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- From: Jim Rosenfield <jnr@igc.apc.org>
- Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs
- Date: 15 Nov 93 14:56 PST
- Subject: Conservtvs for Legalization
- Message-ID: <1484000408@cdp>
-
- COLUMN RlGHT
- PAUL CRAIG ROBERTS
- Drug Laws Aid and Abet Crime Wave
-
- Los Angeles Times, November 14, 1993
-
- * Crime bills won't work until drugs are legalized and the
- welfare system is reformed.
-
- Congress is about to spend more than $22 billion on a crime bill
- that addresses symptoms more than eauses. The money is mainly for
- more police and prisons and might do some good if it produces
- more convictions and longer sentences. Some repeat offenders will
- be curtailed by an amendment to the bill that imposes a mandatory
- life sentence after three federal convictions for violent crimes.
-
- Part of the crime problem stems from punishments being scant and
- far between. Recently, the Washington Post examined crime and
- punishment in the District of Columbia and came to the same
- conclusion as the National Rifle Assn. Crime pays.
-
- If you kill someone in DC, you have a 75% chance of getting away
- with it. Kven if a murderer ends up convicted, his odds for a
- stiff sentence are low. The Post found that only 82 first-degree
- murder convictions could be squeezed out of 1,280 killings. The
- District of Columbia. of course, has no death penalty.
-
- The explosion of crime from lack of punishment feeds on itself.
- Homicide detectives are overwhelmed by the number of murders and
- courts are clogged. Incomplete investigations, missing and
- intimidated witnesses, plea bargains and early parole have added
- to the crime rate by reducing the certainty and severity of
- punishment. As crime mounts, the over-crowded criminal-justice
- system's ability to cope further declines, making criminal
- activity an ever more attractive option to schooling and job
- discipline.
-
- What strategies can be employed to end the carnage? Here reason
- fails. Liberals blame guns, hopeless poverty and unloved
- children. Invariably, the solution comes down to more gun
- control.
-
- A gun ban, however, ls counterproductive. It creates profitable
- criminal activity for gun runners, and it disarms law-abiding
- citizens, leaving them defenseless. Disarming citizens would lead
- to an explosion in the crime rate. Not only are attempted crimes
- prevented: when the would-be victim is armed, many crimes are not
- even attempted.
-
- The District of Columbia's gun ban has added to the crime rate by
- giving criminals control over gun sales. The failure of the local
- ban has spawned arguments for a federal gun ban. That would only
- mean that the guns would eome in with the drugs from Colombia and
- Mexieo
-
- To be effective, gun and bullet bans would have to impose far
- more Draconian punishments than apply to murder and drug
- possession. We shouldn't forget that murder and drugs are already
- banned, and both proliferate.
-
- The $22-billion crime bill will be another expensive failure
- because it stems from a refusal to recognize the obvious: The
- laws against drugs have created a profitable way of life for
- people who don't flinch at violence. In trying to protect society
- from drug use, we have created an alternative career pattern for
- people averse to formal education and regular working hours.
-
- In the District of Columbia, the murder rate is the product of
- black males killing each other over the fantastic profits of the
- illegal drug trade. Being illegal, drug profits cannot be
- protected by contractual rights. Instead, the profits are
- distributed by violence, and they go to the most ruthless. The
- same sltuation prevailed when alcohol was illegal. Ban makeup,
- clgarettes, pantyhose, word processors or guns, and a similar
- murder rate wlll be associated with the profits from their
- illegal distribution.
-
- Conservatives oppose drug legalization because it implies
- society's approval of destructive behavior. But unless we are
- prepared to execute people for selling and using drugs, the laws
- against drugs will continue to be ineffectual. Indeed, the
- frustration from losing the war against drugs has produced far
- more dangerous results than the drug culture ltself. We now have
- asset-forfeiture laws that mainly victimize the innocent, and
- dangerous assaults on our Second Amendment rights.
-
- More prisons and more police are not the answer, because the
- welfare system produces an endless supply of fatherless sons to
- take the place of each drug dealer who is put away. In 1991, 68%
- of black births were to unmarried women, up from 37% in 1970.
- Fewer and fewer young blacks ever experience a father or see a
- work ethic. For people cast aside by a stupid social policy,
- brigandage has become a way of life.
-
- No progress will be made against the crime rate--regardless of
- the number of new crime bills--until drugs are legalized and the
- welfare system is reformed. Gun-control measures in no way affect
- the root causes of the problem and will intensify crime by
- creating a profitable new product for illegal trade.
- --------------------------------------------------------------
- Paul Craig Raberts a former assistant secretary of Treasury
- chairman of the Institute for Politicai Economy and a
- Distinguished Fellow at the Cato Institute in Washington.
- --------------------------------------------------------------
- copied by hand from the Times by jim Rosenfield
-
-
-