by Dennis Myers
Rick Shepherd, who says he was treated better in a traffic stop than a black person would have been, tells local law enforcement officers (foreground) that they need to rid their departments of racists.
BAD EXAMPLE CATCHES ON On the first night of the Republican convention, GOP leaders took a page from Nevada Democratic Party officials, using a voice vote to quash a revolt by die-hard Trump opponents who had shocked the Republican leadership by getting a majority of signatures from delegates in 11 states—four more than needed—to get a floor vote on convention rules. U.S. Rep. Steve Womack of Arkansas, presiding over the convention, used a voice vote to claim the convention had approved the rules without change. Just as the same stunt worked at the Nevada Democratic Convention in May, so insurgent GOP delegates angrily shouted for a roll call vote again—which was denied them. Again.
PHOTO/DENNIS MYERS
SuPErDELEgATES TArgETED Presidential candidate Bernie Sanders is expected to try to get rid of a substantial portion of the unelected delegates known as “superdelegates”—party and elected officials who get delegate seats at the convention automatically. It could mean a floor fight, though some Clintonites are expected to join in. Nevada’s DNC delegation will have eight unelected delegates, seven of whom support Hillary Clinton. Sanders seems particularly concerned because those delegates came out for Clinton so early. The purpose of superdelegates is to wait to see how a presidential race is going and intervene if they believe the party is likely to nominate a troublesome or unelectable candidate. Clinton had hundreds of votes lined up from superdelegates before 2016 even began. Information is available at EndSuperdelegates.com
POT TALE Of THE wEEk In a June 7 editorial, the Las Vegas Review-Journal claimed, “And no matter how much pot enthusiasts argue otherwise, marijuana is both addictive—one in 10 people who try pot will become hooked on it—and a gateway to more deadly drugs that kill more than 45,000 Americans a year.” The gateway theory has been around for decades—long before any research on drugs had been done. Thus, it plainly originated as a product of supposition, not of science. One version of it in the early 20th century said that tobacco always leads to harder stuff. Con man Charles Towns, who ran “clinics” where alleged cures for drug addiction were offered, said, “It [tobacco use] always precedes alcoholism and drug addiction. I’ve never had a drug case or an alcoholic case (excepting a few women) that didn’t have a history of excessive smoking.” In the case of marijuana, once outside the realm of supposition and into practical tests, there is evidence that marijuana—far from acting as a gateway—actually serves as a barrier to “harder stuff.” In 1969, the Nixon administration launched what it called “Operation Intercept”—slowing traffic at Mexico/U.S. border towns and thoroughly searching every vehicle. It certainly dried up supplies of marijuana in the Southwest—and demand for harder stuff shot up. New users of smack crowded into clinics. As marijuana slowly became more available again, heroin cases declined. California physician David Smith told Newsweek, “The government line is that the use of marijuana leads to more dangerous drugs. The fact is that the lack of marijuana leads to more dangerous drugs.” The previous year during the Johnson administration, a military crackdown on marijuana in Vietnam reduced supply and prompted an upsurge in heroin use by U.S. servicepeople. Incidentally, the Review-Journal has changed its position on marijuana since it was purchased by billionaire Sheldon Adelson.
—Dennis Myers
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07.21.16
Search for answers Residents meet to discuss race and police “I want to do something, but I don’t know what to do,” Leslie Sexton told the mostly white audience at a July 14 NAACP meeting in Reno. She had become inured to killing, she said, but the Philando Castile and Alton Sterling killings revived her horror. She wasn’t the only one searching for a way to deal with her feelings. “I felt discouraged and hopeless last week and I wanted to do something really practical for my fellow citizens,” said Laura Freed. “I wanted to do something really practical ... for my fellow citizens.” So she decided to volunteer for the local police advisory board—only to discover there isn’t one. To city councilmembers, the county sheriff and Reno police chief who were seated
in the audience, she called attention to Nevada Revised Statute 289.380, which provides for creation of a “review board by ordinance to advise the governing body on issues concerning peace officers, school police officers, constables and deputies of constables within the city or county.” She also said she sought information from an unnamed Reno city councilmember about whether local police have body cameras. She said she was given a “polite brush-off. … I wanted a straight answer to that question, and I didn’t get one.” Councilmembers Naomi Duerr and David Bobzien, seated in the front row, then spoke. Bobzien said since the Castile/Sterling incidents, “my white middle class friends have been up in my grill asking me, ‘Tell me
what’s going on in the Reno Police Department. What are you doing about this?’” He said his son has also been asking uncomfortable questions. Duerr recalled attending ninth grade in a school that had about a 50/50 black-white split and was very tense. “I’m struck by the fact that this was 40 years ago, and here we are talking about the same things.” The meeting of 139 people in a small room near downtown Reno went on like that, with attendees telling their stories or answering questions. Early in the meeting, Police Chief Jason Soto and Sheriff Chuck Allen described police procedures to which their departments subscribed that are designed to avoid brutality and violence. Longtime civil rights leader Lonnie Feemster noted that at one time, a flag was hung in front of the NAACP headquarters in New York each time someone was lynched. It read, “A MAN WAS LYNCHED YESTERDAY.” Feemster displayed a photo of a flag that was hung recently at the Jack Shainman Gallery in New York: “A MAN WAS LYNCHED BY POLICE YESTERDAY.” “I am safer being a black man today than ever in this country’s history,” Feemster said, but argued that there are obviously still serious problems. He argued that there are police procedures that can be implemented from an NAACP report, Born Suspect. “A lot of this has been done,” he said. “We don’t need to reinvent the wheel. … What have you implemented in this report?” Sheriff Allen said, “I do believe we are embracing all six pillars that were cited by the Department of Justice. … We are not going to go back to the office and forget about this [meeting].” He also said, “I hope and pray we never have a mistake where we have to come together and explain” a Castile/ Sterling-type incident. Feemster said, “People are saying, ‘Well, if everybody has a gun, then the good guys will get the bad guys.’ I don’t know what things are going to be like for police officers if everyone has a gun.”
guArANTEES When an audience member questioned Allen on his endorsement of ballot question 1, providing for gun purchase