Why NAACP Call to End War on Drugs Matters

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Miami Herald columnist Leonard Pitts writes about NAACP President Benjamin Todd Jealous' call to end the nation's "war on drugs," calling it a monumental sea change for the old-guard civil rights organization.

See, this particular quake was not of the Earth, involved no shifting of the planetary crust. No, what shifted was a paradigm, and the implications are hopeful and profound.

On Tuesday, you see, the NAACP passed a resolution calling for an end to the War on Drugs.

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Said NAACP President Benjamin Todd Jealous in a written statement, "These flawed drug policies that have been mostly enforced in African-American communities must be stopped and replaced with evidence-based practices that address the root causes of drug use and abuse in America."

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Here's why this matters. Or, more to the point, why it matters more than if such a statement came from Jesse Jackson or Al Sharpton. The NAACP is not just the nation's oldest and largest civil rights organization. It is also its most conservative.

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Read Leonard Pitts' complete column at the Miami Herald.

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