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DEA Adds Insult To Injury, Touts Nixon’s Drug War Policies On First Day Of Black History Month

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The Drug Enforcement Administration’s recent Throwback Thursday (TBT) post on Twitter, now known as X, happened to fall on the first day of Black History Month. But that did not stop the agency from proudly touting its failed war on drugs, which a former presidential advisor later revealed to be a targeted attack on the antiwar left and Black community. 

The DEA’s TBT post features a photo of then-President Richard Nixon, who brought upon the drug war, receiving a “certificate of special honor” from the International Narcotic Enforcement Officers’ Association “in recognition of the outstanding loyalty and contribution to support narcotic law enforcement.”

#TBT On Dec. 14, 1970, at the White House, the International Narcotic Enforcement Officers’ Association presented President Nixon with a “certificate of special honor” in recognition of the outstanding loyalty and contribution to support narcotic law enforcement. #DEAHistory pic.twitter.com/xC5Omns20q

— DEA HQ (@DEAHQ) February 1, 2024

Marijuana Moment shared comments from various cannabis advocates blasting the DEA’s post as offensive and tone-deaf.

“This is the agency that we are supposed to trust to objectively decide cannabis’ final schedule? Posting drug war propaganda to kick off the first day of Black History Month?” wrote Kalika Castille, president of the Minority Cannabis Business Association.  

“Nixon signed the fear- and stigma-based Controlled Substance Act in 1970, declared the disastrous ‘war on drugs’ in 1971, and ignored calls to decriminalize marijuana in 1972. The DEA’s history leaves all that out,” tweeted the Drug Policy Alliance, referring to the DEA’s five decades and over $1 trillion spent on enforcing the Controlled Substances Act, which classifies drugs and sets criminal penalties. Cannabis remains a Schedule I drug along with heroin, LSD, meth, ecstasy and peyote.

The War On Drugs & John Ehrlichman: Villify Black People And Antiwar Left

In 2016, writer Dan Baum began Harper’s Magazine cover story, “Legalize It All: How to win the war on drugs,” with quotes from a 1994 interview he’d done with Nixon’s top adviser John Ehrlichman. During the interview, Baum asked how the U.S. entangled itself in a drug prohibition policy that…

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