Pubdate: Tue, 1 Oct 2002 Source: High Times (US) Page: 36 Copyright: 2002 Trans-High Corporation - reprinted by permission Contact: http://www.hightimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/191 Author: Preston Peet Cited: Students for Sensible Drug Policy http://www.ssdp.org/ Note: SSDP has an excellent discussion list with a sign up form at http://www.ssdp.org/getactive.htm Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Shawn+Heller FREEDOM FIGHTER OF THE YEAR: SHAWN HELLER Shawn Heller, national director of Students for Sensible Drug Policy, is disgusted with the entire War on Drugs. "Drug laws as a whole are not only un-American, they violate the essence of the Constitution. Marijuana certainly shouldn't be Schedule I, but the idea that Schedule I even exists, that the Department of Justice is determining what the legal status is for possessing a plant or chemical either in your body or on your person, this is just a crazy idea." Heller co-founded SSDP in 1998, while he was studying political science and criminal justice at George Washington University in Washington. He'd come there in 1997, after graduating from the Maritime Academy of Science and Technology in his hometown of Miami. In his first year at GWU, Heller worked in the White House Office of Political Affairs and for the Clinton advance team, writing weekly political and trip briefs for the President on over 30 different states. "Towards the end of working at the White House and over that following summer, I spent my time researching drug policy pretty much day and night," says Heller, who that fall was an intern with the reform organization DRCNet and a volunteer for the DC Initiative 59 medical-marijuana campaign. "For me, never having been a drug user or even considered using drugs, looking at the situation from a real policy-focus angle, I had always felt that the War on Drugs was wrong. When I found out that SSDP wasn't going to be only a marijuana-focused organization, but still would deal with marijuana policy, I felt it a perfect fit for what I was looking for." Since Heller, Chris Lotlikar and other student activists founded SSDP at five schools in 1998, the organization has grown to include over 200 chapters nationwide. New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson joined its board of advisors in 1999. That November, SSDP had their first national conference, and the next year Heller was elected national director. One of the group's main issues has been the Higher Education Act, the 1998 law that bans federal loans to students convicted of drug charges-but not of rape or murder. And last June 6, he and some friends locked themselves to the front doors of the Department of Justice, demanding an end to the war on medical marijuana. "I definitely feel that little steps are important, that small victories here and there are definitely helpful, and spur growth of the movement," he says. "The only way we're going to end the War on Drugs is for our movement to increase, for the things that we do to get increased attention and notoriety, increased publicity, increased awareness and discussion so that the discussions are actually happening versus being laughed at. We want to take it to the next step, where most everyone is saying 'no', this is wrong and it needs to end." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake