Pubdate: Sat, 24 Feb 2001 Source: Charlotte Creative Loafing (NC) Copyright: 2001 Creative Loafing Charlotte, Inc. Contact: P.O. Box 241988 Charlotte, NC 28224-1988 Fax: (704) 522-8088 Website: http://www.cln.com/charlotte/newsstand/current/index.html Author: Jerry Klein IS ANYBODY LISTENING? On the way out of the movie theater after seeing Traffic a few weeks ago, I told my friend that I was depressed by the film -- a dark depiction of this country's decades-long "war on drugs" and the extent to which substance abuse permeates every segment of our society. I was discouraged, not for the obvious reasons, but because I was afraid the majority of people who see it will probably miss the movie's point. Judging by some comments made by Charlotte's Mayor Pat McCrory recently, it turns out those fears were on the mark. What's even more interesting, though, is that the city's Chief of Police, Darrel Stephens, got it right. Traffic is a starkly realistic portrayal of the whole drug scene, from start to finish. People who live in squalor in other parts of the world produce the stuff, because it's their best, often their only, shot at making enough money to raise their pitiful standard of living. The thugs who distribute it have enough cash lying around to co-opt even the most dedicated law enforcement officials. People here buy and use the stuff, irrespective of their standing in society, for more reasons than we can count. And what we've been doing to confront the problem -- throwing away tens of billions of dollars a year, locking up hundreds of thousands of otherwise non-violent people -- is an exercise in abject futility. But that's apparently lost on the Mayor -- as it still is on most politicians. At the end of a planning retreat earlier this month, the Mayor and Charlotte's City Council somehow got on the subject of drugs. You'll recall that there's been a lot of discussion lately about a proposal to crack down on what are loosely called "raves" -- all-night dance parties at which young people are using the currently fashionable drug Ecstasy in increasing numbers. The erroneous assumption -- as usual for those who don't get it -- is that if you lower the boom on raves, drug use will go down. At that meeting, McCrory weighed in with this bit of wisdom, as reported by Lauren Markoe in the Charlotte Observer: "I was watching that movie, Traffic, (about drugs in upper-middle-class homes), with a bunch of people and they said, 'that's not Charlotte,' and I said, 'bullcrap. . .We need to get the word out better. . .Some of the people buying the drugs, I don't think they're even worried about being arrested." And then Police Chief Stephens spoke up: "We're not ignoring the non-street level activities. But one thing I think is important for the council and the community is that you're not going to enforce your way out of the problem. It's part of the solution, but what we all need to emphasize more is treatment and education." McCrory responded, "I don't want to get back to the period when I was in college when there was such casual use that no one got caught." Stephens answered, "Mayor, I don't think we ever left that period." Right on, Chief. You get it: we will never build enough jails and prisons to "punish" our way out of this. And that's what people like the Mayor don't understand -- even when the message is put in front of their noses as clearly as can be done. At the end of Traffic -- don't read this part if you haven't seen the film and you're afraid I'm giving away too much information -- Michael Douglas, who plays the part of the country's "drug czar," is sitting in a 12-step recovery program meeting alongside his wife and his teenage daughter, who's just finished telling the group the story of her downhill slide into addiction. The group's leader asks Douglas whether he has anything he'd like to say. His response, in his character as the man who's supposed to best know the answers for the whole country, is the central point of the movie: "I'm just here to listen." "To listen," indeed. If you want to make any difference in the "drug wars," maybe it's time for those who make our laws to listen to those who have direct experience with the whole scene: the users, recovering and otherwise, and those on the front lines of the war. As one who falls in that category, I'm hoping some of you will "listen" to this: Chief Stephens is right. As happened with Prohibition's ban on alcohol use in the 20s, we'll never "enforce" our way out of this. Never, never, never. No amount of money spent on trying to keep drugs out of the hands of people who want them is going to work. What's more, every time you think you've gotten things under control, it's all going to start all over again, with stronger or different drugs. Ecstasy is the perfect example of what's coming: substances being developed in laboratories -- often by otherwise "legitimate" pharmaceutical companies - -- to make us feel better, stronger, happier, more energized, or whatever. Squelch one drug, and another will be in the pipeline before you can snap your fingers. Why? Because humans will always look for ways to alter how we feel. Sugar gives us a lift, as does caffeine. Alcohol slows us down, as does marijuana. Prozac smooths over our rough edges; Vicodin makes the pain go away and lets us slip into a dreamy state of mind. It will never end. And until you take exorbitant profits out of the business of supplying mood-altering substances to people who want them, the associated crimes won't go away. You can't "enforce" yourself out of this problem, which even the judges and attorneys and police and prison officials are finally coming to realize. If you want to keep throwing good money after bad, more power to you. But if you get the point of movies like Traffic, if you understand that you won't learn anything until you listen to the people who know what they're talking about, nothing will change. Nothing. There are only three things that will make any difference, Mr. Mayor: 1. That you learn finally that more cops and jails won't change anything. 2. That you spend the money instead in giving people the real facts about the substances they put in their bodies, without discrimination. If alcohol is legal and regulated, while it destroys way more lives than other drugs, then those drugs should be legal and regulated, too. 3. That when people ignore truthful advice and get themselves into trouble, the only thing that works is affordable treatment, on demand, in adequate supply to meet that demand -- which isn't the case now, in Charlotte or anywhere else around the country. That's what Traffic was about. Is anybody listening? - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens