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The War on Drugs:
One of America’s
Greatest Failures.
Now’s the time to
admit we were wrong.
by Corey Owens
w ww.OpEdNews.com
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It is relatively
easy to make
claims that the
United States
government is
waging war on its
own people. It
was claimed during
Prohibition, the
Vietnam War, and
now the War on
Terror. However,
it is in most all
instances a
significantly more
difficult endeavor
to “prove” that we
are the victims.
But as with most
rules the
exception begs one
to reconsider the
rule itself. The
War on Drugs –
forgotten by most
during this time
of wars against
Iraq, Afghanistan,
terror, and
poverty – is
wasting more time,
energy, and money
today than it ever
has before. With
the founding of
the Bureau of
Narcotics and
Dangerous Drugs in
1968 began what
may prove to be
the most
protracted and
expensive war upon
which this country
has ever
embarked. While
the medical
marijuana
initiatives passed
by several states
might give one
faith in the
democratic process
they are a far cry
from what is
needed and
sufficiently
justified at this
juncture: an end
to the War on
Drugs.
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The War on Drugs,
officially
declared by
President Nixon in
1971, was the
brainchild of a
crafty Nixon
campaign aide who
realized that
public sentiment
was moving away
from acceptance of
drug use as a
backlash to the
1960s
counterculture.
Just one year
prior to Nixon’s
declaration, only
16.3% of federal
prison inmates
were there on drug
charges, most of
them violent
offenders or
involved in
mid-level
distribution or
production.
According to the
Office of National
Drug Control
Policy (ONDCP), by
1998 nearly 59% of
the federal prison
population was
incarcerated on
drug charges. It
might be hoped
that since the
federal anti-drug
budget has
increased from $.1
billion in 1970 to
$17.7 billion in
2000 that the
increase in
drug-related
sentences is a
reflection of
major success in
combating the
abuse of illegal
drugs.
Unfortunately,
this couldn’t be
much further from
the truth. While
federal survey
results do reflect
a general decrease
in drug use (14.1%
of the general
population in 1979
to 6.2% in 1998)
two factors
discourage
celebrating this
decrease as a
success. First,
most estimates
(including those
made by the ONDCP)
suggest that any
decrease in use
has been mostly
among casual
marijuana users
fearful of arrest
and prosecution,
while the number
of hardcore users
of opiates,
methamphetamine,
and cocaine seem
to have increased
steadily over the
past thirty
years. Second, as
the National
Research Council
pointed out in a
2001 report, the
increasing stigma
against drug use
has likely
resulted in far
fewer survey
respondents
admitting to any
drug use, let
alone hardcore
use.
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The report
concludes that
better indicators
of drug use trends
are “overdose
deaths and
emergency room
mentions of drugs.
These numbers
have escalated
consistently since
the 1980s, and
both are at record
highs.” With more
deaths resulting
from hardcore drug
use one might
expect that the
ONDCP would be
working diligently
to encourage
education and
treatment. And
one would be
wrong. In 2002
the ONDCP reported
that 32.5% of the
federal anti-drug
budget went to
treatment and
education, down
from 58% in 1970.
Even more
discouraging, a
study by the Rand
Corporation in
2000 offered a
seething
indictment of the
ONDCP’s accounting
practices,
accusing that the
reported education
and treatment
budgets are
inflated by as
much as 20%.
These numbers are
especially
disturbing
considering the
cost-effectiveness
of education and
treatment.
According to a
report from the
Drug Policy
Research Center,
“domestic
enforcement costs
4 times as much as
treatment for a
given amount of
user reduction, 7
times as much for
consumption
reduction, and 15
times as much for
societal cost
reduction.”
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Instead of
allocating funds
to programs that
work (treatment
programs,
preventative
education,
addiction
counseling, etc.)
the federal
government has
seen it fit to
pump billions of
dollars into a
system of
enforcement that
has done less than
nothing. Not only
has hardcore use
increased since
1968, the War on
Drugs has spurred
a general distrust
of the police and
courts in many
communities. This
distrust is not
unfounded. For
one, Whites
comprise nearly
three-quarters of
drug users in the
United States, but
make up only 21%
of imprisoned drug
offenders at the
state level. The
racial disparities
are evident at all
stages of the
enforcement
system, ranging
from arrest and
conviction rates
to length of
sentences and time
served. The
statistics that
consider income
level are equally
staggering. The
privileges
stemming from
being White and
wealthy are seldom
more apparent than
when observing the
workings of the
War on Drugs.
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President Abraham
Lincoln once
famously stated
that “prohibition
goes beyond the
bounds of reason
in that it
attempts to
control a man's
appetite by
legislation and
makes crimes out
of things that are
not crimes. A
prohibition law
strikes a blow at
the very
principles upon
which our
government was
founded.” More
than thirty years
later the United
States has little
to show for the
tens of billions
of dollars it has
spent combating
the use illegal
narcotics. It is
time to
acknowledge the
facts: America is
waging war on its
own citizens. The
War on Drugs is a
war on racial
minorities, the
impoverished,
civil liberties,
and common sense.
Ultimately, the
War on Drugs is a
war on all of us.
The War on Drugs
was a mistake in
1971 and it’s a
mistake now. It’s
time to admit we
were wrong.
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Corey Owens is a
student of
Rhetoric and Power
at Truman State
University in
Kirksville,
Missouri. He is
currently working
as an intern with
the ACLU’s
National Field
Office in
Washington, D.C.
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This article is
copyright by Corey
Owens (coreyowens@truman.edu),
originally
published by
opednews.com.
Permission is
granted to forward
this or to place
it on a website as
long as the
article is
included intact,
including this
statement.
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