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- Hanging with the Drug Policy Reformers in Washington, D.C.
- by Paul Hager
-
- "We must all hang together, or, most assuredly, we shall all hang separately."
- -- Ben Franklin, 4 July, 1776.
-
-
- The 6th International Conference on Drug Policy Reform took
- place in Washington, D.C. recently. The conference was sponsored
- by the Drug Policy Foundation (DPF), an organization founded 5
- years ago to seek alternatives to the drug war. These alternatives
- include legalization of marijuana and decriminalization of other
- illegal drugs, expanded treatment for substance abuse focusing on
- a medical rather than a criminal justice approach, and education --
- as opposed to D.A.R.E. and Partnership for a Drug-Free America
- propaganda and hysteria which is about all we have now. The most
- well known members of the DPF are probably Mayor Kurt Schmoke of
- Baltimore and Dr. Carl Sagan, the noted astrophysicist and writer.
- As a member myself (perhaps less renowned) I attended numerous
- panels and other events at the Conference. A full report would
- more than fill the pages of the Voice -- so here are a few of my
- experiences and impressions.
-
- The Clinton Conundrum
-
- Speculation about the future drug policies of President-elect
- Clinton was rampant. Clinton's public pronouncements have not
- suggested that he would embrace any kind of reform; on the
- contrary, he has said that he is "adamantly opposed to drug
- legalization" and believes that the criminal justice system "saved"
- his brother.
-
- I had a conversation about Clinton with Kevin Zeese, the VP
- and general counsel of the DPF. He noted that Kurt Schmoke is a
- friend and close political ally of Clinton's. According to Zeese,
- Schmoke was of the opinion that Clinton was "flexible" on the issue
- of reform. Zeese said that he had spoken to "Kurt" within the past
- couple of weeks and had no reason to doubt his assessment.
-
- Zeese's is the optimistic view. Others saw little cause for
- celebration. There is no mandate for change and Clinton's own
- words leave little room for maneuver. The person touted for drug
- czar in the Clinton administration is Mathea Falco, author of the
- just-published The Making of a Drug-Free America. Falco was in the
- Carter administration as an assistant to Dr. Peter Bourne. The
- only reforms she would be likely to put in place are permitting
- needle exchange and expanding methadone treatment. Throwing
- nonviolent drug offenders in concentration camps euphemistically
- called "boot camps" and putting 100,000 more police on the streets,
- as is called for in the proposed Clinton program, do not qualify as
- reform. Per this view, it is possible that some of the more
- egregious excesses of the forfeiture mill will be curbed but that's
- about it. The pessimistic view of the future under Clinton is a
- kinder, gentler drug war.
-
- "We've won the war"
-
- Dr. Dale Gieringer is a lanky, bearded Californian from the
- Bay area. I had encountered Dale a year or so earlier but that was
- electronically -- call it a virtual meeting. Dale and I are both
- on computer networks and subscribe to the same drug policy
- discussion groups. We had exchanged e-mail (i.e., electronic mail)
- on a few occasions and I had read several of his journal articles,
- so I was hoping that he would be at the conference. When I finally
- did meet him, we took a brief moment to scan each other's physical
- forms -- as if to vouchsafe that we were flesh and blood creatures
- and not holographic projections.
-
- Dale had an interesting take on the future under Clinton.
- "We've won the war," he said. He explained that the twelve years
- of Reagan/Bush had been dominated by ideologues and zealots who had
- stifled legitimate science and rational discourse. Whatever
- Clinton himself thought about drug policy, science would become
- possible again in a Clinton administration and in such an
- environment reason and the truth would eventually prevail.
-
- Dale was certainly right in his assessment of science under
- Reagan/Bush. One need only recall the Meese Commission on
- pornography or the decision to ban fetal tissue research to see how
- ideologically driven everything was. From the Laffer Curve to Star
- Wars, it was all fantasy and pseudo-science designed to justify
- corporate rapacity, political corruption, and cultural warfare. On
- Dale's assessment of science under Clinton/Gore, there is less
- certitude. However, it was asserted by a number of people at the
- conference that rank-and-file bureaucrats involved in drug
- enforcement know that the current system can't work and are ready
- to embrace alternatives. Thus far, the alternatives have been
- blocked by the upper level political appointees.
-
- "Say goodnight, George"
-
- Another e-mail correspondent of mine is Eric Sterling, a
- Washington attorney. Eric was a counsel for the House Judiciary
- Committee until 1989 when he left to found the National Drug
- Strategy Network. Naturally, when I saw that he was conducting a
- discussion on "grass-roots" organizing, I sought him out.
-
- Eric had brought his laptop 486 computer with him and he
- demonstrated how to access activist computer bulletin boards and
- news groups. I was glad to see that someone at the conference was
- alerting people to the enormous potential of digital communications
- as an organizing tool.
-
- Eric related the story of election night in D.C. Parties were
- going on all over the district. Sometime after midnight, Eric
- drove by the White House with the sunroof on his "beemer" (i.e.,
- BMW) open and holding a sign he had made. It had written on it,
- "Say goodnight, George." As he described the scene in front of the
- White House, passing cars were honking and parties of revelers
- danced and threw broccoli.
-
- Caucusing with the Arkansas Delegation
-
- The conference attracted a diverse collection of individuals
- and groups. Perhaps one of the most colorful groups was Arkansas
- NORML (the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws).
- They quickly earned the sobriquet, "the Arkansas Delegation." They
- were easy to spot: most sported buttons bearing Clinton's picture
- with the words, "Inhale Bill, Inhale."
-
- I went to a "caucus" of the Arkansas Delegation at the end of
- the first day's events. One of the people on hand was Richard
- Cowan, the new executive director of NORML. Cowan is the
- antithesis of the stereotype of a marijuana legalizer. A Texan who
- made his money in the oil business, Cowan looks to be the kind of
- man who would attend power lunches at Houston's Petroleum Club,
- give $100,000 to the Bush Campaign, and fret over the vagaries of
- the Amsterdam spot market -- in fact, he probably has done two of
- the three. The only thing that suggests that Cowan may not be a
- stolid Republican is the small pin he sports in his left lapel: a
- marijuana leaf.
-
- Cowan has long been active in the Libertarian Party and is
- part of the Libertarian "right wing" (yes, even Libertarians have
- a left and a right wing). When it comes to espousing Reagan-type
- small government rhetoric, Cowan is without peer. This makes him
- particularly effective in dealing with the archetypal conservative
- prohibitionist. Cowan recounted a recent debate he had with Orange
- County (California) prosecutor, Dan Lundberg. "I had him flanked
- on the right," said Cowan, who got a favorable response from the
- stolid burghers in Southern California.
-
- One item he used to good effect was the story of Donald Scott,
- the multi-millionaire and Scott Paper heir who was shot dead by
- police looking for marijuana on his 200 acre estate. The evidence
- is that the motivation for the raid was forfeiture -- the police
- had the forfeiture papers on them when they busted down Scott's
- door in the middle of the night. The sleepy Scott reacted in a way
- perfectly understandable to Cowan's audience: Scott heard crashing
- sounds in his house and thought that gang members had broken in,
- bent on mayhem. He got his gun and headed toward the sounds only
- to be blown away when he was spotted. Exit Mr. Scott. Of course,
- no marijuana was found. Scott, in fact, was rabidly anti-drug.
-
- It's one thing to hear "liberals" crying over ghetto dwellers
- who have been victimized by the police but when it's one of your
- own describing the same thing happening to a member of the white
- upper class, the effect can be galvanizing. Cowan summed up this
- example of how the forfeiture laws are corrupting law enforcement
- by the following formulation: "If you think the forfeiture laws
- can't apply to you, you probably think the RICO laws (i.e., the
- Racketeering Influenced Corrupt Organizations Act) only apply to
- people with names like Rico."
-
- "Yeast shit"
-
- There were panels at the conference covering just about every
- imaginable topic of interest to drug law reformers. In talks I've
- given, I've discussed marijuana toxicity, so when I saw that a
- panel had been set up that would present the latest information on
- that subject, I went for it. I was also attracted by the fact that
- one of the panelists was yet another computer net contact, Dr. Tod
- Mikuriya, a California M.D. who was instrumental in the passage of
- San Francisco's medical marijuana ordinance. (But more about
- medical marijuana later.)
-
- Much of the content of the presentations was fairly technical
- but interspersed were such pithy observations as, a lethal dose is
- "... a bale of marijuana hitting someone on the head." Art
- Lecesse, a psychologist on the faculty of Kenyon College, drew some
- interesting comparisons between legal alcohol and illegal
- marijuana. "Alcohol," he said, "is a neurotoxin -- it's yeast
- shit. It achieves its effect by irritating neural membranes -- it
- is an organic solvent. It's associated with organic brain damage
- like Korsakov-Warneke syndrome." [Note: a good case study of the
- effect of alcoholic Korsakov's syndrome is to be found in Oliver
- Sacks' excellent book, The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat, in
- the chapter titled, "The Lost Mariner".] In contrast, he noted,
- there is no evidence that marijuana has any deleterious effect on
- brain function. In fact, the recent discovery of cannabinoid
- receptors indicates that the human brain actually requires
- endogenous cannabinoid-like (i.e., marijuana-like) substances in
- order to function.
-
- I must suppress a natural desire to recapitulate the entire
- discussion. For example, there was a whole discussion of
- considerations surrounding prescription of marijuana -- were it
- available for medical purposes. Fortunately, an amateur video was
- made of this panel. I intend to get a copy and have it aired on
- BCAT, Bloomington's community access channel. The official title
- of the panel is "Marijuana and Toxicity" -- look for it to appear
- in about a month.
-
- The Neo-Temperance Movement
-
- Dr. Bruce Alexander, a social psychologist on the faculty of
- Simon Fraser University in Canada, has been a student of the
- recrudescent prohibitionist movement in North America --
- particularly the U.S. Alexander was an advisor on a two part
- episode of the popular, "The Nature of Things" science show that
- airs on the Discovery Channel. The episode was called "Dealing
- with Drugs" and presented an objective view of alternative drug
- policy approaches being followed by the U.S., Canada, and the
- Netherlands. Alexander has also researched cocaine's association
- with violence, attempting to isolate the effect of the drug -- its
- pharmacology -- from the brutalizing and corrupting influence of
- the criminal black market that arises from prohibition. (His
- conclusion is that it is prohibition of cocaine and not cocaine
- itself that is responsible for most of the so-called "drug-related
- violence.")
-
- Alexander and a fellow researcher, Bryan Nadeau, have
- coauthored a forthcoming paper that examines how the attitudes,
- myths, and rhetoric that animated the 19th Century Temperance
- movement have been adopted, almost without change, by the modern
- drug prohibition movement. This paper was the basis of a
- presentation at the conference.
-
- What Alexander and Nadeau observed was that one had only to
- make a few substitutions in 19th Century prohibitionist rhetoric to
- bring it up to date. For example, for "alcohol" and "alcoholism",
- substitute "substance" and "substance abuse". A lengthy list of
- adverse consequences is asserted in the rhetoric -- past and
- present -- ranging from "addiction" to "the fall of civilization."
- To illustrate this, Alexander and Nadeau made an interesting
- choice: they looked at the how society's attitudes about anabolic
- steroids have changed in the past decade.
-
- As a frequent weight lifter, I've had more than a passing
- interest in how steroids came to be demonized in the 1980s. One
- popular assertion was that steroids promoted aggressive behavior --
- that users "roided out" and committed unspeakable acts of violence.
- A drug inducing someone to be violent or antisocial is a central
- element of drug prohibition mythology -- thus "reefer madness" or
- the claim by King James that coffee and coffee houses led people to
- lese majeste and sedition. In the case of steroids, evidence of
- violence induction is at best anecdotal.
-
- Most interesting was a look at the side effects associated
- with steroids and the extent they have been exaggerated to serve
- the prohibition mythos. One of the most serious alleged side
- effects is liver cancer. While this is often mentioned, the
- incidence of liver cancer never is -- an omission which prevents
- the supposed harm from being quantified and compared with other
- societally accepted risks. According to Alexander and Nadeau, the
- rate of liver cancer is around 3 per 1,000,000 users per year. In
- contrast, the mortality rate for cigarette users is about 6500 per
- 1,000,000 users per year, most of the deaths coming from lung
- cancer.
-
- Alexander and Nadeau concluded by asserting that pharmacology
- -- the true action of the drug on the human body -- offered no
- insight into steroid prohibition. Rather, they said, it was only
- in the context of a "drug war" being driven by 19th Century
- attitudes that an explanation could be found.
-
- "Surrogate Issue"
-
- On the marijuana front, one of the hottest issues for
- reformers is forcing the DEA to move the drug from Schedule I to
- Schedule II in its classification scheme. A drug that is Schedule
- I is deemed to have no medical uses and have a high potential for
- abuse. Schedule II differs in that such drugs have medical uses
- and can be prescribed by doctors. For a point of comparison,
- cocaine is Schedule II.
-
- As is often the case when government bureaucrats and know-
- nothing political appointees start mucking around in scientific or
- technical areas, the assigning of marijuana to Schedule I has no
- rational basis. Over 150 years of scientific research and medical
- experience demonstrate the usefulness of marijuana in treating a
- wide variety of maladies. The AMA opposed marijuana prohibition in
- 1937, but their objections were overridden.
-
- To the benefits known to doctors in the 1930s can now be added
- two more: marijuana is very effective is suppressing the nausea
- that often accompanies cancer chemotherapy and it also stimulates
- the appetites of AIDS sufferers. Because of drug war ideology, the
- limited and grossly inadequate medical marijuana program that had
- been grudgingly run by the government was recently discontinued.
- This action did, however, receive national media scrutiny and was
- accompanied by a widely quoted survey of clinical oncologists that
- found that half would prescribe marijuana to their cancer patients
- if they could legally do so.
-
- Here, then, is a ready-made issue for reformers. Force
- government to reverse its position on medical marijuana which,
- incidentally, compels government to admit that it has been
- systematically lying about the drug since it was initially
- prohibited. At the conference, medical marijuana was deemed a
- "surrogate issue" -- it can be promoted without advocating
- legalization yet has the result that the cause of legalization is
- advanced.
-
- A diverse group of activists has been involved in this issue.
- Dr. Tod Mikuriya and his supporters in the California Medical
- Association were very successful in getting the Association to
- endorse medical marijuana. Likewise, the Massachusetts ACLU drug
- task force lobbied that state's legislature to pass a resolution
- endorsing medical marijuana. And ACT UP, the AIDS advocacy group,
- has added medical marijuana to its list of demands.
-
- This seems like a good place to plug our own efforts locally.
- A number of Bloomington-based reformers are embarking on a campaign
- to get Monroe County government to endorse medical marijuana. We
- intend this to be a broad coalition -- there is no litmus test on
- marijuana legalization.
-
- Final Thoughts
-
- I could easily devote an entire article to any of a number of
- issues discussed at the conference. One was a presentation on the
- growing use of the National Guard in drug enforcement, a de facto
- if not de jure violation of the Posse Comitatus Act and the common
- law tradition of not using the military for civilian law
- enforcement. Another dealt with the growing number of prosecutions
- of physicians for their prescribing practices.
-
- Whether it's peeing in a bottle, agents pawing through
- people's garbage, low-flying helicopters using infrared scanners,
- the increasing brutality of the police, or the forfeiture epidemic,
- the indications are all around us that the drug war is spinning out
- of control. The drug war is domestic policy conducted on the
- Vietnam model. It would be ironic if the President-elect, so
- ardent an opponent of that war, continued our home grown-one.
-
- I believe that reason eventually prevails. Galileo who ended
- his days under house arrest was just this year exonerated by the
- Pope, which cautions us that reason sometimes takes over 300 years.
- Still, there is no substitute for patiently putting the facts out
- and attritioning the opposition with the truth. That is the
- commitment of groups like the DPF and I'm proud to be a part of
- that effort.
- --
- paul hager hagerp@moose.cs.indiana.edu
-
- "I would give the Devil benefit of the law for my own safety's sake."
- --from _A_Man_for_All_Seasons_ by Robert Bolt
-
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-