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Showing posts with label legalization. Show all posts
Showing posts with label legalization. Show all posts

Saturday, October 12, 2024

Trump live in Coachella: rally (10/12)

I know I'm doomed to lose, so I'm going around blue states to be able to say I tried my best.
Will you implement Project 2025? - Mm, what's that? I never read it. Everyone knows IDK.


I'm not p*ssed off. I'm just mad.
Right wing radio Los Angeles (KFI AM 640) has announced that DJ Trump is hitting Los Angeles (Burbank in the Valley, approaching the Foothills) to appear on The John With No Ken Show  with John Kobylt (after eight years of begging) today at 2:00 pm (Pacific).

He's coming to California for a rally this Saturday (Oct. 12, 2024, at 5:00 pm with gates opening at noon) at Coachella, the polo grounds in Indio far outside LA, at Calhoun Ranch.

This is where the Stagecoach country music hootenanny is held following the massive pop and EDM jamboree that is COACHELLA. (Two tickets per cell phone number registered, and no guns or Anti-Trump protesters please).

How did DJ make it to the coach? He survived Pennsylvania and the gold course. But he needs another spectacular attention grab if he wants to overcome Kamala's slight lead in some polls. Demented ramblings? That might do it. Heat stroke for an old man, the oldest ever to try to win the office?

Trump rambles on. Massive fight breaks out at MAGA rally

Do you care that you're losing to Kamala?
VP KD Harris is on overdrive. Since DJ chickened out of his interview with 60 Minutes, Kamala went it alone and got slightly clobbered. She just clams up, plays dumbs, changes the subject. Gov. TV Walz fizzled on Jimmy Kimmel Live, an affable Midwesterner coach caught fibbing but being likeable, rightly accusing Trump of being a "pathological liar."

Today is a busy day for Kamala with a visit to The Howard Stern Show on Sirius Radio in New York. Stern is now publicly backing her (what does he know?), claiming to be confused why anyone would still be supporting the New York grifter, his erstwhile friend DJ. She is headed to New York to do The Late Show with Stephen Colbert and another View type show. Will it be enough? Is she pulling out all the stops with the election only a month away?

Wednesday, October 9, 2024

Weed, beer, guns, Israeli wars w/ Kamala


Kamala was on a media blitz, promoting legalization of weed (cannabis, THC) everywhere, brags about having a gun and being willing to shoot anyone who visits her house unexpectedly, cracked open a beer during an interview to seem hip, talks to her staff in secret by covering her mouth, backs all Israeli wars and will change nothing if she replaces Pres. Genocide Joe except that she will add a Republican "diversity hire" to her cabinet for inclusion and equity.

Does Kamala listen to Cypress Hill for ideas?

Hey, we're normal, right, Stevie? - You bet, Kami. - So let's chug Millers.

Of course I would: You ask me how I could just kill a man? I back wars.

(The View) Israeli wars in Middle East? I'll do everything like G-Joe Biden

Kamala’s media blitz, Melania’s Fox News book tour, and Project 2025's porn agenda
(The Daily Show) Oct. 9, 2024: Jordan Klepper dives into presidential candidate VP Kamala Harris's press tour, including how she utterly fails to differentiate herself from Genocide Joe Biden (except that she plans to lean even more to the right by putting a Republican in her cabinet to advise her) and the revelation that as for handguns, she owns a deadly Glock. Plus, Melania Trump visits Fox News to discuss fecal adult diaper dependent Donald's pajamas, Stephen Miller exemplifies how to be a "sexual matador," and Project 2025 plans to take down porn. #DailyShow #KamalaHarris #MelaniaTrump #JordanKlepper


Trump tries to deny inappropriate relationship with Russia's Putin, JD Vance is a hypocrite, MyPillow for MTG
(Jimmy Kimmel Live) Oct. 9, 2024: There was a new episode of the “Golden Bachelorette” tonight, Jimmy extends his warm and safe wishes to those who are in the path of Hurricane Milton, Trump right now is denying an absolutely inappropriate relationship with his Sugar Vladdy Putin, he released a forceful statement lashing out at Bob Woodward, JD Vance doesn’t seem to have any problem with Trump and Putin’s relationship, Vance never said anything in 2020 about the election being stolen, Eric Trump was just sworn in as a Deputy Sheriff in Florida, Lara Trump wants everyone to know that her father-in-law Donald is huge in the napkin signing community, the God Bless the USA bibles Trump has been selling are made in CHINA, he went on Ben Shapiro’s podcast to tell people he isn’t erratic, and Mike "MyPillow" Lindell (James Adomian) endorses weather conspiracist Marjorie Taylor Greene. #Kimmel

Saturday, February 10, 2024

Sex is legal in Switzerland: prostitution

Pfc. Sandoval, Seth Auberon (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

Is Switzerland's £3 billion legal sex trade too liberal? | documentary
(The Sun) Feb. 3, 2024: Welcome to liberal Switzerland, where prostitution is legal and paying for sex has become as simple as ordering an Uber.

As well as street prostitution, now websites offer clients a range of sexual services, spanning all kinds of kinks and fetishes, at the click of a button.
  • 0:00 Intro
  • 01:37 Inside a brothel in Geneva
  • 06:30 Street prostitution in Zurich
  • 10:29 Inside the high-class escort industry
  • 13:32 Uber-style prostitution app
  • 16:22 Inside a group sex sauna
The sex industry is thought to be worth £2.9 billion — more than the country’s domestic cheese production.

But while it sounds like a sex-positive utopia, for thousands of women plying the trade across the country the reality is much darker.

In this documentary The Sun travelled to Switzerland to investigate how the county's super-liberal sex buying laws are working out for those in the industry.

Read more
ABOUT: The Sun delivers breaking news, latest gossip, and incredible exclusives around the world with hubs in London, New York, Scotland, and Ireland. Covering topics from news, money, and sport along with famous Fabulous Magazine, The Sun is the biggest news brand in the UK and one of the fastest growing news sites in the US. Stay tuned for video clips across the biggest news stories and segments from The Sun’s expert journalists. Become a Sun subscriber and hit the bell to be the first to know. Read The Sun: thesun.co.uk

Friday, June 16, 2023

Where all drugs are legal: Portland (video)


I Investigated the city where every drug is legal...
(Tyler Oliveira) May 31, 2023. Help Kevin save Portland, Oregon, and check him out on twitter.com/kevinvdahlgren, YouTube: @truthonthestreets, website: truthonthestreets.substack.com.
Buy some merch and help keep the channel alive 🙏 (link below) onews.lol. Become a channel member to help support the channel: @tyleroliveira.

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Most American INCEST is in the state of Alabama

Tuesday, December 27, 2022

Thai High: Legal weed in Thailand (video)

NYT; ABC News In-depth, Australia, 10/6/22; Seth Auberon, Ashley Wells (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

Morphing Monasteries: Buddhism in today's Thailand (The New York Times, 12/23/12) Buddhism has been a way of life in Thailand for centuries, but inside the most popular temples is a trend that critics call "fast-food Buddhism." Article: nyti.ms/XGYUFp


Is Thailand the new weed capital of the world?
(ABC News In-depth) From zero tolerance to decriminalization, Theravada Buddhist Thailand’s recent U-turn on its cannabis laws is lighting up a billion-dollar industry.

Bhante, do you guys accept bud for dana?
Officially weed is for medicinal use only, but the legal grey area means ganja lovers are celebrating. It’s the country that gave us the words "bong" and "ganja."  In Thailand, cannabis has been used for centuries in traditional medicine.

But when the US launched its "war on drugs" in the 1970s, Thailand became a key partner, placing cannabis on its own narcotics list and toughening penalties against it. This June (summer 2022), the country took it off that list, meaning cannabis sellers and recreational users no longer risked jail for selling or possessing cannabis.

Many Westerners took up Thai Forest Tradition
In tourist hotspots, a ganja-culture is fast taking hold. In Bangkok’s Khao San Road [the backpackers' and shoestring travelers' haven] and nightspot, it seems easier to buy a joint than a Pad Thai (which cost about 10 cents for the street version of the dish).

"Now it’s legal. God gave a gift for us," says Choco Gonzales, a cannabis seller in Bangkok. And it’s party time for tourists at the famous full moon party at Koh Phangan in the country’s southeast.

What will Dhammakaya do to save Thailand?
"Wherever you go now, it’s Amsterdam again in Asia," says an Italian tourist at the party. As Australia reignites on its own debate about legalizing cannabis, Southeast Asia correspondent Mazoe Ford travels around Thailand to meet the new crop of "ganja-preneurs" cashing in on the green rush.

In Bangkok, Kitty Chopaka, a shop owner selling cannabis products and a leading advocate of decriminalization, is still pinching herself. "I never thought in my lifetime that this would actually happen…But at the same time I knew it has to be done."

On the southern island of Ko Samui, resort owner Carl Lamb reckons the liberalization of the laws is attracting overseas tourists. "You can really feel it's reinvigorated the market. There's a new energy here."

Ford also hitches a ride on the private jet of the politician behind the policy – Deputy Prime Minister and Public Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul. He takes us to Thailand’s east to spruik, the medicinal cannabis industry, which the government hopes will become a billion-dollar industry.

“It turned out that majority of my voters chose to vote for my party…some people even called my party [the] ‘Cannabis Party,’” he tells Ford. But not everyone welcomes the change. More than a thousand doctors have warned that the drug was delisted before proper safeguards and regulations were in place. 

“We don't want to be the cannabis haven of the world,” say Doctor Chanchai Sittipunt from Chulalongkorn University's Faculty of Medicine. But Kitty Chopaka says going back isn’t possible; the genie is out of the bottle.

“That bottle is broken. It’s gone!” More: ab.co/3ebD2pG

ABOUT: Foreign Correspondent is the prime-time international public affairs program on Australia's national broadcaster, ABC-TV. It produces half-hour, in-depth reports for broadcast across the ABC's television channels and digital platforms. Since 1992, its teams have journeyed to more than 170 countries to report on war, natural calamity, and social and political upheaval – through the eyes of the people at the heart of it all.

Contributions may be removed if they violate ABC’s Online Terms of Use abc.net.au/conditions.htm (Section 3). This is an official Australian Broadcasting Corporation YouTube channel.

Friday, September 4, 2020

The legal marijuana industry's rigged (video)

Hasan Minhaj (Patriot Acmtflix, May 25, 2020); Seth Auberon, Ashley Wells, Wisdom Quarterly


The legal marijuana industry is rigged
(Patriot Act) As rich white male business owners monopolize newly-available marijuana licenses, states continue to arrest people of color for cannabis crimes -- even after it’s legal. This leads Hasan to ask, If cannabis can’t be legalized fairly, should it be legalized at all?

Have a happy day, marijuana monger.
About Patriot Act with Hasan Minhaj: New topics and new episodes every Sunday, only on Netflix. Hasan Minhaj brings an incisive and nuanced perspective to global news, politics, and culture in this unique comedy series.

ABOUT: Netflix is the world's leading streaming entertainment service with 183 million paid memberships in over 190 countries enjoying TV series, documentaries and feature films across a wide variety of genres and languages. Members can watch as much as they want, anytime, anywhere, on any internet-connected screen. Members can play, pause and resume watching, all without commercials or commitments.

Sunday, June 3, 2018

Too much marijuana in Oregon, prices down

Associated Press (ap.org, May 31, 2018); Seth Auberon, Crystal Quintero, Wisdom Quarterly

Glut of marijuana in Oregon is cautionary tale, experts say
PORTLAND, Oregon - When Oregon lawmakers created the state's legal marijuana program, they had one goal in mind above all else: to convince illicit pot growers to leave the black market.

That meant low barriers for entering the industry that also targeted long-standing medical marijuana growers, whose product is not taxed. As a result, pot production boomed -- with a bitter capitalist consequence.
Now, marijuana prices here are in freefall, and the craft cannabis farmers who put Oregon on the map decades before broad legalization say they are in peril of losing their now-legal businesses as the money market adjusts.
 
Oregon regulators on Wednesday announced they will stop processing new applications for marijuana licenses in two weeks to address a severe backlog and ask state lawmakers to take up the issue next year. Experts say the dizzying [de-]evolution of Oregon's marijuana industry may well be a cautionary tale for California... More

Saturday, March 25, 2017

Colorado guards against Fed POT crackdown

Associated Press (ap.org, March 25, 2017); Seth Auberon (ed.), Wisdom Quarterly

A bill pending in the Legislature would allow pot growers and retailers to reclassify their recreational pot as medical pot if a change in federal law or enforcement occurs.

It's the boldest attempt yet by a U.S. marijuana state to avoid federal intervention in its weed market.

The bill would allow Colorado's 500 or so licensed recreational pot growers to instantly reclassify their weed. A switch would cost the state more than $100 million a year because Colorado taxes medical pot much more lightly than recreational weed -- 2.9 percent versus 17.9 percent.

The measure says licensed growers could immediately become medical licensees "based on a business need due to a change in local, state or federal law or enforcement policy."

The gov't wants you to smoke, so don't (AP).
The change wouldn't take recreational marijuana off the books, but it wouldn't entirely safeguard it either. What it could do is help growers protect their inventory in case federal authorities start seizing recreational pot.

The provision is getting a lot of attention in the marijuana industry following recent comments from members of President Donald Trump's administration.

White House spokesman Sean Spicer has said there's a "big difference" between medical and recreational pot. More

Monday, February 27, 2017

Colorado's legal marijuana experiment (video)


Legalized: A year in the life of Colorado's legal weed experiment
NBC News(NBC News) Election night 2016 was a big night for the marijuana legalization movement as multiple states passed measures including recreational use initiatives in California and Massachusetts. This story documents the first year of Colorado's "legal weed" experiment. More videos

NBC News is a leading source of global news and information. Clips from NBC Nightly News, Meet The Press, and original series like Debunker, Flashback, Nerdwatch, Show Me, and exclusive NBC investigations like toxic pesticides in California's medical cannabis with Joel Grover on February 23, 2017.

Monday, September 30, 2013

Marijuana versus Alcohol (radio)

Alcoholic Homer Simpson tries a new "medicine." The moral of the story? Avoid booze, avoid pot, and learning to cope with stress is a beneficial habit to develop.
Arrest photo: I'm not an alcoholic!
(Sept. 30, 2013) Uprising radio host Sonali Kolhatkar speaks to the lead author of a new book called Marijuana is Safer: So Why are We Driving People to Drink? If alcohol is worse, why are people pushed to resort to it and pressured to avoid a safer and more medicinal alternative? In the past year two states have legalized its recreational use. The financial infrastructure of legalization is in its infant stages with investors pouring in money and big banks agreeing to accept profits. Such steps were unthinkable a few years ago. Pot was thought far more dangerous as a vice than booze. The US is now closer than ever to legalizing cannabis. Even CNN’s Dr. Sanjay Gupta recently changed his position on weed. Trying to overturn the legal ban on marijuana, activists and advocates have hit upon a winning formula: point out the fact that alcohol leads to far more public violence and that having the option to use marijuana instead could lead to a safer, less criminal society. Guest Steve Fox is Director of Government Relations at Marijuana Policy Project. AUDIO

Steve Fox, Paul Armentano, Mason Tvert
(AlterNet.org) A book explains how we are steering people away from cannabis and toward the use of a very harmful and deadly substance: alcohol. The following is an excerpt from the book: It’s Super Bowl Sunday and throughout the nation millions of Americans have stocked their shelves and refrigerators with alcohol for the big game. In living rooms across the country, guests will enjoy the libations and gawk at the humorous beer commercials sprinkled liberally throughout the telecast. Like the Fourth of July and fireworks, the Super Bowl and booze are an American tradition. There is no societal stigma associated with this excessive drinking. It is all part of the celebration. Like the old saying goes: “We don’t have a drinking problem. We drink. We get drunk. No problem.” More


DemocracyNow.org (Sept. 30, 2013)
 
Cubicle criminality at the offices of the NSA
When I first met Reverend Rick Hoyt he said, “You don’t have to call me Reverend; just Rick is fine.” The First Unitarian Church of Los Angeles has taken a stand against the NSA surveillance program. The bespectacled and youthful pastor, sporting a salt-and-pepper beard, certainly didn’t look like a conventional “man-of-God.” In fact, the Unitarian Universalist church to which Rick belongs is known for defying Christian theological convention. Rick’s home at the First Unitarian Church of Los Angeles also has a history of defying political convention. The church, according to Hoyt, has been a “fierce advocate for personal liberties.” Even before Edward Snowden became a household name, the First Unitarian Church of LA became a plaintiff named in a major lawsuit against the National Security Agency (NSA) over privacy violations. Nineteen organizations have joined Hoyt’s church in an unusual coalition that includes the Marijuana legalization group, NORML, and gun rights groups like the California Association of Federal Firearms Licensees.


Fire Dog Lake: How Obama punishes Medical Marijuana patients
Troops swoop in on illegal growers (scpr.org)
(Aug. 22, 2013) Despite overwhelming support from the general public, significant backing from medical doctors, and even several prominent Republicans publicly acknowledging that cannabis has a legitimate medical use, the Obama administration officially insists it does not have one.The administration’s dodge when asked to explain this unpopular and scientifically unjustifiable position is to act as if it is a non-issue because they are not arresting medical marijuana patients. When Jessica Yellin asked why the administration refused to use its power to reschedule marijuana to make it legal for medical use, Deputy Press Secretary Josh Earnest responded: “the President and the administration believe that targeting individual marijuana users, especially those with serious illnesses and their caregivers, is not the best allocation of federal law enforcement resources.”

Cannabis is a safer plant? (hempsaves.net)
The administration pretends that since they are not arresting patients, rescheduling marijuana does not matter. The possibility of arrest, however, is only a small part of how legitimate medical marijuana patients are significantly punished because the Obama administration refuses to use its power to remove marijuana from Schedule I (an assignment shared by the worst drugs of abuse with no redeeming quality whatsoever). Over the years the legal tentacles of the so-called "War on Drugs" have been allowed to touch all parts of federal policy, from gun rights to education. According to Hoyt, some of these groups are not ones his church normally works with and “aren’t necessarily politically sympathetic with.” But the right to personal privacy is a Libertarian position deeply held by both ends of the political spectrum. Complete interview:


Why are we really fighting a war in Afghanistan, DRUGS? (TheRealNews.com)
  • VIDEO: "Herman's House" - 42 years in solitary
  • (Sept. 30, 2013) Cancer-stricken "Angola 3" prisoner Herman Wallace has been given just days to live after being in solitary confinement for 42 years His crime? Robbery then being falsely accused of participating in the killing of a Louisiana ("the incarceration capital of the world") prison guard. His actual crime was forming one of the first Black Panther chapters in prison, making him a political prisoner, which the US claims not to have. More
  • Amys_column_default
    Host Amy Goodman
    Last week, far out in the Arctic Ocean, the Greenpeace vessel Arctic Sunrise approached a Russian oil-drilling platform and launched a nonviolent protest, with several protesters scaling the platform. They wanted to draw attention to a dangerous precedent being set. The platform, the Prirazlomnaya, owned by Russian gas giant Gazprom, is the first to begin oil production in the dangerous, delicate, ice-filled waters of the Arctic.
     

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Medical Marijuana: CBD not THC (audio)

Wisdom Quarterly; Martin Lee (AlternativeRadio.org, Program #LEEM004, 2-22-13)
Cannabidiol -- CBD -- is a compound in Cannabis with medical effects. But it does not make people feel “stoned.” It actually counters some of the effects of THC. After decades when only high-THC Cannabis was widely available, CBD-rich strains are now being grown by and for medical users. The reduced psychoactivity of CBD-rich Cannabis may make it an appealing treatment option for patients seeking anti-inflammatory, anti-cancer, anti-pain, anti-anxiety, and/or anti-spasm effects without disconcerting euphoria, addiction, or lethargy (ProjectCBD.org).
 
Marijuana, cannabis, weed, grass...by one name or another, we have all heard of it and may have even tried it. Irish physician William O'Shaughnessy introduced the therapeutic use of marijuana to Western medicine in the 1830s.
  • LISTEN:  
  • Cooling inflammation and aggressive forms of cancer
  • Marijuana contains at least 60 known cannabinoids that activate internal receptors in the human body. THC (tetra-hydro-cannabinol) is the component mainly responsible for psychoactive effects or “high.” While THC has some medicinal value, CBD has been found to have more medicinal benefits than any legal pharmaceutical drug on the market. 
He gave it to patients to help treat muscle spasms and stomach cramps. Cannabis as a medicine became common throughout much of the Western world by the 19th century. It was the primary pain reliever until the invention of aspirin. 
 
Today, there are many under-reported scientific breakthroughs including the discovery of a beneficial non-psychoactive component (CBD), which stimulates adult stem cell growth, prevents the onset of diabetes, and shrinks malignant tumors. 

By mining the plant’s treasure trove of active ingredients, researchers have developed effective treatments for cancer, tumor erasing, heart disease, schizophrenia, glaucoma, Alzheimer’s, chronic pain, and many other conditions beyond the reach of conventional cures.

Martin Lee is co-founder of Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR), a NY-based media watch group, director of Project CBD, and a contributing editor of O’Shaughnessy’s. An award-winning journalist, he has investigated the CIA and its drug experiments  and has a classic text on the topic, Acid Dreams. He also wrote The Beast Reawakens and Smoke Signals.

Saturday, April 20, 2013

4/20: massive Denver smoke out (legal)

Wisdom Quarterly; DenverPost.com; HuffingtonPost.com
Cannabis sativa leaf (David McNew/Getty Images/scpr.org)


Abuse? (Julia Ferguson/flickr)
It looks like one of the the biggest "420" pot parties in Colorado will be shut down again in 2013, despite recreational marijuana having been legalized last November.
 
The University of Colorado Boulder announced Monday that for the second year in a row the university will be shut down on April 20 in an attempt to snuff out the annual 4/20 marijuana smoke-out on campus.
 
“We are committed to ending the unwelcome 4/20 gathering on the CU-Boulder campus, and this year’s approach represents the continuance of a multi-year plan to achieve that end,” said CU-Boulder Chancellor Philip P. DiStefano in a statement.
 
“What’s important here is the protection of CU’s missions of research, teaching, and service. This isn’t about marijuana or drug laws. It’s about not disrupting the important work of a world-class university.”
 
In years past, the marijuana celebration has brought 10,000 to 12,000 people to campus to light up, and no doubt this year with recreational weed newly legalized, university leaders were very likely concerned with drawing record crowds. More

Monday, February 14, 2011

The 3 P's of Prostitution (video)


(JBT) "The Rape Trade" (presented by Sam Kiley, directed by Claudio von Planta) reveals another truth about sex slavery: Teens are kidnapped, raped, and forced into prostitution. A police officer justifies the situation by saying that it is "the need of society, the need of men" ["needing" sex, worried about contracting AIDS].

Brothels: A Terrible Reflection
John Restakis (TheTyee.ca, Jan. 2011)
The Durbar Sex Co-op's successes must be measured against vast injustices that foster prostitution everywhere. Along Sonagachi Street, an entrenched system of exploitation continues. Braided throughout the stories of prostitutes told in this series of articles, binding those stories together in a pattern, are the three elements that underpin the sex trade in Sonagachi and most everywhere else:
  1. poverty
  2. patriarchy
  3. powerlessness

Washer wallahs sort laundry on Sonagachi Street (J. Restakis/The Tyee).

All the women I spoke to, both individually and in groups, were driven to sex work by the desperation brought on by poverty. The money they earn, especially if they are new to the trade, is siphoned off to support an intricate superstructure of pimps, thugs, madams, landlords, moneylenders, police, and the politicians who sit at the top of the heap. For all of these [and the obscene profits of modern slavery to continue], it is essential that sex work remains an underground activity that is never legitimized.

Legitimacy would mean the end of graft, the system of payoffs and bribes that feed the spectral figures that loom behind every woman working the street. This is the system that maintains the internal exploitation of the trade and the perpetual poverty at the bottom. More>>

[Editor's note: This article is third in a series adapted with permission from the chapter "Daughters of Kali" in the book Humanizing the Economy: Co-operatives in the Age of Capital, New Society Publishers.]

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Wht House Czar calls for end to War on Drugs

Gary Fields (Wall Street Journal) May 14, 2009
Gil Kerlikowske, the new White House drug czar, signaled yesterday his openness to rethinking the government's approach to fighting drug use.

Kerlikowske says [war] analogy is counterproductive; shift aligns with administration preference for treatment over incarceration

WASHINGTON -- The Obama administration's new drug czar says he wants to banish the idea that the U.S. is fighting "a war on drugs," a move that would underscore a shift favoring treatment over incarceration in trying to reduce illicit drug use.

In his first interview since being confirmed to head the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, Gil Kerlikowske said yesterday the bellicose analogy was a barrier to dealing with the nation's drug issues.

DISCUSS: “That the War on Drugs has been a complete failure is not even a question anymore-- David Dimston

"Regardless of how you try to explain to people it's a 'war on drugs' or a 'war on a product,' people see a war as a war on them," he said. "We're not at war with people in this country." More>>