Pubdate: Fri, 23 Mar 2001
Source: USA Today (US)
Section: Page 13A
Copyright: 2001 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc
Contact:  1000 Wilson Blvd., Arlington VA 22229
Fax: (703) 247-3108
Website: http://www.usatoday.com/news/nfront.htm
Author: Walter Shapiro

NATION WAITS FOR INSANITY TO STOP IN THE DRUG WAR

WASHINGTON -- The drug war is stuck in heavy traffic.

The Oscar marathon may showcase the scene from Traffic in which Michael 
Douglas, playing the nation's drug czar, begs his staff for "some new 
ideas" -- and is rewarded with the sounds of silence.

This fatalism about drugs is not just a creation of Hollywood. A new poll 
finds that 74% of Americans believe "we are losing the drug war." 
Similarly, nearly three-quarters of respondents to the survey, conducted by 
the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press, agree that "demand is 
so high we will never stop drug use."

Yet when asked about anti-drug strategies, the public still clings to the 
hard-line nostrums of the late 1980s such as "stopping drug importation" (a 
priority for 52%) and "arresting drug dealers" (49%).

"What comes through is the frustration of it all," says Andrew Kohut, the 
director of the Pew research center. "People don't think what's happening 
now is working, but they pick the same strategy and tactics when they're 
asked what to do."

A small note of moderation was added to the drug debate Wednesday, when the 
Supreme Court ruled in a 6-3 decision that a Charleston, S.C., hospital 
could not test pregnant women for drug abuse without their consent and then 
hand positive results over to the police. Before the public hospital ended 
this draconian program in 1994, women were dragged off to jail in handcuffs 
right after giving birth.

"Why wasn't the Supreme Court decision a unanimous 9-0?" asks Garrett Epps, 
a constitutional law professor at the University of Oregon. "When you go to 
your doctor and the cops then arrest you for using drugs, it doesn't seem a 
hard issue that your Fourth Amendment rights were violated."

Epps is the author of a new book on a 1990 Supreme Court decision that 
banned the use of peyote in the rituals of the Native American Church, To 
an Unknown God: Religious Freedom on Trial. He argues, "This push toward a 
'naked society' suggests that there's no social norm that won't be trumped 
by the drug war. We think of ourselves occupying a free society, but the 
sphere of personal freedom is constantly dwindling."

Next Wednesday, the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in its first 
medical-marijuana case, The United States vs. Oakland Cannabis Buyers' 
Cooperative. Even though nine states have legalized the use of marijuana 
for medical purposes since 1996, the status of those who supply the drug to 
patients remains in limbo.

The Oakland case grows out of a law-enforcement effort, coordinated by 
Clinton administration drug czar Barry McCaffrey, to go after the 
cooperative after voters in California approved medical marijuana in a 
referendum in 1996.

"If the court treats this as a drug case, we may have a problem," says 
Robert Raich, one of the lawyers for the co-op. "That's why we see this as 
a states' rights case."

The Supreme Court has become increasingly sympathetic to states' rights 
arguments, especially in cases involving the federal government's 
regulatory powers. But for all its attraction to state sovereignty, the 
politicized high court in the medical-marijuana case may find it hard to 
look beyond the passions aroused by the drug war.

A semicomic definition of insanity is continuing to do the same thing and 
expecting a different result. By that standard, the nation's drug war may 
be operating on the fringes of lunacy.

About the only other arena in which the federal government has so 
dramatically and so stubbornly maintained an ineffective policy is the 
4-decade-old economic embargo against Cuba.

It is telling that Bill Clinton developed the moxie to discuss the 
inequities of mandatory sentences for drug crimes and the disparity between 
the penalties for possession of cocaine and crack only after the 2000 
election. In fact, the rigid drug policies of his administration seemed 
motivated primarily by political calculation and Clinton's fear of 
reminding the nation that he was the first president to admit to smoking 
marijuana, although, of course, he "didn't inhale."

In theory, George W. Bush has the freedom to bring to the anti-drug effort 
the same innovative conservative thinking that he has demonstrated in 
education policy and in trying to mobilize religious institutions to 
deliver social services. But aside from a few stray comments by Attorney 
General John Ashcroft about "reinvigorating the war on drugs," the 
administration has been strangely silent on the issue and has yet to 
appoint a drug czar.

The St. Petersburg Times reported Thursday that Florida Gov. Jeb Bush has 
been pushing his own drug coordinator, Jim McDonough, for the White House 
post. While not confirming any discussions with the White House, McDonough, 
a former aide to McCaffrey, took pains in a lengthy phone interview 
Thursday to sketch out his philosophy of the drug war.

McDonough reflects the no-surrender school of fighting drugs when he says, 
"Making drugs legal is the most ridiculous idea since they said that the 
Titanic was unsinkable." But he also takes a more moderate stance in 
emphasizing that "the immediate crying need is on treatment." He advances a 
welcome proposal for "an annual system that should review the egregious 
cases where sentencing is all out of proportion to the crime." But, in the 
next breath, he reiterates his chilling Florida proposal to provide state 
tax breaks to companies that agree to mandatory drug testing of all employees.

The creators of Traffic are right: There has to be a better way of reducing 
drug abuse without further jeopardizing personal freedom. But when it comes 
to new ideas, the nation is waiting. The Bush administration is in charge .
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