Pubdate: January 09 2000 Source: Sunday Times (UK) Copyright: 2000 Times Newspapers Ltd. Contact: http://www.sunday-times.co.uk/ Section: Comment Author: Melanie Phillips BRITAIN IS QUIETLY TURNING INTO A DRUG CULTURE It's the nightmare of so many parents with teenage children. The arrest of Nicholas Knatchbull's three friends on suspicion of possessing drugs was the latest in a series of drug incidents concerning Prince William's social circle. The routine availability of illegal substances is now a fact of life for young people. Keith Hellawell, the "drug tsar", said last week that drug-taking among well-educated teenagers from stable families was the fastest growing part of the drug racket. Forget cannabis - these kids are going straight for cocaine. This is a disaster in which the adult world is utterly complicit. The fact that, as Hellawell noted, middle-class parents are pressuring independent schools to relax their anti-drug rules says it all. Wordly success matters more to them than the health of their young; the use of discipline or law to deter or punish is thought oppressive. The bottom line is that adults aren't sure whether drugs are a great evil at all. Why, isn't half the professional world snorting lines of cocaine at smart dinner parties? This normalisation of illegality merely gives drug-taking added chic for the ever rebellious young. There aren't many issues left, after all, over which the young can rebel. Sex, for so long the revolt of choice, is now reduced to a banal spectator sport for all the family. Drugs are an easily available source of pleasure. Their catastrophic downside can be easily disregarded by young people whose trademark assumption of invincibility is deepened by the message they've picked up from the adult world that many drugs are no worse than alcohol. The prime minister has said that drugs are the most evil industry confronting modern society. Yet they are tolerated to an astonishing degree. There's zero tolerance of squeegee merchants and neighbours from hell, but zero intolerance of drug use. The police mount all-out campaigns against burglary, domestic violence or racist attacks, but none against drugs. On the contrary, they have effectively decriminalised cannabis and turn a blind eye to other drugs. Ecstasy, cocaine and cannabis are, after all, an intrinsic part of the club scene. Why aren't the police raiding all such places every night? Maybe they don't because too much is at stake. It's hardly an exaggeration to say that some of our inner cities have been regenerated on the back of drug money. The litmus test of a cool British inner city is its night life, which generally means its all-night life, its clubs and dance scene whose sleepless success is oiled by drug-taking. A real war against drugs would close many of these places down. Yet there's much more than commercial interest behind the official ambivalence towards drugs. Our libertine elites, responsible for creating so many of our social problems, are now intent on creating another. Politicians, police officers, judges, clerics, academics and journalists are flirting openly with legalisation. The implication is that the smartest people think legalisation is the answer, but debate is being prevented by the forces of prejudice. The greater the hold of drugs on our society, the more the rates of addiction and deaths and car accidents rise, the more calls there are to make drugs legal. This is truly idiotic. It's as if grievous bodily harm, say, had got out of control, and people were urging the legalisation of assault on the basis that all that was really needed was better hospital facilities for the injured and counselling for their attackers. It's no accident that there's this growing acceptance of drugs legalisation. There's a vast amount of money behind it. George Soros, the billionnaire financier, has invested millions of dollars in influential charities that are pushing legalisation. Soros wants to make most drugs legally available; he says he would first destroy the drug trade by keeping prices low and then would keep raising prices, like taxes on cigarettes, making an exception for registered addicts "to discourage crime". This is utter nonsense. Lower prices would attract new customers. Governments would be turned into drug traffickers. Addiction would be institutionalised. Legalisation wouldn't end drug taking; all it would do is take work away from the police and make billions instead for big business. Yet these insanely dangerous arguments are gaining critical mass. In 1998, an advertisement in The New York Times was signed by hundreds of activists who said - fantastically - that they thought the global war on drugs was "causing more harm than drug abuse itself", and contrasted "fear, prejudice and punitive prohibitions" with "common sense, science, public health and human rights". The push to create a legal drugs trade rests on two false assertions. The first is that the worst harm done by drugs is through the crime associated with its supply. This completely ignores the death, destruction and social danger produced by the drugs themselves. The second false claim is that there is such a thing as responsible and safe drug-taking. This belief has taken firm hold in Britain and is behind the shift that has taken place from prevention to "harm reduction". Clearly, there's a place for harm reduction in treating individual addicts; but the idea that drug-taking can be made safe is utterly wrong. There's no such thing as a harm-free drug. Yet drug "education" is all about telling the young how to take drugs "safely". Such classroom materials normalise and encourage drug use, while providing minimal information on harm. They say, for example, that cannabis isn't addictive and is less harmful than tobacco. Yet it is addictive; moreover, cannabis is smoked with tobacco, is itself carcinogenic and, used with tobacco, causes cancer much faster than tobacco alone. These materials don't tell young people that hash is more damaging than alcohol. Cannabis hits the immune system. Far from helping multiple sclerosis sufferers, there's evidence that it does them harm. They don't tell young people that one joint every other day causes permanent brain damage, whereas one point of beer or glass of wine every other day does not. They don't tell them that people aren't fit to drive or fly a plane 24 hours after one joint, and that cannabis stays in the blood for weeks. They don't tell them that, in 1990, the Dutch minister of justice admitted that marijuana-tolerant Holland had become the crime capital of Europe, with a dramatic rise in the use of cannabis, cocaine and opiates. Or that in Alaska, where cannabis was decriminalised for 10 years, use of hard and soft drugs soared along with crime, and 2,000 people were hospitalised with cannabis-induced psychosis. Hard facts, however, have little hope of success against the pull of the pleasure principle and the power of money. If this country really wants to wage war on the drug culture, the most effective strategy would be to attack its huge profits by cutting off the money-laundering routes established through secret banking and offshore shell companies. Would any government though, have the bottle to take on those City financiers who, after a hard day making a fortune out of laundered drug profits, go home to snort a line or two of cocaine with their fashionable friends? Melanie Phillips: --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart