Search the web
Sign In
New User? Sign Up
ibogaine
? Already a member? Sign in to Yahoo!

Yahoo! Groups Tips

Did you know...
Want your group to be featured on the Yahoo! Groups website? Add a group photo to Flickr.

Best of Y! Groups

   Check them out and nominate your group.
Having problems with message search? Fill out this form to ensure your group is one of the first to be migrated to the new message search system.

Messages

  Messages Help
Advanced
[IBOGAINE] Fw: US: 'Frontline' Investigates A 30-Year Battle: The D   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #5236 of 5239 |

-----Original Message-----
From: MAPNews <owner-mapnews@...>
To: mapnews@... <mapnews@...>
Date: Friday, October 06, 2000 1:59 PM
Subject: MN: US: 'Frontline' Investigates A 30-Year Battle: The Drug War


>Newshawk: http://www.cannabisnews.com/
>Pubdate: Fri, 06 Oct 2000
>Source: Christian Science Monitor (US)
>Copyright: 2000 The Christian Science Publishing Society.
>Contact: oped@...
>Address: One Norway Street, Boston, MA 02115
>Fax: (617) 450-2031
>Website: http://www.csmonitor.com/
>Forum: http://www.csmonitor.com/atcsmonitor/vox/p-vox.html
>
>'FRONTLINE' INVESTIGATES A 30-YEAR BATTLE: THE DRUG WAR
>
>Every hour of every day, somewhere in the United States, a plane loaded
>with illegal drugs to be sold on the streets, lands on a vacant lot or a
>remote airfield. It's been this way for some 30 years.
>
>Throughout that period, in increasing amounts, the US has poured hundreds
>of billions of dollars and millions of man-hours into stopping that flow.
>It has not succeeded.
>
>This fall, as part of its Election 2000 "Democracy Project," PBS's
>prestigious "Frontline" series launches a two-part investigation of this
>long struggle in "Drug Wars" (Oct. 9 and 10, 9-11 p.m., check local
>listings). This battle has altered our criminal justice system, put
>millions of people in jail, and created a multibillion dollar, global drug
>industry.
>
>"We're trying to present an objective history of how we got to where we are
>now," says producer Martin Smith. "Most people in this country are severely
>divided over the issues of criminalization or decriminalization, over what
>the exact [drug] policy should be or shouldn't be."
>
>The most evocative portion of the documentary comes from the Vietnam War
>era, when reports came back to Washington that servicemen were developing
>severe heroin habits. The Nixon White House responded with what were then
>controversial methadone treatments.
>
>The methadone program "was an experiment that worked, and it worked to a
>very high level," says Robert Dupont, head of the National Institute of
>Drug Abuse during that period. "That's the good news. The bad news - and
>it's something I struggle with - is how it was lost."
>
>The series tries to show that the Vietnam period is the only time during
>the past three decades that treatment was given a high priority. From that
>point onward, the law-enforcement model - interdiction of drugs, legal
>prosecution of users and pushers - has dominated both the discussion and
>the dollars.
>
>"The problem is really that there's too much support for the
>law-enforcement side of the drug-war question," Mr. Smith says.
>
>"It's the politicians," says "Drug Wars" reporter Lowell Bergman, who
>sprang from behind the camera to big-screen notoriety in the recent movie
>"The Insider." "The politicians are afraid of being called soft on crime.
>There's the dilemma."
>
>Law-enforcement officers make their case onscreen. "I think going after
>product is basically a foolish objective," says Robert Stutman, a former
>agent with the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA). "Whether it be the Medellin,
>Cali [drug cartels], or anybody else, [they] can afford to lose 90 percent
>of their product, probably 95 percent of their product, and still turn a
>profit. Yet, the basic concept of US government and most state drug wars is
>to go after product. Well, my three-year-old grandson knows that doesn't
work."
>
>A dramatic appearance by a drug-cartel operative under federal protection
>underscores the depth of the problem.
>
>"DEA is an agency that has scored a lot of big goals against the cartels,"
>says Carlos Toro, a former drug trafficker - and a childhood friend of
>Colombian cartel leader Carlos Lehder - whose testimony helped land Lehder
>in jail. "But the tentacles of the cartel are greater than any people can
>imagine." His recommendations echo those of the law-enforcement members who
>were interviewed in the series.
>
>"All I can tell you is we have to reduce the demand," Mr. Toro says. "As
>long as there's a great market for consumption, the Colombians, the
>Bolivians, the Peruvians, those who grow the coca leaf, those Colombians
>who produce it will be enticed to make the billions of dollars."
>
>The show will be enhanced by companion programming from National Public
>Radio, whose stations will air a five-part series on "All Things
>Considered" during the same week.
>
>"We made this film," Smith says, "because for the first time we have people
>who've spent their entire careers at this endeavor on one side or the
>other, and these people are retiring and they have a lot to teach us."
>__________________________________________________________________________
>Distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in
>receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.
>---
>MAP posted-by: Jo-D
>



-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
TO UNSUBSCRIBE: send an email to listproc@... with the subject blank
and with the body containing nothing but the two words: SIGNOFF IBOGAINE
FOR INSTRUCTIONS: send an email to listproc@... with the body
containing nothing but the word HELP
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------



Sat Oct 7, 2000 1:35 am

pieman@...
Send Email Send Email

Forward
Message #5236 of 5239 |
Expand Messages Author Sort by Date

... From: MAPNews <owner-mapnews@...> To: mapnews@... <mapnews@...> Date: Friday, October 06, 2000 1:59 PM Subject: MN: US: 'Frontline'...
ARON KAY
pieman@...
Send Email
Oct 6, 2000
8:37 pm
Advanced

Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Guidelines - Help