The Week Online with DRCNet, Issue #123 - Jan. 28, 2000
   A Publication of the Drug Reform Coordination Network

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This issue can be also be read on our web site at
<http://www.drcnet.org/wol/123.html>.

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

1.  Gore Drug Use Question Leads to More Questions
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/123.html#gorequestions

2.  San Francisco Approves Plan to Issue ID Cards to Medical
    Cannabis Users -- Buyer's Club Seeks Business License
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/123.html#sfmedmj

3.  Britain:  Shelter Workers Sentenced to Prison for
    Refusing to Inform on Clients
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/123.html#shelterworkers

4.  UK Police Report:  Legalizing Drugs is Obvious Choice
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/123.html#ukpolicereport

5.  Michigan Initiative Effort to Rely on Volunteers,
    Enthusiasm
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/123.html#pra2000

6.  Court Strikes Down Cincinnati Ban
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/123.html#cincinnati

7.  Regaining the Vote:  Sentencing Project Report Details
    State and Federal Activities
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/123.html#disenfranchisement

8.  ALERTS: Legislative Action in Maryland and Virginia
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/123.html#alerts

9.  Anderson and Boje Cases Seeking Support
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/123.html#cases

10. EDITORIAL:  A Not So Nutty Professor
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/123.html#editorial

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

1. Gore Drug Use Question Leads to More Questions
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/123.html#gorequestions

In the week since DRCNet's special report on allegations of
extensive drug use contained in an upcoming Al Gore
biography by Newsweek reporter Bill Turque, further
information has surfaced in the media, and non-denial
denials have been issued by the Gore campaign.  Most
significant of all, at least in the eyes of drug policy
reformers, were the statements of Senator John Kerry (D-MA)
who, inadvertently perhaps, pointed out the "dangerous
hypocrisy" that is the essence of the ongoing saga.

On Saturday (1/22), Salon magazine followed DRCNet's special
report and interview with long-time Gore friend John
Warnecke with an interview of its own (available online at
http://www.salon.com/politics2000/feature/2000/01/22/gore/).
In it, Warnecke expanded on his explanation of the pressure
he was under to hide the truth of his relationship with
Gore, and Gore's drug use, when the issue surfaced during
the '88 campaign.

The New York Times, while downplaying to story (a short
article by Alex Kuczynski appeared on page c11 in the
January 24 edition), did confirm that the excerpt had indeed
been scheduled to run but was pulled at the last minute by
chairman and editor-in-chief Richard M. Smith.  A
spokesperson for Newsweek told The Times that the decision
had nothing to do with the political schedule, but declined
to discuss the magazine's editorial process.

The Vice President, for his part, refused to answer
questions about his relationship with Warnecke.  When asked
about the allegations of long-term, regular drug use, Gore
would only answer that he had used marijuana, but "not to
that extent," while refusing to discuss specifics.

But despite significant media attention this week, the only
government official to touch upon the disconnect between the
drug use of political leaders and the punitive drug policies
that they often espouse was Sen. John Kerry (D-MA).

On Monday, Kerry was asked by reporters to explain why he
thought that questions surrounding George Bush regarding
whether or not he had used cocaine were more substantively
relevant than Gore's use of marijuana.  Kerry, noting that
Al Gore had already admitted his use of marijuana, said:

"(H)e (Gore) said 'I used it.'  So that's not an issue...
And I don't think Al Gore intends, you know, to make prior
use an issue of other people, except to the degree that it
affects public policy."

Pressed later on the question of the Bush cocaine rumors,
Kerry laid out his thinking on why Bush's drug use, if
substantiated, is indeed an important issue for voters to
consider:

"The issue about George Bush is not the fact that he may
have used it, said Kerry.  "The issue about George Bush is,
how can you, if you have (used cocaine), have a position
that is so at odds in terms of being a governor where you
send a lot of other people who may have done the same thing
you do to jail.  That's the issue.  It's not a question of
whether he used it or when he used it, it's a question of
what his policy is today and whether that's hypocritical and
dangerous."

The Week Online spoke with Kerry Spokesman David Wade, who
reiterated the Senator's position.

"The Vice President has long admitted that he has used
marijuana," said Wade.  "Governor Bush, on the other hand,
will say only that when he was young and irresponsible, he
was young and irresponsible.  But when Bush has had the
opportunity to score political points in Texas by
promulgating tough, extremely punitive new laws against drug
users, he has been happy to do so."

Such analysis, however, is far from exculpatory of the Vice
President.  Under the Clinton-Gore administration, marijuana
arrests increased from fewer than 350,000 in 1992 to more
than 650,000 in 1998, 88% of which were for simple
possession, according to the FBI's annual Crime in the
United States report.

On December 30, 1996, in the wake of California's passage of
a medical marijuana initiative, the Clinton administration
held a press conference to announce that they would
aggressively prosecute doctors who so much as discussed
medicinal marijuana with patients -- despite the fact that
Vice President Gore recently admitted that his sister tried
marijuana for relief of the pain and nausea associated with
cancer.

Further, in October of 1998, the Clinton administration
signed the Higher Education Act of 1998.  That act contained
a provision that will automatically delay or deny all
eligibility for federal student aid for any student for any
drug conviction.  (Visit http://www.u-net.org for further
information.)  The provision will go into effect on July 1,
2000 and is likely to adversely impact educational
opportunities for hundreds of thousands of poor and working-
class students.  Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA) has since
introduced H.R. 1053, which would overturn the provision and
return discretion on financial aid eligibility to the hands
of sentencing judges.

And on February 7, 1999, the Vice President himself
presented the administration's newest "National Drug
Strategy" at a Washington press conference.  At the event,
Gore spoke about opportunities for young people as being key
to the prevention of drug abuse.  Nevertheless, the
strategy, in line with its previous incarnations, earmarked
approximately two-thirds of the $18 billion federal anti-
drug budget for enforcement and interdiction.

Robert Kampia, executive director of the Marijuana Policy
Project (http://www.mpp.org) told The Week Online that the
issue of hypocrisy on drug policy is an important one.

"Given that many of our elected leaders have admitted to
their own past drug use, it behooves us to examine this
issue.  It is certainly hypocritical, if not morally
reprehensible, when our elected officials actively support
the wholesale arrest and incarceration of others who engage
in the same behavior for which they themselves ask
absolution."

DRCNet's Gore report is available online at
<http://www.drcnet.org/wol/gore.html>.

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

2. San Francisco Approves Plan to Issue ID Cards to Medical
   Cannabis Users -- Buyer's Club Seeks Business License
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/123.html#sfmedmj

Medical marijuana users in San Francisco may soon be
carrying identification cards that could provide a measure
of legal protection and greater peace of mind.

On Jan. 24, the city's Board of Supervisors approved a
program under which patients who have a doctor's approval to
use marijuana, and their caregivers, would receive an ID
card issued by the city.  San Francisco's Department of
Public Health is likely to contract with an outside agency
to administer the program, according to Wayne Justmann, a
director of the San Francisco Patients Resource Center
(SFPRC), a medical marijuana dispensary.

"We're thrilled by passage of the ordinance," said Justmann.
"Many people have worked very hard to reach this point.  A
lot of activists want the city to use a designated outside
group to run the program.  That way, people who are
skeptical won't be able to complain that tax dollars are
supporting the use of marijuana."

Justmann, who is HIV positive and uses marijuana in
combination with other medicines, has been a major player in
the ID card ordinance and an imaginative battler in the
cause.  He is one of four directors of SFPRC, all of whom he
modestly described as "patients with an idea."  He told the
San Francisco Chronicle that SFPRC is "the first group I
know of in the United States to ask a city for the various
permits that any legitimate business must have.  We want
official recognition."

To achieve that, Justmann and his colleagues have met with
city planning officials, the fire department, sheriff's
deputies, the local merchant's association and many of their
neighbors.  The center is applying for a nonprofit business
license, and on Jan. 27, SFPRC finalized a lease for its
space in the Hayes Valley neighborhood.

"A key issue for dispensaries is how to qualify patients,"
said Justmann.  "It's very time-, money- and labor-intensive
for every dispensary to do its own intake or registration.
We're working to establish some uniformity in this process."

The ID card program would enable patients from any of San
Francisco's medical marijuana dispensaries to avail
themselves of the closest or most convenient club.

Justmann told the Chronicle that SFPRC's efforts to set up
shop as a licensed nonprofit business have been "tough
sledding.  The hoops we've had to jump through to make this
legal, I don't know if I'd advise the next people to do it."

Despite the hardships, Justmann was eager to sit down with
the designated point person from the Department of Public
Health.  "We can't wait," he said.  "We have patients who
can't wait for medical cannabis."  One of his co-directors,
Gary Farnsworth, said the team at SFPRC was "very proud of
what we've done so far.  And we've been getting some great,
encouraging phone calls from other cities.  They want to
learn about what we're doing."

Some medical marijuana and AIDS activists have expressed
concerns about ID card programs, fearing the data could be
misused by authorities.

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

3. Britain:  Shelter Workers Sentenced to Prison for
   Refusing to Inform on Clients
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/123.html#shelterworkers

Andria Efthimiou-Mordaunt for DRCNet

Sentencing of Charity Workers Sparks Debate, Protest in UK

Just days before Christmas, the director and manager of a
homeless shelter in Cambridge, England were found guilty of
what prosecutors called "allowing their premises to be used
for 'procurement & trading' of illicit substances."  Kings
Lynn Crown Court Judge Jonathan Haworth sentenced Ruth Wyner
and John Brock of the Wintercomfort homelessness project to
five and four years in prison, respectively.

The two were arrested after a buy-and-bust operation by
local police netted several individuals who were using the
site to sell drugs.  Wyner and Brock, who were not accused
of dealing or using drugs themselves, were arrested because
they had not turned over to police the names and addresses
of suspected drug dealers -- persons whom they had
previously banned from the site.  Wyner and Brock maintain
that informing on their clients would have violated their
confidence and broken the fragile link the shelter created
between addicts and drug treatment services.

Wyner and Brock's sentencing, the length of which exceeds
that of the dealers who were arrested at Wintercomfort, has
caused an uproar in England from official public health
circles to drug user's unions, from Cambridge drawing rooms
to the floor of Parliament.

It has also spurred the formation of an action committee
under the slogan "Free the Cambridge Two."  At a recent
meeting, Professor David Brandon of East Anglia University
exhorted his comrades to drastic measures.  "If it comes to
it, we should offer ourselves up for arrest," he said.
"These sentences have made a mockery of the law, and by
offering ourselves up, we would be dignifying it.  Thousands
of us are 'aware' of drug dealers in our agencies."

Critics of Wyner and Brock's sentences say the case is
representative of an increasingly repressive and punitive
British drug policy that has developed under the leadership
of Prime Minister Tony Blair.  Along with a burgeoning urine
testing industry and a growing criminal justice involvement
within drug service provision, they perceive a disturbing
tendency of the Blair administration to emulate the United
States' so-called War on Drugs.

The media, too, has weighed in on the matter.  In a January
2nd editorial, the Guardian newspaper said the sentence had
"put Ruth Wyner and John Brock on the casualty list of the
unwinnable war on drugs," and noted that "The undercover
police operation at Wintercomfort has not only brought
misfortune to the Wyner and Brock families but shown that
the national fad for zero tolerance not only encourages the
hounding of the destitute but also the persecution of those
who help them."

This week, Wyner and Brock went to court asking leave for
appeal, and for bail, but the Judge refused to give his
response publicly, saying he would write it to them.
Outside, some 50 supporters from around the country gathered
in a show of solidarity for the Cambridge Two.

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

4. UK Police Report:  Legalizing Drugs is Obvious Choice
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/123.html#ukpolicereport

The Daily Mail is reporting that a report released by the
Cleveland (UK) Police, one of Britain's most active police
forces, states that the War on Drugs is a failure and that a
legalized, regulated market is the obvious choice to replace
it.  The report was written by the force's former assistant
Chief Constable Richard Brunstrom and endorsed by Chief
Constable Barry Shaw.  It says in part:

"If there is indeed a war on drugs, it is not being won --
drugs are cheaper and more readily available than ever
before.... Attempts to restrict availability of illegal
drugs have failed so far everywhere.... There is little or
no evidence that they (drug laws) can ever work within
acceptable means in a democracy.... There is little evidence
that conventional conviction and punishment has any effect
on offending levels."

This in advance of an inquiry by a British think-tank, the
Police Foundation, that is expected to call for a
reassessment of laws against cannabis and ecstasy (MDMA),
along with broader drug policy reforms.

Finally, the report calls for a Royal Commission to study
the issue of drug prohibition, adding its weight to a
growing number of individuals and organizations urging the
Blair government to take this step.  The Blair government,
however, has thus far refused to convene such a study.

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

5. Michigan Initiative Effort to Rely on Volunteers,
   Enthusiasm
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/123.html#pra2000

Michigan defense attorney Greg Schmid has neither polling
data nor money, but he has loads of enthusiasm and
volunteers which he hopes will propel his marijuana
legalization initiative, dubbed the Personal Responsibility
Amendment (PRA), to a place on Michigan's ballot in
November.

Instead of paying people to gather the 300,000 signatures he
needs to put his initiative on the ballot, Schmid is relying
on volunteers.  If the volunteers can collect enough
signatures, he said he may be able to raise enough money
from supporters to fund a paid signature gathering effort to
collect the rest.

The PRA calls for a constitutional amendment that would
allow people to possess up to three marijuana plants or
three ounces of marijuana within their homes, in a manner
not readily accessible to minors.  Schmid told The Week
Online he got involved in drafting the initiative because of
his concern over the increased numbers of arrests of
marijuana users in the last few years.  "We've seen a
serious pattern since 1996 of a hard line against marijuana
users," he said.  "Prosecutors all over Michigan have turned
to a policy of pressing felony charges for second offense
simple possession of marijuana.  By the fifth offense for
simple possession, a person could face a statutory maximum
sentence of 15 years!"

But Schmid's initiative takes the concept of personal
responsibility beyond the "right to use drugs" argument.  It
both "eliminates lawsuits based on any [medical] condition
that is the direct and obvious results of a person's long
term abuse of marijuana, tobacco or alcohol" and changes
asset forfeiture laws so assets seized by police during drug
busts will only be available for "personal responsibility
education."  Schmid's tack differs here from asset
forfeiture reform initiatives in other states this year,
where seized money would be directed to drug treatment and
crime prevention programs.

If the PRA makes the ballot, Schmid predicts strong
opposition from the state's attorney general's office, but
hopes Michigan Governor John Engler to be sympathetic to the
issue, because Engler drafted medical marijuana legislation
years ago.  More realistically, however, allies for Schmid's
campaign could include the state's Libertarian Party and
State Senator Mike Goschka.

If the initiative does pass, Schmid promises it will be
"bulletproof" from state or federal interference.  Because
it is a constitutional amendment, he said, state legislators
can't touch it, and because it specifies personal non-
commercial use, the federal government will have no legal
right to arrest marijuana smokers using the interstate
commerce clause.

NORML National Director Keith Stroup agreed that the
government would not be likely to interfere if the
initiative passes, but for a different reason -- because it
does not legalize the sale and distribution of marijuana.
Unlike marijuana legalization efforts underway in Alaska,
Oregon and Washington, the Michigan measure does not allow
the sale of marijuana.  "This is a model that should be able
to withstand federal challenge, but not because of the
interstate commerce clause," Stroup said.

Schmid said that so far, at least 1,500 people have
volunteered to collect signatures for the PRA.  "People are
calling all day.  I've never seen this kind of enthusiasm
before," he said.  The deadline for signature gathering is
July 10.

To learn more about the Michigan Personal Responsibility
Amendment, visit <http://www.ballot2000.net>.

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

6. Court Strikes Down Cincinnati Ban
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/123.html#cincinnati

Jane Tseng, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Last Thursday (1/20/00), US District Court Judge Susan Dlott
struck down a Cincinnati law that banned people accused or
convicted of drug-related offenses from a downtown
neighborhood.  In her decision, Dlott said the law violates
constitutional rights to freedom of association, freedom of
movement, and freedom from double jeopardy.  Cincinnati
Municipal Code Chapter 755, passed by the Cincinnati City
Council in June 1996, banned those arrested for drug-related
offenses from traveling through public streets and sidewalks
in the Over-the-Rhine neighborhood for 90 days following the
arrest.  Upon conviction, the ban extended to a full year.
People caught violating the ban were subject to immediate
arrest for criminal trespass, an offense that carried a
maximum fine of $250 and 90 days in jail.

The case stemmed from a federal lawsuit filed by American
Civil Liberties Union of Ohio Foundation lawyers on behalf
of two Cincinnati residents subjected to the ban in June,
1998.

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

7. Regaining the Vote:  Sentencing Project Report Details
   State and Federal Activities
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/123.html#disenfranchisement

In 1998, a study by Human Rights Watch and the Sentencing
Project found that 13 percent of African American men and
nearly four million Americans have lost the right to vote
due to felony convictions.  Felony disenfranchisement,
together with mandatory minimum sentencing and the year 2000
census, were named by Congressional Black Caucus chairman
James Clyburn as the most serious current civil rights
issues, speaking to a democratic awards dinner last May
(http://www.drcnet.org/wol/090.html#clyburn).

A new report by the Sentencing Project outlines legislative
and legal activity in thirteen states and in Congress to
address the issue of whether convicted felons and ex-felons
should have the right to vote.  "Regaining the Vote: An
Assessment of Activity Relating to Felon Disenfranchisement
Laws" reports the following state and federal activity:

 * Legislation to restore voting rights has been proposed or
considered in Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida,
Pennsylvania, Nevada and Virginia.

 * Inmates' voting rights have been restored in New
Hampshire after a state constitutional challenge, and a
legal challenge has been brought in Washington state, based
on the Voting Rights Act.

 * The Subcommittee on the Constitution of the House
Judiciary Committee held a hearing in October, 1999, to
consider restoring federal voting rights to non-incarcerated
felons.

Regaining the Vote also reports that Utah voters chose to
take away the right of inmates to vote, and that a similar
measure is being considered in Massachusetts.  Affecting
felony disenfranchisement indirectly, a 1999 Louisiana vote
restricts the set of crimes for which first offenders can
receive automatic pardons upon completion of their
sentences.

Marc Mauer, Assistant Director of the Sentencing Project,
said that "The expansion of the criminal justice system over
the past 25 years has created an ever-larger pool of
ineligible voters.  Current efforts to restore the right to
vote to offenders who have 'paid their debt' to society may
help to bring the US more in line with other democratic
nations."

Regaining the Vote, written by Mauer and Patricia Allard, is
available from the Sentencing Project, 1516 P St. NW,
Washington, DC 20005, (202) 628-0871, or online at
<http://www.sentencingproject.org>.

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

8. ALERTS: Legislative Action in Maryland and Virginia
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/123.html#alerts

DRCNet issue legislative alerts during the past week for the
states of Virginia and Maryland.  In Virginia, activists are
battling Gov. Gilmore's "Operation SABRE," a draconian set
of proposals that would increase drug policing and mandatory
minimum sentences.  If you are from Virginia, please visit
our collaborative web site with the group Virginians Against
Drug Violence, at <http://www.drcnet.org/states/virginia/>,
to send a free e-mail or fax to your state Senator and
Delegate and to find our more information about Operation
SABRE and how to get involved.

In Maryland, Del. Don Murphy (R-Catonsville) is introducing
a bill to protect patients who use marijuana medically and
their doctors who recommend it.  We are collaborating with
the Marijuana Policy Project on a web site to demonstrate
public support for the bill.  If you are from Maryland,
please visit <http://www.mpp.org/Maryland/>, to send a free
e-mail or fax to your state Senator and your Delegates (you
may have a few of them).

We also sent a note to our subscribers in the District of
Columbia about a forum and protest that took place at
American University last Monday night.  If you live in
Virginia, Maryland or DC, but didn't receive one of these
alerts, then we probably don't have your state information
in our database.  Please e-mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] to
update your info, or to sign up for info from additional
states.

Most of all, if you live in Maryland or Virginia but haven't
acted on these alerts, please take a moment now to do so.
It is crucial that medical marijuana pass in Maryland and
that SABRE be defeated in Virginia.  Time is of the essence!

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

9. Anderson and Boje Cases Seeking Support
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/123.html#cases

AARON ANDERSON:  Last June, the Week Online reported that
Aaron Anderson, a hemp advocate in Hawaii, had won the right
to sue prosecutors and the County of Hawaii (the "Big
Island") for violations of Constitutional rights in a case
dating back to 1992.  Former prosecutor Kay Iopa had brought
charges against Anderson and Roger Christie for commerce in
legal hemp seed products, acknowledging she would only bring
such charges against advocates of marijuana legalization
(http://www.drcnet.org/wol/094.html#andersoncase).

Two weeks ago, a federal judge rejected the County's claim
that all hemp products are illegal, and Anderson's civil
rights case is scheduled for trial in federal court in
Honolulu on June 5, 2000.  Attorney Steven Strauss says that
the case is making good law for marijuana and civil rights
advocates, but that contributions and other resources have
run out.  Anderson and Strauss are seeking financial help to
pay for expert witness fees to establish lost profits for
Anderson's hemp business that was shut down, for depositions
of the prosecutor, three deputies, police officers and a DEA
agent, photocopying costs, and travel expenses.  They are
willing to return any contributions out of an award of
damages or attorney's fees.

If you would like to support the Anderson civil rights
lawsuit against prosecutors and the County of Hawaii, send
contributions to:  Steven D. Strauss Client Trust Account,
P.O. Box 11517s, Hilo, HI 96721.

RENEE BOJE:  The US government is seeking to extradite Renee
Boje from Canada, to try her for alleged involvement in a
medical marijuana growing operation in Bel Air, California.
The judge in her extradition case is expected to hand down a
ruling on Feb. 9, and it is expected that the judge will
order her surrendered to US authorities.  Boje's attorney,
John Conroy, has prepared an appeal.

The case has attracted substantial media attention,
including an article in Glamour magazine, but financial
support for the defense and media effort has been sparse.
Visit http://www.thecompassionclub.org/renee/ or e-mail
[EMAIL PROTECTED] to learn more about Renee Boje and her
case.  To contribute, send check or money to: Renee Boje
Legal Defense Team, P.O. Box 1557, Gibsons, BC V0N 1V0, or
visit http://www.safesafe.com/reneeboje/ to donate online.

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

10. EDITORIAL:  A Not So Nutty Professor
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/123.html#editorial

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

One of the greatest rewards of a career in activism is the
opportunity one is afforded to share ideas with learned men
and women.  I had such an opportunity this week in the form
of an hour-long phone conversation with a professor of
sociology at a University in New York.  The professor, who
will remain nameless for the simple reason that I haven't
been able to reach him to ask permission to use his name, is
a regular subscriber to The Week Online, and an avid and
enthusiastic analyst of both the human and the social
condition.  On the night we spoke this week, he was in rare
form.

"I think," he began, "that in trying to reform drug policy,
you don't know what you're up against."  Yes, I replied, I
had a pretty good idea what I was up against.  A global
illicit market producing hundreds of billions per year in
cash, much of which ends up in the pockets of corrupt
government officials, militaries and seemingly legitimate
corporations.  A law enforcement/prison industrial complex
grown enormous with the arrest and incarceration of
literally millions of poor and powerless folks.  An
intelligence and military community ever more dependent upon
drug war funding.  A...

He cut me off.

"No, no, no.  That's not what I'm talking about," he said.
I'm talking about the reason why the issue of drug policy
reform is still a hard sell in liberal circles.  I mean,
you've got the libertarian right, you've got the old-style
liberals, you have a small but growing group in the middle.
But despite the fact that the social justice aspects of the
drug war should appeal to most of the people in this country
who consider themselves liberal or progressive, there hasn't
been a real move by the establishment on that side to back
what you're doing."

Knowing that the man on the other end of the phone considers
himself a strong liberal, I was naturally curious as to
where he was going with this.  OK, I said.  Tell me why.

"It's ominous" he said.  "And it's bigger than I initially
thought."

What is?

"They're really Communitarians.  They believe in social
justice, just like liberals, but they don't believe in
individual rights.  That's why the drug war doesn't really
register with them as an overriding evil.  That whole 'it
takes a village' thing?  That's what it means.  They're
green, they recycle, they care about the poor in their own
way, but they're willing to sacrifice freedom itself to
achieve their vision of progress."

Libertarians call that socialist, I told him.  He laughed.

"Right!  They've taken over much of the Democratic party and
part of the Republican party as well.  They have no regard
for privacy, for the right to be left alone by the
government, for the whole concept of civil liberties.  Feds
watching your bank account, mandatory drug testing, national
ID's.  They cannot fathom, they do not agree, that maybe,
just maybe, people have the right, the God-given right, to
put what they want into their own bodies, even if their
motivation is nothing more than to feel good."

So, I asked, you feel betrayed by your liberal compatriots?

"I'm horrified," he said, "but Ira Glasser (National
Director of the ACLU) told me twenty-five years ago what we
have to do."

He did?

"Yup.  Brilliant guy, Ira.  Y'know, I've always said that
Ira Glasser had everything figured out back in 1972.  He's
just been waiting for the rest of the world to catch up to
him."

OK, so what does Ira Glasser say?

"There needs to be a renewed, vigorous discussion of civil
liberties in this country.  We need to begin the process of
reintroducing the issue of individual liberties into the
public and political discourse.  It's not okay to trade
freedom for order.  It's not okay to trade freedom for
efficiency.  It's not even okay to trade freedom for social
justice, whatever one's conception of that is, because you
wind up with neither."

That's it?  I asked.

"That's it.  But remember what I said.  The enemy has become
mainstream.  And it won't be easy."

I hung up with a smile.  A very excitable guy, my professor
friend.

This morning I came into the office and opened my email.
Buried amidst the flood of important and not-so-important
notes was one from another friend of mine.  This one, a
fellow activist.  It was about the Hatch-Feinstein
Methamphetamine bill.  Cosponsored by one Republican and one
Democratic senator, the bill would make it illegal to
transmit over the Internet any information that is likely to
be used to break any state or federal drug law.

My activist friend, along with many of our colleagues,
believe that the bill will prohibit life-saving information
on syringe-exchange, on safe injecting practices and on
growing marijuana for medicinal use, at the very least.  The
bill would outlaw speech itself, in the name of protecting
society from the horrors of finding drug recipes online.  I
thought about what the professor had said.  I was no longer
smiling.

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