Pubdate: Tue, 11 Apr 2000 Source: London Evening Standard (UK) Copyright: 2000 Associated Newspapers Ltd. Contact: http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/ Author: Brian Sewell WHEN BEANS MEANS HIGHS (Read Brian Sewell's column every Tuesday, and on art every Friday in the Evening Standard) Drugs damage minds, break up families, perpetuate a despairing underclass and subvert human dignity -- so said the Daily Mail when the Police Federation report on drugs was published last month. The Times said much the same, but with admirable brevity -- "Drugs ruin lives" was the editor's conclusion. And so they do, say I, victim of one of them, knowing that were it subject to the same prohibitions as those marketed by drug barons, it would ruin mine. I took to it in my early teens and almost at once became dependent on it. Two years of National Service cut short the addiction, the pain of deprivation hardly noticed when basic army training inflicted so many other pains, but as a student I willingly returned to my enslavement and have ever since been subjugated by it. I need to feel this drug coursing through my veins, responding with exultation to the renewal of my physical and intellectual energy. In the early morning I cannot begin to function without a shot of it, and throughout the day the drip-feed of controlled doses maintains its high level of activity. Occasionally I take an overdose, an accidental excess of it, the consequences a racing pulse, nausea, trembling hands, headaches, depression and the jitters, and to these the only effective response is withdrawal. But the symptoms caused by deprivation are much the same as those of excess, and I am left weak and drained, an empty husk until I take another dose of it - and then the rush of exhilaration, as once again I feel alive, makes the cycle of excess and denial utterly inevitable. My cardiologist insists that I must break my habit. I fret about palpitations and he tells me that I know the cure; I complain that my heart feels like the single-cylinder diesel engine of a Turkish fishing boat, my Pacemaker like the turbo of an early Saab, and his dour response is that I know the remedy; I grumble that nausea overwhelms me, that I feel faint, that sleep is wakeful, that my bladder has the capacity of a tennis ball, and he shakes his head in bored despair. "It is killing you," he says, "give it up." I cannot. I have tried, time and again, but I cannot free myself from an addiction that has as firm a hold on me as heroin, cocaine or crack. My drug is not recreational, not taken to heighten the pleasure of the dance, not a popper to extend the sexual experience, not E or LSD, not a narcotic nor a sedative. It is not sold at the school gates by seedy whites in grubby anoraks, nor by dapper blacks in BMWs; it is not in the gift of adolescent friends at raves and concerts; it is available in every supermarket, every high street, every village shop. It is caffeine. I do not care whether it is ground from the five-year-old bean of far Sumatra, subtle and pale from such long loitering, or from the dark roast of Mocha; I do not care whether it is in granules, Mr Nestle's blended with gold dust and the pubic clippings of Norwegian blondes, or Lord Sainsbury's very own and unadorned; I do not care if it is an espresso as black as a Nubian scrotum or the breakfast cafe latte to be had on Como's shores. I care only that my coffee has not been decaffeinated and gives me the required kick. If it does not, then out comes the snuff box, not for a snort, but for the boost of Nescafe. My friends have seen me scatter it on a cappuccino, thicken an espresso, darken a cafe filtre, add it to a glass of Coca-Cola and spoon the dramatically rising froth; they have seen me, in extremis, place it on my tongue and let saliva do the work; those who have trekked and climbed with me have seen it mixed with muesli, yoghurt, honey and snow. I am an addict. The Chancellor could punitively tax it, as he does tobacco, and I would pay the price, or smuggle it tucked in my underpants, or buy it from menacing dealers on the corners of Old Compton Street. Tony Blair could preach another sermon and appoint another Tsar, but I'd not care a damn and ask my friends from foreign parts to play bootlegger with it. The Archbishop of Canterbury could declare it sinful, quoting the authority of Paul and Habakkuk, but I'd raise my middle finger to him yet again. I am an addict and I will not, cannot, do without my coffee. As an addict, I have some sympathy with those addicted to far stronger stuff. I have friends who cannot function without alcohol and nicotine, whose dependence must be satisfied with the first waking breath of day, and who, to pay the price decided on in Downing Street, cut back on other things. I have a friend with multiple sclerosis for whom, as Beta Interferon is denied him (too far gone, they say), illegal cannabis affords relief and he quite rightly buys it, but at crippling expense. I have talked to young men and women addicted to cocaine and heroin who sustain their habits by prostitution, shoplifting and theft from cars, of which the insurance, police and prison costs must be incalculably large. The Police Federation report estimates that the illegal international trade in drugs in worth not less than UKP1,000 billion a year and possibly three times that figure. In Britain, annually, some 100,000 arrests are made for possession of cannabis, ecstasy and LSD - think of the cost of that in police time. Some 500,000 use ecstasy every weekend and get away with it. There is now widespread belief that the Government's repressive policies cannot work and that we should at least be more permissive with recreational drugs. Let me suggest a more radical response. Let us take the profit out of illegal drugs by making them all legal. Let the addict walk into any pharmacy and pick up a clean needle and a measured dose of heroin or crack for much the same as it costs to buy a ticket on a London bus. With no law broken, there will be no consequent adrenal thrill, no one to whom to sell drugs for a profit, no point in stealing a car radio, no point in shoplifting or prostitution, and cannabis can grow on the kitchen window-sill. No addict need die of a contaminated dose nor contract HIV from an infected needle; no MS sufferer will feel compelled to affect innocence in his wheelchair when he spies Policeman Plod. With such freedom from drug barons and prosecution, there may well be fewer addicts and certainly fewer accidental deaths, and it is probable that with a government and all authority seeming utterly indifferent to our shooting, snorting and guzzling drugs, our experimental appetite for them would fade, and only a small band of inadequates (like the poor, always with us) would continue on their way, as irredeemable as smokers, boozers, wine-bibbers and coffee-drinkers -- which means almost every adult in the British Isles. We are all addicted to something -- some of us to the power-piety of imposing abstention on others. - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst