Pubdate: Wed, 11 Aug 1999 Source: Progressive (WI) Copyright: 1999 Progressive Inc. Contact: Sam Smith THE HIGH ON COKE The Washington Post's Howard Kurtz joins those trying to make a campaign issue out of George Bush Jr.'s past cocaine use while maintaining the media code of silence about W.J. Clinton's much deeper involvement in the coke culture. Kurtz' spin continues the fiction that the only drug questions about Clinton concerned his use of marijuana while a student. Interestingly, Kurtz also writes: "Questions about the personal lives of candidates have become far more common in the hyper-competitive media climate of the '90s. But they are often triggered by specific allegations, such as when Gennifer Flowers charged in 1992 that she had had a long-running affair with candidate Bill Clinton." Kurtz is apparently unaware of Flowers' more recent allegation that Clinton offered her cocaine. More important that the political double-standard, though, is the fact that not only are both leading presidential candidates former users of drugs for which hundreds of thousands of Americans have received criminal penalties, including draconian prison sentence, but that the incumbent was closely connected to major Arkansas drug operatives. Here's how Kurtz brushes off this issue: "Other politicians, including Vice President Gore, have acknowledged past marijuana use with no apparent penalty. But an admission of having tried cocaine, the focus of major federal anti-drug initiatives and much inner-city violence, could be more problematic." For one person to end up in prison for years for doing what someone else can do and still be elected president is not problematic, it is obscene. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart