War On Drugs Czar Jeff Sessions Can’t Get Out of the 80s

The Daily Sheeple – by Dawn Luger

Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who should be more accurately known as the War on Drugs Czar, is firmly stuck in the 80’s. His approval of the old, outdated, and ineffective DARE program proves that he’s out of touch with current realities.

Sessions has embarrassed himself when it comes to drugs; especially cannabis since becoming the Attorney General of the United States. He’s such an embarrassment, that some even suggest he smoke some marijuana and relax a little.  But the longer he’s in office, the more humiliating it is to watch him flop around like goldfish in the sand. 

He’s now gone out of his way to praise the old DARE program from the 80’s. Some might remember it, DARE: Drug Abuse Resistance Education. It was a government-funded program enacted in 75% of American schools to try to keep kids off drugs, but based on the opioid epidemic we are facing, it has epically failed.

That hasn’t stopped Sessions from declaring his undying love for the failed program. Speaking at a DARE conference, Sessions said, “DARE is, I think, the best remembered anti-drug program today. In recent years, people have not paid much attention to that message, but they are ready to hear it again. …We know it worked before, and we can make it work again.” However, the statistics aren’t exactly in Sessions’ favor.

Students who went through DARE weren’t any less likely to do drugs than the students who didn’t. In fact, there’s some well-regarded research that some groups of students were actually more likely to do drugs if they went through DARE. Scientists knew DARE was ineffective relatively early on, but the program grew anyways. The program’s eventual reform was the result of a long and hard battle between evidence-based research, and popular opinion. –SOURCE

The DARE program cost taxpayers millions of dollars, and it’s “cool” 90’s trendy mascot “Daren the Lion” has all but been forgotten. But Sessions just can’t give up on DARE and it’s failures. Just like he can’t give up on his fight to ensure marijuana remains illegal.

Sessions’ inability to focus on the problem of government interference in the “war on drugs” has been a disaster. He doesn’t seem to really be interested in the facts or the causes of drug use, nor is he willing to listen to possible solutions outside of government punishments. A 2000 study by the American Psychological Association and a report to Congress from the National Criminal Justice Reference Service in 1998 both came to the same conclusion: kids who went through the DARE program were just as likely to use drugs as those who did not.

Many have claimed that the problem wasn’t the education of the effects of drug use, but the fact that police were teaching these classes, not doctors or nurses. It undermined the effectiveness of the program even though some assumed that the police would have more “authority” when it comes to “criminal behavior” than a doctor.

Dr. Ruth Rich was tasked with selecting the first curriculum for the DARE program. Research on drug prevention education was already underway at USC, under the title “SMART.” But there was a catch, DARE’s founder desired the program be taught by police officers themselves, not doctors or teachers. Rich agreed with him, on the grounds that cops are more familiar with the “criminal culture.” As she told the LA Times, “There’s a gap between the street and the classroom. Police officers are believable on this subject. When it comes to drugs, they’re more credible than a teacher.”

The idea of police officers in the classroom turned off some of SMART’s original authors, including the head of the research team, Andy JohnsonReason Magazine reported, “Though sympathetic to Rich’s dilemma, Johnson had serious objections to handing an experimental educational program over to the local police.”

Government punishments for drug use haven’t worked, and neither has handing over the task of education on drugs to the police. Major changes in how the government handles drug use and freeing up the industry which treats addiction is what would work the best, but is also the one thing the government refuses to try – because we can’t’ have freedom.  It’s just way too scary.

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Contributed by Dawn Luger of The Daily Sheeple.

Dawn Luger is a staff writer and reporter for The Daily Sheeple. Wake the flock up – follow Dawn’s work at our Facebook or Twitter.

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7 thoughts on “War On Drugs Czar Jeff Sessions Can’t Get Out of the 80s

  1. Lol, DARE introduced a lot of kids to the existence of drugs that they otherwise may never have been aware of. Out of sight out of mind. Same thing with sex ed, talking about a subject all the time has the effect that it stoke further curiosity in the subject.

  2. What???? You Don’t mean Jeff “the Yankee” sessions do ya? I thought he was gonna save the country.y’all know that little prick is just another Bush….. Right?????

    1. ‘Illegal’ drugs + indefinite detention + private prisons === BIG MONEY for investors ……..now what are the odds ol Jeff boy has a vested interest?

  3. The government is in the process of banning opiates except for end of life. They will leave chronic pain sufferers without medication. This is what you get with government health care. A total cluster fook caused by the government.
    I wish these bureaucrats suffered a major accident resulting in a severe spinal cord injury. They’d be begging for opioids back on the market once they realize that what’s available now doesn’t do squat for relieving pain but I suspect their gubberment insurance will take care of them.

  4. “He doesn’t seem to really be interested in the facts or the causes of drug use, nor is he willing to listen to possible solutions outside of government punishments.”

    Because they already have the best depopulation & mammon extraction system currently available to them.

    “Rich agreed with him, on the grounds that cops are more familiar with the “criminal culture.”

    Pigs ARE the “criminal culture”.

    Can’t get any more ‘familiar’ than that.

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