The Great Tennessee Marijuana Cave
THERE IS ONE SUBJECT BEING forgotten in the 2008 Democratic race for the White House. While all the major candidates are vying for the black and Latino vote, they are completely ignoring one of the most pressing issues affecting those constituencies: the failed “war on drugs†— a war that has morphed into a war on people of color.
Consider this: According to a 2006 report by the American Civil Liberties Union, African-Americans make up an estimated 15 percent of drug users, but they account for 37 percent of those arrested on drug charges, 59 percent of those convicted and 74 percent of all drug offenders sentenced to prison. Or consider this: The United States has 260,000 people in state prisons on nonviolent drug charges; 183,200 (more than 70 percent) of them are black or Latino.
I was listening to Adam Curry the other day and he was talking about an incredible underground pot growing factory that was recently uncovered in Tennessee. It really is an amazing example of what pot prohibition has created.
Our current Republican advertising campaign, aka ‘the war on terror’ has been so successful that it tends to gray out everything else. Still, the pot factory story got me thinking about that other, older advertising campaign, aka ‘the war against drugs.’ That’s when I found the Huffington piece.
The statistics are both frightening, as Huffington notes, and reassuring, in that most Americans seem to favor reforms that would have once seemed too radical. Decriminalization and medical use seem reachable political goals.
As Huffington suggests, it would seem to be another issue that the Democrats could use to help reinforce their progressive agenda. The case against the tactics of the so-called war on drugs is virtually air-tight, as numerous Front Line episodes have illustrated.
It would save money all over, too: in the prison and legal systems, and in local and state governments. According to Drug Sense, we have already spent 13 billion so far this year. And these are numbers taken from the Office of National Drug Control Policy.
Ending the war on drugs– the congress could pull the money plug on this one too– makes a lot of sense. It would ease immigration and security fears too by making smuggling pot a moot point. We could raise it ourselves, as those guys in Tennessee make plain.
Waiting for Zacappa.com
All I know is what the words know, and dead things, and that makes a handsome little sum, with a beginning and a middle and an end, as in the well-built phrase and the long sonata of the dead.
Samuel Beckett, from Brainy Quote
“Play it (again), Sam”
Saturday, March 3rd, 2007Samuel Beckett has only nine quotations, most of them from Waiting for Godot. We miss his remark about what it will be like in the afterlife: “We’ll sit around talking about the good old days, when we wished that we were dead.â€
Read the full article By Louis Menand on the Yale Book of Quotations, edited by Fred Shapiro at The New Yorker
from Zacappa
Here’s a blog that compiles “a collection of quotes, anecdotes, trivia, top 10 listings and other noteworthy messages that surround the world of fiction -and its writers.”
The title, by the way, is apparently a misspelling of the name of a town in Guatemala, as well as a kind of rum made in the region. (“Zac,” the author of the About page, claims to have the correct spelling, but I don’t know why.)
It’s a good idea but it doesn’t seem to be updated as often as it might. Still, it’s a fun place to visit now and again. I am not sure that the quote I found on Brainy Quote is included in the Yale Book, but it should be.
Femme Fatale: Foxy Tunes
I found this on the FoxyTunes Planet, now in beta, a kind of search / mash up engine for all things music.
