Category Archives: Drugs

The Crisis Next Door

The woman on the phone wants to kill Robert Kennedy. “He needs to be hooked up on life support until he has eaten every bit of his flesh,” she says slowly. She has given it serious thought. This woman obsesses about all of the Kennedys. “I have a theory about Karen Carpenter. She isn’t really […]

America’s House of Pain

Given the events of the past several days (with a lead-up from the last several years), it’s time to retire that empty phrase, “The American Dream.” It only encourages people to get their hopes up for something that is not going to happen. And when they realize it isn’t going to happen, they turn to […]

Staying Alive in Portland

When I was a police reporter in San Bernardino, Calif., and homicides were becoming a weekly occurrence, I told a colleague, “One of the leading causes of death in this town is turning your life around.” Every time I wrote a story about a homicide victim, invariably one of his loved ones would say, “He […]

Good Morning, Heartache

The media love anniversary stories, and this month they have been revisiting the War on Drugs, which just turned 40. The gist of many of these stories is: The war on drugs has been a war on black men, and it’s time to end the war. Many stories cite the racial inequities of harsher penalties for dealing […]