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White House 2013 National Drug Strategy Released

dagnabit

Game Bred
Veteran
The White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP -- the drug czar's office) released its 2013 National Drug Control Strategy Wednesday. The strategy is being billed as a "21st Century Approach" to drug use and trafficking, but despite some rhetorical softening maintains the US hard-line approach to the issue.


"The president has outlined his vision of an America built to last -- where an educated, skilled workforce has the knowledge, energy and expertise to compete in the global marketplace. Yet -- for far too many Americans -- that vision is limited by drug use, which not only diminishes the potential of the individual, but jeopardizes families, communities and neighborhoods," ONDCP wrote on a blog post announcing the strategy's release and touting reductions in cocaine and prescription drug abuse as progress made.


"Today we are releasing a science-driven plan for drug policy reform in America to build upon this progress," ONDCP continued. "This 21st century drug policy outlines a series of evidence-based reforms that treat our nation's drug problem as a public health issue, not just a criminal justice issue. This policy underscores what we all know to be true: we cannot arrest or incarcerate our way out of the drug problem."

The strategy emphasizes treatment and prevention, but despite the rhetoric, the Fiscal Year 2014 federal drug budget it accompanies continues to be imbalanced, with 58% of federal anti-drug spending directed at law enforcement and interdiction efforts. That figure does mark a decline from previous years, but only a marginal one.

And even its emphasis on treatment also includes punitive criminal justice elements, such as its embrace of the drug court system, where drug-addicted people are subjected to legal sanctions for such addiction-related behaviors as failing a drug test or missing an appointment. That has some drug reformers calling foul.

"The administration says drug use is a health issue but then advocates for policies that put people in the criminal justice system," said Bill Piper, director of national affairs for the Drug Policy Alliance. "Until the Drug Czar says it is time to stop arresting people for drug use, he is not treating drug use as a health issue no matter what he says. I know of no other health issue in which people are thrown in jail if they don't get better."

While much of the strategy is little more than the same old same old, the strategy does call for expanded access to naloxone, a low-cost antidote that can reverse the effects of opioid overdoses. That is in response to the rapid growth in prescription drug overdose deaths in recent years.

"Director Kerlikowske should be applauded for taking steps to reduce drug overdose fatalities, but he's not doing much to reduce drug arrests or the many other problems associated with treating drug use through the criminal justice system," said Piper.

But while the drug strategy shows flexibility in its efforts to deal with fatal drug overdoses, it maintains a staunch opposition to marijuana reform and includes attacking outdoor and indoor marijuana cultivation as one of its key goals.

"The administration's continued opposition to marijuana law reform shows they're not serious about reforming US drug policy," said Piper. "At the very least they should stop getting in the way of states that are trying to improve public health and safety by regulating marijuana like alcohol."
Washington, DC
United States
ondcp-infographic.png

http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2013/apr/24/white_house_2013_national_drug_s
The White House

Office of the National Drug Control Policy
For Immediate Release
April 24, 2013
Obama Administration Releases 2013 National Drug Policy Strategy

Action Plan Details Support for Most Significant Expansion of Drug Treatment in America in Generations; Emphasizes Drug Policy Reform; Policies Treat Drug Addiction as Public Health Issue, Not Just a Criminal Justice Issue

(Baltimore, MD) - Today, Gil Kerlikowske, Director of National Drug Control Policy, released the 2013 National Drug Control Strategy, the Obama Administration’s primary blueprint for drug policy in the United States. The science-based plan for reform contains a series of over 100 specific actions to reduce drug use and its consequences and expand prevention, treatment, and alternatives to incarceration.

The programs and policy reforms set forth in the 2013 Strategy are built upon decades of scientific research demonstrating that addiction is a chronic disease of the brain that can be successfully prevented and treated, not a moral failure on the part of the individual. The Strategy directs Federal agencies to expand community-based efforts to prevent drug use before it begins, empower healthcare workers to intervene early at the first signs of a substance use disorder, expand access to treatment for those who need it, and support the millions of Americans in recovery.

The Strategy details actions to implement the most significant expansion of access to substance use treatment in generations. Through a new rule made possible by the Affordable Care Act, insurers will now be required to cover treatment for substance use disorders just as they would for any other chronic disease. Specifically, this new rule expands mental health and substance use disorder benefits and Federal parity protections for 62 million Americans, making it a key element in the Administration’s public health approach to drug policy in the United States.

The Strategy also contains action items in support of a “smart on crime” approach to drug enforcement, protecting communities from domestic and international drug-related crime while diverting non-violent drug offenders into treatment instead of prison. As part of this approach, the Strategy highlights promising criminal justice reforms, including drug courts and smart probation programs that reduce incarceration rates, along with community-based policing programs that break the cycle of drug use, crime, and incarceration while focusing limited enforcement resources on more serious offenses.

“President Obama believes in the pursuit of an America built to last – a Nation with an educated, skilled workforce that has the knowledge, energy, and expertise to succeed in a highly competitive global marketplace,” said Kerlikowske. “For too many Americans, this future is clouded by drug use and substance use disorders, which inhibit the ability of our citizens to remain healthy and safe and to achieve their full potential. This plan represents a smarter approach to drug policy in America – one based on the premise that addiction is a disease that can be prevented and treated. We must address drug use as a public health issue, not just a criminal justice issue.”

“This Strategy demonstrates that the Obama Administration is serious about criminal justice reform,” said NAACP President and CEO Benjamin Todd Jealous. “The President’s Strategy puts in place an approach which acknowledges that we cannot incarcerate our way out of the drug problem and that we have an obligation to expand ‘smart on crime’ approaches that place individuals, their welfare and dignity, at the center of drug policy in America.”

“For too long,” said Devin Fox, Executive Director of Young People in Recovery, “millions of Americans in recovery from addiction and their families, friends, and supporters—including young people like us—were absent from the debate about drug policy. Today, we are a powerful and growing movement, achieving real progress in lifting the stigma associated with substance use disorders and removing barriers to sustained recovery. The Obama Administration’s historic focus on recovery adds to the momentum we need to help shift our country to a recovery-oriented system.”

“Science should inform policy decisions about public health and safety in America,” said Dr. Nora D. Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, part of the National Institutes of Health. “Groundbreaking advances in addiction research have contributed to our understanding of addiction as a brain disease that can be prevented as well as effectively treated. We look forward to continuing our collaboration with ONDCP to ensure the policies set forth in the National Drug Control Strategy are informed by science.”

Overall drug use in the United States has dropped substantially over the past 30 years. In response to comprehensive efforts to address drug use at the local, state, Federal, and international levels, the rate of Americans using illicit drugs has dropped by roughly one-third since the late 70s. More recently, there has been a 50 percent drop in the rate of current cocaine use, and meth use has dropped by one-third since 2006.

To build on this progress and support the public health and safety approach outlined in the Strategy, the Obama Administration has requested more than $10.7 billion to support drug education programs and expand access to drug treatment for people suffering from substance use disorders. The FY 2014 Budget request also includes $9.6 billion for domestic law enforcement, $3.7 billion for interdiction, and $1.5 billion for international programs.

http://www.whitehouse.gov/ondcp/news-releases/2013-national-drug-policy-strategy-release

http://www.whitehouse.gov/ondcp/drugpolicyreform



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my cynical brain makes conjuncture to follow.

the release today mentions rehab in conjunction with the affordable care act several times.
when the act was being "debated" i many times suggested the hidden consequences to marijuana users might include forced rehab if one is found to have "illicit substances" in their systems...
seems a step closer.
 

lost in a sea

Lifer
Veteran
10 billion buys alot of government brainwashing rehab centers..

yep rehab centers,, i knew it was all heading that way, when richard branson mentioned about virgin running them it became obvious.. who knows what they will do to people in them as well..

what a load of bullshit, it's your body,, the most basic right you are born with is the right to put in it what you want, even kill yourself doing it, it's your right,, until the state convinces you they own the right to tell you what to do with your body that is, like telling you you cant commit suicide/euthanasia or get an abortion or say certain words.. doesn't help society it just helps them control society..

fuck em
 

fungzyme

Active member
my cynical brain makes conjuncture to follow.

the release today mentions rehab in conjunction with the affordable care act several times.
when the act was being "debated" i many times suggested the hidden consequences to marijuana users might include forced rehab if one is found to have "illicit substances" in their systems...
seems a step closer.

Hmmm - hadn't thought of that. What is pretty likely to happen though is an absolute rush of newly-covered addicts swamping treatment facilities. I bet the bigger ones are getting ready for that cash cow. They probably won't turn away marijuana 'addicts' either, as long as their stay is paid for. They never do.
 

dagnabit

Game Bred
Veteran
im gonna get me a certification as a drug councilor!
build me an outpatient facility.
had a dot com bubble,had a housing bubble now a rehab bubble!!!
except you never run out of "addicts" to treat! the bubble never bursts.
an entire economy based on prohibition.

do you think under the ACA doctors or insurance companies can be compelled to report "felonious" activity(ie possession/use of controlled substances in their blood)if they find it?
 

Growcephus

Member
Veteran
/sigh

How in the fuck is it possible to be as fucking stupid as we are as a species?

Somebody....anybody....how?
 

resinryder

Rubbing my glands together
Veteran
do you think under the ACA doctors or insurance companies can be compelled to report "felonious" activity(ie possession/use of controlled substances in their blood)if they find it?

If they can raise your rates because a person uses tobacco you bet your ass they will raise rates or even deny coverage for using federally prohibited substances.
 
I agree its you're body you're right to put whatever you want in it, but its not MJ that is causing the social problems and government ones also.
Its the harder drugs that pollute the system like heroin/crack/cocaine and I would actually admit now amphetamine, which caused me tons of problems.
They should also do stuff like give everyone on government money (unemployed) cards that only work to buy food and electricity, and ban the harder drugs that are causing the problems in society,
MJ isn't a "drug" in the normal sense, its a plant which doesnt give health that are so antisocial like the other ones, to the whole of society, in every country first world especially

I would also say I would not at all incriminate anyone whatsoever using the "bad society" drugs, but punish the dealers much more severely. That's laws I would implement, but theres legal highs now available alot like amphetamine and cocaine which is causing government all sorts of legal problems
 

Harry Gypsna

Dirty hippy Bastard
Veteran
10 billion buys alot of government brainwashing rehab centers..

yep rehab centers,, i knew it was all heading that way, when richard branson mentioned about virgin running them it became obvious.. who knows what they will do to people in them as well..

fuck em

What pisses me off about the court ordered rehab or rehab as alternative to Gaol thing, is that they then use those people in statistics, and whine about all the poor souls who are seeking rehab for Cannabis use, and that this proves Cannabis really is a junkie drug**. Sneaky bastards.


** Cannabis can be a junkie drug, if the person using it has the junkie mindset.
 

DevilWeedSeeds

Private Breeder
ICMag Donor
The sick part is the police are no longer even supporting the will of the people. The majority of society doesn't even agree any longer with the criminalization of marijuana yet the cops are still arresting people. Not hard to see who the police are now "protecting and serving." It sure ain't the people paying their salaries.
 
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I can't believe the Feds haven't done the math on how much revenue they could generate if they could legally tax cannabis; not only that, but just the funds saved on a state level could provide some relief to states struggling to meet their budget requirements.

Bottom line: Cannabis is not the drug of the rich, alcohol is; and until it becomes the drug of the rich, they will fight tooth and nail.

That and all the reach arounds they get from Big pharma....same reason they don't want the population to know that you can cure cancer with natural approaches like the Gerson Therapy.

It's sad that a plant is illegal.
 

Mud Boy

Member
This is the last dying gasp of a failed drug war. If I'm ever busted again, I will refuse rehab and probation and drug tests and demand jail time. The gloves are off. I'm not playing their fucking games anymore. :moon:
 

Jhhnn

Active member
Veteran
Well, a truly "science-based plan" would include the legalization of cannabis. It's easily the least harmful intoxicant currently available. Pretty much everybody other than politicians have that figured out...
 

thaicat

Member
I agree its you're body you're right to put whatever you want in it, but its not MJ that is causing the social problems and government ones also.
Its the harder drugs that pollute the system like heroin/crack/cocaine and I would actually admit now amphetamine, which caused me tons of problems.
They should also do stuff like give everyone on government money (unemployed) cards that only work to buy food and electricity, and ban the harder drugs that are causing the problems in society,
MJ isn't a "drug" in the normal sense, its a plant which doesnt give health that are so antisocial like the other ones, to the whole of society, in every country first world especially

I would also say I would not at all incriminate anyone whatsoever using the "bad society" drugs, but punish the dealers much more severely. That's laws I would implement, but theres legal highs now available alot like amphetamine and cocaine which is causing government all sorts of legal problems

The #1 drug problem in the US, by far, is prescription drugs. Ironically, our Government is in bed with the Pharmas and the shit is pushed on us from all angles.
The big thing now is to diagnose virtually every child as ''Autistic'' and immediately get them on some kind of pill. I have 9 year old Niece that is as bright as any kid would ever be. Her school has terrified my Brother and my Sister-in-Law by repeatedly advising she go for further testing and Dr's.

It's sickening.
 
G

greenmatter

was anyone really expecting any sort of intelligent drug policy to come out of washington?

when i read anything that our government writes i pretty much expect to be disappointed, therefore i am never shocked
 
The #1 drug problem in the US, by far, is prescription drugs. Ironically, our Government is in bed with the Pharmas and the shit is pushed on us from all angles.
The big thing now is to diagnose virtually every child as ''Autistic'' and immediately get them on some kind of pill. I have 9 year old Niece that is as bright as any kid would ever be. Her school has terrified my Brother and my Sister-in-Law by repeatedly advising she go for further testing and Dr's.

It's sickening.

My daughter was medicated for 2 and 1/2 years for 'bi-polar disorder' at the prompting of her educators, and after an evaluation with a child psychiatrist.

Needless to say, shit didn't work, we have weaned her off the meds, and she is the happiest kid now, and blossoming more every day.

My husband made a good point tonight when we were talking about this topic, and his thought is that if the insurance providers in this country ever figure out, that an oz. of medicinal cannabis is more effective than prescription medications for things like nausea, pain, cancer management, etc....then perhaps they will apply pressure to change the game and get something effective AND less costly on the market for people to use. But if insurance companies decided to deny reimbursement for things like Zofran, or hydrocodone because they are 3x, 4x more expensive than cannabis...who's gonna be backed into a corner?

The war on drugs has been a dismal failure, that's been painfully apparent for a while...and the next person who wants to secure the presidency after Barack better take a serious look at coming off cannabis prohibition. I think people are ultimately tired of seeing the gov't wasting money on something that is blatantly less harmful than alcohol or prescription meds.
 

devilgoob

Active member
Veteran
They are making these so a bunch of idiots can rehab off weed and show it on 20/20 to make marijuana's image bad.

Just a theory.
 

xmobotx

ecks moe baw teeks
ICMag Donor
Veteran
well; everyone knows 'prevent drug use through education' is a known failure ~if anything it promulgates drug use by building curiosity in young minds and enforcing the rebel image/reverse psychology paradigm

access to treatment? what treatment? how many people going through 'treatment' immediately relapse {esp court-ordered treatment}

this is just what we can typically and should expect; more lies; more stupidity; more cash cows for whatever industry & all this while the for profit prisons get their butt licked and actual real people suffer/get taken advantage of BY the government and BY the police that are supposedly there to support them

they are thieves w/ their asset forfeiture bullshit and you can bet that remains intact

phfft 'public health issue' what a crock of shit

does anyone actually believe any of this?
 
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