The Week Online with DRCNet, Issue #103 - August 13, 1999
   A Publication of the Drug Reform Coordination Network

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 URGENT COLOMBIA ALERT:  http://www.wola.org/uadrugs.html

================

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1. Medical Marijuana Under Siege, Making Slow Progress
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/103.html#undersiege

2. Baltimore Study Finds Needle Exchange Effective
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/103.html#baltimorenep

3. Interview:  Dr. Joel Brown on the Status of Drug
   Education in the United States
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/103.html#joelbrown

4. Beyond Prohibition:  Cato Institute Conference to Feature
   New Mexico Governor
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/103.html#catoconference

5. Methamphetamine Bill Contains Anti-Free-Speech
   Legislation
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/103.html#methbill

6. Newsbriefs
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/103.html#newsbriefs

7. Job Opportunities
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/103.html#opportunities

8. Washington Video and Speaker Series Concluding Next Week
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/103.html#seriesconcluding

9. EDITORIAL:  Killing the Bad Guys
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/103.html#editorial

================

1. Medical Marijuana Under Siege, Making Slow Progress

Medical marijuana advocates were angered by the trial,
conviction and sentencing of B.E. Smith, a Vietnam veteran
who used marijuana to treat post-traumatic stress syndrome
(PTSD).  Smith, who considered his marijuana use and
cultivation to be legal under Proposition 215, had informed
local police and county officials, and posted a sign in his
garden identifying it as a medical marijuana supply.  Smith
was prosecuted by the federal government in the District
Court in Sacramento, California.

US District Judge Garland Burrell forbid the defense from
addressing the issue of Smith's medical marijuana need,
caregiving (providing marijuana to other documented
patients), or Prop. 215.  Burrell's disallowing of much of
the defense's case led to a sharp exchange between Burrell
and actor Woody Harrelson, who almost drew a citation for
contempt of court.  Harrelson asked Judge Burrell, "I'm just
wondering why you're keeping the truth from the jury... How
can you sleep at night?"

At sentencing last week, Judge Burrell rejected requests by
the defense to sentence Smith to the low end of the federal
guideline range, and by the prosecution to use the middle of
the guideline range, and instead sentenced Smith to the
maximum possible sentence, 27 months, calling Smith "beyond
rehabilitation" and saying he had no remorse and would
probably grow marijuana again as soon as he got out of
prison.

Smith told the court that "[e]very day I spend in prison
will be seen by me as another day in the service of my
nation," and exhorted members of the public to help pass
laws "that will allow people to use an herb provided by
nature to alleviate their terrible and cruel suffering, made
worse by cruel legislators, prosecutors and judges whose
actions add to this suffering by punishing those who would
provide such medicine to these patients."

On July 6, police in San Diego arrested Steve McWilliams,
founder and organizer of the Shelter from the Storm Cannabis
Collective, and another patient and member of the
collective, identified only as Tom.  McWilliams told Zenger
Magazine that the San Diego police and the Narcotics Task
Force destroyed all of the Collective's plants, despite them
being individually labeled for individual patients.
McWilliams, who moved from his native Colorado to take part
in the 1996 campaign for Proposition 215, was on probation
for a previous conviction.  Judge Kenneth So, however, who
sentenced McWilliams to probation last spring, also ruled
that McWilliams had a right to grow marijuana for his own
personal consumption.  McWilliams suffers from head, neck
and shoulder injuries from automobile accidents in 1986 and
1992.

According to the San Diego Tribune, a dozen collective
members addressed a meeting of the City Council late last
month.  Michael Bartelmo, a wheelchair-bound quadriplegic,
told the Council that Collective members are "trying our
darndest to follow the law... but we can't if police
officers, the City Council or others in authority won't tell
us what the law is."  Councilmember George Stevens called
the confiscation of the group's plants "an urgent
situation," and asked the city manager and attorney to
report back with a clarification from the police on medical
marijuana within 30 days.

Meanwhile, the trial of Steve Kubby, recent Libertarian
candidate for California governor, and Michele Kubby, has
been postponed until February, 2000.  Judge Robert G.
Vonasek found that Michele Kubby could not stand trial at
this time, due to medical complications in her pregnancy.

Steve Kubby told the Sacramento Bee that he welcomes the
trial as "an opportunity to educate a largely disbelieving
society that considers this (medicinal use of marijuana) to
be some kind of hoax," and contends that he uses marijuana
to control hypertension associated with malignant
pheochromocytoma, a usually fatal cancer.

The trial of medical marijuana activists Todd McCormick and
bestselling author Peter McWilliams has also been scheduled,
for November 16.

In Naples, Florida, medical marijuana patient Joe Tacl and
his 20-year old son Michael are trial for growing five
marijuana plants, having more than 40 grams of marijuana in
their house, as well as several items of drug paraphernalia
such as pipes and grow lights, according to the Naples Daily
News, July 28.  Tacl uses marijuana to relieve the nausea
caused by painkillers such as morphine, codeine and
methadone, which he has had to take since being run over by
a van six years ago.

Tacl's attorney, Gary Wainwright, is arguing a medical
necessity defense.  According to the Gainesville Sun, jurors
heard testimony from Dr. Scott Lipoff, a Gainesville pain
management specialist who has been treating Tacl, and Dr.
John P. Morgan, a pharmacology professor from New York who
co-authored "Marijuana Myths, Marijuana Facts" and has
conducted research on a wide range of drug issues.

If convicted, Tacl and his son could face up to 11 years in
prison, though as first-time offenders the sentence would
probably be lighter.

In other states, the new medical marijuana laws have begun
to have an impact.  Nearly 200 patients in Oregon have
registered with the state's voluntary registry, and the
Oregon Medical Association has dropped its initial
opposition and issued guidelines to physicians, according to
the Daily Herald (WA), 8/11.  In Alaska, the state registry
had nine patients enrolled, according to KTUU in Anchorage,
on 7/15.  Other patients were reluctant to register with a
government database.  Legislation sponsored by State Senator
Loren Leman amended the voter initiative last May to make
registration mandatory to receive the initiative's legal
protections.

In Great Britain, a 42-year old medical marijuana patient
was acquitted in a jury trial on four charges of cultivating
and possessing marijuana with intent to supply.  According
to The Telegraph on July 23, Colin Davies uses marijuana to
relieve back pain from spinal injuries, and also set up a
Medical Marijuana Cooperative and supplies marijuana to two
multiple sclerosis patients.  Davies was arrested last
November, five days after the government rejected a House of
Lords select committee's recommendation to legalize medical
use of marijuana.  A spokesman for the British Medical
Association said that the association supports clinical
research into marijuana's medical use, and that "[i]n the
meantime we ask the courts to look at cases with
understanding and compassion."  Davies has pledged to
continue operating his cooperative.

In Grand Forks, Canada, Mayor Brian Taylor has proposed
setting up an official medical marijuana production
facility, hoping to make his town the "medicinal marijuana
capital of Canada," according to the Grand Forks Gazette.
Taylor's proposal was made last June, on the heels of a
report by Health Minister Allan Rock on how his ministry is
proceeding on development of medical marijuana clinical
trials.  Taylor's proposal was reported on BCTV, CTV, CBC
Radio and in several major newspapers.

Taylor and a group of community leaders and have formed a
cooperative called Brown Bear Medicinals, which has already
been accepted as a bidder by the US National Institute on
Drug Abuse.

Health Minister Rock has granted special exemptions to
Canadian federal drug laws to two patients with AIDS, and
his office has received exemption requests from 40-50
people, according to the Calgary Herald.

(A good place to get ongoing information about the medical
marijuana battle is <http://www.marijuananews.com>.)

================

2. Baltimore Study Finds Needle Exchange Effective

Taylor West, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Baltimore this week celebrated the success of its extensive
needle exchange program, one of the largest in the country.
After five years of operation, the program has saved the
city an estimated $30 million in AIDS patient care costs, a
hefty sum in comparison to the $1.2 million the city has put
into the program.

By providing access to sterile syringes, the program cuts
down on needle-sharing among injection drug users, a primary
channel of HIV transmission.  Among the clients of
Baltimore's needle exchange, the HIV incidence level is 70%
lower than that of the city's non-participating injection
drug users.  Dr. Peter Beilenson, Baltimore City Health
Commissioner, said that the program has now enrolled over
9,000 participants and helped over 1,000 enter drug
treatment.  2.5 million syringes have been exchanged, and
Beilenson estimates that around 300 HIV cases have been
prevented.

Baltimore's success stands in stark contrast to the
situation in nearby Washington, DC, where Congress has
forbidden the use of city funds for needle exchange for the
second year in a row.  Washington, the city with the highest
rate of injection-related HIV in the country, is served only
by a single, small needle exchange program which is
bankrolled entirely by private funds.

Visit DRCNet's Syringe Exchange Resources Online (SERO), the
most comprehensive collection of needle exchange information
on the web at <http://www.projectsero.org>.

================

3. Interview:  Dr. Joel Brown on the Status of Drug
   Education in the United States

In a new study published this month in the Journal of
Consulting and Psychology, researchers from the University
of Kentucky have concluded that the world's most popular
anti-drug education program is largely ineffective.  After
following more than 1,000 graduates of DARE (Drug Abuse
Resistance Education) and similar programs over a ten-year
period, the study found that "in no case did the DARE group
have a more successful outcome than the comparison group."

The Kentucky research is only the latest of several studies
over the past ten years to reach the same conclusion.  The
Week Online spoke with Dr. Joel Brown, PhD, the executive
director of the Center for Educational Research and
Development, a nonprofit that researches and evaluates drug
education programs.

WOL: Your study of the California DATE (Drug, Alcohol, and
Tobacco Education) program in 1995 came to much the same
conclusion as the new study from Kentucky.  What does that
tell you about the state of drug education in this country?

JB:  Let me put it this way: if you had a senior citizens
program that was found, repeatedly, to be ineffective or
even hurting the senior citizens, there would be an uproar
like you wouldn't believe.  But here we have many studies
that show that the kids are being hurt by these programs,
and there's not a peep from anyone.

There is still not a single scientifically sound, long-term
study that shows that DARE prevents kids from using drugs.
But more importantly, this isn't really about DARE We now
have at least nine recent examinations of drug education
that show that the programs like DARE, Life Skills Training,
Project Alert, etc., do not prevent kids from using drugs.
And we have at least three recent examinations which show
that they cause a multitude of negative effects --
including, but not limited to, increased drug use, exiling
those kids in need of help from the school system, and
cognitive dissonance.

WOL: How do drug education programs cause cognitive
dissonance?

JB:  There is a severe emotional disturbance in kids that's
raised by the conflict between the just-say-no messages they
receive in school versus a variety of people using a variety
of substances with different effects outside of school.  We
are quite sure now that that emotional conflict results in a
reduction in educator credibility.  And not just in drug
education -- we think that it generalizes into the larger
educational community.  That is to say, if students don't
receive honest, accurate and complete information, they
develop a basis for the belief that educators are lying to
them.

WOL: Spokespeople for DARE complain that studies showing
DARE's ineffectiveness don't take into account the changes
made to the curriculum over the years.

JB:  The curricula are always changing, but they're building
on an original curriculum.  Ten versions of what doesn't
work in the first place will not suddenly make it effective.
But there are deeper issues here.  For instance, what is
emerging right now is a basic federal policy conflict.  The
federal government mandates implementation of only effective
drug education programs.  But the only programs they will
allow to be implemented have been found to be universally
ineffective.

But ultimately, it's a critical error of judgment to believe
that this is about DARE.  The political aspects may be about
DARE, but this is really about the overall effectiveness of
drug education, and whether, under a no-use model, it is
possible to prevent kids from using drugs.  And the
preponderance of evidence at this time is telling us that it
is not possible.  It's telling us that we need to change
from focusing on young people's disabilities to their
capabilities.

WOL: That focus on disabilities is known as looking at kids'
"risk factors," or the attitudes and beliefs they hold that
puts them at risk for using drugs.  What does it mean to
focus on young people's capabilities?

JB:  It's called a resilience approach.  What we now know is
that if you take kids in the worst possible situations and
emphasize their capabilities, they have a much better of
chance of developing positive life outcomes than if you
emphasize those risk factors.  That's been shown in a number
of studies.

For example, one key risk factor is a lack of connectedness
between young people and adults.  But we now know that
adult-youth connectedness is one of the most powerful
predictors of positive youth outcomes.

So what we need is what's called is a resilience model, that
emphasizes relationships over rules, and emphasizes
emotional attachments rather than the emotional
disconnection between young people and adults.  When those
emotional attachments are present, then the educator can
bring in good and honest and accurate and complete
information.  Because we also know, although it's never
brought into drug education, that if young people are given
sufficient information, they are virtually as good as adults
at decision making.

WOL: So a zero-tolerance environment is not only
ineffective, but makes it more difficult to develop
resilience.

JB:  Absolutely.  I look at it like this: these zero
tolerance programs and policies are the equivalent of
mandatory minimum sentences for kids.  When a first time
drug offender is sentenced under mandatory minimums, the
judge has no discretion.  Similarly, when young people
violate a zero-tolerance policy in school, the educational
community has made it so that there's no discretion about
them getting kicked out of school.  The only difference is
that we're talking here about children.

Rather than teaching kids a valuable lesson, almost all the
evidence points to the conclusion that these zero tolerance
policies teach young people unintended lessons about a
punishing society, and the limited learning opportunities in
a punitive educational system.  That's the key lesson.  If
you listen to the voices of kids in all of our research,
that's the key lesson they pick up from these policies.

WOL: Is there a place for the "get tough" approach?

JB:  For some kids it does work.  However, those are in fact
the kids who are least likely to experiment with drugs or
develop drug problems in the first place.  But we know that
by the end of high school, at least eighty percent of kids
will have experimented with alcohol, tobacco or other drugs.
So why would you make policies for all kids based on the
problems of a few?

But the key is that just because we say that just-say-no
programs don't work, doesn't mean that we're just-say-yes
researchers.  There's a long distance between just-say-no
and a paradigm shift that focuses on children's well being.

The Center for Educational Research and Development is
online at <http://www.cerd.org>.

The key findings of the Kentucky study are online at
<http://www.apa.org/journals/ccp/ccp674590.html>.

To learn more about DARE, read our report with the Voluntary
Committee of Parents, at <http://www.drcnet.org/DARE/>.

================

4. Beyond Prohibition:  Cato Institute Conference to Feature
   New Mexico Governor

The Cato Institute will host a one-day conference, "Beyond
Prohibition: An Adult Approach to Drug Policies in the 21st
Century," October 5 in Washington, DC.  "Beyond Prohibition"
will feature New Mexico governor Gary Johnson, who has
recently begun a discussion of decriminalization and
legalization, as well as Ethan Nadelmann of the Lindesmith
Center, Joseph McNamara, former police chief of San Jose and
fellow at the Hoover Institution, professor Steven Duke of
Yale Law School, a debate between former California attorney
general Daniel Lungren and George Mason University law
professor Daniel Polsby, former DEA agent Mike Levine and
others.  Visit http://www.cato.org/events/drugwar/ for
information or to register, or contact Addison Wiggin, Cato
Institute, 1000 Massachusetts Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20001,
(202) 789-5248.

================

5. Methamphetamine Bill Contains Anti-Free-Speech
   Legislation

Language in the anti-methamphetamine bill in the Senate, led
by Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-UT) with Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-
CA), would forbid linking to Internet sites that include
information on the manufacture or use of illicit substances
or on how to acquire drug paraphernalia, if the reader might
use the information to get high, according to an article in
Wired News.  Please read the Wired article online at
http://www.wired.com/news/news/politics/story/21152.html to
learn more about this dangerous piece of legislation.

Though DRCNet is a policy organization and does not provide
information on drug production or paraphernalia, we are
concerned that this bill could nevertheless interfere with
our ability to educate the public on important drug policy
issues.

For example, we have just launched a major new web site
devoted to the syringe exchange issue, Syringe Exchange
Resources Online (http://www.projectsero.org).  Would a link
from our site to a needle exchange program's web site, that
happens to include the program's schedule or contact
information, subject us to prosecution under the bill's
paraphernalia provision -- even though needle exchange is
legal in many states and officially tolerated, even
government-funded, in many others?

Would a link to a site like High Times draw a penalty, even
though High Times includes serious journalism in addition to
drug culture information and advertisements?  Violations of
the paraphernalia provision could be punishable by a fine
and prison term of up to three years.  Violation of the
prohibition on providing information on manufacture or use
could draw a ten year prison term.

If your Senator is one of the bill's eleven sponsors, please
inform them that they are in "Contempt of Constitution":

Orrin Hatch (R-UT), http://www.senate.gov/~hatch
Dianne Feinstein (D-CA), http://www.senate.gov/~feinstein
Mike DeWine (R-OH), http://www.senate.gov/~dewine
Joe Biden (D-DE), http://www.senate.gov/~biden
Strom Thurmond (R-SC), http://www.senate.gov/~thurmond
Christopher Bond (R-MO), http://www.senate.gov/~bond
Gordon Smith (I-NH), http://www.senate.gov/~smith
Jesse Helms (R-NC), http://www.senate.gov/~helms
Harry Reid (D-NV), http://www.senate.gov/~reid
Richard Bryan (D-NV), http://www.senate.gov/~bryan
Herb Kohl (D-WI), http://www.senate.gov/~kohl

Visit your Senator's web site to find out the e-mail address
or phone number.  IMPORTANT: include your name and mailing
address in your message, so they know that you are a
constituent, and only write to your own Senator.  Otherwise,
they will delete your message unread.  ALSO IMPORTANT:
Please send us a copy of your correspondence or a note
letting us know that you made a phone call:
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

================

6. Newsbriefs

UN Says Coca Production Has Not Increased in Colombian Rebel
Territory

Last month, US "drug czar" General Barry McCaffrey said that
an additional $1 billion in US military aid to Colombia was
necessary to fight the drug war in that country, because the
rebel Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, had
doubled the production of coca in the more than 40% of the
country under their control.

But last week, a UN official working with the FARC on a crop
substitution plan said that not only were the FARC
cooperating with the UN project, but that coca production
had not changed in the year since Colombian government
troops pulled out of FARC territory.  According to Klaus
Nyholm, director of the UN drug control office in Colombia,
"drug cultivation has not increased or decreased since the
FARC took control."

Hugh Downs Tells Corrections Conference the Drug War Should
End

Veteran TV anchor Hugh Downs gave the keynote speech last
weekend (8/8) at the Congress of Corrections, a conference
for prison professionals sponsored by the American
Correctional Association.  In his speech, Downs spoke out
against the war on drugs, saying that it had "turned a
medical problem into a crime problem."  Downs also compared
drug prohibition to the US' failed attempt at alcohol
prohibition in the 1920's.  "I'd like to see an end to the
war on drugs," he told the group.  Downs hosted the "Today"
show for 9 years and has anchored "20/20" since 1988.

================

7. Job Opportunities

Prevention Point Philadelphia
Executive Director Position Announcement

Prevention Point Philadelphia, one of the ten largest
syringe exchange programs in the United States, seeks an
Executive Director.  PPP is a growing and dynamic
organization with a strong staff and Board of Directors, and
which sees thousands of people for syringe exchange every
year.  PPP also provides a variety of ancillary services
such as HIV testing/counseling, medical clinics and support
groups.  Qualified candidates will be exceptional managers
with an understanding of harm reduction philosophy.  The
Director is responsible for staff supervision, fiscal and
physical plant management, program development, grant
writing, acting as public spokesperson, and collaborating
effectively with a range of stakeholders (i.e. participants,
evaluators, politicians, Department of Health officials,
community leaders, volunteers and staff).  The Executive
Director will be expected to have a thorough understanding
of harm reduction, knowledge about disease prevention among
drug users, and a strong commitment to promoting the health
and civil rights of drug users.  Competitive salary and
benefits.  Equal opportunity employer.  Prevention Point's
Board of Directors will begin accepting applications and
interviewing for this position immediately.  Please mail
resume to:  Annet Davis-Vogel, Vice-Chair, Prevention Point
Board of Directors, 333 West Girard Avenue, Philadelphia, PA
19123.

Harm Reduction Coalition
Director of Training

The Harm Reduction Coalition (HRC) is seeking a dynamic and
energetic Director for its regional California Harm
Reduction Training Institute.  HRC is a national
organization dedicated to reducing drug-related harms that
affect individuals and communities through community
organizing, training, conferences, publications and policy.
The Director will be responsible for oversight of all
aspects of training activities including:  planning,
budgeting, contracting, daily operations, staff supervision,
identification of funding opportunities, and collaborations
with other institutes and agencies in California and the
West Coast.  Experience with harm reduction is essential, a
background in non-profit development, training and community
organizing is a plus.  Personal or work history with drug
use and/or recovery and HIV/AIDS a plus.  A minimum of two
years program management experience required.  Salary mid to
high 40's, DOE, plus full benefits after three month
probationary period.  Equal Opportunity Employer.  HRC is
committed to a diverse workforce.  Mail cover letter and
resume to:  Search Committee, HRC, 3223 Lake Shore Avenue,
Oakland, CA 94610, or fax to (510) 444-6977.  For a longer
job description, please e-mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Drug Policy Foundation
Executive Director

Seeking Executive Director:  Preeminent Washington, DC drug
policy reform nonprofit organization seeks an experienced
executive to develop new initiatives, administer existing
programs and oversee a $2.7 million budget.  The successful
candidate will have a proven ability to deal with the media,
manage staff, expand programs and raise funds.  The Drug
Policy Foundation promotes alternatives to current drug
policies, focusing on public health, education, and civil
liberties.  The organization offers a competitive salary and
excellent benefits.  Send letter, salary history and resume
to:  ED Search, Drug Policy Foundation, 4455 Connecticut
Avenue NW, Suite B-500, Washington, DC 20008-2328.

================

8. Washington Video and Speaker Series Concluding Next Week

The Institute for Policy Studies' Drug Policy Brown Bag
summer lunch series will conclude this coming week with the
"The Legacy," a PBS documentary, and Vincent Schiraldi of
the Justice Policy Institute speaking on "Three Strikes and
Other Legislative Hysteria," Thursday, 8/19, noon to 2:00pm,
733 15th St., NW, Suite 1020, drinks and dessert provided.
For further information, call (202) 234-9382, ext. 220.

================

9. EDITORIAL:  Killing the Bad Guys

Adam J. Smith, Associate Director, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

A study released last week by researchers at the University
of Kentucky indicates that teens who went through the Drug
Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) program were no less
likely, in the long run, to use drugs and alcohol than kids
who had gotten their drug information in health class.  The
study is the latest in a long line of research raising
questions about the efficacy of America's number one "drug
education" program.

More than 70% of American schools use DARE, making it
perhaps the single most pervasive curriculum in the nation.
Given that rate of application, one would imagine that there
was some evidence that it works.  In fact, there isn't.

DARE, in which police officers come into classrooms for an
hour per week for seventeen weeks to teach kids about drugs,
self-esteem and resisting peer pressure, has been criticized
since its inception on several grounds.  Among the
criticisms is DARE's zero-tolerance approach, which fails to
make distinctions between different substances.  Researchers
have argued that treating marijuana the same as heroin, for
instance, reduces the credibility of DARE's message.  Others
criticize DARE's law enforcement focus, which tends, they
say, to demonize rather than to educate.

A DARE "graduation" ceremony held in Miami last May
illustrates this point.

The ceremony was held at the Orange Bowl, with thousands of
elementary school-aged DARE "graduates" in attendance to
receive their certificates.  The children watched Florida
Governor Jeb Bush, on hand for the occasion, sign a new
mandatory minimum sentencing law.  But the real fun came at
the end.

At the close of the ceremony, the children were treated to a
special performance by the Florida Highway Patrol Special
Tactics Team.  The Team rolled out across the stadium's
field in an armored personnel carrier.  Disembarking from
their tank-like vehicle, officers engaged in a "shootout"
with a group of "drug dealers."  The vignette ended with the
officers "shooting" and "killing" the bad guys, to the
obvious delight of the cheering children.

And so, having witnessed this clearly successful outcome, in
which the police shot and killed -- presumably without a
trial -- several drug suspects, these thousands of children
became the latest class of DARE graduates.

Such a display would seem to be directly in line with the
ethos of DARE's founder, former Los Angeles police chief
Daryll Gates, who once remarked that casual drug users
"should be taken out and shot."  So perhaps we ought not to
judge DARE's success by how many of its graduates remain
drug free, but rather by the number who, as adults, are
content to stand and cheer while the state shoots down their
less obedient former classmates.

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DRUG POLICY LIBRARY     http://www.druglibrary.org/
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GATEWAY TO REFORM PAGE  http://www.stopthedrugwar.org/


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