Pubdate: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 Source: Gainesville Sun, The (FL) Copyright: 2001 The Gainesville Sun Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/163 Website: http://www.sunone.com/ Author: Steve Hach Note: Steve Hach is a P.H.D candidate in history at the University of Florida. He studies U.S. diplomatic history and drug policy. This appeared as part of "Talking Back." DRUG WAR EXAGGERATIONS In a recent editorial published by The Sun, Family Research Council member Robert L. Maginnis asserted that "last year, in the United States alone, more citizens died of illegal drug overdoses than were murdered." This statement is not true and represents typical drug war propaganda and hyperbole. It appears as though the drug warriors are getting desperate as the nation finally wakes up and realizes that drug war policies -- which gut the Bill of Rights, incarcerate non-violent offenders in huge numbers and at great cost, and criminalize people who are otherwise decent and productive citizens -- have utterly failed to reduce the quantity, quality or cost of drugs on our streets. Maginnis most likely is basing his false assertion on the statements of our own Orlando congressman, John Mica. In September, Mica released a statement to the press asserting that drug overdoses in the United States now exceed murders. Doug McVay, a research analyst with Common Sense for Drug Policy ( http://www.csdp.org ), disproved this assertion with the Centers for Disease Control's National Vital Statistics Reports, Volume 48, No. 11, published July 24. (The report is available online at http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/releases/00newsfinaldeath98.htm.) This report indicates there were "18,272 deaths from homicide and legal intervention" and "16,926 deaths from drug-induced causes." For CDC purposes, "drug-induced causes" includes "not only deaths from dependent and non-dependent use of drugs (legal and illegal use), but also poisoning from medically prescribed and other drugs." This report clearly shows it is impossible to claim that more people died from illegal drug overdoses than from murders, as stated in the Maginnis editorial. Only by combining illegal drug overdoses with all the other categories of drug deaths, and then comparing that figure with a murder statistic lower than the one presented by the CDC -- Mica got the lower murder figure from an FBI report -- could the congressman and people like Maginnis make such a patently false assertion. So once again we see that truth is the first casualty in war. Maginnis' use of false statistics is typical of many drug warriors. We have seen similar distortions and outright lies about the war on drugs at the national, state and local levels on numerous occasions. Our own state "drug czar" James McDonough was caught grossly exaggerating the so-called "club drug" death rate in Florida. A Florida Department of Law Enforcement spokesman at the Alachua County Drug Summit falsely asserted that ecstasy was more widely used in the United States than marijuana. The Gainesville Police Department was caught presenting bogus statistics to the Gainesville City Commission during the "anti-rave" debacle here in town. This begs the question, why do the drug warriors feel the need to participate in these distortions, exaggerations and outright lies? The problem with these false statistics and statements is they tend to take on a life of their own and get repeated ad nauseum by media sources like yours. These falsehoods negatively impact public policy debates that should -- no matter what one's views may be on the issue -- be based on factual information. May I suggest that in the future you view all statistics and statements presented by people with a demonstrated penchant for distorting the truth with at least a bit of skepticism, and that perhaps you do some fact-checking of your own before running these pro-drug war propaganda pieces? Some people here in Gainesville may still believe everything they read in your paper. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk