Holder To Announce New Drug Policy?
Attorney General Eric Holder seems to be signaling that he'll soon be announcing major changes in the federal government's policies on illegal drugs. If this turns out to be true, it will indeed be a welcome change in the approach the Justice Department has taken under President Barack Obama. Obama is now the third president to have admitted smoking marijuana before he entered office (well, OK, the second one who admitted inhaling, technically, but still...), so any changes are indeed long overdue.
The focus of Holder's comments in a recent interview seemed to be on the vast number of people who are in federal prison on drug charges. This is an important aspect of the War On Drugs which desperately needs changing, as is brutally shown in this simple chart. When First Lady Nancy Reagan decided to make drugs her "pet issue," the War On Drugs went into overdrive. The results are plain to see, as the chart clearly shows. Two big parts of this problem were the "mandatory minimum" laws Congress passed back then, and the 500-to-1 sentencing disparity between crack cocaine and powder cocaine (which are chemically the same thing, in essence). The cocaine problem was lessened by Obama in his first term, but not completely equalized. The mandatory minimum problem seems to be what Holder may announce changes to, at least from reading between the lines of his recent interview.
This is all well and good. Any steps the federal government takes away from its own addiction to a senseless "war" on its own citizens has to be seen as a good one, at this point. But there are two festering issues which Holder really also should address.

