theatlantic | On December 5, 1969, President Richard Nixon appointed Stephen Hess to
the position of National Chairman of the White House Conference for
Children and Youth. Hess's task was to "listen well to the voices of
young Americans -- in the universities, on the farms, the assembly
lines, the street corners," in the hopes of uncovering their opinions on
America's domestic and international affairs. After two years of
intensive planning, Hess and 1,486 delegates from across the country met
in Estes Park, Colorado, and, from April 18 to 22, 1971, discussed ten
areas that most concerned the youth of America. These issues included,
not surprisingly, the draft and the war in Vietnam, the economy and
employment, education, the environment, poverty, and, most notably for
Points readers, drugs.
The task force on drugs, composed of eight youths and four adults,
forcefully argued for addressing the root causes of drug abuse,
advocating therapy for addicts rather than incarceration or punishment.
"We acknowledge that drug abuse is largely a symptom of the individual's
inability to cope with his immediate personal environment," they
conceded. "However, it must be understood that deep societal ills
increase the individual's sense of personal alienation. Specifically,
our society has permitted the perpetuation of the Indochina War, of
institutional and personal racism, of the pollution of our environment,
and of the urban crises.... If the administration is sincere in its
concern with drug abuse, it must deal aggressively with the root causes
as well as implement the recommendations contained herein."
At this point, it might have been easier if Nixon had just told his
Conference delegates that they couldn't have their "root causes" cake
(even with its concessionary 'individual inability to cope' icing) and
eat it too: There was only so much federal funding to go around. Just
three months after the Youth Conference met, Nixon launched a drug war
that framed drug users not as alienated youths whose addiction was
caused by inhabiting a fundamentally inequitable society, but as
criminals attacking the moral fiber of the nation, people who deserved
only incarceration and punishment.
1 comments:
Nice headline..."Material destruction of...human populations as the sovereign political project..." Fuzzlimz invading Australia as far as the eye can see (followed closely by America...??)
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