Pubdate: Tue, 18 Jun 2002 Source: Boston Weekly Dig (MA) Copyright: 2002 Boston Weekly Dig Contact: http://www.weeklydig.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1515 Author: Zara Gelsey Note: Zara Gelsey is the Director of Communications for the Center for Cognitive Liberty and Ethics, a nonprofit law, policy, and public education center focused on protecting freedom of thought. She can be reached by e-mail at or check out http://www.alchemind.org for more info on what the Center does. LEFT IN THE DUST AND KICKING A DEAD HORSE Americans were once renowned for their progressive politics, their radical stance on personal freedoms, and their rational approach to public policy free from religious bias, at least in comparison to European theocracies. We embraced rational scientific solutions to public policy problems. But that was 230 years ago. We were once Revolutionaries, but now we're stodgy, stubborn, and increasingly alienated when it comes to one of the most pressing problems of the Western world: drug policy. Juxtaposed to European drug policy, we've been left in the dust. Eleven of the 15 EU countries have already forgone criminal penalties for marijuana use. The most recent example is the UK. Effective this month, Cannabis will be downgraded to a Class C drug in the UK, comparable to steroids and prescription tranquillizers such as Valium. Possession will no longer be an arrestable offence. Considering the traditional policy alignment between US and UK home affairs (excepting that messy Revolutionary War incident), this development should be receiving noticeably more political attention and press coverage in the US. Yet I've not heard one statement from any US politician regarding this fairly significant policy shift. It seems our government is so far behind the pack that the dust is obscuring its sight. In an embarrassing episode of poor timing, US Drug Czar John Walters' recent revamp of "Reefer Madness" warnings in a series of newspaper Op-Eds appeared just as the UK Commons Home Affairs Committee recommended the downgrading of Cannabis. The UK report, "The Government's Drugs Policy: Is It Working?" honestly admits, "There are no easy answers to the problems posed by drug abuse, but it seems to us that certain trends are unmistakable. If there is any single lesson from the experience of the last 30 years, it is that policies based wholly or mainly on enforcement are destined to fail." Meanwhile, our Drug Czar, in his syndicated article ominously entitled "The Myth of Harmless Marijuana," tried to validate heavy-handed drug enforcement tactics and discredit the medical marijuana movement. So when are the US politicos going to realize that they've been left in the dust? The outlook is not so good if the ONDCP (Office of National Drug Control Policy) continues its policy of kicking a dead horse. Surprising to many was the recent admission by the agency that anti-drug ads are not at all effective in curtailing youth drug use. But instead of looking into alternative strategies, the Drug Czar requested an increased budget to hire new PR and advertising firms and to engage in better pre-screening of commercials. Similar to a remote control car stuck in a corner, instead of turning around to see wide open space full of alternative routes, the drug warriors just keep crashing into the same two walls over and over. The Wall Street Journal recently diagnosed the problem as "the power of habit to create irrational behavior." The rationality of the UK model, in contrast to the US "War on Drugs," lies in its allowance for discussion and change, whereas ours barely allows for dissent. Case in point was the discovery that the US National Drug Intelligence Center (NDIC) was monitoring web sites "probably operated by drug legalization groups" who reportedly want to "increase pressure on lawmakers to change or abolish drug control laws." In a supposedly open society, it is regrettable that those who want to engage in honest discussion over amending failed policies are regarded as criminals who must be watched with a wary eye. Given this attitude, is it any surprise that we haven't heard a peep from the press about the recent changes in the UK? Most distinctive is the divergence between US and UK attitudes towards the drug issue. In the UK report, legalization and decriminalization advocates were referred to as "sensible and thoughtful people" with "attractive arguments." Meanwhile in the States, Rob Kampia, the Director of the Marijuana Policy Project was told to his face during a Congressional hearing, "You're not a wonderful person. You're doing something despicable . " He was also told by Congressman Mark Souder, "You are an articulate advocate for an evil position." An essential difference in motivation defines European drug policy as opposed to the American crusade: rational discussion vs. emotional ranting. Members of Parliament are taking a rational approach to a public policy issue; American Congressmen exacerbate communication problems by getting personal. It seems US "drug war" lords are inflexible in their resolve to avoid any semblance of rational discussion or consideration of the "drug problem" (which many define as the drug war itself, not drug use). The War on (some) Drugs is causing more damage to this country than the embarrassing prison counts and artificially inflated abuse statistics show. The true danger of marijuana prohibition, and similar morally coercive laws, lies in its chilling effect on personal freedom. We need to stop kicking the dead horse of prohibition, and instead catch up with the UK, and the rest of the EU, by entering into rational discussions about the future of drug policy reform in the US. Now is the time for a rational response. In light of the UK's embrace of science to support its public policy, we should be demanding a similar response (or any response at all!) from our political leaders rather than menacing silence occasionally pierced with hysterical warnings. War rhetoric and continued appeals to "protect the children" are explicitly used to divert attention from the fact that adults are continually losing individual rights over their own bodies and minds. The UK's shift from enforcement to a harm reduction model isn't a final solution; it still fails to acknowledge the personal, cognitive liberty implications of laws that attempt to control individual consciousness. But the UK committee report acknowledges the evolution of drugs policy, never discounting the future possibility of legalization. They're looking towards future solutions, while the US continues to regress into the Dark Ages. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake