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Monthly Archives: January 2020
Republicans grew our economy – and in the process, turned Arizona purple – AZCentral
Posted: January 26, 2020 at 11:41 pm
Nathan Sproul, opinion contributor Published 6:00 a.m. MT Jan. 26, 2020 | Updated 3:09 p.m. MT Jan. 26, 2020
Opinion: Arizona is becoming increasingly Democratic because it successfully wooed companies - and their workers - from more liberal states.
Downtown Gilbert isn't the sleepy place it used to be. Most cities have transformed as more people have moved to Arizona.(Photo: Michael Schennum/The Republic)
During the 2000 election, when I was the executive director of the Arizona Republican Party, the Bush presidential campaign launched a massive effort to woo the Hispanic vote throughout the Southwest.
They were convinced that the Southwest could be a problem for Bush unless he got Hispanic voters. He garnered 35% of the national Hispanic vote in 2000 and in 2004,garnered 44%. Their approach worked.
Arizona has been a reliablyRepublican state for decades. The Legislature movedfrom Democratic to Republican controlin 1966 and has flipped back only a handful of times since. A handful of Democrats have won statewide office over the past 50 years, but theyve been the exception, not the rule.
Most pundits have assumed that if Arizona were to revert to its Democratic roots of the '40s and '50s, it would be from the growing Hispanic vote tipping the scale. Within this paradigm of thought, its clear to see why Bush and many other Republican campaigns have focused their efforts on promoting policies that were viewed favorably by Hispanic voters.
Fast forward to 2018. Many political pundits were surprised to see how well Democrat candidates faired up and down the ballot in Arizona. Democrats won a U.S. Senate seat andstatewide offices like secretary of state. Theymaintained a 5-4 congressional majority and nearly won the majority of seats in both chambers of the Legislature.
In reality, this shouldnt have been a surprise. The signs have been coming into focus a few years now.
Even though 2018 was the midterm election, which historically goes against the party in the White House, I dont think the Republican president was the only reason for the 2018 Democratic victories.
It wasnt just a political correction or swing.I think its the likely trend.
In fact, we have been seeing for a couple of years now the underlying currents of Arizona going purple, and our swing-state statuswas finally realized in 2018.
The most important early warning sign for Republicans was likely the vote for the Legislature in 2016.
Take Senate District 18, for example. In 2012, Republican John McComish won by almost 6,000 votes. This is a district that, with the exception of Harry Mitchell (Tempe's iconic mayor), elected Republicans and not by a small amount.
After voting for McComish by historically normal numbers, it then flipped in 2016 and elected a Democrat by a little more than3,000 votes. By 2018, the same Democrat, Sean Bowie, gained much more momentum and won by almost 14,000 votes.
Voting precincts throughout Maricopa County that were reliablyRepublican precincts began to buckle in 2016 and then completely collapse in 2018. Its undeniable that precincts throughout Ahwatukee, Chandler, Peoria, north Phoenix and Scottsdale started seeing a Democrat edge to them that never existed before.
The important aspect of this data is that the increase in votes for Democrats didnt just happen in historically Hispanic areas. It happened in white, Republican suburbs.
That is significant.
Ten years ago, I lived in Gilbert. To say that it was a sleepy suburb of suburbs is an understatement. Three weeks ago, I went back for a Sunday lunch with my family. Downtown Gilbert is booming. It is no longer a town of families with lots of kids. It has become a town of 30-something young adults.
Gilbert isnt the exception to the new migratory patterns for Arizona. Im pretty sure this is the new normal. From Peoria to Surprise to Scottsdale to Chandler to Casa Grande to Marana and even Prescott, white urban professionals are moving here from places like California by the tens of thousands.
Why are they moving here? Arizona has successfully matured and diversified its economy.
In Gov. DougDuceys newest video, The Arizona Way, as accompanied online with his State of the State address last week, he showcased the business-friendly environment that cuts red tape, slashes regulation and invites innovation.
The result? A state of millions of citizens with a daily influx of 300 people. Thank you, Governor Ducey. Youredoing yourjob. But it cant help but change our states demographics.
When I was a kid growing up in the '70s and well into the 2000s, Arizona relied on tourism, retirement and construction. Since then, weve courted and successfully brought major corporations to Arizona. With them comes their employees.
News flash they arent all Republicans.
Over the past decade, weve seen states like Colorado and Virginia go from being reliablyRepublican to purple to Democrat. Why? They diversified their economies and their historic Republican identity changed. This is the same trajectory Arizona faces.
Ironically, everyone assumes that because we are a southwestern state, our shift from Republican to Democrat would be because of Hispanic voters.
While I do believe that the growth among Hispanic voters is part of the shift to purple status, the increase of the Democratic vote in historically Republican areas is because of the influx of white voters from other, more liberal states. This has been the factor that has tipped the scales more than any other and will increasingly continue to favor Democratic candidates.
What can Republicans do to turn the tide? Focus on lifestyle issues that incoming voters care about and away from divisive issues that brand Arizona as fringe.
The bottom line is simply this: Arizona is changing and its changing quickly. Republicans will either recognize this objective fact and adapt, or they will be the minority party soon.
Nathan Sproul is managing director of Lincoln Strategy Group and former executive directorof the Arizona Republican Party. Twitter:@NathanSproul.
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Kobe Bryant: Reaction to his tragic death; career highlights – Waterbury Republican American
Posted: at 11:41 pm
Reaction from the basketball world and beyond on the death of retired NBA superstar Kobe Bryant in a helicopter crash on Sunday at age 41:
Kobe was not only an icon in the sports arena, he was a man of the world and touched so many lives and communities in the most positive ways. His star was continuing to rise every day and he knew no limits because of his many intellectual and creative talents and desire to give back to others his passion for the game, for his family and for others was apparent in everything he accomplished. NBA Hall of Famer Larry Bird
Jeannine & I are absolutely shocked to hear of the loss of one of my favorite people & one of the best basketball minds in the history of the game! Our hearts and prayers to Vanessa & his girls. @kobebryant you were my biggest fan, but I was yours. #RIPMAMBA NBA Hall of Famer Bill Russell via Twitter
Just devastated to hear about #KobeBryant. An extraordinary athlete, and a genuinely kind, wonderful man. Sending love, prayers & compassion to his family. To his entire @NBA family as well. actress Reese Witherspoon via Twitter
As I tweet through my tears, I am so hurt. I cannot stop crying. Kobe was instrumental to so many people. There is a hole in the basketball world and there will be for a long time. Rest in heavenly peace. the Rev. Jesse Jackson via Twitter
Today we at @WaltDisneyCo mourn the tragic loss of @kobebryanta giant in sports and a person so full of life. Terrible news and so hard to process. Robert Iger, chairman and CEO of Disney, via Twitter
A true gladiator in our life time. You will be forever in our memories, our childrens memories, and generations to come. rapper Wyclef Jean via Twitter
Im at a loss for words. @kobebryant was a long-time friend, an inspiration and we shared our first ever commercial @espn together as professionals. I love you forever. #RIPMAMBA Retired NFL player Keyshawn Johnson
Shocked by the death of @kobebryant, an exemplary athlete both on and off the basketball court. Our most heartfelt condolences to his family and loved ones. Rest in peace. FC Barcelona football club via Twitter
Kobe Bryant Rest in Peace. Unbelievable, unbelievably sad NBA Hall of Famer Isiah Thomas via Twitter
Kobe Bryant was a giant who inspired, amazed and thrilled people everywhere with his incomparable skill on the court and awed us with his intellect and humility as a father, husband, creative genius, and ambassador for the game he loved. Eric Garcetti, Los Angeles mayor, via Twitter
Kobe career highlights
Here are some of the many highlights of Kobe Bryants career. The former Los Angeles Lakers star was killed in a helicopter crash in California on Sunday morning:
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Republican senate candidates disagree about whether a border wall is the solution to illegal immigration – Chicago Daily Herald
Posted: at 11:41 pm
The five Republicans running for the chance to unseat Democratic U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin all call for stronger efforts to thwart illegal immigration -- but they disagree about whether a wall across the Mexican border is the best solution.
During a joint endorsement interview Friday at the Daily Herald offices in Arlington Heights, three of the GOP hopefuls enthusiastically supported President Donald Trump's plan to build that border wall, sections of which have been erected. Two said they prefer other options, such as airborne drones.
The candidates in the March 17 primary are: retired information technology professional Casey Chlebek of Glenview; former Lake County Sheriff Mark Curran of Libertyville; former police officer Peggy Hubbard of Belleville; Dr. Robert Marshall, a physician from Burr Ridge; and Dr. Tom Tarter, a urological oncologist from Springfield.
The winner will face Durbin, a four-tern incumbent from Springfield, in November.
Tarter said walls have reduced illegal immigration where they've been built along the border. He wants the Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Customs and Border Protection to get enough funding to complete 450 miles of wall.
"Walls work," he said. "This is why Democrats don't want them -- at least the open-border Democrats."
Tarter said the government should implement technology that will help detect the attempted importation of illegal drugs and track migrants.
Additionally, Tarter said immigration applications should use a merit-based system that awards points for work history, education, speaking English, community service and "evidence of assimilation."
Marshall said he's "100% in favor" of completing the border wall. He called for tighter immigration policies and said he opposes comprehensive immigration reform, calling it "a code word for amnesty."
Marshall said immigrants should have to meet three criteria to live in the U.S.: they should be able to support themselves; they should be able to speak English "to a minimal degree" or be willing to learn; and they "should love us and not want to blow us up."
Hubbard said she supports Trump's efforts to secure U.S. borders. Like Tarter, she said walls work -- but she also advocated using technology and putting "more boots on the ground" at the border.
Hubbard lauded the president for sending military troops to the border in 2018 as a caravan of migrants from Central America approached the U.S.
Hubbard supported shifting to a merit-based immigration system, too.
Curran was an outspoken advocate of immigration reform during the last eight years of his 12-year tenure as sheriff, which concluded in 2018.
In 2011, Curran said U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement should "quit wasting time breaking up families, because it makes America a lesser country." The following year, he backed a proposal that would allow people living here illegally to get driver's licenses so they could get to work.
On Friday, Curran said a wall across the southern border makes a statement about American sovereignty -- "but it's going to be very expensive."
Curran said drones and other high-tech security equipment could more effectively stop border incursions.
"We've seen all the videos of people going underneath the walls, and creating these tunnels," he said.
Curran also voiced concerns about radical Islamists getting into the U.S. "The wall alone is not going to keep America safe," he said.
Chlebek wants a different approach to protecting U.S. borders, too. Walls can be breached, he said, and the project is too costly.
Technology should make a border wall "irrelevant," Chlebek said.
"People are ready for it and expect it," he said.
If high-tech programs aren't implemented, however, Chlebek said he'd support completing the wall.
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Equality Should Not Be A Partisan Issue: Where Do Key Republicans Stand On It? – InsiderNJ
Posted: at 11:41 pm
The House of Representatives passed the Equality Act with 236 votes for and 173 against.Eight Republicans voted in favor of the bill and no Democrats opposed it. Equality should not bea partisan issue.
The Equality Act would amend the Civil Rights Act to prohibit discrimination on the basis of thesex, sexual orientation, or gender identity. A student of my advocacy class at Kean Universitywrote a compelling letter to the New Jersey Congressional delegation urging unanimous supportfor equality for the LGBT community, unfortunately it fell on Congressman Chris Smiths deaf ears. Michael wrote about a very close friend who was a member of the LGBTQ community who lives in the South and was outed by a coworker outed is the term used when someone reveals the sexuality or gender identity of another person without their consent. As a result, his friend was fired from his job with no warning. This occurred because Texas, where his friend lives, as well as 20 other states do not have discrimination protections for the LGBTQ community. As a result of this, he is currently unemployed and having a difficult time finding work.
In this day and age when Marriage Equality is the law of the land and assaulting someonebecause of how they identify is a hate crime, why is it that hard working Americans can still befired just because their identity doesnt conform to the norm that currently runs this country?asked Michael.
Good question. The Equality Act has been sitting dormant in the Senate Judiciary Committeesince May 20, 2019. The bill is sponsored in the Senate by 43 Democrats, 2 Independents, and1 Republican. 1 Republican! Susan Collins of Maine.
Dr King said, The Arc of Moral Justice Is Long But It Bends Towards Justice. When SenatorWeinberg and I called for a vote on same sex marriage in 2009, it only received 14 votes, oneRepublican and only 13 of 24 Democrats. It took the US Supreme Court years later, notlegislation, to make Marriage Equality the law of the land I proudly hosted New Jerseys first same sex marriage in my home in Elizabeth.
Can you imagine your son or daughter, nephew or niece, cousin or friend being fired from their job or denied renting an apartment because they are gay? Well, in 28 states they can. And only one Republican supports the Equality Act in the United States Senate and the only Republican member of the New Jersey House of Representatives delegation, Chris Smith, doesnt support it.
I dont mean this message to be partisan, although it is coming out that way, but thats just because the Republican Party is turning its back on the LGBTQ community in America. Equality belongs to all Americans. I ask the Republican leadership in New Jersey, Senator Tom Kean, Assemblyman Jon Bramnick and Republican State Chair Doug Steinhardt to publicly state their support for the Equality Act.
Equality is not a partisan issue.
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Commentary: Note To Republicans- When You Are Innocent, Witnesses And Documents Should Be Welcomed – KRWG
Posted: at 11:41 pm
Commentary:Theres a rule at trials: when one sides lawyers have improperly lost evidence, hidden evidence, or refused to show the jury evidence in their control, the judge may order jurors to assume that evidence is bad for the side controlling and withholding it. Its a life rule, too: if the warm chocolate-chip cookies are disappearing, and your kid is hiding his hands behind his back, dont you infer something?
So why shouldnt Donald Trumps unprecedented, across-the-board stonewalling of legitimate Congressional inquiry raise questions in everyones minds?
Simple: Republicans dont want us to know the facts about Donald Trumps allegedly impeachable conduct.
Not only are Republicans refusing to call material witnesses (even John Bolton, who, as an ambitious Republican with dreams of political office, cant be allthatdangerous), but theyve imposed strict new rules on reporters to hinder the free flow of information from senators to us. Normally, credentialed press have free run of most areas in the Senate; theyre now restricted to a specific area, and reporters are forbidden to walk along with a senator, continuing a conversation, even if the senator is willingly participating.
The House heard some devastating witnesses to Trumps misconduct. Most were patriotic career foreign service folks, not politicians. Plus Trumps own Gordon Sondland, scared into telling the truth.
Some important things have happened since the House investigation. Notably, thenonpartisanGeneral Accounting Office concluded, after careful investigation, that Trumps political hold-up of funds approved by Congress broke a 1974 law enacted by Congress over Richard Nixons veto. And Bolton is now available a Trump appointee who mocked the Ukraine extortion plot as that drug deal, refusing to participate.
Republicans mumble that the House did its investigation and reached its conclusions, so theres no need for further witnesses. They toss out the red herring of subpoenaing Joe and Hunter Biden, who have no firsthand knowledge about Trumps actions or motives. The truth is simple: the facts are inconvenient.
Theres a reasonable argument that Democrats are wasting Senate time. Not because these arent high crimes and misdemeanors, but because Republicans have strong political motives not to consider the evidence and convict.
Federalist Paper 65 says, The most conspicuous characters [deciding impeachment trials] will be too often the leaders or the tools of the most cunning or the most numerous faction, and . . . can hardly be expected to possess the requisite neutrality. They foresaw Mitch McConnell, but hoped that when our country needed them, politicians might put conscience above politics as McConnell fears some might.
What would a fair trial look like? Republicans would acknowledge the actual evidence, and consider its weight. Theyd hear more witnesses, because Trumps lawyers deny the facts. Most importantly, both parties would forego political speeches to discuss the real issue: when a president violates the law by holding up, for political reasons, Congressionally-mandated aid to a beleaguered ally, is that misconduct sufficiently important that we should impeach, or at least censure him?
The allegations against Trump are more serious than those made against Clinton, and perhaps even those against Nixon. You could argue about the relative seriousness of burglary vs. extortion; both Nixons burglary and Trumps effort to use Ukraine to tip domestic political scales were antidemocratic; and the Ukraine aid concerned national security.
Whitewashing Trump whites out our Constitution. It tells future presidents they need not follow the law or provide Congress information. Is that what we want?
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Readers respond: Republicans must do the right thing – oregonlive.com
Posted: at 11:41 pm
I just watched Sen. Mitch McConnells opening remarks for the impeachment trial of the president. He stated, Our founders trusted the Senate to rise above short-term passions and factionalism. They trusted the Senate to soberly consider what has actually been proven and which outcome best serves the nation.
Trump tried to coerce foreign interference and sought to cheat in our 2020 election, and he endangered our national security by doing so. I watched and heard the witnesses in the House show over and over again just how true this was. If Trump is innocent, conducting a fair trial shouldn't be a problem. Invite the witnesses, hear what happened. Evidence from House impeachment as well as new evidence must be considered, given we hear new evidence almost daily.
We citizens know McConnell isn't being truthful when he says the House did not fairly present the case against the president. The senator gave an oath more than once. He claims to be a Christian, yet seems to ignore all the un-Christian-like and illegal behavior of the president. He should do the right thing and hold a fair trial. Trump is bringing down the Republican Party and our countrys values with corruption. I believe in Americas values and feel we must remove this president now. I hope the Republicans overcome their short-term passions and the factionalism they have helped cause in our country. They must do the right thing.
Kim Lawler, Beaverton
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Buttigieg on plan to win over Republicans: ‘I’m not trying to trick anybody’ – Washington Examiner
Posted: at 11:41 pm
2020 Democrat Pete Buttigieg assured attendees and viewers of a Fox News town hall that he is not trying to trick Republicans into supporting him even though he aims to woo them.
"I'm meeting a lot of what I like to call 'future former Republicans' who are coming to my events. I'm not pretending we are going to agree on everything; I'm not trying to trick anybody," the former South Bend, Indiana, mayor said on Sunday. "But my message is that we can at least agree on this: That, if you're having trouble looking your kids in the eye and explaining this presidency to them, that you have a choice."
With one week until the first-in-the-nation Iowa caucuses, Buttigieg, 38, aims to gain support from voters who cast their ballots for President Trump in 2016. Part of his reasoning is that he is from the Midwest, an area that Democrats need to win in 2020 to secure the White House.
Buttigieg said he was effectively demonstrating his strategy by appearing on Fox News, a network that many Democratic presidential candidates, such as Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, have actively avoided.
"We are doing it right now. This network is known for having a lot of more conservative viewers. But I don't think that you have to be a Democrat to see what is wrong with this president and this presidency," Buttigieg said.
He continued: "If there's an American majority that can agree on what we're against, there is an even bigger majority that agrees on what we are for. Remember, I'm proposing things that most Americans, even in conservative states, think we ought to do: raising wages, making sure that corporations pay their fair share in taxes, delivering paid family leave, doing something about gun violence. You know, more than 80% of Republicans think we ought at least to be doing universal background checks."
Buttigieg is in third place in the RealClearPolitics average of Iowa polls with 17.8% support, while former Vice President Joe Biden holds 21% support and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders has 20.6%. Many analysts believe a strong showing in Iowa is critical for Buttigieg's path to winning the Democratic presidential nomination.
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What happened to the ‘War on Drugs’? | Other Commentary – Journal Inquirer
Posted: January 25, 2020 at 2:42 pm
Americas War on Drugs is over.
Unfortunately, for our society, the drugs won.
Since its inception, America has been suffering defeats. Filling up prisons with drug offenders and giving stiff sentences, penalties, and fines havent discouraged people from using drugs. Our efforts to stop drugs from entering the country have failed. And illegal substances across the board are more potent than ever.
Though the above illustrates how the battle has been lost, the most powerful display of drugs dominance over our society is the implementation of harm-reduction methods. This ideology accepts that we have lost and utilizes different practices to make the use of narcotics less harmful.
Its Americas white flag, and as we wave it, we see things occurring in our society that would have never been considered during the early stages of the war. Safe injections areas with free needles for IV drug users, decriminalization of illicit drugs, and opioid replacement drugs are components of this effort.
There is a noticeable shift in what these new practices are trying to achieve. Things have changed from trying to prevent drug use to avoiding the consequences of drug use. As our society becomes more interested in stopping the spread of disease and preventing overdose deaths, it is ignoring the core issue: substance abuse.
After fighting a losing battle for so long, something needs to be done to mitigate the fallout of Americas failed War on Drugs.
The biggest problem I see is that harm-reduction might be seen as the only option we have.
As our society moves further away from tackling the main issue, the concessions we make may lead to more significant implications in the future. As harm-reduction becomes more popular it may make it impossible to stop substance abuse from being an accepted way of life. Im afraid thats what we are doing by making it safer and more comfortable for people to be a drug addict.
The existence of practices like this undermines the drug addiction prevention education we have been trying to get our children to utilize from a young age.
Im not against stopping the spread of disease and preventing death but arent we sending the wrong message. We have been telling people that drugs are harmful and to Just say no. It appears that we are shifting to: Just say no. But if you do say yes, we have clean needles and a place to hang out while you inject your body with poison.
It just doesnt have the same ring to it.
The War on Drugs may be over, but we need to find other ways to help those afflicted with addiction. Making drug-use less harmful doesnt help people get off drugs; it does quite the opposite.
As we look to the future, I suggest we create policies and initiatives that focus on drug education and prevention and stay away from methods that undermine it.
Things are bad, but if the evolution of drug use over the past couple of decades has shown us anything, its that things can get worse. Maybe its time we reconsidered how helpful harm-reduction really is.
Marcel Gemme has been helping people struggling with substance abuse for over 20 years. His website is Addicted.org.
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What happened to the 'War on Drugs'? | Other Commentary - Journal Inquirer
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Rethinking Indonesia’s ‘War on Drugs’ – The Diplomat
Posted: at 2:42 pm
ASEAN Beat|Society|Southeast Asia
Can the Global Commission on Drug Policys advocacy help change Jakartas harsh drug laws?
On January 29, the Global Commission on Drug Policy (GCDP), one of the worlds leading bodies advocating for global drug policy reform, will be co-hosting a seminar called Sustainable Development in Indonesia: What Can Be Learned From Global Best Practice in Drug Control? in Jakarta. The purpose of this forum is to open dialogue with government officials, business executives, and civil society members as to potential modes of progressing todays drug policy in Indonesia. The discussion could not be more prescient.
Formed in 2011, the GCDP has advocated for drug policies based on scientific evidence, human rights, public health, and safety, for all segments of the population. The GCDP consists of Commissioners from around the world, including both former heads of states and influential figures from the private sector, with their Secretariat based in Geneva, Switzerland. The current chair of the GCDP is Ruth Dreifuss, the former president of Switzerland (1999) and an instrumental policymaker behind remedying the Swiss drug problem at the end of the 20th century. Other members of the Commission have included Geoff Gallop (former premier of Western Australia, 2001-2006), Jos Ramos-Horta (former prime minister and president of Timor-Leste (2006-2007; 2007-2012), Csar Gaviria (former president of Colombia, 1990-1994), business magnate Richard Branson, and the late Kofi Annan, among others.
The members who are traveling with the GCDP to Jakarta will be speaking on a host of issues, all curated around implanting change to the modern drug policy in Indonesia. Currently, all narcotics are prohibited in Indonesia. The criminalization of drugs has led to compulsory rehabilitation in detention, corporal punishment, forced urine testing, and mandatory registration as means of administrative punishment for those arrested for drug-related offenses.
After beginning his first term as president in 2014, Joko Jokowi Widodo announced the resumption of executions of convicts sentenced to the death penalty, an act that had been subject to a moratorium since 2008 under President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono. The lifting of this moratorium is extremely pertinent to the war on drugs as in Indonesia narcotic-related offenses can also lead to death row. It has happened numerous times over the years, perhaps most famously with the Bali Nine, two of whom have been executed under Jokowis administration. Since Jokowi took office, 18 drug offenders have been executed.
With the recent legalization of medical marijuana in 2019 by fellow ASEAN member Thailand, there is some hope for Indonesias drug laws to change in the not-too-distant future. Furthermore, policy changes in Malaysia highlight that Southeast Asia, a region once synonymous with draconian drug laws, has progressed. However, there are still countries in the region that show regression and use aggressive force against those involved with narcotics. The most troubling case of an intensifying war on drugs is Rodrigo Dutertes Philippines, which has caused death and destruction at unprecedented levels. Some human rights activists claim the war on drugs has seen over 27,000 civilians killed in the past few years.
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It is still uncertain what the panelists will discuss in Jakarta; however, if past reports are any indication, expect advocacy for the abolition of the death penalty, ending penalties for drug possession for personal use and cultivation of drugs for personal consumption, and implementing alternatives to punishment for low-level, nonviolent actors in the drug trade. All of these recommendations would be a change of course, if heeded by Jokowi and his current administration.
The Global Commission on Drug Policys seminar on Sustainable Development in Indonesia: What Can Be Learned From Global Best Practice in Drug Control? will take place on January 29. LBH Masyarakat and the School of Law Atma Jaya Catholic University of Indonesia are co-sponsoring the discussion. The event is open to the public.
Will Doran conducts independent research and analysis regarding the war on drugs and drug policy reform in Southeast Asia. Currently, he is assisting with research at LBH Masyarakat in Jakarta. He is a graduate of the SOAS, University of London.
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Dawsey: Detroit wants weed, but city officials still are fighting the war on drugs – Deadline Detroit
Posted: at 2:42 pm
The writer is a local freelancer, author and former reporter at The Detroit News, Los Angeles Times, New York Daily News and Philadelphia Inquirer.
By Darrell Dawsey
The war on drugs has been a failure. For most of us, thats not breaking news.
Even many of the staunchest former drug warriors have long conceded that the reckless, draconian criminal justice policies that grew out of the 1980s and '90s drug epidemics have done little to stop the flow of drugs or eliminate Americans' taste for getting high.
Instead, four decades of moralistic thrashing has left the United States with little to show other than one of the world's largest incarceration rates and the exorbitant costs of a sprawling prison-industrial complex.
Recognizing this, political leaders at all levels and in both parties have begun to rethink policies that led us here. In a new age of reform, talk of locking 'em up and tossing away the key has segued into discussions about eliminating mandatory minimums, ending racial disparities in sentencing, bail reform and marijuana decriminalization/legalization.
Even Michigan got its purple ass in on the act when voters decided in 2018 to make weed legal not only for medical use, but for recreational consumption as well.
Then theres Detroit.
Whose community benefits?
Despite the statewide vote, despite the recent successful opening of a handful of recreational marijuana dispensaries in the metro area, leaders in the city continue to give a middle finger to the majority on the legalization issue.
Related: This Is Metro Detroit's First Recreational Weed Shop, Jan. 21
At no time has this disregard for voters been as starkly clear as this week, when a Detroit councilman and the citys police chief teamed up to put forward dishonest, confusing and contradictorymarijuana policy proposals.
Councilman James Tate, the man behind an expiring temporary ban on implementation of legal recreational weed sales in the city a lawmaker openly refusing to follow the law announced this week he would maintain this prohibition until at least March 31. Never mind that Tate and the council had more than a year to address the matter before legal dispensaries went online. Never mind that the city will continue to lose out on tax dollars legal dispensaries generate. Never mind that numerous enterprising and law-abiding Detroiters, eager to cash in on a multi-billion-dollar legal weed market, are left idling on the sidelines while Tate continues to stall and fake interest in a community benefits regulation that he swears hes looking into in the name of the same people hes cutting out of the game.
Think about that: In one of the blackest cities in the country, an African-American city councilman keeps black entrepreneurs out of a booming legal market and uses the thin veil of support for community benefits to do it.
(Meanwhile, as NORML attorney Matt Abel pointed out in Metro Times, Detroit remains home to 528 bars, 427 licensed liquor stores, and 585 beer and wine licenses.)
As if that wasnt bad enough, Police Chief James Craig, a man whos never been accused of passing an opportunity to posture for TV, came out of his face this week with an outlandish claim that more than half of the murders in Detroit in 2020 have been related to black-market marijuana sales.
Reefer madness
I will be the first to concede the police should have a better handle than most of us on the causes of local crime. But in a city still awash with crack, heroin and other drugs commonly associated with violence, claims that the marijuana market has suddenly become Detroits biggest hub of bloodshed and mayhem ought to be backed with evidence.
So far, Craig has yet to produce any. (And simply pounding a podium doesnt count.)
Moreover, when Deadline Detroit reached out to our law enforcement sources, lets just say Craigs claim drew skepticism, including from some of the same officers on the streets dealing with the citys violence.
You might have people who do marijuana, said one DPD detective, but I dont think (the violence) is because of marijuana.
Asked about the chiefs claim that 60 percent of the citys 2020 killings so far have been because of the black market weed trade, the detective was even more forthright: Its ridiculous.
But this being Detroit, inconvenient truths -- especially about poor folks and people of color -- dont stop public policy shitshows.
Because of this alleged surge in weed shootings, the chief said hell soon be deploying a task force (sigh) to crack down on black-market dealers who carry guns. "We're going to be aggressive about it, while still adhering to constitutional policing," said Craig without a hint of irony.
Yes, James Craig the same chief who treats hyperbolic graffiti scrawlings as legitimate threats against cops, who patrols Facebook for social media posts that bad mouth him, who wants to turn the city into a surveillance state with shoddy facial recognition tech, who openly worries about brutal cops being overcharged by the county prosecutor after beating down people in Greektown wants you to know that, even as hes conjuring up weed-related shooting sprees to justify crackdowns on marijuana dealers, hell still be safeguarding your constitutional rights.
Uh huh.
People have spoken and want to smoke 'em
Or we could just say fuck all that and bow to common sense and the will of the voters by getting on with the business of opening up the legal market. After all, if Detroit were allowed to actually foster a thriving legal market for weed, the underground market would not be such a draw anymore.
"This crime is not being caused by marijuana, but by the prohibition of marijuana," Abel told The Detroit News. "What we need to do is make it available through retail stores, but the City Council has been dragging their feet on that for more than a year."
Tate could still pretend to be pushing for community benefits. And Craig could still arrest all the illegal gun-toters that he wants without tossing a wet blanket on lawful marijuana users.
We all know you dont have to like a law, or a democratic expression of the peoples will, to follow and respect it.
But the last people youd expect to have to explain this to are those charged with making the laws or those who are supposed to enforce them.
Earlier:
Detroit Council Delays Recreational Pot Sales for 2 More Months, Jan. 21
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