Crack: Cocaine, Corruption & Conspiracy
The new documentary revisits the draconian political response to the crack cocaine "epidemic" of the 1980s.

It "seemed like a good idea at the time," former Rep. Charles Rangel (D–N.Y.) says in the Netflix documentary Crack: Cocaine, Corruption & Conspiracy. Rangel, who represented Harlem from 1971 to 2017, is talking about the draconian political response to the crack cocaine "epidemic" of the 1980s.
That response included a federal sentencing scheme, backed by then-Sen. Joe Biden (D–Del.), that treated crack as if it were 100 times worse than cocaine powder and imposed a five-year mandatory minimum for possessing as little as five grams. Crack reminds us of the circumstances in which policies like those, which overwhelmingly targeted African Americans, seemed like a good idea to supposedly liberal black Democrats such as Rangel. "Clearly," he says now, "it was overkill."
The documentary recalls seminal events in the tangled cultural history of crack, such as Nancy Reagan's inane but widely echoed "Just Say No" campaign, the 1986 death of college basketball star Len Bias, the scientifically baseless "crack baby" panic, and the 1989 TV address in which President George H.W. Bush dramatically held up a bag of crack, telling America this "innocent-looking" substance was "turning our cities into battle zones." The teenaged drug dealer who provided Bush's prop after he was lured to "a park just across the street from the White House" ended up serving nearly a decade in prison.
"I can't feel sorry for the fella," Bush remarked, expressing a sentiment you'd expect from a politician who urged Americans to "rise up united and express our intolerance." Alarmed by the violence and corruption caused by the very policies Bush was so keen to enforce, a bipartisan, transracial majority did just that, destroying many lives in the process.
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So, given that this exists, and there's video of Rangel admitting that it was A.) Something he was on-board with, and B.) Was a mistake that he's acknowledged, we can finally stop hearing folks lament how this was a deliberate plot by white people, right?
I thought it was teh CIA trying to sell plane loads of cocaine to fund central American counter-insurgencies or something (not saying I necessarily believe this).
It just means the plot by white people is far more nefarious than we thought, if they were able to dupe Rangel into going along with it.
The crack "high" was the equivalent of a death sentence for the user and anyone nearby. It was the most incredible (brief) high, followed by an insanely painful low and a desperate need to replace missing brain chemistry with another hit. Everybody was willing to try anything to minimize the destruction until most drug users themselves understood that crack was not worth the high.
The more ignorant of facts the louder the braying in the pseudoscience surrounding enjoyables. Coke in all three stages is a non-addictive stimulant more like coffee than anything else. People smoke base all over South America despite American exporting of hired killers, arm-twisting election meddlers and ignorant fools... yet it is the Yew Ess Eh that has 100,000 fentanyl fatalities/yr. Before Biden & Reagan passed the economy-crashing 1986 drug act, barely 900 persons a year OD on coke products. Nobody died from mescalin or acid. Pro-death politicians?
OK, I finally get it. Sullum is the designated reality denier for "reason" (although none of your authors are tightly lashed to that mast). You think he's using spice melange to cruise the universe like a Guild Navigator, but in fact....
Note how these Democrats favored this, then at the same time accuse Republicans of being racist and draconian?
It is the Democrats who are racist, and it is the Democrats who impose more and more draconian laws.