The Ottawa Citizen is the leading
newspaper in Ottawa, the capitol of Canada. Dan Gardner is a member of the
Citizen's editorial board. I think this should be required reading for every
journalist in the country.
THE STREET VALUE OF CANADIAN JOURNALISM ABOUT THE
WAR ON DRUGS
by Dan Gardner
After working for five months in four countries preparing a series
on
illegal drugs, I think I'm entitled to a little self-indulgence. So
bear
with this journalist while he writes about journalism -- specifically,
the
media's role in the insanity of drug prohibition.
It's a long and
sorry record. Prohibition laws owe their very genesis to
"drug scares"
fomented by the media. Maclean's, for one, ran the racist
screeds of Emily
Murphy that led directly to legislation in the 1920s.
The crack cocaine
hysteria of the 1980s showed that modern journalism is not
so far removed
from Murphy's glory days. We exaggerated, invented facts,
ignored evidence,
lied and whipped up panic. The legacy of this shoddy work
can be seen in such
popular myths about drugs as the "instant addiction"
canard, and in horrific
American drug laws. There's a reason why the U.S.
has more people in prison
for drug offences than the European Union has for
all crimes combined. The
reason is the media.
The recent coverage of the biker war and the
shooting of reporter Michel
Auger gives little reason to hope things are
improving. True, the media
haven't used the shooting as an excuse for an
old-fashioned drug scare. But
we've done something that may be just as
dangerous: We've hardly mentioned
drugs at all.
One "analysis" of the
gang war called it the result of our "affluence and
complacency." Many long
stories about the violence never mention drugs, as
if gangs kill people for
kicks. It's like writing about Al Capone's mayhem
in Chicago without using
the word "alcohol."
Shallow reporting invites a shallow response. After
all, if bikers are
killing people for no reason, all society can do is make
war on the gangs,
and accept lost lives and liberties as the price. But if
there's an
underlying reason -- say, the trade in illegal drugs -- then we
might
consider whether there are other ways to deal with that issue. If
the
Charter of Rights is overridden to ban gang membership, media coverage
of
the biker war will be partly responsible.
Or consider the
announcement earlier this month that police had made two of
the biggest
heroin seizures in Canadian history. It was major news. Yet in
none of the
coverage I saw did a journalist ask the only question that
matters: Will this
cut drug supply enough to significantly reduce drug use?
That's what the
whole exercise is nominally about. Shouldn't we ask if it's
accomplishing
what it's supposed to? But no one did.
The media are painfully credulous
in dealing with the police, far more so
than with any other institution. They
give us numbers and we run them, no
questions asked, leading to endless
stories of uprooted marijuana plants
that read like Vietnam War body counts
-- "143 destroyed in latest
operation" -- and are about as meaningful. Even
worse are the "street value"
reports police feed us. A seized field of
marijuana, say, will have a
"street value" of $200,000 because that's what
you might get if you
harvested, processed, shipped, and sold the marijuana in
small portions.
It's like saying a pond in Northern Ontario is worth $1
million because
that's how much it could be worth if it were bottled, shipped
and sold at
Lollapalooza. It's a PR ploy to puff up the police success. And
we fall for
it time after time.
The media seem blissfully unaware
that the police -- like politicians,
corporations and everybody else -- have
their own interests and present
things in ways favourable to those interests.
That's not a knock against the
police. It is the media who aren't doing their
job.
I could go on. The media often take popular wisdom about drugs as
fact and
fail to check with experts. We distort reality by delighting in the
lurid.
We don't dig for root causes.
Many things will have to change
if Canada is ever to have sane drug
policies. Chief among them is journalism.
Another matter. Liberal MP David Kilgour, in response to my series,
wrote
that legalization would make drug abuse soar. He ignored my
empirical
evidence that it would not, instead resting his claim on a column
in the
Citizen by James Q. Wilson. But Mr. Wilson also cited no evidence to
support
this view. So Mr. Kilgour's assertion rests only on another
assertion. That
is not a credible argument. It is a stack of turtles.
And that is everything you need to know about the case for drug
prohibition.
.
Mr. Gardner recently completed an extrodinary series of
articles on the failures of prohibition for his paper and recently published
this article pointing out the failure of the press to deal honestly with the
drug issue. If you'd like to read his entire series you can find them at
:www.ottawacitizen.com
, or, even better, send an email to Peter Christ at :
CHRIST@RECONSIDER.ORG
and he'll send you a clean Word file with the entire series, free, of
course. It's one of the most thorough looks at drug policy around the
world and something you'll want to print out and share with
others.
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