On Monday’s “First Take” on ESPN2, personality Stephen A. Smith attacked former President Ronald Reagan’s “war on drugs,” blaming it for the “frustration” and “violence” of African-Americans and other inner city residents today. Smith, who was originally reacting to the report that former New Orleans Saints player Will Smith was shot and killed in a road rage incident, explained that the “war on drugs” resulted in African-Americans and inner city folks being thrown in prison, which has led to frustration within the community. “Len Bias, star at Maryland, dies in June of 1986 from a cocaine overdose,” Smith said. “Congress panics. Everyone politicizes it, the Reagan administration talks about the ‘war on drugs’ and all of a sudden you have a situation where 100 grams of cocaine is the equivalent of one gram of crack. Crack was considered to be an inner city drug. As a result, an abundance of African-Americans and folks in the inner city, who didn’t even happen to be African-American, were being thrown in prison. And so when that is your priority and that is the perception you’re feeding to a nation of people, all of a sudden the opportunities are going to dwindle. If the opportunities dwindle, then you are going to have people who feel hopeless. If they feel hopeless and helpless,