Pubdate: Sun, 10 Jun 2001 Source: Times Record (ME) Copyright: 2001 Times Record Inc., ASC Inc Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/705 Website: http://www.timesrecord.com/ Author: Arthur Cannon LESSONS FROM THE 'DRUG WAR' ENERGY CRISIS So Vice President Dick Cheney has declared an energy crisis and is urging that we build between 1,300 and 1,900 new power plants over the next 20 years, to solve our current energy "crisis" and meet projected demand. Hmm. We built 1,000 new prisons between 1980 and 2000, one a week, to "solve" the drug crisis, some 1.5 million new beds worth, and quadrupled our inmate population. But the drug crisis is still as bad as ever. The Bush-Cheney-energy industry energy crisis plan, if implemented, would be as effective in solving the energy crisis. But that's not the point. As with the drug war, the point is increased profit and political power, not solving the purported crisis. It's an age-old story. Wielders of power seek to consolidate and increase it by turning real or imagined problems into crises. The Inquisitors had their heretics, the witch hunters of the American Colonies and Europe their witches and the Devil. Hitler had his Communists and Jews, and a deep resentment from World War I, to bring about his Third Reich and the Holocaust. All had their willing enablers, operating from the profit motive. An opportunity to steal with impunity. Sometimes crisis manipulation is an organized conspiracy. More often it just happens when a group of disparate interests coalesce around a perceived crisis and a constituency against it develops. But intentional or otherwise, once they reach a certain point the power structure adopts it and the constituency becomes virtually unstoppable. The "cure" mechanism becomes an end in itself, the purported crisis used only to justify and fuel that mechanism. Drugs were a real and serious problem when Ronald Reagan declared the war against them in the 1980s. But although drugs are extremely dangerous to individual users, the danger to society as a whole was grossly exaggerated. The average number of alcohol-related deaths in the United States from 1990-94 was 110,640; total number of licit and illicit drug -related deaths in 1998 was 16,926; total number of deaths in 1998 was 2,337,256. (Source: http://www. drugwarfacts.org/causes.htm#drug) But -- with the help of sensational media coverage -- paranoia prevailed. The "cure" became far more harmful than any amount of drugs ever could. And 20-plus years, trillions of dollars and tens of millions of man-years of incarceration later, the drug problem is no better. But we will be paying the huge societal costs of that folly long after the drug war ends. Although a Republican president declared that war, Democrats led the charge for its draconian sentencing laws. And both parties cooperated in keeping the true costs well hidden from the public. Nor did the Democratic President Clinton do anything to slow it down. The drug war became the epitome of bipartisanship and political correctness, the slightest hint of moderation meaning certain political oblivion. No one ever said that we needed to build one new prison a week for 20 years; they just kept getting built. And as fast as they were built new tenants were found to keep them filled and overflowing. The prison-industrial complex became an end in itself, fueled by the extremely harsh mandatory minimum sentencing laws, $80,000 per bed construction cost, $30,000 annual incarceration cost per inmate and the more than $200 billion annual cost of the drug war. That money found its way to a lot of people, and increased the power of politicians from the White House down to the smallest town hall. That constituency has so far proven unstoppable. But manufactured crises cannot last indefinitely, and the wise ruler will have replacements in the wings. And the drug war is finally showing signs of unraveling. Lo and behold -- our newest crisis: energy. The Bush-Cheney-energy industry energy crisis plan copies the same failed strategies of the drug war: Throw lots of money, material resources and technology at it and ignore the only things that could improve the situation: conservation and changes in human thinking. Build thousands of new power generating plants and power lines; drill more gas and oil; build more refineries; lay thousands of miles of fuel lines; allow more use of dirty coal; increase nuclear energy; relax pollution controls. More of the very things that led us to our present "crisis." Critics will call it madness, because -- as with the drug war -- it would be precisely the wrong way to solve the problem. But again they would miss the point. The conservation and rational energy alternatives they propose would not generate nearly the profit and jobs as all that new construction. Energy would be cheaper and plentiful once again; and just as the drug war prisons were filled up as fast as they were built, uses for the additional energy would be quickly found: more energy guzzling cars and other energy intensive equipment, more roads and greater urban sprawl, etc., to expand our economy. More importantly, a truly rational energy policy would not provide nearly as much additional power to politicians and bureaucrats. And lobbyists. And as with the drug war and other crises, it would be a totally bipartisan effort, with all opposition politically incorrect. Democrats and Republicans alike would scramble to hop aboard the energy crisis bandwagon, and lobby for the facilities to be constructed in their districts. As with the drug warriors ridiculing treatment and prevention as "soft-on-drugs," the energy warriors would dismiss conservation and other viable programs as impracticable "tree hugging" efforts. That's the picture as Bush and Co. envision it. But crisis policies don't always take off, and unlike the drug war there is already powerful opposition to this one. And perhaps we will have learned some lessons from the drug war. The most ludicrous rationale for the energy plan though is to reduce our dependence on foreign oil. We are becoming increasingly dependent upon foreign oil for engaging in precisely what they are proposing more of: an increased demand for oil even as our own resources dwindle. But if implemented, this crisis plan would be even more harmful than the drug war. What would we do if the foreign suppliers refused to sell us enough oil at reasonable prices? The answer should be chillingly obvious; our national interest would allow no option but to go in and take it. Have Bush and Co. thought that through? In case they haven't, they might consider some not too ancient history. In 1941 Japan was totally dependent on foreign oil, and felt forced to go to war to secure it when its major supplier cut off sales. That supplier was the United States, then the world's leading oil exporter. Arthur Cannon, Phippsburg MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk