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Contributors
Cliff Kincaid- Contributor
Cliff Kincaid, serves as editor of the Accuracy
in Media (AIM)
Report. A veteran journalist and media critic, Cliff has
appeared on the Fox News programs Hannity & Colmes and
The O'Reilly Factor, where he debated O'Reilly on global
warming, the death penalty,
and the homosexual agenda. He was a guest co-host on CNN's Crossfire
(filling in for Pat Buchanan) in the 1980s, where he confronted
the then-Libyan Ambassador to the U.N. with evidence of Libyan
involvement in international terrorism. Through his America's
Survival, Inc., organization (www.usasurvival.org), he has been
an advocate on behalf of the families of victims of terrorism
and has published reports and held conferences critical of the
United Nations. His articles have appeared in the Washington
Post, Washington Times, Chronicles, Human Events, Insight, and
other publications. He served on the staff of Human Events for
several years and was an editorial writer and newsletter editor
for former National Security Council staffer Oliver North at
his Freedom Alliance educational foundation. He has written or
co-authored nine books on media and cultural affairs and foreign
policy issues. Cliff is married and has three sons.[go to
Kincaid index]
From
Pot To Porn To AARP
A new social agenda for the liberal lobby group...
[Cliff Kincaid] 12/30/04
The American
Association for Retired Persons now calls itself simply “AARP” because some members are offended by
the term “retired” and it wants to appeal to younger
Americans. But the organization is now trying to explain a far
more serious and deceptive practice. It hired an admitted former
drug user and dealer as an editor of its 22-million circulation
magazine. He has emerged as a spokesman on the so-called “medical
marijuana” issue, telling America that seniors might benefit
from smoking dope.
AARP confirmed
AARP magazine editor Ed Dwyer’s curious
background, saying that he wrote for High Times magazine
and Playboy but had also done work for “quality” publications.
AARP said his resumé didn’t include a stint as a
writer for Penthouse, but there are several references
to that in the public record. What’s more, AARP magazine
top editor Steven Slon also worked for Penthouse. It turns out
he and Dwyer
are old friends.
High in America, a book taking an inside look at the drug culture,
reported that High Times was described by its founder,
drug smuggler Tom Forcade, as being like a “sleazy carnival” with “pills
in one room, grass in another, coke in another room, nitrous
in the next room, glue in another room, and so on down the hall.”
Dwyer didn’t respond to my emails and telephone calls.
But emerging as a national spokesman for the magazine, Dwyer
was quoted by the Associated Press as saying that “The
use of medical marijuana applies to many older Americans who
may benefit from cannabis.” An article and poll results
on the issue will appear in the March-April issue. Slon says
Dwyer helped edit the marijuana article and claims that it is
a balanced treatment, but he wouldn’t provide an advance
copy.
The poll
results were released in advance, generating widespread coverage
with Tonight
Show comedian Jay Leno cracking, “Nearly
75 percent of elderly Americans approve of the legalization of
medical marijuana. And you thought grandpa used to forget stuff
before!” But it’s not a laughing matter to anti-drug
activists who recognize the use of marijuana cigarettes for “health” reasons
as a ploy to soften opposition to the legalization of pot.
Slon claims
Dwyer’s
drug use is a thing of the past and AARP says that he worked
for High Times years ago, from 1974-1978.
However, he also authored a piece for the December 2004 “anniversary” edition
of the magazine about how High Times “was a dope-fueled
mission” for him. Dwyer didn’t disavow his early
drug-taking years and, in fact, speaks fondly of “the memories
and opportunities.”
For those who have never seen a copy, High Times features centerfold
pictures of illegal substances, like Playboy features
women exposing their private parts. The “sex was plentiful” and
the work, Dwyer wrote, was “most rewarding when we got
to sample the centerfolds,” naming several varieties of
dope. He said that some of his best story ideas “came out
of a balloonful” of nitrous oxide or laughing gas.
High Times founder
Tom Forcade, he said, would “give me
pounds of marijuana or hash to peddle…” but Dwyer
gave most of it back because he wasn’t good at dealing
drugs. However, he took the job when Forcade gave him “a
bag of Colombian” marijuana as an inducement.
Dwyer reveals
that Forcade would talk only “half-jokingly” in
admiring terms about such figures as North Korea’s Kim
Il Sung, Hitler, and Juan Peron of Argentina. He eventually committed
suicide, but Dwyer survived, bouncing from job to job until he
has ended up at what is now called AARP The Magazine.
The old name, Modern Maturity, was dropped because
it was too bland. The new version is apparently modeled after
ESPN The Magazine and designed to be fashionable and youth-oriented.
But AARP may have become too slick for its own good by hiring
veterans of the counter-culture and using seniors in a deceptive
campaign to peddle dope.
With the
assistance of Jeanette McDougal of Drug Watch International,
anti-drug
activists Joyce Nalepka and Dee Rathbone uncovered
the Dwyer connection when they read how AARP had “decided
to study” the issue of “medical marijuana.” They
said, “To those of us who’ve known for years that High Times magazine
is a virtual market place for all things pro-drug, including
marijuana seeds, mushroom spores, and drug
paraphernalia, we had to wonder how many grandparents who participated
in this AARP poll were aware what they were voting to support.
We suspect very few have any idea. Grandparents are the most
anti-drug segment of our society.”
Perhaps this is why seniors have been targeted with a poll that
is being used to push dope. Forcade, if he were alive, would
be proud of AARP The Magazine. tRO
copyright
2004 Accuracy in Media
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