NIXON AIDE ADMITS WAR ON DRUGS TARGETED BLACK PEOPLE

63,610
50,738
Joined
May 23, 2005
Nixon Aide Reportedly Admitted Drug War Was Meant To Target Black People

“Did we know we were lying about the drugs? Of course we did.”
4 hours ago | Updated 3 hours ago
Hilary Hanson Viral News Editor, The Huffington Post



ASSOCIATED PRESS
John D. Ehrlichman, appointed counsel to the White House, is seen in 1968. (AP Photo)
An eye-opening remark from a former aide to President Richard Nixon pulls back the curtain on the true motivation of the United States’ war on drugs.

John Ehrlichman, who served 18 months in prison for his central role in the Watergate scandal, was Nixon’s chief domestic advisor when the president announced the “war on drugs” in 1971. The administration cited a high death toll and the negative social impacts of drugs to justify expanding federal drug control agencies. Doing so set the scene for decades of socially and economically disastrous policies.

Journalist Dan Baum wrote in the April cover story of Harper’s about how he interviewed Ehrlichman in 1994 while working on a book about drug prohibition. Ehrlichman provided some shockingly honest insight into the motives behind the drug war. From Harper’s:

“You want to know what this was really all about?” he asked with the bluntness of a man who, after public disgrace and a stretch in federal prison, had little left to protect. “The Nixon campaign in 1968, and the Nixon White House after that, had two enemies: the antiwar left and black people. You understand what I’m saying? We knew we couldn’t make it illegal to be either against the war or black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities. We could arrest their leaders, raid their homes, break up their meetings, and vilify them night after night on the evening news. Did we know we were lying about the drugs? Of course we did.”

In other words, the intense racial targeting that’s become synonymous with the drug war wasn’t an unintended side effect — it was the whole point.

The quote kicks off Baum’s “Legalize It All,” the cover story for Harper’s April 2016 issue. Read the whole article, which is a comprehensive argument for drug legalization, here.

Baum explained to The Huffington Post why he didn’t include the quote in his 1996 book, Smoke and Mirrors: The War on Drugs and the Politics of Failure.

“There are no authorial interviews in [Smoke and Mirrors] at all; it’s written to put the reader in the room as events transpire,” Baum said in an email. “Therefore, the quote didn’t fit. It did change all the reporting I did for the book, though, and changed the way I worked thereafter.”

The quote does, however, appear in the 2012 book The Moment, a collection of “life-changing stories” from writers and artists.

Baum also talked to HuffPost about why Ehrlichman would confess such a thing in such blunt terms.

“It taught me that people are often eager to unburden themselves, once they no longer have a dog in the fight,” Baum said. “The interviewer needs to be patient sometimes, and needs to ask the right way. But people will often be incredibly honest if given the chance.”
 
It's 2016 and I don't think it's something to take lightly but in the future this could help in presenting a case for "reparations" for not only free labor but events that were deliberately done to target blacks either as an experiment or to financially capitalize off of us while criminalizing our very existence in every way shape and form possible.

It's not shocking news everyone knew or has some inkling that uncle Sam's offspring is at the helm of this whole war on drugs because it's still going on their still making money from it and most won't even acknowledge this because to keep it real it's involving black people which some slyly like to downgrade,downplay any victimization when it comes to blacks in 2016 ,that's just the truth.Drugs is the burden we have to bear since the early 1900's even though whites and other's succumb to it more than anyone else does,we are the maskots of it some of us proudly(rappers,facebookers).

The media start to use words like "epidemic" as if the sudden use in their communities just fell out of the sky and everyone's hooked on pills and out of all of that money will be made from rehabs,prison,slogans,anti-lectures to young children and a slew of other rehatched from 80's just for the same people just a younger generation.
 
I use to think trying to get reparations was ridiculous, but when you have clear cut evidence like this I don't see how there isn't a case for it. Things like this don't just affect those who were incarcerated or killed from it, but also the families it broke up. Never mind the financial and physiological damage its caused.
 
Ya don't say.

These ppl always wait so long to admit the truth. Definitely does make the case for reparations though.
 
Smh excuse after excuse to justify our deaths. These people created hell on earth and all of them fools signing up to be the demons. Smh...smh
 
That's the thing. People would rather run this this country to help because someone other than them receives any type of perceived benefits or special treatment. Zero sum mentality. So I do not see this country getting better. The more we have as a country, the more people will fight to keep you from having anything. Very childish behavior.
 
Not surprised at all. He waited all this time to say this though? Send his *** back to jail
 
Not like we all didn't know this was a fact. It just crazy reading verbatim that basically he is saying " yea we screwed y'all over and it's nothing you can do about it"
 
That's how they operate. Plan a F up so big and grandiose and expensive that by the time folks figure it out its either to late to do anything about it, or too expensive to fight.
This is a built in coat of doing business in America. And you will still have ppl saying we are making this up.
 
The "ya don't say" responses are understandable, but this info needs to be given to those folk thinking that african americans created the race card. So many genuinely ignorant people believe the problems facing blacks (and other minorities) are contrived, or a result of victim mentality.  With "evidence" to back up their stance like, "Oh, well look at [insert model minority here] people, they came after black folk and look how well they're doing!" 
indifferent.gif
laugh.gif


Idk what y'all talmbout as "case for reparations" though, that's hilarious.

If they didn't give y'all money for the trillions of dollars of infrastructure provided by the sweat of black bodies by the use of an obviously dehumanizing and widespread peculiar institution, how is anyone gonna get anything from a "purported claim" by a former govt. official?

If anything this bolsters the idea that the govt. never saw black folk as anything other than a tool to make money off of.
 
Last edited:
The Question is, 'What should we do now?'
I mean, it's pretty much all out there now. With many African American communities in subpar conditions, how do we bounce back?
 
smh. hopefully they understand the true damage they've done in destroying the family unit in these homes. Im sure there's a place for them after death that will deal with em real proper like
 
Back
Top Bottom