Pubdate: Wed, 08 Oct 2003 Source: Good 5 Cent Cigar (RI Edu) Contact: 2003 Good 5 Cent Cigar Website: http://www.ramcigar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2599 Author: Inga Buchbinder Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/racial.htm (Racial Issues) ACTIVIST DISCUSSES EFFECT OF DRUG WAR ON MINORITY COMMUNITY Cliff Thornton spoke to students at Chafee hall about the war on drugs, it's effect on minorities and how it is highly censored in the media. For the next hour and a half Thorton gave a lecture called "Race and the Drug War: War on Minorities?" Many students attended the event, which was sponsored by the Students for Sensible Drug Policy organization. Thornton is the founder and president of Efficacy, a Connecticut-based non-profit organization that attempts to bring the issues of drug abuse and crime prevention into public light. Thornton has been the leading voice in speaking out against the drug war in Connecticut. Thornton also said that it is the most important social problem in our lifetime, other than the environment, and thinks it deserves more attention than it is currently receiving. "It is the most wasteful war ever," he said. "My generation screwed it up." Thornton's presentation consisted of a brief introduction to the drug war, and then a video made about thirteen years ago, which had a former Los Angeles Police Department officer speaking about his involvement in fighting the drug war, and how it cost him his job. The video stated that the Central Intelligence Agency has had a lot more to do with drug trafficking than many would like to believe. The United States buys cocaine and heroin from third parties and makes millions of dollars on it, only to then sell it on the black market to dealers and addicts for twice what they had paid for it, Thornton said. According to Thornton, almost every CIA covert operation is funded by money from illegal drugs. After the ten-minute video, Thornton asked his audience to interact with him, to tell him what they thought of the video. One student in the audience said that the video was "surprising," and that he "didn't know the CIA was involved in it." Thornton then gave a lecture about drug war, and provided a massive amount of statistics on the African-American and Latino community and how they are affected. He said that equal opportunity is fiction, and that many whites believe African-Americans are the majority of the population. Many of his statistics related to African-American and Latino men who are in prison on drug charges. The two groups make up 70 percent of the total number of men in prison on such charges. According to Thorton only 15 percent of African-Americans use drugs, yet 35 percent are arrested on drug charges. In 1963, shortly before he graduated high school, a police officer came to his home and asked Thornton to come with him. The officer brought him to a field with multiple abandoned cars, and showed him one particular car where he saw his mother dead. His mother had died of an apparent heroin overdose. A few decades passed before Thornton retired early and became a drug war activist, fighting for the legalization of marijuana, heroin and cocaine. Thornton said he feels that if these top three drugs are legalized and the production and distribution are controlled, that drug and crime rates will go down. Tobacco, marijuana, and alcohol can be sold in one type of store, and there would not be any advertisements advocating the use of these substances. He also proposes that those already dealing with addiction, either to cocaine or heroin, should continue to get their doses through clinics, so that they may also receive help in becoming clean. If you would like to learn more about Efficacy, Cliff Thornton or the war on drugs, you can visit Efficacy's homepage at www.efficacy-online.org . - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk