home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
-
-
- I was honored (?) with the task of reviewing the book "Drug
- Legalization, For and Against". For publishing the review they let me
- have the book. So here it is, "published" on the net.
- [in paper: ISBN-0-8126-9169-5 in cloth: ISBN-0-8126-9168-7]
-
- The book is published by Open Court Publishing Company,
- (LaSalle IL, 61301 (c) 1992) edited by Rod L. Evans and Irwin M.
- Berent with a forward by Linus Pauling and a redundant introduction by
- Hugh Downs. The editors are appologetic for being biased in favor of
- some form of legalization and given the arguments they picked favoring
- the status quo of prohibition it's easy to see why. I think they
- tried hard to find good arguments for continuing prohibition but it
- really boils down to accepting a paternalistic government versus a
- free society. Out of 11 articles favoring prohibition, only 2 were
- consistent: given their basis of argument you could logically reach
- the same conclusion. I just happen to disagree with their basis.
-
- So there's no confusion, both the editors and reviewer
- agree, legalization (of some form) is the way to go.
-
- In general, the legalizers used facts and talked much about
- marijuana and the prohibitionists used rhetoric and polls (nobody
- believes the other side so don't listen to them) and talked much about
- heroin and cocaine. Given the skew argument, maybe legalizing hemp
- really is possible? All other drugs are just a matter of changing a
- few polls. To this reader, the best prohibitionist argument was "we
- have helmet laws, therefore we can control your mind too." This is
- true. We ought not have helmet laws!
-
- What follows are my notes of each contributing author.
- Their efforts were culled from various journals and proceedings from
- 1988 to 1992. Only one article has never been published before. It
- was actually my favorite piece.
-
- Linus Pauling opens the book with the concept of
- *orthomolecular substances* as things which the human body has adapted
- to over the past million years or so and *drugs* as substances not
- normally present. He figures distilled alcohol is only a few hundred
- years old so that falls in the catagory of drugs but he says
- "marijuana and cocaine, and perhaps also peyote" should be as
- available as beer. I hope he meant coca leaf and not processed
- cocaine because that would make him a hypocryte, calling distilled
- alcohol a drug but not processed cocaine!
-
- Hugh Downs asks the readers to think about legalization and
- suggests a few questions to have in mind while reading the book. The
- editors then spell out their rational for putting the book together
- the way they did. The book is laid out in 11 chapters of various
- types of arguments with the first chapter a list of questions that
- Charles Rangle (chairman of the select Committee on Narcotoics Abuse
- and Control) asked his committee to consider at the behest of Kurt
- Schmoke's request to investigate legalization. They are really good
- questions and he obviously ignored the answers to stay a
- prohibitionist. All in all the book starts out interesting.
-
- Next up was a very abridged version of Nadelmann's 1989
- Science article arguing for legalization. I'd read the original so I
- skipped this.
-
- James Wilson (prof. of mang. and public policy at UCLA)
- mounts a personall attack on Nadelmann and tries to use history of
- drugs starting in 1970. Very unconvincing.
-
- Then comes Milton Friedman's famous letters to Bill Bennett
- and the reply. Bennett says "I advocate a larger criminal justice
- system to take drug users off the streets." And "drug use is a threat
- to the individual liberty and domestic tranquility guaranteed by the
- constitution." Friedman replies with a quote from Justice Brandeis:
- "The greater dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men
- of zeal, well meaning, but without understanding."
-
- At this point I'm wondering if the prohibitionists have
- anybody who can articulate their viewpoint at all with reason.
- Fortunately Ed Tully and Marguerite Bennett of the FBI show up with
- the most consitent argument for the prohibitionists. They start out
- making good points about individual rights versus social safety. They
- feel that laws which "protect the individual" (seat belt and helmet
- laws) are good things. Using this as a basis they argue well for
- prohibition. They also use several specious arguments about the
- dangers of marijuana which are blatently false but this does not
- affect their arguments. Proves to me that paternalistic society is a
- bad thing.
-
- Merrill Smith (U.S. Chief Probation Officer) gives lots of
- quotes from professors and medical doctors. Lots more facts than the
- FBI argument and an excellent review of history of how drugs went from
- the medical domain to the criminal starting from the 1890's.
-
- John Hill (Law prof. and Ph.D. philosophy) then comes along
- with a really nice libertarian perspective. The book might be worth
- getting for this article alone. Hill argues for the principle of a
- "zone of privacy". He defines "'privacy' in the jurisprudential sense
- is that which is beyond the legitimate concern of the government and
- its laws." A couple of quotes I really liked are: "Similarly,
- monarchists, Marxists, and fascists of various brands reject the
- notion of a private realm of individual choice as a chimera of modern
- Liberalism." And "Defenders of a zone of privacy, on the other hand,
- recognize the logical and moral primacy of the individual over the
- state. The individual is not, as it was for Aristotle, a part of the
- state. Rather, the state is the creation of the individual and, as
- such, the servant of individual ends." Right on dude!
-
- Hill goes on to study supreme court rullings about privacy
- and covers 4 specific areas. He then quotes Mill's definition of
- 'harm to others' and relates all this to drug use. He does not
- venture a direct opinion towards legalization and tosses out bits for
- debate such as "prohibition might also be warranted in the case of
- certain specified drugs that pose a threat to the continued autonomy
- of the individual user." An ivory tower argument but a great place to
- get definitions and a basis for legalization.
-
- Mark Moore (Harvard Prof. of Criminal Justice) starts off
- with "In this Article, I note that the 'drug problem' is primarily a
- cocaine epidemic." Sets up 6 straw men 'alternatives' of legalization
- and then knocks them down. Very unconvincing. He blames all of
- societies problems on drug use. Actually it's kind of sad.
-
- Todd Brenner (Lawyer, Notes Editor for Capital Law Review)
- is very repetitive of the legalization side. Nadelmann covered the
- facts and Hill covered the logic. I didn't finish reading it. It
- seemed like 50 pages of the book could have been saved leaving Moore
- and Brenner out.
-
- I then skipped Wisotsky (Law prof. at Nova University) as
- just another boring lawyer. [That's part of the reason I'm running
- for office on the Libertarian ticket. I'm sick of lawyer's telling me
- how to live my life.]
-
- Kurt Schmoke gives a short, succinct and powerful message
- for legalization. Bill Bennett (again!?) rantingly replies "law
- enforcement works". Is this bias of editors or is there really no
- rational explanation of prohibition?
-
- Dr. Gazzaniga (psychiatry prof. Dartmouth Med. school) is
- published in interview format. This was interesting to read after the
- previous boring rants and gave a useful counter to the "drugs create
- crime" falicy. Compares alcohol, tobacco to crack and cocaine
- addictions.
-
- Gabriel Nahas (pharmacologist and known liar) claims alcohol
- "does not impair mental acuity" but marijuana does "even in minute
- quantities". Seeming to admit he has no facts he says "Only when the
- vital grass-roots forces of America feeling their existance
- threatened, become determined to fight drugs will they be able to wage
- a war and win it." He basicly believes propaganda and lies will work
- forever. Made me want to puke.
-
- Thomas Szasz (psychiatrist prof. from SUNY) follows in
- typical great style. He has a sharp wit but uses few real facts. He
- gives a high level abstract argument with some of the best
- legalization propaganda I've seen. He directly ties Hitler's argument
- of the 'dangerous jew' to WoD's 'dangerous drugs'. He says: "The
- perennial confrontation between authority and autonomy, the permanent
- tension between behaviour based on submission to coercion and the free
- choice of one's own course in life - these basic themes of human
- morality and psychology are now enacted on a stage on which the
- principal props are drugs and laws against drugs." Kind of made me
- wonder if the human race is worth the effort I expend on it.
-
- David Musto (psychiatry prof. Yale) gives an accurate
- historical perspective. He argues public opinion polls be used to
- determine what to do with drugs: "My belief is that the popular
- attitude which is growing so powerfully against drug use in this
- country is in the long run more determinative than profits or even
- foreign supply." He does think "we must not again revert to extreme
- punishments, silence or exaggeration" when discussing drug use. He
- suggests that the war should plow ahead as usual because it is
- working. He ignores his own arguments but it ranks up there with the
- FBI paper as the best of the prohibitionists.
-
- William Buckly (editor National Review) complains that "no
- politician can be elected who recommends the one thing that hasn't
- been tried." They could have picked a better piece. I think this
- could have been left out also.
-
- Morton Kondracke (senior editor New Republic) claims that
- "drugs have been the rage in America only since about 1962". He makes
- the amazing assumption that because alcohol kills 200,000 people per
- year that legalizaing marijuana would do the same thing and including
- all drugs he says "the number of deaths actually could go as high as
- 500,000 a year." He concludes "in the name of health, economics, and
- morality, there seems no alternative but to keep drugs illegal." The
- 'liberals' are more dangerous than the 'conservatives'!
-
- Ms. Taylor Branch (freelance writer) comes at it with a
- literary attack. She compares Prohibition to today. She comments on
- the connection between racism and drugs and why doctors did not
- defend use of opium or cocaine. She argues for a "Koop model" of
- legalization: no advertising, no sales to minors, but legal to
- purchase with warnings that it's bad for you. She ends with "To fight
- the entire drug war by Everett Koop's rules would require disciplined
- courage within individual citizens and enormous trust between them.
- But so does the practice of democracy itself."
-
- The book ends with Arnold Trebach (law prof. American
- University and head of Drug Policy Foundation) throwing a self
- promoting rah-rah. He gives a few good points on how activists should
- push for medical marijuana and heroin and asks that users be left
- alone but dealers still be punished. Argues for political reason on
- the part of legalizers and suggests taking things one step at a time.
-
- The lawyers were definitly boring. Too many words and not
- enough said. If you've been in the WoD for awhile, this book does you
- no good at all. But their market is the "public" and for that it may
- be too thick. If the market is libertarians it may sell ok.
-
- I just have the feeling that there must be more to the
- prohibitionist argument. If there isn't then it should be really easy
- to legalize hemp. The major argument is that the government has the
- power to control individual behavior. This is absurd. Government can
- not control its own behavior let alone that of individuals. This is
- observed historical fact. I'll be suprised if the book gets wide
- circulation because it is biased in favor of legalization. The powers
- that be are biased against it.
-
- Nahas is right about one point: "Only when the vital
- grass-roots forces of America feeling their existance threatened" will
- they fight oppression. If this book really represents the
- prohibitionists then they are planting the seeds of their own
- destruction. And this book documents their demise.
-
- Patience, persistence, truth, reality: mgr@anhep2.hep.anl.gov
- Dr. mike UUCP: uunet!pyramid!cdp!mrosing
- IMI, P.O. BOX 2242, Darien IL 60559 bitnet: mrosing@igc.org
-
-
-
-