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Smashing meth or trashing rights? Drug bill in Congress...



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Background:
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,21152,00.html
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,33473-2,00.html

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Media Awareness Project (MAP)
PO Box 651 Porterville * CA 93258 * (800) 266-5759
http://www.MAPINC.org * MGreer@mapinc.org

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                   FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
January 18, 2000                                         Mark Greer, 
800-266-5759

Smashing Meth or Trashing Rights?

Consider these statements:

A: "If you must smoke marijuana, filter the smoke with a water pipe and
don't even think of driving afterwards."

B: "If you ever do shoot up heroin, don't use dirty needles.  Clean them
with bleach or find a syringe exchange program."

I think these statements are good advice.  But if U.S. Senators Orrin Hatch 
and Dianne Feinstein have their way, it will soon be a felony to publish 
these statements in any book, newspaper, magazine, web site, or even to 
utter them or link to a web site containing them. The Hatch/Feinstein 
Methamphetamine Anti-Proliferation Act of 1999 makes these statements 
illegal because they "pertain" to an act that violates federal 
controlled-substance laws.

Here's the censorship language of the Hatch/Feinstein bill (S.486): "It 
shall be unlawful for any person-- (A) to teach or demonstrate the 
manufacture of a controlled substance, or to distribute by any means 
information pertaining to, in whole or in part, the manufacture or use of a 
controlled substance, with the intent that the teaching, demonstration, or 
information be used for, or in furtherance of, an activity that constitutes 
a Federal crime."

My opening statements "teach" people how to "use" criminalized drugs in a 
way that reduces potential harmfulness.  They are nonetheless information 
that, if heeded at all, would be used "for ... an activity that constitutes 
a Federal crime," namely the use of marijuana or heroin.  (Don't believe 
for a minute that the "intent" aspect clarifies anything: the "intent" of 
suspects in federal crimes is exactly what the prosecutor says it is. Period.)

The penalty for my heinous utterances: 10 years in federal prison.

You're probably thinking "Surely they didn't mean that.  This is a 
clamp-down on methamphetamine, isn't it?" But a law is a very literal 
beast.  The implications of S.486 are as broad as its language is 
vague.  It clearly violates the face-value meaning of the First Amendment 
-- guaranteed free speech.

Anyone who thinks the feds would use common sense and restraint when 
enforcing this law hasn't been watching the Drug War for the past 20 years. 
These are the same drug warriors who just paid $1 million in an 
out-of-court settlement with the family of Donald Scott, who was shot to 
death in a "dry" (no drugs found) raid on Scott's California ranch in 
1992.  Purportedly, the feds, fearing the publicity about corrupt drug cops 
in LA's Rampart precinct, thought jurors might be persuaded that enforcers 
really were trying to grab Scott's property under federal drug forfeiture 
laws, as the suit had alleged.  On another front, drug-warring federal 
prosecutors are notorious for using mandatory sentencing laws to jail the 
lowest-level participants in drug cases for the longest possible terms, 
based on heresay evidence and wide-reaching conspiracy laws (see the PBS 
documentary "Snitch").  A study of drug case law reveals that people can be 
jailed on drug cr imes through a head spinning array of legal 
technicalities (often convoluted, illogical, and unfair). Prosecutors 
essentially have the power of accuser, judge, and jury, all rolled into 
one, and can effectively jail whomsoever they please. Many use their power 
to seek high political offices.

Would S.486 be used benignly? Tell me another.

In states that have passed compassionate-use referendums, S. 486 would 
facilitate federal prosecution of doctors who tell patients about medical 
marijuana.  These are among the more obvious applications of this 
bill.  The larger implication concerns citizens who are now legally 
protesting the Drug War or conducting now-legal programs that are at odds 
with abstinence-enforcement ideology.

Given the vague and inclusive interpretation of federal conspiracy laws, 
almost any information about criminalized drugs and any dissent against 
existing drug laws could be construed by federal enforcers as furthering 
federal drug crimes.  In Congressional hearings last summer, drug czar 
Barry McCaffrey specifically accused two national drug reform 
organizations, MAP (the Media Awareness Project) and the Drug Policy 
Foundation (DPF), of distributing information to support the manufacture of 
criminalized drugs.  Of course, McCaffrey was lying about this.

Check it out at the
Media Awareness Project (MAP) http://www.mapinc.org
and
The Drug Policy Foundation http://www.dpf.org

MAP posts worldwide news related to criminalized drugs, drug policy, 
etc.  Both groups organize activism to end the War on Drugs policy. Neither 
of them advocate drug use or offer instructions about drug 
manufacture.  However, in the light of the 33,000 press articles clipped by 
MAP, the government's Drug War does not look good.  And activists are 
running scared about S.486.

Based on McCaffrey's statements of last summer, MAP and other drug policy 
leaders fear that enforcers, armed with the Hatch/Feinstein bill, would 
shut down their web sites, effectively silencing dissent against the Drug 
War and squelching public debate about drug policy. They fear selective 
enforcement of S.486 such that any anti-Drug-War web site could be shut 
down directly or indirectly because Internet service providers, fearing 
prosecution, would refuse to host such sites.

In remarks about the bill, Sen. Feinstein emphasized her intent to censor 
communications about drugs on the Internet.  Whether Hatch and Feinstein 
know it or not, S.486 neatly fulfills the wishes of UN drug czar Pino 
Arlacchi, whose global drug-war organization recommended, in a 1997 
publication, that governments should curtail civil liberties in their 
pursuit of strict drug-abstinence enforcement.

Other implications: books about criminalized drugs could be withdrawn from 
Barnes-and-Noble's shelves; certain magazines would be shut down (no more 
High Times).  Information about industrial hemp cultivation would be 
outlawed.  Drug treatment and intervention programs that deviate from 
strict abstinence doctrine or help non-abstainers (concerning harm 
reduction, needle exchange, methadone maintenance, or medical marijuana) 
could be prosecuted - because their communications, like my opening 
statements, pertain to activities that are federal crimes.

S.486 seems to be a bald-faced violation of the First Amendment.  But the 
opinion of Chief Justice William Rehnquist, who never saw a draconian drug 
law he didn't like, is harder to predict.

This is an extremely dangerous law, not only for drug policy and reform, 
but concerning freedom of speech generally in the United States.  If 
dissent about this issue can be silenced, all dissent can be silenced.

If S.486 becomes law, American speech rights become subject to the whim of 
the badge-bearing guys who smash down doors carrying submachine guns and 
yelling "Freeze!" like they did to Donald Scott. No matter what you think 
of drugs, if you love freedom, you should hate this bill.

-30-

The Media Awareness Project (MAP) Inc. is a Project of DrugSense a 501(c)3 
non profit educational organization dedicated to accurate information and 
reporting on drug and drug policy related matters.

Additional resources

Drug War Facts
http//www.csdp.org/factbook/

Searchable archive of more than 30,000 articles on drug policy matters
http//www.mapinc.org/drugnews/

The Media Awareness Project (MAP) Inc. Home page
http//www.mapinc.org

DrugSense Home Page
http//www.drugsense.org

Free Weekly Email newsletter on important drug policy developments
http//www.drugsense.org/hurry.htm


Contact Information

The individuals below may be contacted for further information regarding 
this release.

Mark Greer
Executive Director
DrugSense (MAP Inc.)
PO Box 651
Porterville,
CA 93258
(800) 266 5759
MGreer@mapinc.org
http//www.mapinc.org
http//www.drugsense.org

Paul "Paul Bischke"
<pbischkezip@hotmail.com>
pmb@MULTITECH.com

Tom O'Connell M.D.
195 Warren Rd.
San Mateo
CA 94401
650 348 6841 Ph/fax
tjeffoc@sirius.com

Kevin Zeese
Common Sense For Drug Policy
3619 Tall Wood Terrace
Falls Church VA 22041
(703) 354 5694
703-354-5695 (fax)
<kevzeese@laser.net>
http//www.csdp.org

Kendra Wright
Family Watch
3619 Tallwood Terrace
Falls Church
VA 22041
703-354-5694
http//www.familywatch.org/
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

For more on this bill Please click this link for the views of Dana Larsen, 
Editor of Cannabis Culture - complete with suggestions and links for taking 
action:
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00.n071.a01.html



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