Peter Webster, review editor of the International Journal of Drug Policy and frequent Tidbit contributer, recently had this op-ed published in the Edinburgh Evening News (Scotland). Shortly afterwards a letter to the editor was published in response. I reproduce both here for your edification and amusement.


HIGH TIME TO COOK UP A FRESH IDEA


THROUGHOUT history, noble experiments of prohibition intended to rid
the world of the "immorality of intemperance" and the "scourge of
addiction" have repeatedly failed.

Our modern version of this folly has left us with overwhelming prison
populations, a criminal industry whose proceeds comprise more than ten
per cent of world trade, general disrespect for law and government, and
increasing use of the prohibited substances by younger and younger
people.

It becomes obvious yet again that prohibition, when logically analyzed,
does not control drugs nor their use, but is an abandonment of control
to black market forces.

The continued pursuit of prohibitionism today in a manner more fanatic
and pernicious than ever before - the so-called "Drug War" championed
by the United States - is of major consequence to the very future of
civilisation.

Yet curiously, a merely realistic stress on the importance of resolving
the problem tends itself to sound like a fanaticism. Talk of
legalisation or repealing prohibition has often placed one amongst the
lunatic fringe of conspiracy theorists and alien abductees. The
necessary hypotheses for rational debate have thus been a little-heard
current in the media, and practically absent in the halls of
government.

The roots, facilitations and justifications for prohibition run deep
into the fabric of modern civilisation. For example, there are numerous
economic incentives for promoting prohibition as viable policy: the
momentum of cash-flow involved with interdiction and its agencies, with
prison-building, drug-testing, manufacture of Drug War material, and
forfeiture. The situation is a major obstacle to any change of policy
at the international level or in the leading prohibitionist nations
such as the US.

Surely the reasons and mechanisms which allowed drug prohibition to
become the worldwide fiasco it is today are many, and the roots of the
prohibitionist attitude grow strongly from unexamined and obsolete
assumptions and prejudices of our times.

The question today is that as the philosophy of prohibition is finally
exposed as bogus, as its goals are shown to be self-defeating in their
pursuit, as it is revealed as one of the greatest crowd-madnesses of
all time, at what point will the absurdity of our collective folly lead
to a general abandonment of prohibition?

We must finally realise that not only has prohibition failed to deliver
the benefits it promised, but that it is the culprit we will eventually
have to blame for the greater part of the problems we now attribute to
the use of drugs.

So how do we proceed? It is obvious that after many decades of
prohibition it will be no easy task to design and implement such
policy. Thus it is perhaps impossible to say, and risky to recommend,
for instance, that this or that drug simply be "legalised", or that the
Government or industry should undertake to supply any and all drugs
that are in demand.

A general and absolute decriminalisation of all drug use and possession
should be instituted, first in the nations already considering policy
reform, and later worldwide, mandated by United Nations and
international agreements.

Much leeway to allow and overlook casual exchange and small-scale sales
of drugs will also be necessary until the issue of manufacture and
supply of drugs is settled. These ideas have already been partly
implemented with some notable success in various countries in Europe.

Decriminalisation is certainly merited and when fully implemented will
make possible for the first time much more accurate research concerning
drug use, its harms and possible benefits. Drug users who are under
absolutely no threat of penalty are obviously much more reliable as
research subjects than those who fear reprisal for their chosen
activities.

DRUG policy must be designed so that it recognises inevitabilities
concerning all aspects of drug use, drug production, and supply. So,
for example, it will be pointless to try to prevent people from growing
their own cannabis and distributing it to friends, collecting magic
mushrooms, or buying the occasional ecstasy pill at party.

Whatever the prevailing moral views say about such activities, insofar
as they attempt to interfere with the inevitable, they are useless as
guides for constructing effective policy.

Drug policy must, on the contrary, be pragmatic and attempt to guide
the inevitable toward situations manifesting the least aggregate and
individual harm and most collective benefit to society.

Drug policy may not legitimately have as a goal the minimisation or
attempted overt discouragement of drug use. This may sound drastic, but
when analysed fully, becomes obvious. The great majority of drug use
today already is undertaken responsibly. Yet legal and medical
authorities suffer from a certain illusion concerning the nature of
drug use and the general characteristics of drug users because they
uniformly see only the problem cases.

Thus drug policy must recognise that the use of a given drug will find
its own equilibrium in a society, and this equilibrium will depend on
the balance between risk and benefit that people find in the use of the
substance. Trying to convince people that "government knows best" when
it comes to such personal choices is counter-productive, and
anti-democratic.

Government and medical authorities may not transgress the line between
education and coercion, between supplying all possible information
concerning a drug and its use and attempting to use that information as
propaganda designed to narrow the legitimate choices of citizens.
Although such a view will be widely labelled as libertarian, in reality
it is merely pragmatic.

FINALLY, perhaps I may suggest a golden rule for future drug policy. It
is of obvious benefit to society that access to all drugs that present
significant risks to the user should be regulated in one way or
another. Drugs with greater potential for harmful use must be more
closely regulated. How shall we know whether such regulation achieves
its goals?

Here is a simple rule of thumb: Every individual drug, according to its
dangers, shall be subject to a regulatory scheme as restrictive as
seems merited, yet not so restrictive as to produce a black market in
the substance.

Once a significant illicit trade in a substance appears, we can be sure
that regulatory policy is a failure and bound to contribute to, rather
than minimise the harms of the commerce and use of that substance. The
appearance of the black market will be the litmus test for policy.

Peter Webster is review editor of the International Journal of Drug
Policy
                                             
 RESPONSE

Editor-

Mr. Peter Webster, in his column High Time To Cook Up a Fresh Idea
(Tues, Mar 19), serves up just an obvious ploy by another "legalizer."
Sure, throw facts out there in a reasoned approach and today's average
citizen would be prone to accept them and the premise they espouse.

But beware! Drugs are an evil scourge, spawn of the devil! We must
continue our freedom destroying march to the promised Land of the
Drug-free. No matter how we here in the US trash our Constitution or how
many innocents die from no-knock raids at the wrong address we must
continue to blindly stumble forward.

If necessary we must be prepared to bomb ourselves into oblivion to
eradicate the drug menace that our sisters and brothers seem unable to
resist. Although Mr. Webster's argument seems to make sense we must
close our ears and minds to these truths! While the founders of the U.S.
would cringe to see the extremes necessary in removing illegal drugs
from our homes and corporate board rooms, they share in the
responsibility for our current desperate plight by having been
cultivators and proponents of the dread hemp plant.

We must not allow common sense to enter the arena of Prohibition
dialogue. Rather we must continue, in the fine tradition of Harry
Anslinger, to distort truth, lie, deceive with racist innuendo, and
manipulate the simple mindedness of our legislative bodies in our
eternal quest for purity.

Allan Erickson



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