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- From: germuska@casbah.acns.nwu.edu (Joe Germuska)
- Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs,alt.drugs,rec.music.gdead
- Subject: American Drug Policy: What's the real problem?
- Date: 10 Apr 91 22:41:00 GMT
- Organization: Northwestern University
-
- Because of fairly high demand for copies of this, I've decided to post it
- to the three newsgroups selected. Note, followups to talk.politics.drugs,
- so if you are interested in the discussion I hope will follow this paper,
- check there. Permission is granted to reproduce this paper as long as
- you're cool about it: i.e. don't change it, don't take my name off of it,
- and don't make any money off of it, or if you do, share with me! :-)
- About the paper, some of the prelim discussion has brought to my eyes
- that there are some potentially unclear parts. Please read carefully
- before responding. I'd clear it up a little, but I've gotta run.
- Discussion, commentary, criticism, etc. is strongly encouraged -- these
- facts must become general public knowledge before they help anyone!
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- American Drug Policy: What's the Real Problem?
- by Joe Germuska (germuska@casbah.acns.nwu.edu)
- [copyright 1989]
-
- "There were 2000 drug arrests in Cleveland in 1987, 3700 in 1988, and
- [former mayor George] Voinovich predicted 6000 in 1989. Arrests are
- growing at 70% a year. Juveniles arrested for drug abuse in Cleveland
- increased from 23 in 1985 to 142 in 1988 with a prediction of more than 520
- arrests in 1989"
- -Cleveland Plain Dealer, 2 April 1989
-
- "U.S. Stops Some Airborne Drugs but Admits the Smugglers Are Winning"
- -Headline in The New York Times, 30 July 1989
-
- "On Thursday, March 17, 1988, at 10:45 p.m, in the Bronx, Vernia Brown was
- killed by stray bullets fired in a dispute over illegal drugs. The
- 19-year-old mother of one was not involved in the dispute, yet her death
- was a direct consequence of the "war on drugs."
- -from "Thinking About Drug Legalization" by James Ostrowski (1989)
-
- (In Colombia:) "Since 1980, assassins have gunned down 178 judges; eleven
- of the 24 members of the Supreme Court died in a 1986 shootout between the
- army and leftist guerillas thought to have been paid by the drug barons.
- Also hit were two successive Justice Ministers (one survived), an Attorney
- General, the police chief of the nation's second largest city, Medellin,
- and the editor of the newspaper, El Espectador in the capital city of
- Bogota. The drug lords also kidnaped the 33-year-old son of a former
- President."
- -Time, 4 September 1989
-
- "The operation of New York's famous Rockefeller Drug Law, which provided
- high mandatory minimum sentences for heroin sellers and restricted plea
- bargaining . . . caused essentially no decrease in heroin activity, but did
- lead to a drop in the number of heroin offenders arrested and convicted, a
- considerable increase in the court and correctional resources necessary to
- process those apprehended, and a significant increase in the overcrowding
- of the state's prison system."
- -from The Hardest Drug by John Kaplan (1983)
-
- It was recently noted that the Eighties are the first decade since the
- depression in which the U.S. was not involved in any wars. In a
- traditional sense, this may be true, but, especially in the latter half,
- the war of the 80's has been the American government's "war on drugs".
- Suggested solutions have ranged from Nancy Reagan's glib "Just Say No!" to
- George Bush's extravagant "I'm requesting--altogether--an almost billion
- and a half increase in drug-related federal spending on law enforcement...."
- (from President Bush's televised address, 5 September 1989) However, all
- efforts of law enforcement officials to crush the drug traffic seem to have
- little end effect on traffic. For example, in 1984, Colombian authorities
- seized and destroyed thirteen and a half tons of cocaine, more than the
- total amount seized in the history of law enforcement, and yet "it did not
- nudge the price of coke on the street in the United States." (Latimer,
- 1985) In fact, the effects of law enforcement may sometimes actually be
- detrimental. Columnist Doug Bandow reports, "A government study in Detroit
- found that as the drug laws were more strictly enforced, drug prices rose
- and the number of other crimes committed increased." (1984) Obviously,
- with respect to drugs, the state of the American nation is absolutely
- intolerable. In an August Gallup poll, Americans named drugs as the biggest
- problem facing their country. "Drugs," however, is but a very vague
- simplification of the problem in America. Before American policy can win
- the war, the enemy must be defined. Analysts and policy makers debate with
- little progress. Drugs are blamed for crime, loss of productivity, and the
- decay of social institutions. Now, though, many experts are suggesting
- that the problem may actually lie in the actual laws prohibiting drug use.
- Whichever argument is more convincing will direct the future of policy. If
- the drugs themselves are the culprits, then enforcement efforts must be
- stepped up so as to minimize illicit drug sales and abuse. However, if the
- scenario created by prohibition of drugs is judged to be the true problem,
- then legalization methods must be developed.
- Current American policy is based on the premise that the use of illicit
- drugs is, by nature, wrong. The laws, some say, were enacted to protect
- Americans from the harm drug abuse can cause. However, socialization has
- created several "drugs of choice" which are, despite possibly being more
- dangerous, considered acceptable to use and even abuse. For too long,
- American society has accepted caffeine, nicotine, and alcohol as "O.K."
- drugs, despite possible negative side effects. The government tried to
- protect its citizens with the eighteenth amendment, but tenacious drinkers
- who wanted ways around the law motivated criminals to industrialize
- bootlegging, which became the foundation of organized crime in America.
- Former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop released a study declaring nicotine
- a drug at least as addictive as heroin, yet President Bush's appointed
- "Drug Czar," William Bennett, is still hooked on cigarettes. In fact,
- technically speaking, if nicotine were discovered today, it would be listed
- as a "Class C narcotic," putting it in a league with heroin and cocaine,
- neither of which has been a part of our culture long enough to be accepted
- like tobacco. Because of the nature of illegal drugs, few studies have
- been conducted. However, it seems that neither heroin nor cocaine have
- long term health effects anywhere near as severe as the chronic effects of
- America's drugs of choice. Lawyer James Ostrowski writes:
-
- It is well known that tobacco causes cancer, heart disease, and
- emphysema. While the effects of heavy alcohol consumption are not as well
- known, they include anemia, fatty liver, hepatitis, cirrhosis,
- pancreatitis, gastritis, ulcer, hypoglycemia, congestive heart failure,
- ataxia, brain damage, blurred vision, dementia, cranial nerve palsy,
- circulatory collapse, and hemorrhages. (1989)
-
- The government is trying more to protect its citizens from the acute, or
- immediate effects of these drugs. However, many scholars argue that the
- acute dangers of cocaine and heroin are predominantly because of their
- illegality. It has been "reasonably estimated that at least 80 percent of
- deaths from illegal drugs today are attributable to the effects of drug
- prohibition." (Ostrowski, 1989) Obviously, legalization would prevent all
- of these deaths. First, street drugs are not monitored, so the user has no
- idea what he is actually putting into his body. Many drugs are cut with
- other substances to increase their bulk at no cost to the dealer. The fact
- that some of these additives may be harmful or fatal need not bother
- dealers, as their customers have no legal recourse. This is comparable to
- the sale of denatured alcohol during prohibition. Criminals often sold
- blindness-inducing wood alcohol to unknowing customers. Obviously, since
- the repeal of Prohibition, brewers and distillers have been obeying
- government safety measures. It has been quite a while since anyone was
- sold methyl alcohol as an intoxicant! Also, because street drugs are not
- labeled, the user has no idea of the potency of the drug he may be using.
- A drug user may shoot up with a dose of the same quantity as the last time,
- and therefore be apparently safe. If the second dose is more pure,
- however, the user may overdose. Since distribution of alcohol includes
- legislation requiring consistent percentages of alcohol by volume, drinkers
- can know how much they've been drinking. If currently illegal drugs were
- instead monitored by the government in essentially the same way as legal
- "drugs of choice," those who so desired would be able to monitor their use
- much more carefully and responsibly, as may today's drinkers and smokers.
-
- Also, the illegality of drugs may be the motivation for users to turn to
- more dangerous methods of administration. Randy Barnett, a law professor,
- writes, "Intravenous injection, for example, is more popular in countries
- where the high drug prices caused by prohibition give rise to the most
- 'efficient' means of ingesting the drug. In countries where opiates are
- legal, the principal methods of consumption are [smoking] or snorting. . .
- . [N]either is as likely as intravenous injections to result in an
- overdose." (1987) Also, addicts often share needles, which helps spread
- AIDS and hepatitis. It seems that, from a strict health standpoint, the
- laws outlawing drugs are causing users more harm than use through
- government approved channels might.
- The one health aspect that would be constant regardless of the legality
- of drugs is the prospect of addiction. The laws in place today are there
- primarily to prevent Americans from becoming enslaved to a chemical.
- However, there are serious problems with these motivations. First,
- Americans can and do become addicted to alcohol, nicotine, caffeine, and
- numerous legal over-the-counter and prescription drugs. The government
- does not, however, forbid the use of these addictive chemicals. And
- marijuana has been determined not to be physically addicting. That is, a
- marijuana user will suffer no health problems if deprived of THC for an
- extended period of time. If the government will outlaw psychologically
- addictive substances such as this, then it may as well include gambling,
- eating, and even dieting, all of to which people can become psychologically
- addicted, or more accurately, all of with which people can become obsessed.
- The only grounds upon which the government would be justified in
- maintaining this inconsistency is if it were demonstrable that addiction to
- currently illegal drugs would necessarily be more harmful or more
- inevitable than addiction to currently accepted drugs. There is simply no
- reason to believe that this would be so. Popular belief may hold that
- these drugs are particularly worse than the ones we use today, but many
- people are basing their beliefs on fear-motivated research such as that
- which produced the film "Reefer Madness." In this film, marijuana smokers
- were depicted as raving psychotics after one puff of smoke. While this
- myth has been debunked, similar misbeliefs about other drugs persist. For
- example, Henry Giordano, former head of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
- said that his agency's research showed that anyone who used heroin more
- than six times would become an addict. Even at that time, several studies
- showed that those who had tried heroin far outnumbered those who became
- addicted. And today, "it is now clear that there exists a sizeable
- population of nonaddicted but regular heroin users who seem well integrated
- into society and in many ways indistinguishable from the rest of the
- population." (Kaplan, 1983) It is likely that, as with alcohol, caffeine,
- and tobacco, other drugs would after a short period of acculturation be
- similarly compatible with daily life.
- Also, there are considerable questions about the rights of the government
- to prohibit what is often called a "victimless crime." The United States
- government was founded on principles of limited government. Many
- libertarians point out that it is not the government's business to regulate
- commerce between consenting adults. To these people, drug use is a private
- matter in which the government has no business. Obviously, neither the
- buyer nor the seller of drugs objects to the transaction. One counter to
- this viewpoint is the claim that drug abuse cannot truly be victimless:
- the user's friends and family may suffer if he becomes an addict, and many
- drug users commit crimes to support their habits. What about these
- victims?
- Well, a person's associates may suffer if that person were to become
- obsessed with anything, not just illegal drugs. However, this in other
- cases is considered a social problem and not a criminal problem. Or, in
- the case of child abuse or neglect, the parent is punished for that crime,
- not for the possible causes of his misdeeds.
- As for crime, quite simply the laws against drugs cause many more crimes
- than simply drug sales and possession. Because of the legal risk, sellers
- can inflate prices. A dose of heroin that costs pennies to hospitals sells
- for $10-20 on the streets. Also, because the market is illegal, ruthless
- "businessmen" can resort to violence and terror to control business, since
- their customers could certainly not turn to the police and risk detection
- themselves. This danger inflates the prices still further. But, drug
- conviction records keep many users from gaining useful employment and
- money. Therefore, they must rob or steal to maintain their habit. Drugs
- themselves do not tend to promote violent crimes against persons. As Duane
- McBride reports, "Non-drug users were more likely to commit crimes against
- person than were all types of drug users. . . . Heroin addicts concentrated
- their activities on behaviors that would result in the most monetary gain,"
- so that they could by drugs. (1981) Experts generally agree that very few
- of the violent crimes committed that are connected to drugs are committed
- because of the pharmacological effects of the drugs. As New York Police
- Department Deputy Chief Raymond Kelly said, "When we say drug-related,
- we're essentially talking about territorial disputes or disputes over
- possession. . . . We're not talking about where somebody is deranged
- because they're on a drug. It's very difficult to measure that." (quoted
- in The New York Times, 1988) If the drug prices were not inflated, the
- addicts would be buying their drugs over the counter with money earned at
- legitimate jobs, and crime would be reduced tremendously. After all, few
- alcoholics need to resort to muggings to buy their booze.
- To summarize: prohibition of drugs is justified on the following
- grounds: Americans must be protected from the ill effects of drugs, both
- on their health, and addiction; also, Americans must be protected from
- those who use drugs, particularly those who commit crimes because of their
- drug use. But, though the long term side effects of illegal drugs are
- unclear, they are unlikely to be worse than alcohol and tobacco. The
- immediate dangers of drug use have been shown to be largely attributable to
- illegalities which would be absent from a legally regulated production
- industry. Addictiveness of illegal drugs has not been shown to be any
- greater than addictiveness of alcohol or nicotine. And, the crime caused
- by drugs is committed for two reasons: to meet high prices which would be
- much less without the inflation caused by criminalization; and in the
- course of criminal business, to settle disputes that legitimate industry
- would take to court. It would seem, in fact, that much of the problem that
- faces America today is truly a result of the laws prohibiting drugs rather
- than the drug use itself. If this is the case, then legalization must be
- considered. And, if the social cost of legalization would be less than the
- current costs of criminalization, then the solution must be implemented.
- Let us examine how legalization might go.
- If drugs were legalized, use would increase. This is inevitable at
- first. However, it is not necessarily true that the novelty would last any
- longer than any other fads which strike our country periodically. When the
- government of the Netherlands reformed its laws, their goal was to "make
- marijuana boring." And, since decriminalization, marijuana use has
- declined markedly in that country. As with alcohol after prohibition,
- society's use would soon stabilize, and with America's growing concern over
- health, drug use would probably soon follow the trend lines of decreased
- use of tobacco and alcohol. Also, legalization would free up $4.7 billion
- dollars that George Bush budgeted for 1990 for enforcement and corrections.
- Much of this, in addition to tax revenue on drug sales, could be added to
- the $2 billion already budgeted for education and treatment programs.
- If drugs were legalized, the drugs themselves would become safer.
- Brewers don't spike their beer with rubbing alcohol or any other dangerous
- liquids, and pharmaceutical companies would be similarly bound by FDA
- regulations. And, users would probably use safer and easier methods of
- administration. More people drink beer and wine than hard liquor.
- Similarly, relatively few Americans would resort to injection, given the
- common fear of needles, especially when one is not concerned with
- "maximizing" the high obtained per dollar. For those who would use
- needles, some of the "windfall" dollars liberated from enforcement could be
- diverted to an education campaign about the dangers of injection and
- sharing needles.
- Of course, the sudden legalization of drugs would open a new area of
- danger, although lessened. Although at first it sounds unusual, a user
- licensing system might be the most practical way to educate users. After
- all, we require citizens to have licenses to drive cars and carry guns.
- All adults who desire to use drugs could be required to pass some kind of
- test about effects and dangers of drug use. Those who pass would be issued
- a license which would be presented when drugs are bought. While this
- system would certainly not be infallible (neither is driver or gun
- licensing), it would help somewhat.
- Most importantly, if drugs were legalized, crime would be radically
- changed. Property crime would decrease. Users would no longer have to
- resort to theft to purchase drugs. Users would not necessarily have
- criminal records, allowing them to seek gainful legal employment. Violent
- crime committed by dealers would vanish entirely. Those who sell drugs
- would be behind drugstore counters rather than in back alleys. Few
- pharmacists resort to violent crime to boost their sales or eliminate a
- competitor.
- Finally, drug legalization would effect great change in many of our
- social institutions. Children in poverty would no longer have a shortcut
- to riches. Although they might be reluctant at first, they would
- eventually begin to strive for success along traditional pathways such as
- education and hard work. Also, school children would be free of the
- spectre of dealers hanging around the playground trying to find new
- customers. With the profits available through legal sales, pharmacists
- would be no more likely to break the law and hawk their wares to children
- than are liquor store proprietors. As for families torn by drug abuse, if
- the problem were accepted as a social, rather than criminal problem, social
- policy solutions could be pursued. Once again, the billions of dollars
- freed from the "Drug War Chest" could be put towards programs designed to
- rehabilitate addicted parents, educate mothers-to-be about the dangers of
- drug use to their unborn children, and warn children away from ever
- starting to use drugs.
- In conclusion, it seems that the cost of maintaining prohibition of drugs
- is much greater than the cost of legal drug sales would be. In fact, in
- 1988 Ostrowski challenged nine major players in the drug war (George Bush,
- William Bennett, Assistant Secretary of State for drug policy Ann
- Wrobleski, White House drug policy adviser Dr. Donald Ian McDonald, and the
- public information directors of the FBI, DEA, General Accounting Office,
- National Institute of Justice, and National Institute on Drug Abuse)
- challenging them to name any study "that demonstrated the beneficial
- effects of drug prohibition when weighed against its costs." None of the
- nine were able to cite such a study.
- For more than a century, America has been threatened by horror stories
- about the effect of drugs. It seems about time that our country took a
- more objective look at the situation it has fallen into. The radical
- changes that legalization would bring no doubt terrify many people.
- However, ever-increasing enforcement efforts seem to be leading nowhere but
- down. Every time criminals are convicted, the huge profit basically
- ensures that someone will move in to take their place. While the demand
- for drugs continues, someone will meet that demand, especially with the
- profits available in a prohibition system. America must begin to study
- legalization options. For the sake of consistency, for the sake of the
- American tradition of limited government intrusion, and most of all, for
- the sake of every American citizen who suffers from drug laws in place
- today, America must open its eyes and learn a lesson from its own past. As
- we saw in the 1920's, if a population wants something badly enough, someone
- will oblige them, whether it be Chicago's Al Capone or Medellin's Jorge
- Ochoa. As soon as America stops adding to the problems with drug laws, it
- can spend its time, energy, and money on the underlying causes and effects
- of drug use and abuse.
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Bibliography
-
- "America After Prohibition: The Next Debate Over Drug Legalization: How
- Would It Work?" (Collection of essays) in Reason, October, 1988. p. 22-29
- "Americans Are Placing Issue of Drugs At the Top of Their National Agenda,"
- in The Washington Post, 18 August 1989. p. A1.
- Baltic, Bernard. "Drug Laws are the problem, not the solution," in The
- Plain Dealer, 2 April 1989. p. 1-C.
- Bandow, Doug. "The U.S. Should End Its War on Drugs," in Chemical
- Dependency, Claudia Debner (ed.) St. Paul, MN: Greenhaven Press, 1985
- Barnett, Randy E. "Curing the Drug-law Addiction: The Harmful Side
- Effects of Legal Prohibition," in Dealing With Drugs, Ronald
- Hamowy (ed.) San Francisco: Pacific Research Inst., 1987.
- "Bush Heats Up War on Drugs," Chicago Tribune, 6 September, 1989. p. 1.
- Chaiken, Marcia R. and Bruce D. Johnson. Characteristics of Different
- Types of Drug Involved Offenders. Washington, D.C.: National
- Institute of Justice, Office of Communication and Research
- Utilization. 1988.
- Daniels, Mitch. "Bennett Knows Best," in The Washington Post, 22 August
- 1989. p. A19.
- Ehrenreich, Barbara. "Drug Frenzy: Why the war on drugs misses the real
- target," in Utne Reader, March/April 1989. p. 76.
- "Going Too Far: The drug thugs trigger a backlash in Colombia and
- Kennebunkport," in Time, 4 September 1989. p. 12.
- Kaplan, John. The Hardest Drug. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983.
- Latimer, Dean. "Cocaine Use is Sensationalized," in Chemical Dependency,
- Claudia Debner (ed.) St. Paul, MN: Greenhaven Press, 1985.
- McBride, Duane C. "Drugs and Violence" in The Drugs-Crime Connection,
- James Inciardi (ed.) Beverly Hills: SAGE Publications, 1981.
- Moynihan, Daniel. "The U.S. Should Strengthen Its War on Drugs," in
- Chemical Dependency, Claudia Debner (ed.) St. Paul, MN:
- Greenhaven Press, 1985.
- Ostrowski, James. "Policy Analysis: Thinking About Drug Legalization."
- Washington, D.C.: The Cato Institute. 1989.
- Rich, Robert M. Crimes Without Victims. Washington, D.C.: University
- Press of America, 1978.
- "Should drugs be legalized?" (opposing editorials) in Utne Reader,
- March/April 1989. p. 80.
- "U.S. Stops Some Airborne Drugs but Admits the Smugglers Are Winning," in
- The New York Times, 30 July 1989. p. 1.
- Zuckerman, Mortimer B. "The Enemy Within," in U.S. News and World Report,
- 11 September 1989. p. 91.
-
-
- --
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