The Week Online with DRCNet, Issue #122 - Jan. 21, 2000
   A Publication of the Drug Reform Coordination Network

       -------- PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE --------

(To sign off this list, mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] with the
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mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] for assistance.  To subscribe to
this list, visit <http://www.drcnet.org/signup.html>.)

This issue can be also be read on our web site at
<http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html>.

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

1.  New Bio Alleges Gore Used Marijuana Regularly for Years
    -- Newsweek Kills Story Set to Run This Week
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/gore.html

2.  INTERVIEW with John C. Warnecke
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/gore.html#warnecke

3.  Prison Moratorium in Tough-on-Crime Colorado?
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#moratorium

4.  U.S. Government Reviewing Scripts of Network Shows as
    Part of Anti-Drug Campaign
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#ondcp

5.  Emergency Coalition Against Propaganda and Censorship
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#coalition

6.  U.S. Drug Czar Commands Customs to Seize All Hemp Seed
    Imports That Contain Any THC
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#hempembargo

7.  Teach Your Children Well:  Clergy, Religious Academics
    Discuss Reform
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#teach

8.  College Convention Report
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#cc2k

9.  Sentencing Project Report Finds Massive Increases in
    Number of Women Imprisoned for Drug Offenses
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#sentencingproject

10. EDITORIAL:  Dishonest Policy
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#editorial

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

1. New Bio Alleges Gore Used Marijuana Regularly for Years
   -- Newsweek Kills Story Set to Run This Week
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/gore.html

A DRCNet Exclusive, by Adam J. Smith, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

The Week Online with

  The Week Online with DRCNet, Issue #122 - Jan. 21, 2000
   A Publication of the Drug Reform Coordination Network

       -------- PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE --------

(To sign off this list, mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] with the
line signoff drc-natl in the body of the message, or
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] for assistance.  To subscribe to
this list, visit <http://www.drcnet.org/signup.html>.)

This issue can be also be read on our web site at
<http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html>.

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

1.  New Bio Alleges Gore Used Marijuana Regularly for Years
    -- Newsweek Kills Story Set to Run This Week
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/gore.html

2.  INTERVIEW with John C. Warnecke
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/gore.html#warnecke

3.  Prison Moratorium in Tough-on-Crime Colorado?
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#moratorium

4.  U.S. Government Reviewing Scripts of Network Shows as
    Part of Anti-Drug Campaign
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#ondcp

5.  Emergency Coalition Against Propaganda and Censorship
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#coalition

6.  U.S. Drug Czar Commands Customs to Seize All Hemp Seed
    Imports That Contain Any THC
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#hempembargo

7.  Teach Your Children Well:  Clergy, Religious Academics
    Discuss Reform
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#teach

8.  College Convention Report
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#cc2k

9.  Sentencing Project Report Finds Massive Increases in
    Number of Women Imprisoned for Drug Offenses
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#sentencingproject

10. EDITORIAL:  Dishonest Policy
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#editorial

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

1. New Bio Alleges Gore Used Marijuana Regularly for Years
   -- Newsweek Kills Story Set to Run This Week
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/gore.html

A DRCNet Exclusive, by Adam J. Smith, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

The Week Online with DRCNet (stopthedrugwar.org) has learned
that Newsweek Magazine decided late Friday to postpone
publication of an excerpt of a Gore biography featuring
eyewitness accounts of Al Gore's regular and continued drug
use over a period of years.  The drug use covers a period of
Gore's life from his days at Harvard up until the very week
he declared his candidacy for Congress in 1976, sources told
The Week Online.  The book, by Bill Turque of Newsweek's
Washington bureau, quotes both named and unnamed sources,
including John Warnecke, son of John Carl Warnecke --
architect of the John F. Kennedy grave site, and a long-time
friend of the Gores.  An exclusive interview with Mr.
Warnecke follows this story.

The excerpt had been scheduled to run in Newsweek's January
18th issue, just days before the start of the Democratic
primaries.  A previous excerpt from the book appeared in the
December 6 issue.  In that excerpt, which covered Gore's
Vietnam experience, Tipper Gore was said to have spent
considerable time, distraught with worry for her husband's
safety, at Warnecke's house while Gore was overseas.

The Gore biography, to be published by Houghton-Mifflin, was
itself originally scheduled for a January release, but that
too has been delayed until March 23.  A spokesman for
Houghton-Mifflin told The Week Online that the delay was
"normal."

Al Gore has previously admitted using marijuana, but those
admissions fall well short of the type of regular, even
chronic use described by Warnecke.  Warnecke also says that
Gore used marijuana regularly for at least four years after
the Vice-President claims to have stopped.

On November 7, 1987, in the wake of Douglas H. Ginsburg's
failed Supreme Court nomination, Gore told the Bergen County
Record that he had smoked marijuana in college and in the
army but had not used it in the past fifteen years.  The New
York Times reported on November 8, 1987:

"Mr. Gore said he last used marijuana when he was 24.  He
said he first tried the drug at the end of his junior year
at Harvard and used it again at the beginning of his senior
year the next fall.  He also said he used the drug 'once or
twice' while off-duty in an Army tour at Bien Hoa, Vietnam,
on several occasions while he was in graduate school at
Vanderbilt University and when he was an employee of a
Nashville newspaper (The Nashville Tennessean).  On November
11, 1987, Gore was quoted in UPI, saying 'We have to be
honest and candid and open in dealing with the (drug)
problem.'"

Mr. Turque refused to comment to The Week Online.  Roy
Burnett, a spokesman for Newsweek, acknowledged that the
magazine was preparing to run a new excerpt from the book
"in the coming weeks."  Asked whether there in fact had been
a delay, and if so, the reasons behind it, Burnett would say
only that it is Newsweek's policy not to discuss its
editorial practices.

Gore, as part of the Clinton Administration, has presided
over a drug war policy that has led to the arrest and
incarceration of record numbers of non-violent drug
offenders.  In 1998, according to the Justice Department,
there were 682,885 Americans arrested on marijuana charges,
88% of whom were arrested for possession.  A recent study by
the Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice
(http://www.cjcj.org) reported that the incarcerated
population of the U.S. will reach two million on or around
February 15, 2000.  Of those, more than half are non-violent
offenders, according to CJCJ.

On February 8, 1999, Vice President Gore personally
presented the administration's Drug Control Strategy at a
Washington, DC press conference.  During his remarks, Gore
spoke about the "spiritual problem" of drug abuse and about
the need for more positive opportunities for young people.
Despite this, however, the strategy allocates approximately
2/3 of the federal drug budget on enforcement, with less
than one third to be spent on treatment and education
combined.

At that press conference, Gore, perhaps inadvertently,
pointed out the very problem inherent in a class of
political leaders who prosecute a failing drug war while
hiding their own experiences with illicit drugs, and the
message that sends to young people.

"And if young people... feel there's phoniness and hypocrisy
and corruption and immorality," Gore said, "then they are
much more vulnerable to the drug dealers, to the peers who
tempt them with messages that are part of a larger entity of
evil."

An exclusive interview with John Warnecke appears
immediately below.  An editorial discussing DRCNet's views
regarding political candidates and drug use appears below,
at the end of this issue.  This article and interview can be
found online at <http://www.drcnet.org/wol/gore.html>.)

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

2. INTERVIEW with John C. Warnecke
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/gore.html#warnecke

Exclusive to The Week Online, by Adam J. Smith

John C. Warnecke worked as a reporter for the Nashville
Tennessean and was a close personal friend of the Gores.
Warnecke is the son of John Carl Warnecke, architect for the
John F. Kennedy gravesite.  The Week Online spoke with Mr.
Warnecke by phone this week.

The Week Online:  Mr. Warnecke, Vice President Gore has said
that he used marijuana "on several occasions" and "not since
he was twenty-four."  But you say that you have first-hand
knowledge that his use was more extensive than he has
previously admitted?

John C. Warnecke:  Yes, I do. I have first hand knowledge
that he has not told the truth about his drug use.  Al Gore
and I smoked regularly, as buddies.  Marijuana, hash.  I was
his regular supplier.  I didn't deal dope, I just gave it to
him.  We smoked more than once, more than a few times, we
smoked a lot.  We smoked in his car, in his house, we smoked
in his parents' house, in my house... we smoked on weekends.
We smoked a lot.

Al Gore and I were smoking marijuana together right up to
the time that he ran for Congress in 1976.  Right up through
the week he declared for that race, in fact.

WOL:  And after that?

JCW:  After that he began to distance himself from me. I was
bad for his political career.

WOL:  During the course of the 1988 campaign, you told the
New York Times and the Nashville Tennessean that you had
smoked marijuana with Al Gore...

JCW:  A few times.  And I told them that he didn't like it.

WOL:  Why didn't you tell the truth at that time?

JCW:  I was put under a lot of pressure to lie.

WOL:  Who was pressuring you?

JCW:  The answer to that question is in the excerpt that
Newsweek decided not to run.  It's in the Turque book.
Right now, I'm going to leave it at that.

WOL:  So what made you decide to come forward now?

JCW:  It's because I've been under a lot of stress.  My
conscience has been killing me ever since then.  I actually
came forward months ago when Bill (Turque) interviewed me
for the book.  I had been told that this story would come
out, that the public would know this by now.  But then the
book date was pushed back, and Newsweek pulled the story.
The only thing that I can assume is that Newsweek is
covering this up, protecting the Gore campaign by refusing
to run this before the primaries.  I decided that I had to
go ahead and tell it.  I really feel that the public has a
right to know this at this time, and I was having trouble
living with myself being part of the hypocrisy and the lies.

WOL:  Hypocrisy?

JCW:  Yes. The drug laws in this country are ruining the
lives of hundreds of thousands of young people, mostly poor
young people, people who don't come from privileged
backgrounds and wealthy families.  It just doesn't make
sense that we have a war on drugs.  It doesn't work, and the
politicians refuse to talk about it.  That suffering and
that hypocrisy has weighed very heavily on my conscience.  I
have a saying that I use, and that is: "who raised you?"  In
other words, were you raised with a conscience?  Mine has
made my life very difficult ever since I became part of the
hypocrisy.  I couldn't live with the lie anymore.  Not and
stay sober.

WOL:  How long have you been sober?

JCW:  Twenty-one years.

WOL:  Congratulations.  So, after twenty-one years of
sobriety, do you consider Al Gore a criminal for his drug
use?

JCW:  I don't consider drug use a criminal act.  Is drug use
a poor choice?  Yes.  Is it risky behavior?  Yes.  Does it
make any sense -- has it gotten us anywhere as a society to
criminalize it?  Absolutely not.  Unless you consider it
progress that we're spending more on prisons than on higher
education, and still the drugs are everywhere.  But
politicians refuse to talk about this issue honestly.

WOL:  And what would you have Al Gore say about it?

JCW:  I wish Al would come clean.  I wish that all
politicians would come clean and deal with this in a
rational manner.  Look at all the damage the silence is
causing.

WOL:  And Newsweek?

JCW:  Newsweek cut off information that the American people
should have had in order to make an informed decision.
Knowing that Al Gore used drugs considerably more than he
has admitted is important.  Let the American people draw
their own conclusions about it, let them decide how
important it is.

We need to quit lying about it.  Quit hiding it.  To my
mind, Newsweek censored this, they covered it up.  And I
think that the perpetuation of that silence over time has
allowed us to go on jailing kids.  Kids who are much younger
and less equipped to deal with life than Al Gore was when we
were using drugs together.

I want any candidate that is running for president to be
honest about their drug use.  And then we can start being
honest with ourselves about how best to deal with society's
drug problem.

WOL:  So you don't think that his past drug use, even his
extensive drug use, should disqualify Al Gore from the
nomination?

JCW:  I'm going to vote for Al Gore.

(An editorial discussing DRCNet's views regarding political
candidates and drug use appears below, at the end of this
issue, or at <http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#editorial>.
This interview accompanies an article, appearing immediately
above, or at <http://www.drcnet.org/wol/gore.html>.)

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

3. Prison Moratorium in Tough-on-Crime Colorado?
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#moratorium

While in Arizona, drug policy reformers have successfully
reduced the prison population through the ballot box, in
Colorado, activists are waging an uphill battle to reduce
incarceration the hard way -- passing  a prison moratorium
bill through a conservative, law and order legislature.

The Colorado Moratorium Project is working with two state
legislators, State Senator Dorothy Rupert (D-Boulder) and
Representative Penfield Tate (D-North Central Denver) to
introduce SB 104, which will ban new prison expansion until
July 1, 2003 and establish a 17 member task force to look
into alternatives to incarceration.  The task force will be
composed of state representatives, law enforcement, public
defenders and representatives from Human Services and the
Department of Corrections.

The project's coordinator, Christie Donner, does not expect
the moratorium to get out of the judiciary committee, but
believes an amended bill featuring just the task force could
get passed by the legislature.  Last year the committee
passed a similar amended bill with just a six member task
force composed of state representatives, but that bill died
in the appropriations committee when representatives balked
at funding "just another study."

Donner told the Week Online that she believes prospects are
better this year due her group's public education campaign.
"There should be more public pressure.  We've been reaching
out to the community."  Her group has been educating
residents about the impact the war on drugs has had in
multiplying the number of non-violent criminals in the
prison system.  She also believes the expanded task force is
an improvement because legislators, by themselves, don't
have sufficient background to draw up the comprehensive
reform the task force will be assigned to do.

The task force will look into how tougher sentencing and the
war on drugs have quadrupled Colorado's prison population
since 1985.  Among the alternatives the task force will be
looking at to reduce incarceration include drug treatment,
crime prevention, job training, and education.

If the bill passes the legislature this year, Donner worries
the state's tough on crime Governor will veto it.  Even
though prospects are dim, Donner feels the legislation gives
her group "an air of credibility and is really good way of
raising the issue."  She points out fifty community groups
and organizations have endorsed the legislation.

A large chunk of Colorado's prison expansion can be
attributed to the war on drugs.  Currently it costs Colorado
$63.4 million every year to incarcerate non-violent drug
offenders.  When asked whether it would be easier to pass a
drug decriminalization initiative via the ballot box then
trying to pass a prison moratorium bill through a
conservative legislature worried about seeming soft on
crime, Donner said her group was looking into supporting an
initiative like the one passed in Arizona.  "We could bang
our heads trying to pass this legislation for a long time.
Voters are more sympathetic."  Apparently, voters aren't
worried about being soft on crime.

There are other prison moratorium groups campaigning around
the country including a California group that helps local
communities say no to new prison construction and a New York
group that is fighting that state's punitive Rockefeller
Drug Laws.  The New York-based Prison Moratorium Project is
online at <http://www.nomoreprisons.org>.

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

4. U.S. Government Reviewing Scripts of Network Shows as
   Part of Anti-Drug Campaign
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#ondcp

(This article was scheduled to appear in last week's issue
of The Week Online, but was accidentally omitted due to an
e-mail breakdown.)

Salon Magazine last week reported that the federal
government, through the Office of National Drug Control
Policy, has been reviewing the scripts of prime time shows
on all six major networks (ABC, NBC, CBS, WB, Fox and UPN)
and giving financial credit -- through that agency's anti-
drug media campaign -- for those that are "on message."  The
scheme, which has been kept largely obfuscated, if not
entirely secret, is seen as unethical by many media scholars
and may run afoul of federal payola laws which require
disclosure of any consideration paid -- either directly or
indirectly -- in return for the airing of content of any
kind.

According to the Salon story, ONDCP got into the business of
reviewing content like this:  In 1997, Congress approved a
billion dollars in Partnership for a Drug-Free America
advertising buys, on the condition that the networks
provided a dollar-for-dollar match in donated ad time.  Soon
after entering these agreements, however, the networks
became swamped with dot-com advertising, making the
contributed ad time far more valuable than it had previously
been.  In order to free-up the ad space that they owed the
government, they agreed to a system under which they would
get credit for airing shows in which the plot was "on
message," showing drug, and in some cases alcohol use, in a
light that the government deemed proper.

Pat Aufderheide, a professor at the American University
School of Communications, told The Week Online that the
practice is extremely troubling.

"It's a very bad idea for government to use carrots and
sticks to influence content on commercial programming,"
Aufderheide said.  "There are lots of forums through which
the government can legitimately get its message out.  You
never want to see government using its clout, financial or
otherwise, to get programming to conform with its version of
the 'right message.'"

"It's not bad to use the mass media to send positive health
messages," she said.  "What is bad is to use the club of
government -- whether through financial incentives to
cooperation or the implicit threat of governmental power --
to influence content."

Alan Jay Schwartzman, president of the Media Access Project,
a public interest law firm, told the New York Times, "This
is the most craven thing I've ever heard of yet.  To turn
over content control to the federal government for a modest
price is an outrageous abandonment of the First Amendment."
To the Washington Post, he added, "The idea of the
government attempting to influence public opinion covertly
is reprehensible beyond words.  It's one thing to
appropriate money to buy ads, another thing to spend the
money to influence the public subliminally.  And it's
monstrously selfish and irresponsible on the part of the
broadcasters."  (This week the Post reported that the Times
had also participated in the government's financial plan.  A
Times writer claimed not to have known this when
editorializing about it.)

There are questions beyond the government's role in paying
networks to air content that the government deems
"appropriate," however, and those revolve around the
effectiveness of the government's message, whether in paid
ads or surreptitiously placed in story lines.  Dr. Joel
Brown of the Center for Educational Research and
Development, and one of the nation's leading researchers in
the field of drug education, questions the very premise of
the government's campaign.

"The strategy, as it manifests itself both in the
advertising and now, as we come to find out, in plot lines
that gain government approval, is focused primarily on the
punitive aspects of our response to drugs and drug use.
What we know about education, however, is that it is far
more effective to focus on the interests, strengths and
development of children -- the "resilience approach" if we
hope to raise kids who make healthy decisions.

"The idea, if we truly want to provide drug education, is to
stress capacity rather than deficits and punishment.  70% of
kids who are raised under even the worst conditions, will
thrive and make healthy decisions if we strive to educate
them in this fashion.  The government's anti-drug campaign,
going all the way back to "this is your brain on drugs,"
promotes little more than tired variations on "just say no."
This message might be appropriate politically, but it is
also largely ineffective."

On the issue of redeeming ad time owed in return for
government-approved scripts, the reaction to the Salon story
indicates that nearly everyone, other than ONDCP itself,
wants to distance themselves from the practice.

NBC, in a statement released on Thursday, said "NBC has
never ceded creative control of any of our programs" to the
drug policy office or any other government agency.  The New
York Times reports that the other networks issued similar
statements.

But an unnamed participant in the give and take between the
networks and the government told Salon that "script changes
would be discussed between ONDCP and the show --
negotiated."  And Rick Mater, the WB Network's senior VP for
broadcast standards told Salon, "The White House did view
scripts.  They did sign off on them.  They read scripts,
yes."

Bob Wiener, spokesman for ONDCP, however, told The Week
Online that the agency merely viewed the scripts of shows to
decide whether or not the network would get credit toward
their advertising commitment.

"We worked with over 100 shows.  They would submit scripts,
mostly after they aired, and we would decide, up or down,
whether or not they met the standard to receive credit.
Sometimes, we will work with a network, voluntarily, to help
them with accuracy.  That has been true for years.  We will
often send them to experts, at CASA (the Center on Addiction
and Substance Abuse) for example, so that they can be sure
to get the facts and the message right."

When asked whether there was a distinction between the
"facts" and the "message," with the latter implying
political doctrine rather than factual information, Wiener
replied that his office is "proud of the 13% reduction in
youth drug use."

"We plead guilty," said Wiener, "to using every legal means
to save the lives of America's children."

Professor Aufderheide, however, believes that the "any means
necessary" defense leaves something to be desired.

"In the end," she said, "the American public will have to
decide which is more important: drug education as defined by
the government, or freedom of the press."

The Salon series can be found on the world wide web at
<http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2000/01/13/drugs/>.  The
Center for Educational Research and Development can be found
at <http://www.cerd.org>.  ONDCP is online at
<http://www.whitehousedrugpolicy.gov>.

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

5. Emergency Coalition Against Propaganda and Censorship
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#coalition

A coalition of organizations and individuals opposed to
government tactics as described in the previous article is
forming.  Write to Sanho Tree of the Institute for Policy
Studies ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) or Eric Sterling of the Criminal
Justice Policy Foundation ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) to be kept informed
of upcoming actions and demonstrations, and to receive a
copy of the coalition's sign-on letter, for your
consideration, when it is completed.

Note to Washington, DC area residents:  On Monday, January
24, there will be a teach-in on censorship, propaganda and
the drug war at the American University Kay Spiritual Life
Center from 6:30 - 7:45pm.  The center is located just off
of Ward Circle at the intersections of Massachusetts and
Nebraska Aves., NW.  At 8:15 that evening General Barry
McCaffrey will be speaking at the university's SIS Lounge.
We hope concerned people will attend the speech and ask
questions.  We ask that attendees not disrupt the talk or in
any way impede the General's right to freedom of speech.

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

6. U.S. Drug Czar Commands Customs to Seize All Hemp Seed
   Imports That Contain Any THC
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#hempembargo

(NORML and DRCNet contributed to this article, which was
accidentally omitted from last week's issue due to an e-mail
breakdown.)

The embargo on sterilized hemp seeds entering the United
States that was lifted in December has once again been
reinstated on order of U.S. drug czar Barry McCaffrey,
because it goes against his office's "zero tolerance
policy."  Tom Corwin, of the U.S. Customs Department of
Trade Programs, said that when the hemp seed embargo was
lifted in December, Customs looked at other country's limits
for tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and decided that 0.3 percent
THC should be the limit.  He said this decision was made
without the knowledge of the drug czar's office.  Corwin
said McCaffrey was "offended" by this decision because it
went against the Office of National Drug Control Policy's
National Drug Control Strategy.

A Jan. 5 memorandum from Robert McNamara, Deputy Assistant
Commissioner, Office of Field Operations, instructed U.S.
Customs to "suspend the policy that allows for the legal
importation into the United States of sterilized hemp seed
or other hemp products which contain an amount not in excess
of 0.3 percent tetrahydrocannabinol."

But Bob Wiener, spokesman for ONDCP, told The Week Online
that the guidelines announced in December were arbitrary,
and that ONDCP was not satisfied with them.

"You don't just base it on some random number that some
other country comes up with," Wiener said.  "Now we're back
to square one."

Corwin said that according to the drug czar's orders, every
hemp seed shipment arriving from Canada will be detained,
and a sample will be taken to a lab to determine if there is
any trace of THC.  This process takes 30 days.  If there is
any trace of THC, the shipment will be seized.  Corwin said
another of McCaffrey's concerns is that even trace amounts
of THC in hemp seed products could cause a false positive
drug test.

In August, the DEA instructed U.S. Customs to stop the
importation of all hemp seed products into the U.S.  The
first seizure was a 53,000-pound load of sterilized birdseed
imported by Kenex Ltd.  In November, the DEA lifted the
embargo and allowed sterilized seeds to enter the country.

"The hemp industry suffered a huge loss of momentum when
Customs illegally cut off our supplies for four months,"
said Don Wirtshafter of the Ohio Hempery.  "We finally were
getting back on our feet when the drug czar did this about-
face on us.  Any new regulations should come only after rule
making procedures, not on some bureaucrat's whim."

Background on the current situation may be read at
<http://www.hempembargo.com>, a site maintained by the Hemp
Industries Association.  The Hemp Industries Association's
main web site can be found at <http://thehia.org>.  Previous
DRCNet coverage of the Hemp Embargo can be found at
http://www.drcnet.org/wol/110.html#hempwar and
http://www.drcnet.org/wol/116.html#embargolifted in the Week
Online archives.

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

7. Teach Your Children Well:  Clergy, Religious Academics
   Discuss Reform
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#teach

What role can religious institutions play in the battle for
drug policy reform?

What would effective drug education look like?

A January 18th gathering of more than 20 clergy, activists
and educators in Menlo Park, California took on those
questions in a spirited session that could be a first step
toward more organized involvement of local religious
organizations in the reform effort.

The event was co-sponsored by Urban Ministry of Palo Alto, a
non-profit group, and Stanford's United Campus Christian
Ministry.  Featured speakers were the Rev. Howard Moody,
minister emeritus of Judson Memorial Church in New York City
and a longtime stalwart in progressive causes; and Marsha
Rosenbaum, director of The Lindesmith Center-West in San
Francisco.

The Rev. Moody said that "the voice of religious
institutions on drug policy has been a mere whisper.  Now we
need a clear and certain sound for reform" from churches,
synagogues and mosques.  "We must raise reasonable,
fundamental questions about our failed policy," he said.
"We have to reach people at an emotional level."

The Rev. Moody is affiliated with Religious Leaders for a
More Just and Compassionate Drug Policy, a New York City-
based organization whose mission statement says "it is not
enough for us to pray for [people] and ask God to heal the
addiction of drug users."  The group has called for
religious communities to "take seriously the task of
examining and speaking out on our current drug policies."

The Rev. Moody's account wove together more than 40 years of
personal experience and religious history on drug users and
policy.  "In the late 1950's, in New York, the church was
the only group that worked with heroin addicts," he
recalled.  "We were responding to the pain of people and
families, and there were no services available to addicts --
not a bed, not a treatment center.  The closest facility to
New York was in Lexington, Kentucky."

He offered several suggestions for what people can do today
for reform.  "First, we can seek out and support reasonable
proposals for reform.  We also can't let ourselves be
frightened or intimidated by the drug warriors."  He
described his indignation at a recent National Prayer
Breakfast when Drug Czar Barry McCaffrey said that it had
never been more important to pray for our young people.
"What about praying for all the African-American families
your drug war has ruined?", the Rev. Moody thought to
himself at the time.

He also urged audience members to push past the inevitable
feelings of discouragement, as difficult as that can be.
"We have to transcend our sense of futility in trying to end
this deadly national tragedy," he declared.  He urged his
listeners to heed the example of the prophet Isaiah and to
"seek justice" with all the energy they can muster.

In her lunchtime talk, Marsha Rosenbaum described a 25-year
professional and personal odyssey and her extensive work on
drug education.  "Honesty is absolutely the key," she said.
"What passes for drug education has made kids very cynical."

Rosenbaum noted that realistic descriptions of marijuana are
crucial to establishing the credibility of drug education.
"What kids are told about pot is inconsistent with their own
experience.  They hear -- and are still hearing -- that pot
is addictive.  Then they learn it isn't, and they discount
all the other messages," she said.

Rosenbaum said parents should learn as much as they can
about drugs and drug policy and insist on better drug
education for their children.  What would such education
look like?  "It has to be honest -- based on scientifically
sound data," she said.  "We also have to integrate drug
education with other parts of the curriculum to make it
meaningful and real."

Finally, Rosenbaum called for a "risk reduction" component
to be pervasive in drug education.  "We have to tell kids
how to reduce the risks of harm if they decide to
experiment," she declared.  "The bottom line is health and
safety."

At the end of the gathering, several people in the group
agreed to work on forming a  speakers' bureau whose goal
would be to spread the policy reform "gospel" at Bay Area
churches, synagogues and mosques.

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

8. College Convention Report
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#cc2k

Steve Silverman, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

On the weekend of January 13-15, more than 1,000 students
from 40 states, 150 colleges, and 50 different high schools
gathered in Manchester, NH to get a taste of all things
political at the College and High School Convention 2000
(CC2K).  The event, sponsored by an assortment of nonprofit
organizations, attracted high profile pundits and
presidential candidates representing a plentiful assortment
of ideologies.

Arguably the most vocal and engaging group present was
Students for Sensible Drug Policy (http://www.ssdp.org).
SSDP, whose presence at CC2K was sponsored by the Criminal
Justice Policy Foundation (CJPF), gathered 25 student
activists for the event, representing eight colleges, some
as far away as Wisconsin.

Kris Lotlikar, the 20 year-old national director of SSDP and
DRCNet's campus coordinator told the Week Online, "We came
to New Hampshire primarily for two reasons.  First, we want
to educate students about the harms of a drug war that was
supposedly launched in order to protect us, but is now more
likely to hurt us.  Second, we are here to show candidates
that they can no longer hide behind the bipartisan effort to
ignore the failure of drug prohibition."

After the students arrived, there was an immediate call to
action:  a Thursday night protest at Londonderry High
School, where Republican frontrunner Governor George W. Bush
was scheduled to speak.  As the students prepared, they were
interviewed and filmed by a platoon of MTV reporters who
later accompanied them to the event.

The students' outdoor protest yielded mixed results.  A
handful of aggravated policemen, accompanied by menacing
looking German Shepherds, refused to let the protesters
inside from the sub-zero weather and threatened them with
arrest.  The protestors countered by editorializing into a
bullhorn and unveiling the centerpiece of the protest -- a
fellow dressed in an oversized homemade paper-mache George
Bush costume dancing around and chanting witticisms such as
"Don't vote for the McCain, vote for the cocaine!"  Hanging
over the puppet's chest was a large sign reading "DRUG WAR
HYPOCRITE."  This unusual disturbance elicited the rancor of
an equally strident crew of Bush supporters who bemoaned the
protestors for unfairly disparaging their candidate.

While some braved the stinging cold, others employed more
covert tactics.  Sanho Tree, director of the Drug Policy
Project at the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS) worked
with CJPF and SSDP during the weekend's events.  He
successfully infiltrated the crowd in Londonderry by
strategically placing a Bush sticker on his lapel, sitting
himself towards the front-center of the room, and getting
his hand in the air for the Q&A session.  When picked by
Bush, Tree tossed him the hot-potato question, "Governor
Bush, you've been doing remarkably well in the polls and I
congratulate you.  It would seem that the American people
don't seem to have a problem with your drug past..."

Bush immediately interrupted with a jumbled reply and never
let Tree finish.  "You're making an assumption, Sir.  Sir,
sit down, please.  You're making an assumption about me,
that you have no, you really don't know what you're talking
about.  And I don't, I don't, I don't accept that
assumption.  What you need to know about me, is should I
swear, I'm going to bring honor and dignity to the office.
That's what you need to know about me."

After the Q&A, Tree was swarmed by reporters.  The next day,
SSDP's activity and Tree's exchange received coverage from
the local and national press, as The Union Leader, The
Concord Monitor, and the Associated Press picked it up.

Satisfied, the protestors exited the Bush event and
continued to a nearby library where Sen. John McCain was
speaking.  The well-dressed young protestors unobtrusively
filed into the meeting room and got into position just as
McCain began taking questions.  Within minutes, SSDP members
had stung McCain with three tough drug policy questions.

David Guard from CJPF asked McCain if he would reconsider
his incarceration based drug policies in light of his own
wife, Cindy, who successfully overcame a serious addiction
to prescription narcotics without having to serve time in
jail.  In response, McCain tried to show that he was
sympathetic to Guard's concerns.  "Why are we sending our
young people to old schools and new prisons?" he
rhetorically asked the audience, followed by applause.  "I
am in favor of increased rehabilitation," he continued.

In reality, McCain's senatorial record shows a conflicting
message.  He has sponsored legislation, S.423, that would
prohibit any federal funding for methadone maintenance --
the only known, reliable treatment for heroin addiction --
and he also voted in favor of S.146, a bill that would
reduce the amount of powder cocaine needed to trigger harsh
mandatory minimum prison sentences for those found
possessing it.

Kristy Gomes, an intern with CJPF and president of the
George Washington University SSDP chapter, challenged the
candidate with a tough line of questions regarding his
medical marijuana policy.  McCain quoted drug czar William
Bennett to justify his support for continuing medical
marijuana prohibition.  Gomes told The Week Online, "I'm
glad that we got McCain to talk about some of the failures
of prohibition, but as long as he relies on Bill Bennett for
his scientific evidence, we can't hope for him to change his
policies."

Friday morning began with an appearance by Reform party
candidate Patrick Buchanan.  SSDP students managed to shoot
off three question regarding drug policy at him; he managed
to awkwardly duck them all.

Soon after Buchanan's speech, the students attended an
animated and informative drug policy debate between Eric
Sterling, President of the Criminal Justice Policy
Foundation, and Kevin Sabet, President of a prohibitionist
collaboration called International Students in Action.  This
forum had the highest turnout of all the policy debates.

Sterling delivered a riveting speech in which he documented
the institutional corruption and widespread evils that occur
from flawed national drug policy.  He emphasized that "Our
national drug policy is a fundamental failure."

He then addressed the young audience, "Do any of you, or did
any of you, go to a drug free high school?  Show of hands?
No one is raising a hand -- yes, there are 2 or 3 hands, not
many in a room of hundreds of students.  The number one goal
of the strategy is to protect kids from drugs.  The 1998
Monitoring the Future survey of high school students reports
that seniors tell us that heroin and marijuana -- heroin and
marijuana -- have never been more accessible to them, and
crack cocaine is more available now than at any time in a
decade.  Only someone committed to a fantasy view of the
world, or a cynical and dishonest propagandist, will
steadfastly claim that national anti-drug policy is
working."

Sabet's attempted to counter Sterling's arguments by
recounting stories of individual tragedy that resulted from
misuse of illegal drugs.  He then insisted that the numbers
of these cases would be greatly magnified if drugs users
were not persecuted criminally by the government.  He was
eventually compelled to admit that we could never really
hope for a drug-free America.

As the debate wound down, Alan Keyes supporters filed into
the conference room.  Keyes lived up to expectations by
delivering a speech that invoked intense reactions -- very
neagative or very positive -- from the audience members.
Dan Goldman, an SSDP member from University of Wisconsin at
Madison, caught the attention of the candidate by asking:
"Dr. Keyes, I've noticed that African-Americans are greatly
under-represented both at this convention as well as on
college campuses around the nation, but over-represented in
prisons.  Do you think this is due to the legacy of slavery,
or the drug war?"

Keyes complimented the thoughtfulness of the question, and
he explained that there was once a time in America's history
when people were able to coexist peacefully with those same
substances we now try in vain to eliminate by locking people
in prisons.

Of all the candidates present, he clearly took the boldest
stance against the drug war by declaring that, "We cannot
incarcerate our way out of the drug problem."  He offered
that strong morals coupled with a strong religious base are
much more effective than imprisonment at keeping people away
from drug use.

Later that evening, the students visited a forum hosted by
front running Democratic candidate Al Gore.  Their caravan
swung into a nearby location in town where they were met
with polite resistance.  The disappointed rabble rousers
were told by Gore's minions that their room on the second
floor was full.  Furthermore, the fire marshal insisted that
nobody else could be allowed entrance because of safety
codes.  The group lamented the fact that they had arrived
too late, but decided to regroup and greet Al Gore by
arriving early at his next scheduled location.

The sophisticated rowdies arrived at a high school in Salem,
NH about an hour before Gore's arrival but were thwarted
again by the Gore staff.  It seems that they were shielding
their Mr. Gore from the pressing students' potentially
troubling drug policy questions.  They had the wannabe
intruders staked out, and gracefully kicked them out into
the icy New Hampshire darkness.

The pretension that such gatherings are open to the general
public quickly evaporated from the expelled visitors' heads.
This Gore gathering was an invite-only affair.  A-list
attendees could only cross the red velvet rope if they
passed a strict test for maximum dullness.  The students
retreated back to the hotel having learned another valuable
lesson about the phoniness of presidential politics.  They
relaxed, socialized, and got some well-deserved sleep time.

Saturday was the final day of the conference.  The remaining
students sought the quiet refuge of their display table and
passed out literature.  Brian Gralnick of George Washington
University's SSDP briefed an interested conference attendee
on the injustice of a provision in the 1998 Higher Education
Act.  "This provision," he explained, "will deny federal
financial aid to any student who gets caught in possession
of even the smallest amounts of drugs.  This is
counterproductive because access to education is the best
way to prevent a life of crime.  Why should we let the
government keep students from getting an education while
they encourage repeat offending?  And anyway, this provision
is only going to hurt working class kids whose parents can't
afford to pay for school if they're denied aid."

The Week Online asked Gralnick if he felt SSDP's attendance
at the conference was a success.  "Absolutely.  We were huge
and we really got the word out.  One student actually came
up to me and he told me that we were the loudest and most
visible group there.  He asked me if I thought our
unorthodox antics were effective, and I said to him, 'Hey,
you came up to me, and when this conference is over you and
everyone here will know SSDP and what we're all about.'  He
agreed with me."

(Steve Silverman played the paper mache George Bush at this
and other protests.)

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

9. Sentencing Project Report Finds Massive Increases in
   Number of Women Imprisoned for Drug Offenses
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#sentencingproject

A new study by the Sentencing Project found a dramatic surge
nationwide in the number of women incarcerated for drug
offenses -- an 888% increase between 1986-1996, compared
with a 129% increase for all non-drug offenses.  While the
women's prison population more than doubled during that
period, drug offenses accounted for 49% of the rise.

"Gender and Justice:  Women, Drugs, and Sentencing Policy,"
also examined the impact of drug offenses for women in three
states, New York, California and Minnesota, finding
substantial variation among them.  In New York, a whopping
91% of the increase in women sentenced to prison from 1986
to 1985 was due to drug offenses.  Drug offenses represented
55% of the increase in California and 26% in Minnesota.

Minority women have been impacted disproportionately by drug
policies.  Of the women sentenced to prison for drug
offenses in those states, 91% were minorities in New York,
54% in California, and 27% in Minnesota, all substantially
greater than the minority proportion of each state's
population.

The study attributed the dramatic rise in women's
incarceration to several factors:  the impact of drug abuse
on low income women; declining economic opportunities for
many women; limited treatment options; and the harsh
mandatory sentencing policies adopted in conjunction with
the war on drugs.  Overall, women in prison are
disproportionately low-income, with low education levels,
high rates of substance abuse (over 60%) and mental illness
(24%).  In addition, more than half have been physically or
sexually abused.

Marc Mauer, Assistant Director of the Sentencing Project,
said, "The 'war on drugs' and harsh sentencing policies have
combined to make a bad situation worse for many women.  The
unprecedented growth in the number of women prisoners
affects not only women, but their thousands of children as
well."

The study found considerable variation in the degree to
which Hispanic women are affected by drug policies.  In New
York, Hispanic women were substantially over-represented
among women sentenced to prison for drug offenses in 1995 --
44% compared to their 14% share of the population -- while
in California, they constituted 31% of the population, but
25% of the women sentenced to prison for drug offenses.

The report also analyzed the impact of rising imprisonment
on women and children.  Two-thirds of women in prison are
mothers to children under the age of 18, many of whom were
heading single parent households prior to their
incarceration.  Half the women inmates in a 191 survey
reported never having received a visit from their children
while incarcerated.  In most states, women convicted of drug
felonies are now banned for life from receiving welfare or
food stamp benefits, as well as financial aid for higher
education.

The report makes several recommendations to policymakers,
including repeal of mandatory sentencing laws such as New
York's Rockefeller Drug Laws; repeal the denial of welfare
and education benefits for person with a drug conviction;
expand the availability of drug treatment both within and
outside the criminal justice system; and provide support for
children of incarcerated mothers by improving parenting
skills, providing greater access to treatment, and breaking
the cycle of addiction of imprisonment.

"Gender and Justice: Women, Drugs, and Sentencing Policy"
was authored by Marc Mauer, Cathy Potler and Richard Wolf,
and is available for $8 from the Sentencing Project, 1516 P
St., NW, Washington, DC 20005, (202) 628-0871,
<http://www.sentencingproject.org>.

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

10. EDITORIAL:  Dishonest Policy
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/122.html#editorial

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

(This editorial accompanies articles appearing at the
beginning of this issue, and on our web site at
<http://www.drcnet.org/wol/gore.html>.)

This week, The Week Online exposes a story of privilege and
position, of hypocrisy in the name of political expediency,
of the problems inherent when a leadership class insists
upon enforcing an unjust and unworkable policy that they
themselves would never, could never enforce upon their own.

So Al Gore reportedly used lots of drugs well into his
adulthood.  That is not the issue, nor should it disqualify
him from consideration for the Presidency.  Did he lie?  Was
political pressure put on Newsweek to kill the excerpt, at
least until after the primaries?  These are interesting
questions and the answers will likely sway some voters.

The most important issue though is this:  The American drug
war was never meant to be enforced against people of means
and privilege.  And, if it were, if the children of the rich
were being arrested, having their lives disrupted, if their
parents' doors were being kicked in, if they were being
harassed by the police for their private behavior, if they
were being incarcerated for their drug use at anywhere near
the rates of America's poor, we would have had a rational
and humane drug policy in place decades ago.

In 1987, Al Gore, describing the circumstances under which
he "occasionally" smoked marijuana in the early '70's,
compared it to drinking moonshine during prohibition.  The
comparison was more appropriate than he let on.  Alcohol
prohibition was also a failed social experiment.  It's
impact was seen in an enormous black market, the wholesale
corruption of law enforcement and government officials, easy
access to alcohol by children, the enrichment of a new class
of organized criminals, an explosion of crime and violence,
the poisoning of users and a wholesale disrespect for the
law.  Sound familiar?

It is time -- no it is long past time -- for our leaders to
begin to speak honestly about our failed prohibitionist drug
war.  To level with the American people about the
multitudinous costs and the paucity of benefits, about the
profits in prisons and in arms and in money laundering,
about the government jobs and the campaign contributions.
But honesty is difficult, with all of the interests
involved, after so many years and so many lies.

So perhaps the questions of Al Gore's drug use, and George
Bush's drug use, and all of the drug use by all of our
political leaders should in fact be an issue.  Maybe that
will allow us to start small, with honest answers to
questions about that use.  Then maybe, just maybe, we could
move forward from there.

-----------------------------------------------------------

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