Accept the facts – and end this futile 'war on drugs'

phr

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The proponents of the "war on drugs" are well-intentioned people who believe they are saving people from the nightmare of drug addiction and making the world safer. But this self-image has turned into a faith – and like all faiths, it can only be maintained by cultivating a deliberate blindness to the evidence.

The recent furore about the British government's decision to fire its chief scientific advisor on drugs, Professor David Nutt, missed the point. Yes, it is shocking that he was ditched for pointing out the mathematical truth that taking ecstasy is less dangerous than horse-riding, and that smoking cannabis is less harmful than drinking alcohol. But this is how the war on drugs has to be fought. The unofficial slogan of the prohibitionists for decades has been: The facts will only undermine the war, so invent some that show how successful we are, fast.

Look at the United States, the country that pioneered the drug war, and still uses its military and diplomatic might to demand the rest of the world cracks down. In 1998, the Office of National Drug Control Policy was ordered by Congress to stop funding any scientific research that might give the impression that we should redirect funding from anti-trafficking busts into medical treatment of addicts, or that there is any argument to legalise, regulate or medicalise drug use.

It's Nutt cubed: only tell us what we want to hear. So, to give a small example, the ONDCP spent $14bn on anti-cannabis adverts aimed at teenagers, and $43m to find out if the ads worked. They discovered that kids who saw the ads were more likely afterwards to get stoned, so the evidence was suppressed, and the ad campaign marched on.

What would happen if we started to build our drugs policy around the facts, rather than our desire for a fuzzy feeling inside? Prof Nutt only took baby steps in this direction before he was booted out. He argued that we should rank drugs by the harm they do, rather than by the size of the panicked headlines they trigger. Now the row is fading, it is possible to see how conservative he was. A must-read new report out this week – "After The War on Drugs: Blueprint for Regulation", by the Transform Drug Policy Foundation – follows the facts as far as they will take us. It shows that the rational solution is to take the drug market back from the unregulated anarchy of criminal gangs, and transfer it to pharmacists, off-licences, and doctors who operate in the legal economy. To see why this is necessary, we have to look at some of the facts our politicians refuse to see:

Fact One The drug war hands one of our biggest industries to armed criminal gangs, who unleash terrible violence across the country. When alcohol was prohibited in the US in the 1920s, it didn't vanish. No: armed gangsters like Al Capone stepped in and sold it – and they shot anybody who got in their way. Yet today, Wine Rack does not shoot up Threshers. Oddbins does not threaten to kill anybody who sees its staff selling wine. Why? Because it wasn't the booze that caused the violence; it was the prohibition. Once alcohol was reclaimed for legal businesses, the dealer-on-dealer violence swiftly stopped.

Where there is a huge profit to be made in a black market – it's 3,000 per cent on drugs today – people will fight and kill to control it. Arrest a dealer, and you simply trigger a new war for his patch, with the rest of us caught in the crossfire. In 1986, the Nobel-prize winning economist, Milton Friedman, calculated that there are 10,000 murders in the US alone every year caused this way. Legalise, and you bankrupt most organised crime overnight. With their profits in freefall, the gangsters don't suddenly become cuddly – but the huge financial incentives to remain a gangster wither fast. It's the drug war that keeps them in business, and legalisation that shuts them down. As Friedman said: "Prohibition is the drug dealer's best friend."

Fact Two Under prohibition, drug use becomes more hardcore. Before alcohol prohibition, most Americans drank beer and wine. After prohibition was introduced, super-strong moonshine became the most popular drink, as booze rapidly became 150 per cent stronger. Why?

The writer Richard Cowan called it "the iron law of prohibition": whenever you criminalise a substance, it gets stronger. Because they are smuggling and stashing a substance, the dealers condense their product to give the biggest possible kick while taking up the smallest possible space. It's at work today: it's why dealers invented crack in the 1980s. The researchers Matthew Robinson and Renee Scherlen found: "The increased deadly nature of drugs under prohibition led to 15,000 more deaths in 2000 [in the US alone] than [if] prohibition had not made drugs more dangerous."

Fact Three The drug war doesn't reduce drug use – but the alternatives can. Some people believe these two dark side-effects are a price worth paying if prohibition stops a significant number of people from picking up their first bong or needle. It was an understandable enough argument – until the evidence came in from countries that have experimented with ending the drug war.

On 1 July 2001, Portugal decriminalised the possession of all drugs, including heroin and cocaine. You can have and use as much as you like for your own needs, and if you are caught, the police might refer you to a rehab programme, but you will never get a criminal record. (Supplying and selling remains illegal.) The prohibitionists predicted a catastrophic rise in addiction, and even I – an instinctive legaliser – was nervous.

Now we know: overall drug use actually fell a little. As a major study by Glenn Greenwald for The Cato Institute found, among Portuguese teenagers the fall was fastest: 13-year-olds are four per cent less likely to use drugs, and 16-year-olds are six per cent less likely. As the iron law of prohibition predicts, the use of hard drugs has fallen fastest: heroin use has crashed by nearly 50 per cent among the young who were not yet addicted. The Portuguese have switched the billions that used to be spent chasing and jailing addicts to providing them with prescriptions and rehab. The number of people in drug treatment is now up by 147 per cent. Almost nobody in Portugal wants to go back. Indeed, many citizens want to take the next step: legalise supply too, and break the back of the gangs.

Portugal is no fluke. It turns out that wherever the drug laws are relaxed, drug use stays the same, or – where spending is switched to treatment – declines. Between 1972 and 1978, 11 US states decriminalised marijuana possession. The National Research Council found that the number of dope-smokers stayed the same. In Switzerland, a decade ago the government started providing legal centres where people could safely inject heroin – for free. Burglary rates fell by 60 per cent, and street homelessness ended. A study by The Lancet – one of the most respected medical journals in the world – found that the rate of people becoming new heroin addicts fell by 82 per cent. Why? Heroin addicts didn't need to recruit new addicts to sell to in order to feed their habit. The pyramid scheme of heroin addiction was broken.

So the drug war doesn't achieve its goal of reducing addiction. All it does achieve is horrific gang violence – and in some cases the cartels gut whole countries like Mexico and Afghanistan. It does unwittingly press people into using harder and more dangerous drugs. And it does waste tens of billions of dollars that could really reduce drug addiction, by spending it on treatment for addicts.

The prohibitionists are therefore left a contradiction between their message and the facts. They can either change their message, or try to suppress the facts. Last week, the British Government made its choice. But how long will this be tenable? The prohibitionists are – from the best intentions and the highest motives – unleashing a catastrophe. Human beings have been finding ways to get stoned or high since we lived in caves. In our attempt to end this natural impulse, we have created a problem worse than drug use itself.

There is another way. Imagine a country with no drug dealers killing to protect their patch or terrorising whole estates. Imagine a country where burglary fell by 60 per cent. Imagine a Britain where we spent all these billions treating addicts as ill people who need our help, not hunting them down as criminals who need punishment. We can be that country. We just have to come down from chasing the dragon of a drug-free world – and start looking soberly at the facts.

Link!


Johann Hari: Accept the facts – and end this futile 'war on drugs'
Johann Hari
The Independent
11.11.09
 
Tbh i dont think the proponets of the 'war on drugs' are well meaning. I think they have quite an established agenda*

*to high to understand the article right now, curious to place the british/china opium wars in context
 
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Every time I read something like this, I simultaneously feel overwhelming joy and head-bashing, hear-pulling, heart-breaking sorrow and anger.

Why in god's name can the people who run our country not see the truth in an article like this?
Why in god's name can the majority of people in our country not see the truth in an article like this?
Why in god's name can the majority of people in the world not see the truth in an article like this?

It's simply infuriating and almost overwhelmingly hopeless.
 
Every time I read something like this, I simultaneously feel overwhelming joy and head-bashing, hear-pulling, heart-breaking sorrow and anger.

Why in god's name can the people who run our country not see the truth in an article like this?
Why in god's name can the majority of people in our country not see the truth in an article like this?
Why in god's name can the majority of people in the world not see the truth in an article like this?..............

Well, more than likely because "in God's name" they see exactly the opposite! :|
 
I believe that the reason people are so against drugs is because they have been raised to believe that using drugs is morally incomprehensible. I really do believe that this belief is slowly losing momentum though, and soon it will become a thing of the past. We can only hope though I guess, but always remember that there is always hope for change, as long as there are dedicated individuals willing to fight to provide the masses with truthful information instead of agenda driven propaganda.

Look at it from this perspective though:

In The United States of America, 100 years ago it was illegal for a female to walk into a polling place and place a vote, 80 years ago it was illegal to have anything to do with alcohol whatsoever, 50 years ago African Americans were not allowed to drink out of the same water fountain as a Caucasian person, and about 30 years ago AIDS was considered to be a form of cancer gay people got.

What im trying to say is, public opinion can, and does change, as long as people introduce change slowly, and as far as I can tell, that's what is currently happening with the drug situation in the US.
 
Good article but don't get your hopes up expecting an end to drug prohibition. There might be some decriminalization, but legalization is very unlikely.

The government and their corporate sponsors favor the profitable drug war. (They favor all wars.) They want people to buy illegal drugs and fuel the black market. They don't care if a drug is safe or dangerous. They want you to keep buying expensive illegal drugs. Some people are caught and put into prison. (That's ultimate control.) But they know there are still plenty of people spending billions. The motivation for waging the war on drugs has nothing to do with helping society. That's why logic and common sense arguments have no effect. The drug war is all about power and profit.

The war on drugs can't be won. It's intended to be a perpetual war with a regular flow of wealth. The war on drugs, like the war on terror, also enabled many new laws diminishing Constitutional rights of the people. The government has vastly increased powers with these intrusive laws. The primary goal of the government puppets and their elite controllers is power. The secondary goal is wealth (which enables power). The war on drugs facilitates both those goals. Drug prohibition is just another tool to control people and to control other countries.

What can people do? Elections don’t help much. You just get a new crop of greedy bastards in office that don’t give a shit about you. Short of an unlikely revolution or moving to a more friendly country, about all you can do is to you can grow your own herbs and pray you don’t get caught.

note: Medical marijuana will become more prevalent, but patients legally growing their own will be rare. The government's corporate sponsors will be your dealers and want you to pay $400 to $500 an ounce for your medicine.
 
This article is just...amazing.Found it so good that I pinned it on the wall above my desk.
 
Very well thought out and expressed. I too am a crusader for an end to the war on drugs on the United States end. I favor a common sense drug policy as it was called by Rolling Stone editor Will Dana. Eric Holder ( US attorney General) later went on to make it known publicly as official policy that the feds won't waste American resources busting patients and distributors who are in "clear and unambiguous" compliance with state medical marijuana laws."
This makes me happy because it is step in the right direction on our governments part in regards to having this "common sense" approach to drug use . Finally allowing free thought and action by adults on a substance that can be taxed and regulated to boost the economy and stimulate jobs. It is controversial and I am not saying that kids should be allowed to use it or make that decision for themselves without being thouroughly educated and that if folks use it irresponsibly that they not be held accountable for their actions, much in the same way that we hold people accountable for their behavior when they misuse alcohol or other substances that are less controversial in our eyes.
Will Dana, managing editor at Rolling Stone, cites in his article " marijuanamerica" ( Nov.12,2009) that the number of people in this country that favor legalization of marijuana is hovering at 44 percent, a figure that has doubled over the last 20 years. We are wasting an estimated 600 dollars per second on " the war on drugs". America, I ask the question...Could there be a percentage of this money, of this 600 dollars per second we are spending as a country, that could be better used on something else? Perhaps education of our children so that they can make better choices in their lives. Do me a favor if you can...Just take a moment to ask yourself this... If we took say 100 dollars of that 600 dollars per second, took it away from the portion we are using to police and prosecute marijuana users and put that into education for our children on drugs and other topics for even 4 years as an experiment,do you think there is a possiblity, just a possibility, that that money could so benefit our childrens education and better our country and our planet as a whole? Just some food for thought, and to the author of this post...Bravo! Continue to think for yourself and sharing your opinions. Education and expression is the way to change and freedom.

As you will come to find out, I do not condemn or judge people for using drugs in a manner that is consistent with exploring and expanding ones mind for creative purposes.

There is a solution for every problem we face if we are willing to dedicate the time to solving it.

Jar
 
legal drugs has to be controlled and in done phases (especially in places like the USA).

Invariably the yanks are going to fuck it up by some crook, probably in Goldman Sachs, will simply transistion from the blackmarket drug trade to the legal trade, advertising and marketing (as is the amercian way) their way to adding smack and crack as another useless fucking thing becoming one more blanket of oppression to addle the souls of humans. Telling them eat another calorie, work that another one off, and smoke that bad ass weed that has no seeds nor stem is what we're going to see. Late nigh infommercials selling the latest designer smack.

Either way the US is fucked. Legalise it and you'll have private business as evil and complicit in death as the tobacco companies taking over supply and production.

I guarantee in our life time that prohibition in the western world will never be lifted.
 
Good article but don't get your hopes up expecting an end to drug prohibition. There might be some decriminalization, but legalization is very unlikely.

The government and their corporate sponsors favor the profitable drug war. (They favor all wars.) They want people to buy illegal drugs and fuel the black market. They don't care if a drug is safe or dangerous. They want you to keep buying expensive illegal drugs. Some people are caught and put into prison. (That's ultimate control.) But they know there are still plenty of people spending billions. The motivation for waging the war on drugs has nothing to do with helping society. That's why logic and common sense arguments have no effect. The drug war is all about power and profit.

The war on drugs can't be won. It's intended to be a perpetual war with a regular flow of wealth. The war on drugs, like the war on terror, also enabled many new laws diminishing Constitutional rights of the people. The government has vastly increased powers with these intrusive laws. The primary goal of the government puppets and their elite controllers is power. The secondary goal is wealth (which enables power). The war on drugs facilitates both those goals. Drug prohibition is just another tool to control people and to control other countries.

What can people do? Elections don’t help much. You just get a new crop of greedy bastards in office that don’t give a shit about you. Short of an unlikely revolution or moving to a more friendly country, about all you can do is to you can grow your own herbs and pray you don’t get caught.

note: Medical marijuana will become more prevalent, but patients legally growing their own will be rare. The government's corporate sponsors will be your dealers and want you to pay $400 to $500 an ounce for your medicine.

Change happens. 200 years ago it was legal in this country to own another person, depending on the color of their skin.

I think the only thing needed for significant change is more exposure of anti-drug war ideas to the public. There are people I know who honestly believe that LSD crystals get lodged in your spine, and that you can have a flashback by cracking your back.

When people believe things like that, you know there's an imbalance of misinformation to information in our society.
 
^Oh dear god that one annoys me. I have to just shut my mouth about it when people start spouting their bullshit. Correcting them takes too much effort, and they fight back too much. My (almost completed) biochem degree counts for nothing against an urban legend? What the hell am I paying tuition for!? lol LSD has the weirdest myths around it...

Frankly, I can see this going either way. Lots of people view drug-hating like a religion. It's an entrenched belief with no rationale behind it, and they are unwilling to challenge it. However, lots of people are aware that most drug use is no worse than alcohol or nicotine use, and marijuana could definitely become a gateway drug in a good way, opening up the legal floodgates. :)
 
Every time I read something like this, I simultaneously feel overwhelming joy and head-bashing, hear-pulling, heart-breaking sorrow and anger.

Why in god's name can the people who run our country not see the truth in an article like this?
Why in god's name can the majority of people in our country not see the truth in an article like this?
Why in god's name can the majority of people in the world not see the truth in an article like this?

It's simply infuriating and almost overwhelmingly hopeless.
god, uncle sam, misinformation spread by uncle sam, and stupid information spread by "god"
 
Great article... unfortunately this end has been argued to the various authorities many times, and debated back and forth. There are movements and organizations out there trying to make the obvious truth obvious to those who choose to fight this expensive, oppressive, and futile war.

And yet many of those against the idea of legalization still site *moral* reasons... this is because of the perpetual lies and misinformation spread about various drugs (LSD crystals in the spine!!). And the non-ignorant authorities, who do know the facts and like doombadger points out, but still push their political agenda, they help spread the misinformation to keep the status quo... no matter how ineffective it truly is!

The regular (mostly ignorant) pro-drug war citizen I do believe supports the war on drugs for well-intentioned reasons. They really do think the human condition can be changed for ALL classes and types of people, within a couple generations. This is just not possible, and it is becoming more and more evident. Only with brute force and loss of freedom - like what Mao did to all the opiate addicts and dealers (imprisoned/executed) when he took power of an opium addicted China - is this even conceivably possible.

Such is life. The people with the power to do something about it (in the US anyway) choose not to in spite of the facts because as the OP mentioned they would *rather* take away rights than strict drug policies. It does suck.
 
^ Changing human nature is very very difficult that's for sure. Hell there are still Neo-Nazi's around for fuck's sake, and those assholes were obliterated decades ago. I guess eventually it would happen, I just hope I live to see it.
 
legal drugs has to be controlled and in done phases (especially in places like the USA).

Invariably the yanks are going to fuck it up by some crook, probably in Goldman Sachs, will simply transistion from the blackmarket drug trade to the legal trade, advertising and marketing (as is the amercian way) their way to adding smack and crack as another useless fucking thing becoming one more blanket of oppression to addle the souls of humans. Telling them eat another calorie, work that another one off, and smoke that bad ass weed that has no seeds nor stem is what we're going to see. Late nigh infommercials selling the latest designer smack.

Either way the US is fucked. Legalise it and you'll have private business as evil and complicit in death as the tobacco companies taking over supply and production.

I guarantee in our life time that prohibition in the western world will never be lifted.

I totally agree.

"The difference is drinkability!"- Bud Light Slogan

When I see how alcohol is advertised I cringe.
 
the war on drugs, marijuana for the most part, will soon come to an end!
cant wait for it to be socially accepted.. its about damn time!
 
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