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- Newsgroups: alt.hemp,alt.drugs,talk.politics.drugs
- From: StewartP@tuareg.demon.co.uk (Stewart Parkinson)
- Subject: UK Media Coverage
- Date: Mon, 13 Jun 1994 14:46:58 +0000
- Message-ID: <771518818snz@tuareg.demon.co.uk>
-
- The following article appeared in this Sunday's (12th June 1994) copy of
- The Independent.
-
- (Note for overseas readers:
-
- The national press is very important in the UK. It acts as a barometer of
- public opinion, and can often force politicians into action. The medium is
- divided into two main sections; the downmarket tabloids and the medium to
- up market broadsheets. The Independent is a quality newspaper with no
- discernable political bias.)
-
- This article formed part of the leader section of the newspaper.
-
- ADDICTED TO A FAILED POLICY
-
- In an ideal world, alcohol would be banned. Even in quite moderate
- quantities, it can impair work performance, affect driving, make people
- quarrelsome, maudlin or boring. In larger quantities, it can kill. It can
- be addictive and so ruin lives. Throughout the past century, most violence
- in our society - particularly domestic violence - has been alcohol-related.
- Though millions of people get harmless pleasure from drinking, that is
- probably not enough, on a strict utilitarian accounting, to outweigh the
- enormous social and health costs. We accept, however, that we do not live
- in an ideal world: most of all, we recognise that, even if alcohol were
- prohibited, as it once was in America, people would continue to sell and
- buy it, thus drawing vast sections of the population into illegal activity.
- We take the same attitude towards many other things that have little
- intrinsic merit and can harm physical or mental health - tobacco, pornography
- gambling. Weighing the question of rights, duties and practicalities that
- have preoccupied political philosophers down the ages, we elect to control
- and regulate them but not to ban them.
-
- Yet we adopt an entirely different approach to drugs. Politicians use the
- word 'drugs' as though to refer to a distinct, single and completely evil
- entity. In reality, drugs (by which they actually mean those drugs that
- happen presently to be illegal) vary enormously in their effects and
- addictive qualities: even the same drug can have quite different results
- depending upon its quantity and its purity, on how it is administered, on
- who takes it in what circumstances. Yet all but a handful of politicians
- refuse to countenance anything other than a blanket ban, backed by severe
- penalties for users and suppliers. "Drugs are harmful," Michael Howard, the
- Home Secretary, told a police conference on drugs last week. "They destroy
- people; they destroy families; they destroy the very fabric upon which our
- society rests." This is soundbite politics at its worst. Senior police
- officers, magistrates, doctors, law lords and drug counselling specialists
- are among those who support some change in the law. Their arguments deserve
- a hearing.
-
- To discuss the legalisation of drugs is not a counsel of despair, as Mr Howard
- and other politicians have argued. Still less is it a denial of the pitiful
- state to which drugs can reduce people. The "War against drugs", as it is
- rather melodramatically called, can perfectly well accompany their
- legalisation, just as the wars against excessive drinking and cigarette
- smoking accompany the legal supply of alcohol and tobacco. Indeed, it looks
- as if those wars are more sucessful than that against illegal drugs. Tobacco
- smoking is in decline - partly because, with nicotine on the right side of
- the law, manufacturers have been allowed to develop and market safe forms
- of administering it. Use of illegal drugs, by contrast, continues to climb
- steeply, particularly among the under-16s. The largest black market in
- history is estimated to be worth <UKP>5 bn. a year in Britain alone,
- providing huge profits for organised criminals, who compete for market share
- with gunfire and knives. The chances of ever preventing supply are almost
- nil: the substances are simply too easy to smuggle and hide, too cheap to
- grow. Drugs are most freely available in prisons. If authority cannot stop
- them under its nose, what hope has it on the streets ?
-
- Lord Mancroft, a Tory peer, has proposed state-licensed 'drug shops' where
- registered users would be allowed to buy drugs provided they had regular
- health checks and counselling. Two questions need to be asked. First, would
- this help those who are already addicted ? Most likely it would. Addicts
- would get safer and cheaper supplies. They would be more willing to seek
- treatment if they did not fear prosecution. They would have less need to
- commit crime to finance their purchases. Second, would more people try
- drugs? Possibly they would because many are deterred by illegality. But
- drugs suppliers might disappear from the streets because their potential
- profits would no longer outweigh the risks. And these suppliers have a
- vested interest in maximising use and persuading people to try 'harder'
- drugs.
-
- To repeat: the war against drugs would continue. Selling drugs outside
- the licensed outlets would remain a criminal offence. Freed from the need
- to fight on all fronts, the Government could devote more resources to
- prevention of such sales, as well as to education and treatment. The total
- war against drugs has failed; politicians of all parties should at least
- address the arguments for a new strategy, based on more limited aims.
-
-
- END
- --
- Stewart Parkinson
-
-
-