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- The following is reprinted from The Pragmatist, August 1988. Some of the
- examples and data are dated, but the arguments are still valid.(rbs)
-
-
- TWELVE REASONS TO LEGALIZE DRUGS
-
-
- There are no panaceas in the world but, for social afflictions, legalizing
- drugs comes possibly as close as any single policy could. Removing legal
- penalties from the production, sale and use of "controlled substances"
- would alleviate at least a dozen of our biggest social or political
- problems.
-
- With proposals for legalization finally in the public eye, there might
- be a use for some sort of catalog listing the benefits of legalization.
- For advocates, it is an inventory of facts and arguments. For opponents,
- it is a record of the problems they might be helping to perpetuate.
-
- The list is intended both as a resource for those wishing to participate in
- the legalization debate and as a starting point for those wishing to get
- deeper into it.
-
- Are we ready to stop wringing our hands and start solving problems?
-
- 1. Legalizing drugs would make our streets and homes safer.
-
- As Jeffrey Rogers Hummel notes ("Heroin: The Shocking Story," April 1988),
- estimates vary widely for the proportion of violent and property crime
- related to drugs. Forty percent is a midpoint figure. In an October 1987
- survey by Wharton Econometrics for the U.S. Customs Service, the 739 police
- chiefs responding "blamed drugs for a fifth of the murders and rapes, a
- quarter car thefts, two-fifths of robberies and assaults and half the
- nation's burglaries and thefts."
-
- The theoretical and statistical links between drugs and crime are well
- established. In a 2 1/2-year study of Detroit crime, Lester P. Silverman,
- former associate director of the National Academy of Sciences' Assembly of
- Behavior and Social Sciences, found that a 10 percent increase in the price
- of heroin alone "produced an increase of 3.1 percent total property crimes
- in poor nonwhite neighborhoods." Armed robbery jumped 6.4 percent and
- simple assault by 5.6 percent throughout the city.
-
- The reasons are not difficult to understand. When law enforcement
- restricts the supply of drugs, the price of drugs rises. In 1984, a
- kilogram of cocaine worth $4000 in Colombia sold at wholesale for $30,000,
- and at retail in the United States for some $300,000. At the time a Drug
- Enforcement Administration spokesman noted, matter-of-factly, that the
- wholesale price doubled in six months "due to crackdowns on producers and
- smugglers in Columbia and the U.S." There are no statistics indicating the
- additional number of people killed or mugged thanks to the DEA's crackdown
- on cocaine.
-
- For heroin the factory-to-retail price differential is even greater.
- According to U.S. News & World report, in 1985 a gram of pure heroin in
- Pakistan cost $5.07, but it sold for $2425 on the street in America--nearly
- a five-hundredfold jump.
-
- The unhappy consequence is that crime also rises, for at least four
- reasons:
- * Addicts must shell out hundreds of times the cost of goods, so they
- often must turn to crime to finance their habits. The higher the price
- goes, the more they need to steal to buy the same amount.
- * At the same time, those who deal or purchase the stuff find themselves
- carrying extremely valuable goods, and become attractive targets for
- assault.
- * Police officers and others suspected of being informants for law
- enforcement quickly become targets for reprisals.
- * The streets become literally a battleground for "turf" among competing
- dealers, as control over a particular block or intersection can net
- thousands of additional drug dollars per day.
-
- Conversely, if and when drugs are legalized, their price will collapse
- and so will the sundry drug-related motivations to commit crime. Consumers
- will no longer need to steal to support their habits. A packet of cocaine
- will be as tempting to grab from its owner as a pack of cigarettes is
- today. And drug dealers will be pushed out of the retail market by known
- retailers. When was the last time we saw employees of Rite Aid pharmacies
- shoot it out with Thrift Drugs for a corner storefront?
-
- When drugs become legal, we will be able to sleep in our homes and walk
- the streets more safely. As one letter-writer to the Philadelphia Inquirer
- put it, "law-abiding citizens will be able to enjoy not living in fear of
- assault and burglary."
-
-
- 2. It would put an end to prison overcrowding.
-
- Prison overcrowding is a serious and persistent problem. It makes the
- prison environment, violent and faceless to begin with, even more dangerous
- and dehumanizing.
-
- According to the 1988 Statistical Abstract of the United States, between
- 1979 and 1985 the number of people in federal and state prisons and local
- jails grew by 57.8 percent, nine time faster than the general population.
-
- Governments at all levels keep building more prisons, but the number of
- prisoners keeps outpacing the capacity to hold them. According to the
- Federal Bureau of Prisons' 1985 Statistical Report, as of September 30 of
- that year federal institutions held 35,959 prisoners-41 percent over the
- rated prison capacity of 25,638. State prisons were 114 percent of
- capacity in 1986.
-
- Of 31,346 sentenced prisoners in federal institutions, those in for drug
- law violations were the largest single category, 9487. (A total of 4613
- were in prison but not yet sentenced under various charges.)
-
- Legalizing drugs would immediately relieve the pressure on the prison
- system, since there would no longer be "drug offenders" to incarcerate.
- And, since many drug users would no longer need to commit violent or
- property crime to pay for their habits, there would be fewer "real"
- criminals to house in the first place. Instead of building more prisons, we
- could pocket the money and still be safer.
-
- Removing the 9487 drug inmates would leave 26,472. Of those, 7200 were
- in for assault, burglary, larceny-theft, or robbery. If the proportion of
- such crimes that is related to drugs is 40 percent, without drug laws
- another 2900 persons would never have made it to federal prison. The
- inmates who remained would be left in a less cruel, degrading environment.
- If we repealed the drug laws, we could eventually bring the prison
- population down comfortably below the prison's rated capacity.
-
-
- 3. Drug legalization would free up police resources to fight crimes
- against people and property.
-
- The considerable police efforts now expended against drug activity and
- drug-related crime could be redirected toward protecting innocent people
- from those who would still commit crime in the absence of drug laws. The
- police could protect us more effectively, as it could focus resources on
- catching rapists, murderers and the remaining perpetrators of crimes
- against people and property.
-
- 4. It would unclog the court system.
-
- If you are accused of a crime, it takes months to bring you to trial.
- Guilty or innocent, you must live with the anxiety of impending trial until
- the trial finally begins. The process is even more sluggish for civil
- proceedings.
-
- There simply aren't enough judges to handle the skyrocketing caseload.
- Because it would cut crime and eliminate drugs as a type of crime,
- legislation would wipe tens of thousands of cases off the court dockets
- across the continent, permitting the rest to move sooner and faster.
- Prosecutors would have more time to handle each case; judges could make
- more considered opinions.
-
- Improved efficiency at the lower levels would have a ripple effect on
- higher courts. Better decisions in the lower courts would yield fewer
- grounds for appeals, reduing the caseloads of appeals courts; and in any
- event there would be fewer cases to review in the first place.
-
-
- 5. It would reduce official corruption.
-
- Drug-related police corruption takes one of two major forms. Police
- officers can offer drug dealers protection in their districts for a share
- of the profits (or demand a share under threat of exposure). Or they can
- seize dealer's merchandise for sale themselves.
-
- Seven current or former Philadelphia police officers were indicted May
- 31 on charges of falsifying records of money and drugs confiscated from
- dealers. During a house search, one man turned over $20,000 he had made
- from marijuana sales, but the officers gave him a "receipt" for $1870.
- Another dealer, reports The Inquirer, "told the grand jury he was charged
- with possession of five pounds of marijuana, although 11 pounds were found
- in his house."
-
- In Miami, 59 officers have been fired or suspended since 1985 for
- suspicion of wrongdoing. The police chief and investigators expect the
- number eventually to approach 100. As The Palm Beach Post reported, "That
- would mean about one in 100 officers on the thousand man force will have
- been tainted by one form of scandal or another."
-
- Most of the 59 have been accused of trafficking, possessing or using
- illegal drugs. In the biggest single case, 17 officers allegedly
- participated in a ring that stole $15 million worth of cocaine from dealers
- "and even traffic violators."
-
- What distinguishes the Miami scandal is that "Police are alleged to be
- drug traffickers themselves, not just protectors of criminals who are
- engaged in illegal activities," said The post. According to James Frye, a
- criminologist at American University in Washington, the gravity of the
- situation in Miami today is comparable to Prohibition-era Chicago in the
- 1920s and '30s.
-
- It is apt comparison. And the problem is not limited to Miami and
- Philadelphia. The astronomical profits from the illegal drug trade are a
- powerful incentive on the part of law enforcement agents to partake from
- the proceeds.
-
- Legalizing the drug trade outright would eliminate this inducement to
- corruption and help to clean up the police's image. Eliminating
- drug-related corruption cases would further reduce the strain on the
- courts, freeing judges and investigators to handle other cases more
- thoroughly and expeditiously.
-
-
- 6. Legalization would save tax money.
-
- Efforts to interdict the drug traffic alone cost $6.2 billion in 1986,
- according to Wharton Econometrics of Bala Cynwyd, Pa. If we ad the cost of
- trying and incarcerating users, traffickers, and those who commit crime to
- pay for their drugs, the tab runs well above $10 billion.
-
- The crisis in inmate housing would disappear, saving taxpayers the
- expense of building more prisons in the future.
-
- As we've noted above, savings would be redirected toward better police
- protection and speedier judicial service. Or it could be converted into
- savings for taxpayers. Or the federal portion of the costs could be
- applied toward the budget deficit. For a change, it's a happy problem to
- ponder. But it takes legalization to make it possible.
-
-
- 7. It would cripple organized crime.
-
- The Mafia (heroin), Jamaican gangs (crack), and the Medellin Cartel
- (cocaine) stand to lose billions in drug profits from legalization. On a
- per-capita basis, members of organized crime, particularly at the top,
- stand to lose the most from legalizing the drug trade.
-
- The underworld became big business in the United States when alcohol was
- prohibited. Few others would risk setting up the distribution networks,
- bribing officials or having to shoot up a policeman or competitor once in a
- while. When alcohol was re-legalized, reputable manufacturers took over.
- The risk and the high profits went out of the alcohol trade. Even if they
- wanted to keep control over it, the gangsters could not have targeted every
- manufacturer and every beer store.
-
- The profits from illegal alcohol were minuscule compared to the yield
- from today's illegal drugs. They are the underworld's last great,
- greatest, source of illegal income--dwarfing anything to be made
- fromgambling, prostitution or other vice.
-
- Legalizing drugs would knock out this huge prop from under organized
- crime. Smugglers and pushers would have to go aboveboard or go out of
- business. There simply wouldn't be enough other criminal endeavors to
- employ them all.
-
- If we are concerned about the influence of organized crime on
- government, industry and our own personal safety, we could strike no single
- more damaging blow against today's gangsters than to legalize drugs.
-
-
- 8. Legal drugs would be safer. Legalization is a consumer protection
- issue.
-
- Because it is illegal, the drug trade today lacks many of the consumer
- safety features common to other markets: instruction sheets, warning
- labels, product quality control, manufacturer accountability. Driving it
- underground makes any product, including drugs, more dangerous than it
- needs to be.
-
- Nobody denies that currently illegal drugs can be dangerous. But so can
- aspirin, countless other over-the-counter drugs and common household items;
- yet the proven hazards of matches, modeling glue and lawn mowers are not
- used as reasons to make them all illegal.
-
- Practically anything can kill if used in certain ways. Like heroin,
- salt can make you sick or dead if you take enough of it. The point is to
- learn what the threshold is, and to keep below it. That many things can
- kill is not a reason to prohibit them all--it is a reason to find out how
- to handle products to provide the desired action safely. The same goes for
- drugs.
-
- Today's drug consumer literally doesn't know what he's buying. The
- stuff is so valuable that sellers have an incentive to "cut" (dilute) the
- product with foreign substances that look like the real thing. Most street
- heroin is only 3 to 6 percent pure; street cocaine, 10 to 15 percent.
-
- Since purity varies greatly, consumers can never be really sure how much
- to take to produce the desired effects. If you're used to 3 percent heroin
- and take a 5 percent dose, suddenly you've nearly doubled your intake.
-
- Manufacturers offering drugs on the open market would face different
- incentives than pushers. They rely on name-brand recognition to build
- market share, and on customer loyalty to maintain it. There would be a
- powerful incentive to provide a product of uniform quality: killing
- customers or losing them to competitors is not a proven way to success.
- Today, dealers can make so much off a single sale that the incentive to
- cultivate a clientele is weak. In fact, police persecution makes it
- imperative to move on, damn the customers.
-
- Pushers don't provide labels or instructions, let alone mailing
- addresses. The illegal nature of the business makes such things
- unnecessary or dangerous to the enterprise. After legalization,
- pharmaceutical companies could safely try to win each other's customers--or
- guard against liability suits--with better information and more reliable
- products.
-
- Even pure heroin on the open market would be safer than today's impure
- drugs. As long as customers know what they're getting and what it does,
- they can adjust their dosages to obtain the intended effect safely.
-
- Information is the best protection against the potential hazards of
- drugs or any other product. Legalizing drugs would promote consumer health
- and safety.
-
-
- 9. Legalization would help stem the spread of AIDS and other diseases.
-
- As D.R. Blackmon notes ("Moral Deaths," June 1988), drug prohibition
- has helped propagate AIDS among intravenous drug users.
-
- Because IV drug users utilize hypodermic needles to inject heroin and
- other narcotics, access to needles is restricted. The dearth of needles
- leads users to share them. If one IV user has infected blood and some
- enters the needle as it is pulled out, the next user may shoot the
- infectious agent directly into his own bloodstream.
-
- Before the AIDS epidemic, this process was already known to spread other
- diseases, principally hepatitis B. Legalizing drugs would eliminate the
- motivation to restrict the sale of hypodermic needles. With needles cheap
- and freely available, the drug users would have little need to share them
- and risk acquiring someone else's virus.
-
- Despite the pain and mess involved, injection became popular because, as
- The Washington Times put it, "that's the way to get the biggest, longest
- high for the money." Inexpensive, legal heroin, on the other hand, would
- enable customers to get the same effect (using a greater amount) from more
- hygienic methods such as smoking or swallowing--cutting further into the
- use of needles and further slowing the spread of AIDS.
-
-
- 10. Legalization would halt the erosion of other personal liberties.
-
- Hundreds of governments and corporations have used the alleged costs
- of drugs to begin testing their employees for drugs. Pennsylvania Rep.
- Robert Walker has embarked on a crusade to withhold the federal money
- carrot from any company or agency that doesn't guarantee a "drug-free
- workplace."
-
- The federal government has pressured foreign countries to grant access
- to bank records so it can check for "laundered" drug money. Because drug
- dealers handle lots of cash, domestic banks are now required to report cash
- deposits over $10,000 to the Internal Revenue Service for evidence of
- illicit profit.
-
- The concerns (excesses?) that led to all of these would disappear ipso
- facto with drg legalization. Before drugs became big business, investors
- could put their money in secure banks abroad without fear of harassment.
- Mom-and-pop stores could deposit their cash receipts unafraid that they
- might look like criminals.
-
- Nobody makes a test for urine levels of sugar or caffeine a requirement
- for employment or grounds for dismissal. However, were they declared
- illegal these would certainly become a lot riskier to use, and hence a
- possible target for testing "for the sake of our employees." Legalizing
- today's illegal drugs would make them safer, deflating the drive to test
- for drug use.
-
-
- 11. It would stabilize foreign countries and make them safer to live in
- and travel to.
-
- The connection between drug traffickers and and guerrilla groups is
- fairly well documented (see "One More Reason," August 1987). South
- American revolutionaries have developed a symbiotic relationship with with
- coca growers and smugglers: the guerrillas protect the growers and
- smugglers in echange for cash to finance their subversive activities. in
- Peru, competing guerrilla groups, the Shining Path and the Tupac Amaru,
- fight for the lucrative right to represent coca farmers before drug
- traffickers.
-
- Traffickers themselves are well prepared to defend their crops against
- intruding government forces. A Peruvian military helicopter was destroyed
- with bazooka fire in March, 1987, and 23 police officers were killed. The
- following June, drug dealers attacked a camp of national guardsmen in
- Venezuela, killing 13.
-
- In Colombia, scores of police officers, more than 20 judges, two
- newspaper editors, the attorney general and the justice minister have been
- killed in that country's war against cocaine traffickers. Two supreme
- court justices, including the court president, have resigned following
- death threats. The Palace of Justice was sacked in 1985 as guerrillas
- destroyed the records of dozens of drug dealers.
-
- "This looks like Beirut," said the mayor of Medellin, Colombia, after a
- bomb ripped apart a city block where the reputed head of the Medellin
- Cartel lives. It "is a waning of where the madness of the violence that
- afflicts us can bring us."
-
- Legalizing the international drug trade would affect organized crime and
- subversion abroad much as it would in the United States. A major source
- for guerrilla funding would disappear. So would the motive for kidnapping
- or assassinating officials and private individuals. As in the United
- States, ordinary Colombians and Peruvians once again could walk the streets
- and travel the roads without fear of drug-related violence. Countries
- would no longer be paralyzed by smugglers.
-
-
- 12. Legalization would repair U.S. relations with other countries and
- curtail anti-American sentiment around the world.
-
- a. When Honduran authorities spirited away alleged drug lord Juan Matta
- Ballesteros and had him extradited to the United States in April, Hondurans
- rioted in the streets and demonstrated for days at the U.S. embassy in
- Tegucigulpa.
-
- The action violated Honduras's constitution, which prohibits
- extradition. Regardless of what Matta may have done, many Hondurans viewed
- the episode as a flagrant violation of their little country's laws, just to
- satisfy the wishes of the colossus up North.
-
- b. When the U.S. government, in July 1986, sent Army troops and
- helicopters to raid cocaine factories in Bolivia, Bolivians were outraged.
- The constitution "has been trampled," said the president of Bolivia's House
- of Representatives. The country's constitution requires congressional
- approval for any foreign military presence.
-
- c. One thousand coca growers marched through the capital, La Paz,
- chanting "Death to the United States" and "Up with Coca" last May in
- protest over a U.S.-sponsored bill to prohibit most coca production. In
- late June, 5000 angry farmers overran a U.S. Drug Enforcement
- Administration jungle base, demanding the 40 American soldiers and drug
- agents there leave immediately.
-
- U.S. pressure on foreign governments to fight their domestic drug
- industries has clearly reinforced the image of America as an imperialist
- bully, blithely indifferent to the concerns of other peoples. To Bolivian
- coca farmers, the U.S. government is not a beacon of freedom, but a threat
- to their livelihoods. To many Hondurans it seems that their government
- will ignore its own constitution on request from Uncle Sam. Leftists
- exploit such episodes to fan nationalistic sentiment to promote their
- agendas.
-
- Legalizing the drug trade would remove some of the reasons to hate
- America and deprive local politicians of the chance to exploit them. The
- U.S. would have a new opportunity to repair its reputation in an atmosphere
- of mutual respect.
-
- =============================================================================
-
- Message-ID: <161306Z09091993@anon.penet.fi>
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs,talk.politics.drugs
- From: an33392@anon.penet.fi (El Poeta)
- Date: Thu, 9 Sep 1993 16:10:18 UTC
- Subject: 12.reasons + 3 more
-
- [intro deleted -cak]
-
- My only objection is that some of them are USA oriented, but I
- realize that either all the EC countries agree with legalizing
- drugs (that is hard to happen) or the USA have to take the first step.
-
- The last three reasons are mine, you can (ought to) freelly
- reproduce them anywhere, and even corrections are wellcome (my English
- is not the best).
-
- [12 original reasons deleted -cak]
-
- THREE MORE REASONS
-
- 13. Legalization would prevent children from consuming drugs.
-
- They can get them now in the black market -- it is impossible to
- control. If drugs were sold legally through pharmacies, black market
- would be inexistent, so children would have it harder to get drugs, and,
- even if they could manage to get them, drugs would be safer (no
- adulteration, impurities, etc), and certainly better than inhaling glue
- or gasoline.
-
- 14. Legalization would encourage pharmaceutical companies the research
- of safer and healthier drugs.
-
- Well, if you discover a drug which produces the same effect as
- other one but is safer, you will win the customers of the other
- companies, and hence increase your benefits (and at the same time the
- health of your customers). Perhaps the government ought to subsidize
- drug research towards substitutes for current recreational drugs safer,
- healthier and less or not addictive.
-
- 15. Legalization could teach people to live safe with drugs.
-
- Last but not least, the money saved from the WOSD, or just the money
- from drug taxes (well, they would be taxed, of course) could be redirect
- to the cure of drug addicts (if they want, I mean), the subsidies for
- drug research, and also to teach people the _true_ real problems
- associated with drugs, and the responsible and knowledgeable use of
- them.
-
- /\^/\
- Hope you enjoy with this. Have a nice day. \|_|/
- V
- <+>|
- Poeta |
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