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'How America Lost The War on Drugs'

Rolling Stone has a scathing, in-depth piece on the failure of the drug war, starting all the way back with Nixon and walking us through how thoroughly "we" (meaning America) have actually lost this thing. It's got far too much detail and solid reporting to adequately summarize here, so check it out when you get a chance.

Thanks to new research, U.S. policy-makers knew with increasing certainty what would work and what wouldn't. The tragedy of the War on Drugs is that this knowledge hasn't been heeded. We continue to treat marijuana as a major threat to public health, even though we know it isn't. We continue to lock up generations of teenage drug dealers, even though we know imprisonment does little to reduce the amount of drugs sold on the street. And we continue to spend billions to fight drugs abroad, even though we know that military efforts are an ineffective way to cut the supply of narcotics in America or raise the price.

All told, the United States has spent an estimated $500 billion to fight drugs - with very little to show for it. Cocaine is now as cheap as it was when Escobar died and more heavily used. Methamphetamine, barely a presence in 1993, is now used by 1.5 million Americans and may be more addictive than crack. We have nearly 500,000 people behind bars for drug crimes - a twelvefold increase since 1980 - with no discernible effect on the drug traffic. Virtually the only success the government can claim is the decline in the number of Americans who smoke marijuana - and even on that count, it is not clear that federal prevention programs are responsible. In the course of fighting this war, we have allowed our military to become pawns in a civil war in Colombia and our drug agents to be used by the cartels for their own ends. Those we are paying to wage the drug war have been accused of ­human-rights abuses in Peru, Bolivia and Colombia. In Mexico, we are now ­repeating many of the same mistakes we have made in the Andes.

Thanks to Entheogenic Reformation for the heads-up.

Posted By Scotto at 2007-12-02 20:50:20 permalink | comments
Tags: war on drugs
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Nowhere Girl : 2007-12-03 06:21:59
In the evening, when I'm back from university, I'll write a comment on it in form of a new blog entry, OK? I'm actually a bit ashamed of slipping into a "word-flow" (perhaps anyone has an idea what is the correct English word?...), but I have much to say. About the article, because I believe it's pretty much one-sided, and about drug policy itself. Simply saying, I think the war on drugs has neither been won nor lost. Among the victims are drug users, but not politicians. While it's true that the war can't be won - "drug-free America" could be possible perhaps only as a purely totalitarian state, going even further into controlling people's movements than Soviet Union or the Third Reich (while perhaps even remaining relatively liberal in other areas) - the war has done much to defeat drug users. We already know that it's possible to break the link between drugs and violence and I'll welcome drug policy going in this direction. But what if we don't succeed in reducing demand? This is the question the "Rolling Stone" aarticle didn't dare ask.

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