reconsiDer: TIDBIT
Robert Hardaway is a professor of law at the University of
Denver College of Law and the author of 'No Price Too High: Victimless Crimes
and the Ninth Amendment' (Praeger Publishers, 2003). The Denver Post published
this op-ed by him and I think it's worth sharing. Hardaway does an excellent job
summarizing the origins of drug prohibition as well as the effects on
today's society.
Author: Robert Hardaway
U.S. STUCK IN THE QUAGMIRE
Every year, more than
400,000 Americans die as the result of tobacco
use. Alcohol abuse results in
the deaths of another 110,640 Americans,
including 16,653 alcohol-related
traffic deaths. Alcohol is a major
factor in more than half of all homicides
and rapes, 62 percent of
assaults, and 30 percent of suicides. Illegal drug
use causes another
3,562 deaths.
According to the Cato Institute,
based on deaths per 100,000 users,
"tobacco kills 650, alcohol 150, heroin
80, and cocaine 4."
If an observer from another planet - say, Mars - were
to analyze these
statistics, he might be surprised to learn that out of
tobacco,
alcohol and other drugs, only the others are criminalized in
the
United States.
Our observer from Mars also might be startled to
learn about the price
Americans are prepared to pay to protect these 3,562
privileged
Americans from taking drugs and possibly jeopardizing their
health:
The expenditure of more than $80 billion annually to arrest
and
incarcerate hundreds of thousands of citizens, using large chunks
of
America's scarce jail capacity and necessitating the early release
of
murderers, rapists and child molesters. A Cook County,
Illinois,
prosecutor has described the devastating effect of the war on
drugs:
Whereas he once had a relatively light case load and could take
to
trial those charged with the most vicious and violent crimes, after
the
drug war began, he was so overloaded with drug cases that he had
no choice
but to award "giveaway" plea bargains to even the most
violent of
criminals;
The imposition of thousands of raids, searches and wiretaps
on
American citizens;
The forfeiture of billions of dollars of
potential tax revenues to
organized crime;
The commission of more than
one-fifth of all property crime in the
United States, amounting to billions
of dollars annually, by addicts
seeking money for drugs made artificially
expensive by
criminalization;
The corruption and undermining of our
political system, particularly
at the local level.
If our Martian were
acquainted with ancient history, he might be
tempted to observe that whoever
these 3,562 drug-using Americans are,
they launched more ships and mobilized
more of society's resources
than the legendary Helen of Troy.
Our
observer would surely assume that the incarceration of hundreds of
thousands
of citizens and the expenditure of such a huge portion of
the national
treasure must surely have achieved tangible results. But
he would have to be
informed that while such efforts have indeed
reduced drug imports by 5
percent, this modest "success" has
perversely done nothing more than raise
the price of drugs, increase
the profit margin to drug dealers, and thereby
send a signal to the
drug producers to produce more drugs - with the result
that the number
of drug users has risen dramatically since the war on drugs
was launched.
The word "quagmire" must surely have been invented to
describe a war
in which every "victory" constitutes a stinging
defeat.
Our Martian might not be surprised by this consequence if he were
also
apprised of our experience during Prohibition (1919-1933). Like
the
modern-day drug prohibitionists, the alcohol prohibitionists
focused
solely on the undeniable deleterious effects of alcohol, rather
than
conducting a rational cost-benefit analysis of prohibition. In
1929,
the Wickersham Prohibition Commission revealed not only that
"crime
had increased by 50 percent as a result of Prohibition" but
that
consumption of alcohol had perversely doubled during the
Prohibition
years. Even more discouraging was the revelation that the number
of
alcohol deaths skyrocketed by more than 400 percent
during
Prohibition.
Nevertheless, those accustomed to Prohibition in
1930 could not
imagine its repeal. Sen. Morris Sheppard of Texas
confidently
asserted: "There is as much chance of repealing the 18th
Amendment
[prohibiting alcohol] as there is for a hummingbird to fly to
the
planet Mars with the Washington Monument tied to its
tail."
Although almost half of all Americans have used illegal drugs,
those
same Americans continue to favor drug prohibition - just as
Americans
in the 1920s overwhelmingly favored alcohol prohibition.
But
collective memories are often short, and many Americans today
assume
that drugs were originally criminalized in the United States as
a
means of protecting the health and safety of its
citizens.
Au contraire.
In the early 20th
century, labor leader Samuel Gompers set forth his
reasons to Congress why
opium should be criminalized: "Opium gives the
Chinese immigrant workers an
unfair advantage in the labor market."
Racists in Congress supported drug
criminalization in order to
suppress the "Jew peddlers," while the State
Department's "opium
commissioner," Hamilton Wright, urged criminalization of
cocaine on
grounds that it turned African-Americans into rapists of white
women.
On such specious and racist foundations were drugs criminalized.
(It
is perhaps not an irony that today, at a time when
African-Americans
struggle for economic opportunities, they make up 90
percent of those
actually prosecuted and incarcerated for minor drug
offenses. The
devastating impact on the families, social fabric, and
economic
opportunities for African-Americans is virtually impossible to
measure.)
Indeed, drugs were considered only a "minor medical problem"
prior to
criminalization in 1914. In the 1920s, Congressman Richard Hobson
was
one of the first to realize the specious justifications
for
criminalization and its terrible consequences: "Ten years ago
[before
criminalization] the narcotic drug addiction problem was a
minor
medical problem. Today, it is a major national problem,
constituting
the chief factor menacing public health today."
Just as
alcohol deaths skyrocketed during Prohibition, drug deaths
increased after
criminalization, since illegal drugs are not subject
to orderly regulation
for purity and safety. But the largest number of
deaths is due to drug
criminalization itself. More than 1,600 murders
occur every year by drug
dealers who take advantage of the profit
opportunities afforded by drug
criminalization.
But what would happen if drugs were decriminalized?
Prior to 1914,
drugs were legal in the United States but constituted a very
minor
problem in society. Hundreds of over-the-counter products (such
as
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup and many popular soft drinks,
including
Coca-Cola) contained drugs which have since been criminalized. But,
as
researcher Ethan Nadelman has noted, "Free access did not lead
to
widespread use. No drug houses blighted neighborhoods, no drug
gangs
had street-corner shootouts, and 'drug-related' crime did not
exist."
Doctors even prescribed opium as a treatment for a disease
considered
substantially more harmful than drug addiction: alcoholism.
That
scenario changed drastically after criminalization.
Why did drug
use increase so dramatically after criminalization? As
conservative economist
Milton Friedman's comprehensive drug study has
revealed, the very fact that a
drug is illegal makes it attractive as
a "forbidden fruit." This explains why
marijuana use by high school
students is considerably higher in the United
States than in Holland,
where such drugs are available in
coffeehouses.
If the untold deaths and crushing taxation required to
conduct the
drug war were not sufficient reasons to rethink drug
criminalization,
the fact that it supports and fosters organized crime should
at least
give pause. As the Block study concludes, "Better to ruin
[organized
crime's] profit balloon than by acting in a way which only
supports
them."
The repeal of Prohibition in 1933 left organized crime
in danger of
extinction. The continued prohibition of drugs saved its hide,
and it
has thrived ever since.
One can only imagine how the billions
spent on incarcerating people
for minor drug offenses might be used to
rehabilitate, educate and
treat drug victims.
Prior to 1922, 16 states
criminalized the use of cigarettes, but it
didn't work. Tobacco use
skyrocketed, the states lost tax revenues,
and organized crime had a field
day. Contrast this aborted attempt at
criminalization of tobacco use with the
education and rehabilitation
campaign begun by the surgeon general in 1965:
Between 1965 and 1987,
tobacco consumption by adult males declined by 36
percent. If harm
were the sole justification for prohibition, cigarettes -
which are
the cause of 400,000 deaths a year - should be at the top of the
list.
By ignoring the lessons of cigarette and alcohol prohibition, we
are
repeating the mistakes of the past and becoming mired in the
real
quagmire of our time.
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