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143 lines
7.5 KiB
Plaintext
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"Taboo No More?"
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by Ira Glasser, Executive Director of the American Civil Liberties Union
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from the Fall/Winter 1989 issue of "Civil Liberties" newsletter
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reproduced without permission
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-------------------------
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At long last, judging from recent comments by public figures and
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editorials in the mass media, Americans seem willing to at least begin
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thinking about what was previously unthinkable: ending criminal
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prohibitions against the use of drugs.
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Our nation's compulsive pursuit of the unattainable goal of a drug-free
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society has been wedded to a policy of prohibition, aimed at eliminating
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the use of certain drugs. Sadly, we would be much better off today if we
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had pursued policies aimed at controlling, rather than eliminating, drug
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use and reducing its harmful consequences.
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Today, consequences of "the drug problem" include the spread of AIDS,
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high homicide rates, property crimes, the proliferation of criminal
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cartels, corruption of public officials, paralysis of our criminal
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justice system, and the steady erosion of our civil liberties.
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Ironically, almost all of these ills are enhanced by prohibition. For
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example, our commitment to prohibition has prevented us from
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establishing programs to combat the spread of AIDS by putting clean
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needles in the hands of intravenous drug users. Foreign observers who
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have described this obstinacy as genocidal are not far wrong. The steady
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erosion of civil liberties is another ominous offshoot of prohibition.
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Opinion polls show that large numbers of Americans, in the grip of
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anti-drug hysteria generated by the gobernment, are ready to permit
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warrantless searches of their apartments, inform on family members, ban
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films that depict drug use, and allow the military to police their
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neighborhoods.
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We've been led to believe that such measures are required to keep drugs,
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especially crack (a smokable form of cocaine) from destroying our
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society. But in fact, the vaunted "war on drugs" targets marijuana users
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primarily. Federal statistics show that in the last few years, about
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750,000 arrests have been made annually for drug law violations. About
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three-quarters of these arrests are not for producing or selling drugs,
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but for possession of an illicit substance, usually marijuana.
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After declaring a stepped-up "war on drugs" a few months ago, for
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example, the federal government last October launched simultaneous raids
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in 46 states on GARDEN SUPPLY STORES, seeking customer lists so they
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could apprehend people who might be growing marijuana indoors! In the
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1950's, it was dangerous to join a political organization for fear the
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FBI would get your name and harass you. Today, tomato growers are in
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danger.
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The traditional accompaniment to such official zeal has been the media
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blitz, starring the image of a devil drug. The culprit substance is
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always said to be so dangerous that even a single dose of it will entrap
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a normal person into lifelong addiction and turn law-abiding citizens
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into violent monsters. At different times in our history, we have been
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bombarded by frightful images of "demon rum," "reefer madness," and the
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"heroin dope fiend." All of these exaggerations turned out to be
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scientifically false, but they were useful propaganda for manipulating a
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fearful public into accepting prohibition. Today, it is happening again.
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The violence attending the use of cocaine is caused, we're told, by the
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chemical effects of the drug itself. But a recent study of drug-related
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homicides in New York showed that 87 percent of those involving cocaine
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were caused, not by people under the influence, but by territorial
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disputes, deals or debt collections gone awry, and other vagaries of the
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criminalized drug trafficking system. Only 7.5 percent of the homicides
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were related to the behavioral effects of a drug, and two-thirds of
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those involved alcohol, not cocaine.
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We tolerate endless violence induced by alcohol - 54 percent of violent
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crime offenders in the U.S. are under the influence of alcohol at the
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time they committed the crimes - without being told that alcohol
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prohibition must be restored. Relatively few people use crack - only
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one-half of one percent of the population during the past year,
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according to federal statistics. Yet we're constantly told that
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crack-induced violence can be stamped out by a policy that appears to
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create more violence than it stamps out.
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We are also told by some that cocaine use would increase significantly
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if prohibition were ended, a claim for which there is no scientific
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evidence. In the inner city, prohibition notwithstanding, crack is
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accessible and cheap. So anyone likely to use it is already using it,
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undeterred by the law. While decriminilization is not likely to affect
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crack use much, it might well alleviate the deadly fallout - including
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the sky-high rates of homicide and imprisonment.
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The fear that ending prohibition would substantially increase the spread
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of drug addiction is also contradicted by the example of the
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Netherlands, where marijuana use actually went down after legalization,
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and where the percentage of the population using marijuana is no higher
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than in the United States. Nothing is certain, of course, and more
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research is needed. But studies of cocaine users in the Netherlands, as
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well as in Australia, indicate that the barrier created by prohibition
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is relatively small and the market relatively inelastic.
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Studies here and in other countries also mock the
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instant-drug-enslavement propaganda, revealing that controlled use of
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cocaine is possible and that no more than 20 percent of users carried
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their habits to the point where adverse effects occurred - and most of
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those users cut their indulgence back to lower levels.
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Norman Zinberg's research in this country established that addiction or
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compulsive use of any drug, including alcohol, is a function of three
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variables: the chemical effect of the drug, the state of mind of the
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user, and the conditions under which the drug is used. Heroin used as a
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painkiller in the hospital, for example, will often not have the same
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addictive effect as heroin used by a street hustler in a criminalized
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setting.
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This is important for projecting the likely effect, on the general
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population, of ending prohibition. Generalizing about the effects of
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cocaine and crack by looking only at pathological users is like trying
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to infer the effects of alcohol on guests at a cocktail party from the
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behavior of skid row alcoholics. Again, more research is needed, but
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that need is being obscured by a din of nonsense about devil drugs and
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their capacity to enslave us.
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The impossible dream of a drug-free nation must be challenged.
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Abstinence makes as little sense in the drug context as it does in the
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fight against AIDS. It's time to cool out the hysteria and talk
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rationally about controlling the use of drugs through practical policies
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that become us, rather than disgrace us, as a nation.
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X-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-X
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Another file downloaded from: The NIRVANAnet(tm) Seven
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& the Temple of the Screaming Electron Taipan Enigma 510/935-5845
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Burn This Flag Zardoz 408/363-9766
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realitycheck Poindexter Fortran 510/527-1662
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Lies Unlimited Mick Freen 801/278-2699
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The New Dork Sublime Biffnix 415/864-DORK
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The Shrine Rif Raf 206/794-6674
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Planet Mirth Simon Jester 510/786-6560
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"Raw Data for Raw Nerves"
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X-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-X
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