Mr Scanlan said WA Police had made unprecedented efforts to target meth dealers in the past two years, setting up dedicated meth teams within the organised crime squad which had helped seize almost 900kg of the drug.

From a policing perspective we have had considerable success, in tandem with our Federal partners, in interrupting supply, and in 2015-16 and 2016-17 we have so far intercepted approximately 890kg of meth headed for our streets, he said.

It could be that the major trafficking syndicates may not be viewing WA as such a soft target after those losses.

And the theory that WAs mining boom and the high disposable incomes it created contributed to our high rate of meth use in the past could, if true, be working in reverse with the end of the boom.

Since 2015, significant government funding had also been poured into education to warn users about the dangers of meth and money for rehabilitation facilities had also been boosted.

The downward trend in WA mirrored the results of a recent national survey that showed meth use around the country had been steadily falling.

The National Household Drug Survey, released this month, showed the number of Australians who admitted using meth had fallen from 2.1 per cent in 2013 to 1.4 per cent last year.

Although no new State-based figures were available, WA is still believed to be the biggest user of any State, running at almost twice the national average.

The survey also found that respondents now considered meth to be the most addictive drug on the illicit market and the drug most likely to cause serious harm to users, overtaking heroin.

Of the regional centres tested for meth, Bunbury had the biggest fall, which helped it shed its tag as the meth capital of WA.

That tag has now shifted to Kalgoorlie which has also recorded significant falls.

The rate of meth use per 1000 people in Bunbury in September was 50 per cent higher than in the Perth metro area. Bunbury was still higher than Perth in April, but consumption had more than halved.

Kalgoorlie mayor John Bowler said that though the meth capital title was obviously unwanted, his community would be pleased to see drug use overall had come down.

While it is a title we obviously do not want ... the use is coming down pretty clearly, so we take that as a positive, he said.

Police Minister Michelle Roberts said that while the local results were encouraging, tackling the meth scourge would remain a top priority for her party.

The McGowan Government wont be taking its foot off the pedal when it comes to tackling the devastation meth causes in our community, she said.

We have laws before Parliament which give life jail sentences for meth traffickers and were boosting police efforts to seize more of the drug before it hits our streets, by introducing a meth border force.

Shadow police minster Peter Katsambanis also welcomed the results which he said were a credit to the former Barnett governments commitment to tackling the meth problem.

I call on the Government to continue these initiatives to make sure our community continues to see improvements in relation to this insidious drug, he said.

Police for the first time in April also tested for the presence of meth at 11 remote Aboriginal communities, finding it was present in all, but only in low levels.

Continued here:

War on drugs: Raw sewage testing shows drop in meth use across WA - Perth Now

‘War on drugs’ is costing thousands of lives Press Enterprise – Press-Enterprise

While American foreign policy has for years fixated on the conflict in Syria and the Middle East, just across the border in Mexico and throughout Central America tens of thousands of people lost their lives last year because of the conflict between drug cartels competing to deliver illicit drugs into the United States.

According to a recent report from the International Institute for Strategic Studies, whereas approximately 50,000 lives were lost in Syria last year, approximately 39,000 were killed in Mexico, Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador, much of which is attributable to drug-war violence.

Mexicos homicide total of 23,000 for 2016 is second only to Syrias, and is only the latest development in a conflict which stretches back to 2006, when President Felipe Calderon deployed the military to combat drug cartels.

Although the exact number of people killed because of the drug war in Mexico is unlikely to ever be known, a recent report from the Congressional Research Service cited estimates from 80,000 to more than 100,000 in that country alone.

The cause of this violence is obvious, and it is a direct, predictable consequence of our failed policy of drug prohibition. In the near-half century since President Richard Nixon declared a war on drugs, hundreds of thousands of Latin Americans have been killed in conflicts fueled by a lucrative illicit drug trade made possible by our prohibition of drugs.

This is an insight a certain New York developer possessed 27 years ago. Were losing badly the war on drugs, Donald Trump said in 1990. You have to legalize drugs to win that war. You have to take the profit away from these drug czars.

While Trump may have since lost this insight, the fact remains that the war on drugs does more harm than drugs themselves.

Last year, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos used his Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech to call for a rethink of the drug war, which contributed to decades of conflict in Colombia that killed hundreds of thousands.

Rather than squander more lives and resources fighting a War on Drugs that cannot be won including in our inner cities the United States must recognize the futility and harm of its drug policies.

Excerpt from:

'War on drugs' is costing thousands of lives Press Enterprise - Press-Enterprise

New war on drugs – Fort Wayne Journal Gazette

More than 59,000 Americans died of drug overdoses in 2016, according to a recent analysis by the New York Times.

Drug overdoses are now the leading cause of death among Americans under 50, the Times reported Monday. Cautioning that the data are preliminary, the Times estimated drug deaths rose 19percent over the 52,404 recorded in 2015. And all evidence suggests the problem has continued to worsen in 2017.

It's worsening here, as well.

This year, from Jan. 1 to the end of May, there were 468 drug overdoses in Allen County, Fort Wayne Police Capt. Kevin Hunter said Thursday. During the same period in 2016, there were267 drug overdoses.

As of this week, overdoses have led to 35 confirmed deaths; toxicology results are awaited in 15 other fatalities. It's likely, Hunter said, that those will also be confirmed as drug deaths.

In all of 2016, there were 68 overdoses.

Nationally and locally, the increases in deaths are being driven by addictions to opioid pills and heroin. Hunter, who leads the Fort Wayne department's drug-fighting efforts, said his officers also are seeing an increase in overdoses caused by the synthetic cannabinoids known as spice, though to his knowledge none of the spice victims has died.

Authorities have tried manynew strategies locally and statewide, tightening access to opioid medicines, improvingtraining formedical workers, making naloxone the overdose antidote more widely available and, recently in Fort Wayne, trying to follow the drugs that caused overdoses back to their sources. But as the problem shows no signs of abating, more attention has shifted to the need for more resources to treat addicts. Even with more federal and state funds being allocated, there's a sense that treatment facilities can't keep up.

In Ohio, where the Times estimated overdose deaths there increased by 25percent last year,officials adopted a strategy Indiana should consider. The state sued the pharmaceutical industry, contending that misleading marketing campaigns fooled patients and doctors into believing opioids were safe.

Modeled on legal actions against the tobacco industry in the 1990s, the opioid lawsuits are viewed as a way to raise funds to fight health problems it can be argued the companies involved helped create.

West Virginia won a similar lawsuit that will provide the state tens of millions of dollars, the Times reported, and lawsuits also have been filed by Mississippi, the city of Chicago and by counties in several states.

We are aware of the filings in Ohio and will be following this lawsuit closely, Attorney General Curtis Hill said in a statement emailed to The Journal Gazette Thursday. We are also aware of actions and litigation occurring in other states in this regard. My office has been and will continue to gather information and monitor these various actions as we consider the best course of action for the state of Indiana.

Thescope of the drug problem demands that dramatic solutions be considered.

In addition to fighting opioids and spice, local police are seeing an increase in crystal meth from Mexico which offsets the good news that the numberof homegrown meth labs here has dropped dramatically. And, Hunter said, his department is bracing to deal with more cocaine, which is reportedly making a comeback in other communities.

I don't expect that things will get any better soon, Hunter said.

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New war on drugs - Fort Wayne Journal Gazette

Still Don’t Think The War On Drugs Is Racist? Watch This Video – Civilized

If you had any doubt that the War on Drugs is racist, check out this story of two average Americans who faced the same legal problem that had very different impacts on their lives because of their racial and economic background.

In the one corner, you have Ross - a young white guyfrom Houston who got pulled over one day in his hometown. After searching his car, the cop found a sock full of a powdery substance that the arresting officer tested using a drug field kit. Ross sat in the back of the officer's car, chatting with a friend as he waited for the bad news:he was charged with possessing 252 grams of meth based on the results of the field test.

In the other corner, you have Barry, a black guy who was also pulled over in Houston one day. His vehicle was also searched, and a powdery substance found inside was also put througha field test. But unlike Ross, Barry had to wait for the result while lying on the ground with an officer's knee on his neck because they found a gun magazine in his car. No, not a 'magazine' as in a clip of bullets. Officers found a copy of Guns & Ammomagazine in his car. Barry was then taken into custody when the sample tested positive as less than a gram of cocaine.

So both men were charged for drug crimes. But Ross got to walk out shortly afterward because his dad secured a bail bond and hired a lawyer that had the case overturned after a more accurate test revealed that the sock was actually full of kitty litter. Turns out, Ross' dad put the litter-filled sock in his car after reading that it was a good makeshift de-humidifer/de-odorizer.

Barry wasn't so lucky. He couldn't afford a lawyer, so he got stuck with a court-appointed attorney who recommended taking a plea bargain instead of waiting for the results of the drug test to come through. And Barry had good reason to take the lesser sentence since the prosecutor wanted 20 years for the crime. And the judge warned him, "If you all want to play with me, by the time you get out of jail, they'll have flying cars."

So Barry ended up doing 180 days in prison. When he got out, his criminal record kept him from getting public assistance or food stamps. Then a year after his release, a lab report came out verifying that the roadside test was wrong. But he had to wait another 5 years to be exonerated of the charge.

But the worst part is that we're going to be seeing a lot more cases like Barry's because Attorney General Jeff Sessions has made it tougher to double-check the results of those flawed field tests -- which can give false positives for substances like chocolate, soap, cheese, anything with sugar and a lot of other common household items. Samantha Bee explains why in this video.

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Still Don't Think The War On Drugs Is Racist? Watch This Video - Civilized

Congress’s new approach to the opioid epidemic: the old war on … – Vox

As the US faces its deadliest drug epidemic, the Senate is working on a new approach to deal with the crisis: the old war on drugs.

According to a new report by Carrie Johnson for NPR, a bipartisan pair of senators Sens. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) and Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) is working on a bill that would create harsher prison sentences for selling synthetic opioids like fentanyl analogs, which have become more common as people have moved from painkillers to other opioids in the course of the crisis.

Johnson reports:

A draft of the legislation reviewed by NPR suggests the plan would give the attorney general a lot more power to ban all kinds of synthetic drugs, since criminals often change the recipe to evade law enforcement. It would impose a 10-year maximum sentence on people caught selling them as a first offense. That would double if they do it again.

Lawmakers argue that the bill is necessary to punish traffickers for drugs that arent already penalized, since the drugs theyre selling are so new that theyre not included in the schedule of controlled substances. This would, then, bring the new drugs in line with other illicit opioids.

But as Michael Collins of the Drug Policy Alliance, which advocates for lighter penalties for drug offenders, told NPR, the concern is that this new bill will be used to lock up even more low-level drug offenders for longer even those who dont know these new drugs are present in their product.

A key problem in the opioid crisis is that these fentanyl analogs are often added to heroin outside the country. (In some places, its estimated that the majority of heroin is now cut with a fentanyl analog.) The dealer, sometimes unaware that the heroin has been cut with a fentanyl analog, will then sell the goods as if theyre just heroin. Then the buyer will use the drugs and overdose, because the fentanyl analogs make the heroin much more potent than even a hardened heroin user can handle.

Under Grassley and Feinsteins bill, the Department of Justice would be able to punish the dealer for selling that contaminated heroin.

But the dealer might not have any idea that his heroin was cut to begin with, effectively punishing him for something he knew nothing about. These penalties would also be added on top of traditional heroin penalties (for which the dealer would likely have been punished anyway), in effect making prison sentences even longer. And this would punish low-level dealers, not the higher-ups that drive the drug trade adding to the US prison population of low-level drug offenders.

In short, more people would be sent to prison for longer due to low-level drug offenses.

This is a clear example of lawmakers repeating past problematic practices. Although state prison systems (where most prisoners in the US are held) arent made up of very many drug offenders, about half of the federal prison system holds people for drugs. Over the past few years, lawmakers said they were trying to move away from that hence the work surrounding a reform bill that would have effectively cut mandatory minimum prison sentences for drug offenses. Yet now lawmakers want to create even more penalties that could be used to lock up more drug offenders.

The evidence suggests this wont work. By dedicating more resources to more incarceration, lawmakers risk shifting necessary funds from the actual solutions to an ineffective strategy.

A 2014 study from Peter Reuter at the University of Maryland and Harold Pollack at the University of Chicago found theres no good evidence that tougher punishments or harsher supply-elimination efforts do a better job of driving down access to drugs and substance abuse than lighter penalties. So increasing the severity of the punishment doesnt do much, if anything, to slow the flow of drugs.

In fact, the research suggests that harsher punishments in general dont do much to prevent crime. As the National Institute of Justice concluded in 2016, Research shows clearly that the chance of being caught is a vastly more effective deterrent than even draconian punishment. Research has found evidence that prison can exacerbate, not reduce, recidivism. Prisons themselves may be schools for learning to commit crimes.

In other words, more certainty of punishment can deter crime, while more severity through longer prison sentences can actually make crime worse.

This is something that even some former supporters of harsh punishments for drugs now acknowledge. In congressional testimony, Kevin Ring, a former congressional aide who helped enact mandatory minimums and now speaks out against them through the advocacy group Families Against Mandatory Minimums, said, Most of these guys made stupid mistakes without any idea of what the punishment was they just didnt think they were going to get caught. So you can make the severity off the charts you can do a life sentence for jaywalking its not going to stop it.

Or as former federal drug czar Michael Botticelli often said, We cant arrest and incarcerate addiction out of people.

Still, the fact is that America has an opioid problem. In 2015, there were more than 52,000 drug overdose deaths, and nearly two-thirds of those were linked to opioids like Percocet, Vicodin, heroin, and fentanyl. The total number of drug overdose deaths was far greater than the more than 38,000 who died in car crashes, the more than 36,000 who died due to gun violence, and the more than 43,000 who died due to HIV/AIDS during that epidemics peak in 1995.

That the crisis got so bad speaks to the failure of decades of policy: Years of tough on crime approaches couldnt prevent the worst drug crisis in history.

So what can we do about it?

Some policymakers have increasingly focused on the public health side. Theres good reason for that: In the most comprehensive analysis of addiction in America, the surgeon general in 2016 found that the US massively underfunds addiction care. It concluded, for example, that just 10 percent of Americans with a drug use disorder get specialty treatment, in large part due to a shortage in treatment options.

So federal and state officials have pushed for more treatment funding, including medication-assisted treatment like methadone and buprenorphine. In 2016, Congress approved an extra $1 billion in funding over two years for drug treatment in response to the opioid crisis.

But public health advocates argue that more needs to be done to make treatment accessible. Andrew Kolodny, co-director of opioid policy research at the Heller School for Social Policy and Management at Brandeis University, estimates that the US needs to spend potentially tens of billions of dollars more a year to deal with a crisis so grave. Theres an empirical base for that: A 2016 study found that opioid painkiller addiction cost the economy $78.5 billion in 2013, more than a third of which was a result of higher health care and drug treatment costs.

We need a massive increase in funding for addiction treatment, he argued. Were not going to get anywhere in terms of reducing overdose deaths until you have very low threshold access to buprenorphine treatment or methadone in some cases referring to two medications used for treating opioid addiction.

Polls show that most Americans prefer treating drugs as a public health issue, not a criminal one. And many experts, including the International Narcotics Control Board, have asked for a greater focus on public health policies to curtail demand for drugs.

Even some police departments are warming to this approach. For example, in Gloucester, Massachusetts, the police chief in 2015 announced that his officers will no longer charge heroin users with a crime, even if they have drugs, and instead offer to put them in rehabilitative treatment. Other cities, like Cincinnati, have adopted similar approaches.

But some governments and agencies continue perpetuating tough on crime thinking on drugs from Indiana upping prison sentences for drugs to an Ohio town charging heroin users with inducing panic to the bill the Senate is now working on. But the evidence suggests that will all be ineffective, and it could shift resources from where help is really needed.

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Congress's new approach to the opioid epidemic: the old war on ... - Vox

Samantha Bee Is Here to Remind Jeff Sessions Why We Don’t Need Another War on Drugs – Slate Magazine (blog)

Jeff Sessions wants to bring back the War on Drugs, but Samantha Bee is not having it. The Full Frontal host spend two-thirds of Wednesdays show attacking attorney general Jeff Sessions opposition to criminal justice reform, one of the few areas that the left and right can agree on, and his Justice Department's reboot of the War on Drugs. (Like most reboots, its bad.) Bee took a deep dive to explain why the first War on Drugs was such a disaster and set about proving that Jeff Sessions one-handcuff-fits-all policy is not the answer to the opioid epidemic.

To further drive the point home, Full Frontal thenalso exposed just how unreliable drug field test kits are, dramatizing two real-world Texas cases in which police pulled over vehicles and then misidentified banal substances like cat litter as illegal substances. Former Houston prosecutor Inger Chandler explains that those tests are widely accepted as evidence in court, despite giving false positives on everything from donut glaze to air. But as Full Frontals segment demonstrates, those false positives can force defendants into taking plea bargains despite a lack of actual evidenceand black defendants are disproportionately affected.

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Samantha Bee Is Here to Remind Jeff Sessions Why We Don't Need Another War on Drugs - Slate Magazine (blog)

War on Drugs is costing thousands of lives – San Bernardino County Sun

While American foreign policy has for years fixated on the conflict in Syria and the Middle East, just across the border in Mexico and throughout Central America tens of thousands of people lost their lives last year because of the conflict between drug cartels competing to deliver illicit drugs into the United States.

According to a recent report from the International Institute for Strategic Studies, whereas approximately 50,000 lives were lost in Syria last year, approximately 39,000 were killed in Mexico, Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador, much of which is attributable to drug-war violence.

Mexicos homicide total of 23,000 for 2016 is second only to Syrias, and is only the latest development in a conflict which stretches back to 2006, when President Felipe Calderon deployed the military to combat drug cartels.

Although the exact number of people killed because of the drug war in Mexico is unlikely to ever be known, a recent report from the Congressional Research Service cited estimates from 80,000 to more than 100,000 in that country alone.

The cause of this violence is obvious, and it is a direct, predictable consequence of our failed policy of drug prohibition. In the near-half century since President Richard Nixon declared a war on drugs, hundreds of thousands of Latin Americans have been killed in conflicts fueled by a lucrative illicit drug trade made possible by our prohibition of drugs.

This is an insight a certain New York developer possessed 27 years ago. Were losing badly the war on drugs, Donald Trump said in 1990. You have to legalize drugs to win that war. You have to take the profit away from these drug czars.

While Trump may have since lost this insight, the fact remains that the war on drugs does more harm than drugs themselves.

Last year, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos used his Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech to call for a rethink of the drug war, which contributed to decades of conflict in Colombia that killed hundreds of thousands.

Rather than squander more lives and resources fighting a War on Drugs that cannot be won including in our inner cities the United States must recognize the futility and harm of its drug policies.

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War on Drugs is costing thousands of lives - San Bernardino County Sun