w***@oblam.ber
2009-01-13 15:58:47 UTC
Five Essential Things We Must Do to Stop America's Idiotic War on
Drugs
By Tony Newman, AlterNet. Posted January 12, 2009.
This is a time to put big ideas on the table. We have to learn how to
coexist with drugs. They aren't going anywhere.
The United States has spent hundreds of billions of dollars waging its
40-year "war on drugs," responsible for the imprisonment of 500,000 of
our fellow American citizens. Despite this enormous waste of money and
lives, drugs are as easily available and cheap as ever. The
drug-warmongers say it is all for the safety and protection of our
children, yet high schoolers all over the country can easily obtain
just about any illegal drug they are seeking in this unregulated
market. Half of all high-school seniors will have tried marijuana
before graduating. The government's latest Monitoring the Future
report, released in December, indicates that more young people are now
choosing to smoke pot rather than cigarettes.
Despite these disheartening facts, there is reason for optimism and
hope. More and more people are joining the movement to end the failed
war on drugs. Passionate people in every neighborhood and from every
walk of life, liberals and conservatives, are joining this
fast-growing movement. Though there are some compelling reasons drugs
should remain illegal, we should at least begin an honest discussion
about the root causes of the violence and the range of options to deal
with the harms associated with prohibition. It is clear that the
strategy of the past 40 years is not working. Below are five
opportunities to engage our fellow citizens, discuss the enormous
challenges we face, and come up with solutions to reduce the harms of
both drug misuse and drug prohibition.
1. Drug Prohibition is Creating a Bloodbath Along the U.S.-Mexico
Border
Thanks to the drug war, a bloody war is raging in Mexico right now --
spilling into otherwise low-crime U.S. cities along the border! Over
5,000 Mexicans have been killed this year alone as a direct result of
drug prohibition -- more deaths than all the fallen American service
members since the Iraq War began. Whole towns and communities are
living in fear with no one -- neither politicians, judges,
journalists nor pop stars -- immune from the violence.
Classrooms are half empty because children are afraid to go to school;
decapitated heads are left in the streets; and there are even murders
occurring in hospitals where gunmen go to "complete" the job. Nothing
in the coca or marijuana plant causes these deaths. Rather, it is
prohibition that creates a profit motive people are willing to kill
for. Remember, when alcohol consumption was illegal in this country we
had Al Capone and shootouts in the streets. Today, no one dies over
the sale of a beer.
This week, the border town of El Paso, Texas, passed a resolution
suggesting an open and honest dialogue on ending drug prohibition. The
nonbinding resolution suggested that legalizing drugs in the U.S.
could help curb a volatile and bloody drug war that last year claimed
nearly 1,600 lives in the city of Juarez, just across the Rio Grande.
In Arizona, State Attorney General Terry Goddard said we should
consider legalizing marijuana, observing that marijuana sales are
responsible for up to 75 percent of the money that cartels use for
smuggling other drugs and for combating the army and police in Mexico.
Goddard contends these profits could be significantly reduced if
marijuana possession were to be legalized.
2. Economic Crisis: We Can No Longer Afford an Ineffective Drug War
States from New York to California and in between are facing
billion-dollar budget deficits. Governors and mayors are being forced
to cut spending on everything from education to heath care, and are
even shutting down popular prevention programs. Fortunately, a win-win
solution for governors facing a budget crunch is apparent: Reform the
drug laws and offer treatment instead of jail for nonviolent drug
offenders. States could save hundreds of millions of dollars by doing
away with these wasteful laws that lock up nonviolent people with drug
convictions at a hefty price tag of $40,000 per year. We can't afford
these ineffective and inhumane laws anymore!
3. Obama and Drugs: Personal and Political
President-elect Obama has been refreshingly honest about his current
and past drug use. Obama has been making news recently because of his
struggles to give up cigarettes. He has written and talked about his
marijuana and cocaine use when he was younger. He has never run from
or made excuses about his drug use or habits. Like Obama, tens of
millions of Americans have tried marijuana and so far they seem not to
be holding his past drug use against him. Having someone in the White
House who continues to grapple with relapses from his nicotine
addiction will hopefully create more empathy between the executive
branch and others trying to give up drug addictions.
On the policy front, President-elect Obama has made some good
commitments during the campaign: He supports repealing the harshest
drug sentences, removing federal funding bans on needle-exchange
programs to reduce AIDS, ending federal raids on marijuana
dispensaries in states where medical marijuana is legal, and
supporting treatment alternatives for low-level drug offenses.
President Obama will also have some key allies in the
Democrat-controlled Senate and House. Senator Webb of Virgina has made
our country's prison overcrowding crisis -- fueled by the drug war --
a top priority.
4. Our Veterans Are Self-medicating from Post Traumatic Stress
Disorder
People use drugs for both pleasure and pain; there is no doubt that
much drug use is self-medication. One group that will be dealing with
self-medication for a long time is U.S. soldiers returning from war.
How does one deal with the pain of having friends die in one's arms?
What does killing other human beings do to one's emotional stability?
What is it like being away from family for a year or more? It's not
hard to imagine how such experiences could lead to post-traumatic
stress disorder, which in turn can lead to drug addiction,
homelessness and even suicide.
It's easy to demand that everyone "support the troops." But if we're
going to talk the talk, we had better be ready to offer compassion and
treatment to our brothers and sisters who need to heal from the
damages of war. And once more people realize that incarceration for
petty drug law violations is not an appropriate response to veterans'
suffering from addiction and depression, then hopefully people will
question the logic of giving long jail sentences to others in our
society who also could be self-medicating for pain and trauma in their
own lives.
5. Incarceration Nation: When Being #1 is Not a Good Thing
America likes to promote its self as the "home of the free" but,
unfortunately, we have the embarrassing honor of being known as the
incarceration nation. The U.S. has less than five percent of the
world's population but almost 25 percent of the world's prison
population, incarcerating more of its citizens per capita than any
other country in the world. We lock up more people on drug charges
than Western Europe locks up for EVERYTHING and they have 100 million
more people than we do. A government report released last month by
theU.S. Justice Department found that 1 in 31 Americans was in prison
or jail or on parole or probation last year.
The Time for Change Has Arrived
The world is in an intense time right now! We have wars raging in Iraq
and Afghanistan; millions of people are out of work; and a growing
economic crisis is on everyone's minds. We have a bloody war in Mexico
and states across this country struggling to pay for the overcrowded
prisons. But, in my heart, I truly believe there are many reasons to
be optimistic and hopeful. We have a new president and millions of
activated citizens who helped put him there. The pro-war idealogues
have less credibility then ever before. This is a time to put big
ideas on the table. We have to learn how to coexist with drugs. They
have been around for thousands of years and will be around for
thousands more. We are smart and compassionate people and we can
figure out how to reduce the harms from both drugs and drug
prohibition.
Drugs
By Tony Newman, AlterNet. Posted January 12, 2009.
This is a time to put big ideas on the table. We have to learn how to
coexist with drugs. They aren't going anywhere.
The United States has spent hundreds of billions of dollars waging its
40-year "war on drugs," responsible for the imprisonment of 500,000 of
our fellow American citizens. Despite this enormous waste of money and
lives, drugs are as easily available and cheap as ever. The
drug-warmongers say it is all for the safety and protection of our
children, yet high schoolers all over the country can easily obtain
just about any illegal drug they are seeking in this unregulated
market. Half of all high-school seniors will have tried marijuana
before graduating. The government's latest Monitoring the Future
report, released in December, indicates that more young people are now
choosing to smoke pot rather than cigarettes.
Despite these disheartening facts, there is reason for optimism and
hope. More and more people are joining the movement to end the failed
war on drugs. Passionate people in every neighborhood and from every
walk of life, liberals and conservatives, are joining this
fast-growing movement. Though there are some compelling reasons drugs
should remain illegal, we should at least begin an honest discussion
about the root causes of the violence and the range of options to deal
with the harms associated with prohibition. It is clear that the
strategy of the past 40 years is not working. Below are five
opportunities to engage our fellow citizens, discuss the enormous
challenges we face, and come up with solutions to reduce the harms of
both drug misuse and drug prohibition.
1. Drug Prohibition is Creating a Bloodbath Along the U.S.-Mexico
Border
Thanks to the drug war, a bloody war is raging in Mexico right now --
spilling into otherwise low-crime U.S. cities along the border! Over
5,000 Mexicans have been killed this year alone as a direct result of
drug prohibition -- more deaths than all the fallen American service
members since the Iraq War began. Whole towns and communities are
living in fear with no one -- neither politicians, judges,
journalists nor pop stars -- immune from the violence.
Classrooms are half empty because children are afraid to go to school;
decapitated heads are left in the streets; and there are even murders
occurring in hospitals where gunmen go to "complete" the job. Nothing
in the coca or marijuana plant causes these deaths. Rather, it is
prohibition that creates a profit motive people are willing to kill
for. Remember, when alcohol consumption was illegal in this country we
had Al Capone and shootouts in the streets. Today, no one dies over
the sale of a beer.
This week, the border town of El Paso, Texas, passed a resolution
suggesting an open and honest dialogue on ending drug prohibition. The
nonbinding resolution suggested that legalizing drugs in the U.S.
could help curb a volatile and bloody drug war that last year claimed
nearly 1,600 lives in the city of Juarez, just across the Rio Grande.
In Arizona, State Attorney General Terry Goddard said we should
consider legalizing marijuana, observing that marijuana sales are
responsible for up to 75 percent of the money that cartels use for
smuggling other drugs and for combating the army and police in Mexico.
Goddard contends these profits could be significantly reduced if
marijuana possession were to be legalized.
2. Economic Crisis: We Can No Longer Afford an Ineffective Drug War
States from New York to California and in between are facing
billion-dollar budget deficits. Governors and mayors are being forced
to cut spending on everything from education to heath care, and are
even shutting down popular prevention programs. Fortunately, a win-win
solution for governors facing a budget crunch is apparent: Reform the
drug laws and offer treatment instead of jail for nonviolent drug
offenders. States could save hundreds of millions of dollars by doing
away with these wasteful laws that lock up nonviolent people with drug
convictions at a hefty price tag of $40,000 per year. We can't afford
these ineffective and inhumane laws anymore!
3. Obama and Drugs: Personal and Political
President-elect Obama has been refreshingly honest about his current
and past drug use. Obama has been making news recently because of his
struggles to give up cigarettes. He has written and talked about his
marijuana and cocaine use when he was younger. He has never run from
or made excuses about his drug use or habits. Like Obama, tens of
millions of Americans have tried marijuana and so far they seem not to
be holding his past drug use against him. Having someone in the White
House who continues to grapple with relapses from his nicotine
addiction will hopefully create more empathy between the executive
branch and others trying to give up drug addictions.
On the policy front, President-elect Obama has made some good
commitments during the campaign: He supports repealing the harshest
drug sentences, removing federal funding bans on needle-exchange
programs to reduce AIDS, ending federal raids on marijuana
dispensaries in states where medical marijuana is legal, and
supporting treatment alternatives for low-level drug offenses.
President Obama will also have some key allies in the
Democrat-controlled Senate and House. Senator Webb of Virgina has made
our country's prison overcrowding crisis -- fueled by the drug war --
a top priority.
4. Our Veterans Are Self-medicating from Post Traumatic Stress
Disorder
People use drugs for both pleasure and pain; there is no doubt that
much drug use is self-medication. One group that will be dealing with
self-medication for a long time is U.S. soldiers returning from war.
How does one deal with the pain of having friends die in one's arms?
What does killing other human beings do to one's emotional stability?
What is it like being away from family for a year or more? It's not
hard to imagine how such experiences could lead to post-traumatic
stress disorder, which in turn can lead to drug addiction,
homelessness and even suicide.
It's easy to demand that everyone "support the troops." But if we're
going to talk the talk, we had better be ready to offer compassion and
treatment to our brothers and sisters who need to heal from the
damages of war. And once more people realize that incarceration for
petty drug law violations is not an appropriate response to veterans'
suffering from addiction and depression, then hopefully people will
question the logic of giving long jail sentences to others in our
society who also could be self-medicating for pain and trauma in their
own lives.
5. Incarceration Nation: When Being #1 is Not a Good Thing
America likes to promote its self as the "home of the free" but,
unfortunately, we have the embarrassing honor of being known as the
incarceration nation. The U.S. has less than five percent of the
world's population but almost 25 percent of the world's prison
population, incarcerating more of its citizens per capita than any
other country in the world. We lock up more people on drug charges
than Western Europe locks up for EVERYTHING and they have 100 million
more people than we do. A government report released last month by
theU.S. Justice Department found that 1 in 31 Americans was in prison
or jail or on parole or probation last year.
The Time for Change Has Arrived
The world is in an intense time right now! We have wars raging in Iraq
and Afghanistan; millions of people are out of work; and a growing
economic crisis is on everyone's minds. We have a bloody war in Mexico
and states across this country struggling to pay for the overcrowded
prisons. But, in my heart, I truly believe there are many reasons to
be optimistic and hopeful. We have a new president and millions of
activated citizens who helped put him there. The pro-war idealogues
have less credibility then ever before. This is a time to put big
ideas on the table. We have to learn how to coexist with drugs. They
have been around for thousands of years and will be around for
thousands more. We are smart and compassionate people and we can
figure out how to reduce the harms from both drugs and drug
prohibition.