Pubdate: Wed, 15 Aug 2001 Source: Amarillo Globe-News (TX) Copyright: 2001 Amarillo Globe-News Contact: http://amarillonet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/13 Author: Gordon W. Scott Note: Gordon W. Scott is a retired Tulia physician. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/tulia.htm (Tulia, Texas) FRIENDS OF JUSTICE NEEDS TO COME CLEAN WITH FACTS TULIA - I read with interest Alan Bean's Aug. 4 guest column, in which he portrays the Friends of Justice as a faith-based, grass-roots organization that is seeking to correct a social injustice. I do not disagree with this characterization, but I noted that several important facts were missing. The recent Tulia rally was sponsored in part by the Drug Policy Forum of Texas, an organization that advocates legalization of illegal drugs. Two of the speakers at the Tulia rally were DPFT representatives. The night of the rally, Globe-News reporter Greg Cunningham spoke with these two individuals and asked them about their proposed talks. They said that they were not going to speak about the legalization of drugs, but about the removal of prohibition of drugs. An Aug. 1 Globe-News editorial said that, at the rally, the speakers mentioned above did advocate legalization of drugs, a point that was sharply criticized at the rally by two members of the Friends of Justice - Mr. Wafer and a woman whose name I do not know. The editorial went on to say that it seemed that the DPFT was using the Tulia controversy to advance the agenda of its organization. This point of disagreement also was aired on Amarillo's Channel 4 news the night of the rally. I am puzzled by Mr. Bean's omission of the sponsorship of the DPFT. I also note that in Mr. Cunningham's article regarding Jeff Blackburn's concern about the writ of habeas corpus filed by Gary Gardner, Mr. Bean used the phrase, "removal of prohibition of drugs." I wish Mr. Bean would both admit that the DPFT helped sponsor the recent rally, and while he's at it, explain the difference between legalizing drugs and removal of prohibition of drugs. During Prohibition in the 1920s, mobsters were awash in cash from selling illegal alcohol. When Prohibition was repealed, these same gangsters went into the legal production and distribution of alcohol, still making money without the expense of bribes to the police, hiring hit men, legal fees to defend mobsters who were indicted, etc. How can we be sure that the same scenario would not prevail if drugs were legalized, or if one prefers, "prohibition of drugs removed"? I have no interest in a public debate with Mr. Bean or anyone else in the Tulia community. This matter will be settled in the Court of Appeals. I merely ask that writers from the Friends of Justice be candid about their association with and implied support of goals of the DPFT and the Kunstler Fund for Racial Justice. - --- MAP posted-by: