Pubdate: Thu, 02 Nov 2000
Source: Boston Globe (MA)
Copyright: 2000 Globe Newspaper Company.
Page: D1
Contact:  P.O. Box 2378, Boston, MA 02107-2378
Feedback: http://extranet.globe.com/LettersEditor/default.asp
Website: http://www.boston.com/globe/
Author: Alex Beam
Bookmark: MAP's shortcut to George Soros items:
http://www.mapinc.org/soros.htm

THE MONEY BEHIND QUESTION 8

Who is George Soros and what is he doing here in Massachusetts?

Soros is the world-renowned currency speculator - I think currency
"trader" is the term he would prefer - who has bet and won stacks of
cash in the international money markets.  Starting in the late 1980s,
the Hungarian-born businessman channeled tens of millions of dollars
into post-Cold War Eastern Europe. His aims were generally laudable.
His nonprofit organizations, the Soros Foundation and the Open Society
Institute, funded "democracy-strengthening" initiatives aimed at
creating civil societies where only totalitarian dictatorships had
existed before.

Soros garnered well-deserved praise for trying to fix Eastern Europe's
broken societies. (His sallies into big-think journalism, including
his since-retracted prediction of the "disintegration of the global
capitalist system" are another matter.) But when he uses his wealth to
fix our broken society . . . the reaction is quite different indeed.

About three years ago, Soros started financing various reform efforts
in the United States. He funded one of the first lawsuits against a
handgun manufacturer, and he has invested in welfare and immigration
reform schemes. But his most controversial cause has been his war
against the war on drugs: he has under written needle exhange programs
for addicts, and has helped pay for ballot initiatives for the
decriminalization of marijuana for medical use in over a dozen states.

Each year he devotes about $1 million of his personal funds to these
electoral efforts, and he has already spent almost $300,000 here
backing Question 8 on next week's Massachusetts ballot. Question 8
calls for the creation of a Drug Treatment Trust Fund, with the money
to be directed to chronically under funded drug rehabilitation
programs. Likewise, assets seized from drug dealers would flow into
the trust fund, rather than into the district attorneys' coffers. Not
surprisingly, all 11 Massachusetts district attorneys oppose it.

In Massachusetts, as elsewhere, Soros works in concert with two other
large donors: businessmen Peter Lewis and John Sperling, each of whom
has used marijuana medically. Sperling had prostate cancer, and Lewis
has used marijuana for circulatory problems. Soros' own motives are
more opaque. His drug-policy adviser, Ethan Nadelmann, told me that Soros 
equates the American
government's abuse of power in the drug war with the Fascist regimes
in Hungary and Nazi Germany. That's a stretch.

Soros may be on the side of the angels, and I intend to vote "yes" on
Question 8. (As do 69 per cent of the state's voters recently polled
by KRC Communications Research, the Globe's polling firm.) However,
this isn't Eastern Europe, and his charity has been received much more
coolly here. His claim to "have tried marijuana and enjoyed it" has
exposed him to the charge that his ultimate aim is to decriminalize
pot and other drugs. Indeed, former Health, Education and Welfare
secretary Joseph Califano has branded him "the Daddy Warbucks of drug
legalization."

The Massachusetts District Attorneys Association couldn't agree more.
"If you put a microphone up to George Soros and asked him if he
supports drug decriminalization, he would say no," says Geline
Williams, executive director of the MDDA. "But if you look at the fine
text of what he's putting forward, that's exactly what he
accomplishes." Her point is that, under Soros' proposed law, drug
dealers can pass themselves off as addicts, enter treatment programs,
and avoid criminal prosecution.

"My hat's off to the guy," Williams says. "The public doesn't know
that he and two of his billionaire philosophical allies are purchasing
a law here in Massachusetts."