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Hillary Clinton Pledges Support for Needle Exchange

After hilariously claiming that she needed to see more evidence of its effectiveness, democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton seems to have found the answers she was looking for.* Her campaign has announced support for harm reduction, including needle exchange:
She also supports using U.S. funding to support proven harm reduction efforts - including needle exchange - to help hard-to-reach populations, and will continue to support new evidence-based prevention methods as additional scientific research helps us understand how to best address this epidemic. [HillaryClinton.com]

We've heard similar pledges from Obama and Edwards, and it's likely safe to assume other democratic candidates will toe the line on this one (possibly excluding drug war hall-of-famer Joe Biden).

It's nice to see Washington politicians getting it right on needle exchange. Of course, this is really about whether or not we want huge numbers of people to die from AIDS in the name of drug war politics. We needn't fall to our knees in gratitude when someone understands such an obvious humanitarian concern. Rather, we should be demanding answers from any candidate who hasn’t yet spoken out against the federal government's catastrophic ban on life-saving intervention programs.

*By "hilarious," I meant that the mountain of evidence showing that needle exchange saves lives is so huge that I couldn't imagine Hillary Clinton actually had time to read it.

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John Edwards Criticizes the War on Drugs

Democratic presidential hopeful John Edwards sounds like he's finally ready to discuss the drug war realistically:
Grinnell, Ia. – America needs to reconsider its punitive approach to "the so-called war on drugs," presidential candidate John Edwards said here today.

"We're not going to build enough prisons to solve this problem," he told a crowd of about 800 at Grinnell College.

The former North Carolina senator grinned when a young man sitting behind him on stage asked about drug policy. “Only on college campuses," Edwards joked before answering.

He said he’s especially concerned about mandatory minimum sentences for first-time drug offenders, which he said should be reconsidered. He added that too few drug offenders get treatment.

"You go to jail, you come out of jail, and a lot of people go right back to the environment that got them in trouble to begin with," he said. "…We need to get them the help that they need; if they need education, if they need job training, if they need drug rehabilitation." [Des Moines Register]

This is a big improvement following Edwards's very recent remarks claiming that discussion of marijuana decriminalization "sends the wrong signal to young people."

What happened? It really is kinda nutty to dismiss a puny little reform like marijuana decrim, only to then stand up weeks later and question the fundamentally punitive nature of the drug war on the whole. My guess is Edwards realized he wasn't scoring any points with that tired old "sends the wrong message" nonsense.

The mere specter of our massive criminal justice system -- bloated with non-violent drug offenders -- sends the wrong message to everyone. It's good that Edwards finally worked up the nerve to say so.


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Búsqueda en la red

La entrevista de Balko con Paey, el informe sobre las drogas de Europa, el <em>podcast</em> de la entrevista con Kucinich, la parodia del One Hitters (¡!), la DrugTruth Network.
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Canadá: Gobierno federal presenta legislación antidroga

Esta semana, el gobierno conservador de Canadá reveló su nuevo abordaje represivo a las drogas. Quiere sentencias mínimas obligatorias para algunos delitos de drogas, incluso el cultivo de marihuana cuya condena máxima desea doblar. Espere una batalla campal en el país más amigo de la marihuana del Occidente.
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Semanal: Blogueando en el Bar Clandestino

Mitt Romney recomienda mentirles a los niños respecto a las drogas, Mark Souder grita “¡legalizador!” otra vez, el luchador antidroga Howard pierde las elecciones en Australia, el aniversario de la tragedia de Kathryn Johnston y la descubierta de la encuesta relacionada, “La gente está lamiendo sapos otra vez”, un compuesto de marihuana puede curar el cáncer de mama.
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