Pubdate: Thu, 13 Apr 2000 Source: Illinois Times (IL) Copyright: 2000 Yesse Communications Contact: http://www.illinoistimes.com Author: Larry A. Stevens DRUG WAR BLACKOUT To the editor: I've always learned a lot of new and different things over the years reading the annual top-ten under-reported stories in the U.S. [see "Censored, again!" IT, March 30, 2000]. I think that the war on drugs should appear on this list, not because it isn't amply covered in major daily newspapers across the country, but because it isn't being similarly covered in smaller media markets like Springfield. In comparing local drug war coverage to that found in big city newspapers it's apparent that Springfield is largely being kept in the dark about the failing war on drugs and the turning of the editorial tide against it. Last month, wire services ran stories about two studies published in respected scientific journals showing that cannabis could relieve symptoms of multiple sclerosis, and that it could shrink brain tumors. The wire services also ran a story about a short, unpublished abstract claiming that smoking cannabis could increase the chance of a heart attack. Guess which one of these stories the State Journal-Register chose to run. Is this censorship? Only a couple of days after the State Journal-Register published an editorial supporting the government's extremely foolish 1.6 billion dollar U.S. aid package to "fight drugs" in Columbia, it was revealed in newspapers outside of Springfield that the Office of National Drug Control Policy was approving television scripts and awarding advertising credits for "on-strategy" content, essentially a propaganda payola scheme. It has further been revealed that similar deals were struck with all sorts of media outlets including TV news, major newspapers and magazines. It is not ludicrous to imagine that the SJ-R's cheerleading editorial in favor of the U.S. aid package for Columbia crossed a desk at the ONDCP in order to free up some advertising space that could be sold again to someone else. The mere idea that such a scenario is even imaginable should send any responsible newspaper scurrying both to make sure no such deal exists between itself and the government and to assure its readers that its editorial integrity wasn't compromised by such an unethical breach of trust. Of course, drug czar Barry McCaffery insisted that no such exchanges ever took place and would never happen again. According to Salon.com writer Daniel Forbes, the practice continues unabated. Speaking of McCzar, a recent fax he sent to the Illinois Statehouse warning that the industrial hemp bill under consideration here is a clever smoke screen for the "legalisers" didn't seem to warrant local news coverage, but I did read about it in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Kudos to State Senator Evelyn Bowles, D-Edwardsville, for her courageous leadership on industrial hemp and her dismissal of McCaffrey's Reefer Madness views on the subject. Illinois Times, it should be said, has done a fine job covering industrial hemp over the years, but it's been over ten years since your last major examination of the war on drugs. We need more local reporting and more local debate regarding what is arguably the single most important issue facing America. Our failed war on drugs has brought forth not only obscene profits for criminals but everything from growing police corruption and youth gun violence to racial profiling and racial disparities in prison sentencing and a host of other problems too numerous to mention here but no less pernicious. It may not be a comfortable subject for many readers, but Springfield can ill-afford to maintain a local news blackout on drug war issues. Perhaps we need a Project Censored at the local level. Larry A. Stevens Springfield - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson