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- Date: Tue, 22 Mar 1994 00:15:41 -0800
- From: Ryan Rossman <rossm_ry@CATSEQ.CATLIN.EDU>
- Subject: Sample Speech by Clifford Schaffer (long)
- Sender: ALCOHOL & DRUG STUDIES <ALCOHOL@LMUACAD.BITNET>
-
- ---------- Forwarded message ----------
- Date: Sat, 19 Feb 1994 12:31:09 -0800
- From: David Borden <borden@netcom.com>
- To: rossm_ry@catseq.catlin.edu
- Subject: Sample Speech by Clifford Schaffer
-
- The following is the transcript of a speech given by Clifford Schaffer,
- co-author of the Hoover Resolution, in favor of drug policy reform. This
- sample speech demonstrates the method Cliff has found for approaching
- this subject in a way that gets past the preconceptions people have
- towards the drug problem. He has used it with great effect, as
- demonstrated by the success of the Resolution (the latest news is that
- five U.S. Senators have signed it and may be planning a news conference
- to announce a companion bill to H.R. 3100 - more info when it's confirmed).
- You are welcome to use this speech or any part of it, and adapt it to your
- own personal situation. There are some graphs referred to in this speech
- - we are still figuring out how to make them available and will make an
- announcement on the email list in the near future. Also soon to follow
- is a list of prominent signers of the Hoover Resolution, and instructions
- on how to obtain the videotapes that Cliff and team have produced and how
- to get them aired on local access cable channels.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Fullerton Community College Speech
-
- First, I would like to inform everyone that the real subject here today is
- not drug decriminalization, or legalization, or re-legalization, or anything
- like that, because we still don't know if we will ever do any of those
- things. What is certain is that we will build the largest prisons in the
- history of the world. The subject is prison. It is not up to us to justify
- decriminalization. It is up to the people who support the current policy to
- justify putting millions of people in prison.
-
- One of the reasons that I am here is because of my mother. I have heard many
- people say that the crusade against drugs is a moral issue. William Bennett,
- our first national Drug Czar, said that it is important to stamp out drugs
- because it is the moral thing to do. I will show you that there is nothing
- moral about it. On April 20, 1992, my mother told me she wanted to die. She
- called me that evening and asked me if I would understand if she committed
- suicide. My mother is sixty-five years old and she looks and acts at least
- ten years younger than her age. She does two hours of aerobics every day and
- she still works because she enjoys her job. Why then does she want to die?
- A few years ago she had a minor operation on her ribs and, during the
- operation, some nerves were damaged. It wasn't anyone's fault, it is just
- one of the ordinary risks of surgery. It could happen to anyone. Now the
- nerves fire constantly, at near-maximum intensity. She says it feels as if
- someone is holding a blowtorch to her ribs -- twenty-four hours a day. She
- can no longer wear clothes which touch her skin. She can no longer walk in a
- warm spring rain because the pain of a single raindrop is too much to bear.
- Something as simple as a hug from her smallest granddaughter will make her
- fall to the floor in tears. She has spent the last few years traveling
- across the United States to find a cure. The doctors have tried a long list
- of treatments including surgery, drugs, ointments, electricity, and many
- other things. None of them worked very well and many of them were dangerous.
- The best of them was a nerve block. The nerve block required my mother to
- lay on her stomach while the doctors injected anesthetic directly into the
- nerve causing the problem. The needle had to be placed precisely on the
- nerve so it usually had to be moved around for a few minutes to get just the
- right spot. It reached the limits of human pain. The pain was so great that
- her body rigidly locked up, with her senses overloaded. She could not
- scream, breathe, or even see. On two occasions they punctured her lung with
- this procedure, and once they actually stopped her heart. To revive her,
- they gave her CPR, which means they had to pound on her ribs. When she awoke
- she screamed at them to kill her. She said that she was bitter for months
- because they had not let her die when they had the chance. She has since
- left written instructions that, if her heart ever stops again, she is not to
- be revived. Still, she said the nerve block is worth it, because it gives
- her relief for almost three days and, besides, there is always the chance
- that she will luck out and they will kill her again. Only one treatment has
- ever worked to ease the pain. That treatment is morphine. Morphine does not
- make her into a drug addict. It does not make her into some kind of mindless
- zombie. It does not even make her high. It just allows her to live a
- relatively normal life, free from the pain in her side. When compared with
- the other available treatments, morphine is the cheapest, safest, and most
- effective treatment for her condition. Her doctors will not give her
- morphine, for two reasons. The first reason is that they are afraid she will
- become addicted. A study conducted at Johns Hopkins Medical School showed
- that the addiction rate for the medical use of morphine was less than one-
- half of one percent. Even when patients do become addicted, morphine
- addiction can be easily managed in a proper medical environment, so addiction
- is not a legitimate medical concern. The second reason they will not
- prescribe morphine is that they are afraid of the drug police. They know
- that the Drug Enforcement Administration and the local police can seize their
- property and destroy their careers over a single questioned prescription, and
- the police do not even have to file criminal charges to do it. It not only
- can happen, it does happen. Last year, the Drug Enforcement Administration
- sent two doctors to prison for prescribing Tylenol 3. That is Tylenol with
- codeine. Tylenol 3 is a prescription drug in only two countries in the
- world, the United States and South Africa, and the United States is the only
- country which has ever sent a doctor to prison for prescribing this common
- medicine. There are many other cases where doctors have had their lives and
- careers ruined over equally trivial matters. My mother has mixed emotions
- when I speak out about her problem. She says that she really does not want
- anyone's sympathy because, since she has had this problem, she has discovered
- that there are so many more people who are in worse condition than she is.
- Some people with AIDS get this same kind of condition all over their bodies.
- Every day of their lives is worse than any horror movie that you have ever
- seen. They can't get morphine either. Seven thousand five hundred people go
- blind from glaucoma every year because the best medicine - marijuana - is
- illegal. And the list goes on. There are literally millions of people with
- chronic pain, cancer, AIDS, glaucoma, and other conditions for which the
- safest and most effective medicine is a drug which is now illegal. Hundreds
- of thousands of them violate the drug laws every day because they need these
- medicines to live. On behalf of all of the families affected by AIDS, and
- cancer, and glaucoma, and a dozen other diseases, I am here to tell you that
- this drug policy is indecent and it must be stopped. There is nothing moral
- about a drug policy which makes sick people choose between prison and death.
-
- Drug policy is a complicated issue and we will not have time today to resolve
- all of the points under discussion. In the past fifty years, however, there
- have been several occasions when major commissions have been formed
- specifically to study the evidence and the options for drug policy and to
- make recommendations. There have been both public and private commissions,
- domestic and foreign, performed by people of all political persuasions from
- liberals to conservative law-and-order Republicans, and people who aren't
- even on our political map. They all recommended decriminalization. I would
- like to read to you some of the studies which have reached this conclusion:
-
- The LaGuardia Committee Report, commissioned by Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia,
- written by the New York Academy of Medicine, and published by the City of New
- York in 1944.
-
- The Baroness Wootton Report, published by the government of the United
- Kingdom in 1967.
-
- The Report of the Canadian Government Commission of Inquiry into the Non-
- Medical Use of Drugs, published by the Canadian Government in 1969.
-
- Dealing With Drug Abuse: A Report to the Ford Foundation, published by the
- Drug Abuse Survey Project in 1972.
-
- The Consumers Union Report on Licit and Illicit Drugs, published by the
- Editors of Consumer Reports Magazine in 1972. This is a landmark study, a
- "must-read", used as a basic textbook at major universities.
-
- The Report of the National Commission on Marihuana and Drug Abuse,
- commissioned by President Nixon, and published by the U.S. Federal Government
- in 1973.
-
- The Facts About Drug Abuse, published by the United States Drug Abuse Council
- in 1980.
-
- An Analysis of Marijuana Policy, published by the National Research Council
- of the National Academy of Sciences in 1982.
-
- The Report of the California State Research Advisory Panel, commissioned by
- the State of California, and published in 1990.
-
- The recommendations in these reports were endorsed by (among others) the
- American Medical Association, the American Bar Association, The American
- Association for Public Health, the National Education Association, and the
- National Council of Churches. I might also add that the last two reports of
- the National Commission on AIDS have also recommended that we adopt non-
- criminal approaches to drug abuse. We may debate the details of the many
- issues of drug policy all day, but one basic fact is undeniable. When all of
- the issues and all of the evidence is considered, the overwhelming weight of
- the scholarly evidence on drug policy supports decriminalization.
-
- The first question that we need to ask ourselves is: How did we get into this
- mess? Any study of the history of the drug laws shows that they were based
- on two primary factors; racism and ignorance. You may have wondered why
- marijuana, heroin, and cocaine are illegal while other equally dangerous
- drugs such as tobacco and alcohol are legal, and even promoted by the Federal
- Government. The primary reason is that alcohol and tobacco were associated
- with white people while the other drugs were associated -- wrongly -- with
- people of color. Opiates were first outlawed because of the fear that
- Chinese men were luring white women to their ruin in opium dens. Ruin was
- defined not as opium addiction, but as associating with Chinese men.
-
- In the early years of this century, many of the major newspapers printed
- lurid articles about superhuman Negro Cocaine Fiends who would take large
- amounts of cocaine which would cause them to go on a violent sexual rampage
- and rape white women. Police departments across the nation switched from .32
- caliber pistols to .38 caliber pistols because as one Police Chief stated,
- "Those cocaine niggers sure are hard to kill." Newspaper stories of the day
- told lurid tales of Jewish peddlers selling cocaine to poor southern blacks.
- There was also a movement to ban caffeine for the same reasons. There was no
- evidence to back up the myth of the Negro Cocaine Fiend simply because most
- black people did not have the money to buy cocaine. Any black man who did
- rape a white woman would have had to be suicidal because in 1905 there were
- 105 recorded lynchings of black men for unspecified offenses. Marijuana was
- later outlawed largely as a repressive tool against Mexican laborers who were
- competing with American workers for jobs during the Depression.
-
- Racism was one of the primary themes of the campaign against drugs until the
- campaigns for civil rights in the 1950's and 1960's made it unacceptable. At
- that point, the drug warriors turned to other myths to defend their cause.
- You have heard some of those myths today. It is important to remember that
- many of the myths you heard today were made up in the 1950's and 1960's when
- it began to be apparent that the old myths just wouldn't cut it any more.
- These laws never did have anything to do with public health and safety.
-
- GRAPH
- We next need to understand the facts on the issue. My first graph shows the
- number of deaths caused by drugs, both legal and illegal, in the United
- States in a typical year.
- Tobacco kills about 390,000 people.
- Alcohol kills about 80,000.
- Sidestream smoke from tobacco kills about 50,000 people who don't even smoke.
- Prescription drugs kill at least 10,000.
- Cocaine kills about 2,500.
- Heroin kills about 2,000.
- Aspirin kills about 2,000.
- Marijuana kills 0. Even the DEA itself says that there has not been a
- recorded death due to marijuana in the history of the United States.
- All of the illegal drugs combined killed about 4,500, or about one percent of
- the number killed by tobacco. Tobacco kills more people every year than all
- of the people killed by all of the illegal drugs in the Twentieth Century.
- More Colombians die from the effects of American tobacco than the number of
- Americans who die from Colombian cocaine. As you may know, tobacco is
- heavily subsidized and promoted by the United States Government. The US
- Government demands that other countries buy more American tobacco even while
- we threaten them with war for sending us their marijuana and cocaine. Right
- now we have about 1.3 million people in prison. More than 600,000 of them
- are there for non-violent drug offenses. For every person who died from
- illegal drugs last year, one hundred and fifty people went to prison. Most
- of them were black men.
-
- You may hear a good deal of talk about the dangers of illegal drugs. First
- let me state that the medical evidence is very clear that, by any standard of
- measurement, alcohol and tobacco are substantially more dangerous to both the
- individual and to society than any of the illegal drugs. We have known this
- for at least twenty-five years. This is not to say that use of any drug is
- entirely safe. We could safely assume that almost anything we put into our
- bodies is going to have some health risk, to a greater or lesser degree.
- That is not the issue. Just because something is hazardous does not
- automatically mean that the best approach to those hazards is to throw
- millions of people in prison. In fact, every major study of drug policy has
- concluded that prison only makes those hazards worse and increases the damage
- done to society. As one commission stated, the more we learn about the
- dangers of drugs, the more it will become apparent that massive prisons are a
- medical and social disaster. It is precisely because of those health hazards
- that we must not send people to prison for drug offenses.
-
- We might win the war on drugs if we could be successful in one of three
- areas. First, we could try to stop the production of drugs in foreign
- countries. There is no credible evidence anywhere which would suggest that
- we could stop, or even greatly reduce, the production of drugs in foreign
- countries. The Federal government's own evidence shows that this is
- impossible and it is a waste of money to try. Second, we could try to stop
- drugs at the border. There is no credible evidence anywhere which would
- suggest that we could stop, or even greatly reduce, the flow of drugs across
- our border. The Federal government's own evidence shows that this is
- impossible and it is a waste of money to try. Third, we could try to stop
- the sale of drugs within the United States, even while we know that it is
- impossible to stop their production, or to keep them out of the United
- States. There is no credible evidence anywhere which would suggest that we
- could stop, or even greatly reduce, the sale of drugs within the United
- States. Again, the evidence shows that this is impossible and, not only is
- it a waste of money to try but, in fact, the war against drugs actually
- causes far more harm than good. The largest part of that harm falls upon the
- African-American community.
-
- GRAPH
- I have here a few graphs which were taken directly from US Federal Government
- statistics. The first graph shows the number of people in prison over the
- last fifty years. The number of people in prison was relatively stable for
- about fifty years, until the 1970's when President Nixon started the first
- major campaign against drugs. Then the number of inmates began to rise
- sharply. It was also during the 1970's that a major recession hit the
- country and African Americans, being at the bottom of the economic totem
- pole, were the first to lose their jobs and the last to be rehired when the
- economy changed. As a result of the stresses on unemployed fathers, African-
- American families began to fall apart and we saw the first great rise of
- black families headed by single mothers. This became especially significant
- because of what happened in the 1980s. In the 1980s the rate of
- incarceration went through the roof. Since 1980 we have tripled the number
- of people in prison and we now have the largest prisons in the world. We will
- almost triple their size again before the year 2000.
-
- GRAPH
- The next graph shows the racial breakdown of our prisons, and projects those
- figures into the future, based on current trends. By the year 2000, our
- prisons will be larger than the Nazi concentration camps of World War II.
- About two-thirds of all of the people in our prisons will be black men, most
- of them arrested for non-violent drug offenses. For every black man who goes
- to college, at least three will go to prison. Two-thirds of all of today's
- black male teenagers will be dead, disabled, or in prison before their
- thirtieth birthday. The largest single group of them will go to prison for
- non-violent drug offenses. Even as we speak, one-fourth of all of the young
- black men in America are in prison, on probation, or on parole. In some
- inner cities such as Washington, D.C. and Baltimore, which were test cases
- for the war on drugs, more than half of all the young black men in the city
- are under the supervision of the criminal justice system. It is estimated
- that more than ninety percent of the black men in these cities have already
- been incarcerated at least once. When an African-American man goes to prison
- he becomes effectively permanently unemployable because nobody will hire a
- black man with a prison record. Most of the young black men in our nation's
- capitol are already economically dead as a direct result of the war on drugs.
- They become social pariahs, unwanted by employers and even by the women in
- their own communities. They are unable to restore themselves and the
- families that we will need to rebuild our inner cities. The economic
- destruction of African-American men caused by the war on drugs is perhaps the
- singlest biggest reason that African-American families continued to
- disintegrate in the 1980's even in the midst of an economic boom. Even
- conservative black leaders are now beginning to say that the war on drugs is
- genocide and the new form of slavery and they are right. Because of our
- misguided and ignorant drug policies, we have already destroyed the better
- part of an entire generation of African-American men.
-
- In 1973 President Nixon's National Commission on Marihuana and Drug Abuse
- said that the real drug problem is not heroin, or cocaine, or marijuana. The
- real drug problem, they said, is the ignorance of our public officials who
- have never bothered to read the evidence. Today, we can prove that this is
- still true. I would like my opponent to answer one simple question. I have
- here a list of every major study of drug policy in the last fifty years
- including the largest studies ever conducted by the US Federal Government and
- the State of California. They all recommended decriminalization. Do you
- agree that the overwhelming weight of the scholarly evidence on drug policy
- supports decriminalization? Before you answer, remember that there are only
- three possible answers to this question. The first possible answer is yes,
- you agree that the overwhelming weight of the scholarly evidence supports
- decriminalization. The second possible answer is no, you do not agree and,
- therefore, you can provide a list of scholarly studies equal in quality and
- quantity to the list I have provided. The third possible answer is that you
- don't have a clue what the scholarly evidence says because you have never
- read the most basic research on the subject. What is your answer? Do you
- agree that the overwhelming weight of the scholarly evidence on drug policy
- supports decriminalization?
-
-
-
-
- Additional Notes
-
- Why did Rodney King get beaten? Sergeant Stacy Koon said it was because he
- was afraid that the black man was on drugs and he would rape the only white
- woman present, even though there were more than twenty police officers at the
- scene and the woman was a highly-trained, heavily armed police officer
- herself. One of the members of the jury said that they felt that Rodney King
- might have been on drugs, even though there was no evidence of that, and, if
- he was on drugs, then anything the police did would have been justified.
- Their thinking is irrational but it shows that the myth of the superhuman
- Negro Cocaine Fiend is still alive and well today. Ask yourself if they
- would have had the same fears and the same reaction to a drunken white man.
- I think not. This is not just a problem of the inner city black man that
- doesn't affect us here today. It must be stopped but it won't be stopped
- until you here today decide to do something about it. I ask you to join me
- in a united crusade to stop the war against our own people.
-
- One particular myth that I would like to address is this idea of the "gateway
- drug". In 1937, when the marijuana laws were first passed, Harry Anslinger,
- then the head of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, was asked specifically if
- there was any connection between marijuana and heroin. He testified,
- specifically, that there was no connection between them and the two groups of
- drug users usually did not associate with each other. Later, in the 1950's
- it became apparent that some of the old myths about drugs were just falling
- apart so they had to look for a new reason to keep marijuana illegal. Then,
- Harry Anslinger created a completely new myth - that marijuana leads to
- heroin. That became the main argument of the anti-marijuana people. This
- sounded good to the public for a while but then a lot of people began to ask
- how one drug could cause some kind of intense craving for an entirely
- different drug. Anyone with any sense could see that was not really very
- likely and there was no evidence at all to support it, so it just made the
- anti-pot folks look a little bit dumb. So they changed it. Now they say
- that pot is a "gateway" drug. That's almost like saying that pot leads to
- heroin but it's changed a little so they hope they won't get caught saying
- something dumb again. It's still bull.
-