Pubdate: Mon, 18 Feb 2002 Source: Eagle, The (DC) Copyright: 2002 The Eagle Feedback: http://www.eagle.american.edu/section.cfm/48/5/0/1 Website: http://www.eagle.american.edu/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1820 Note: Author names are not provided for The Eagle's Op-Eds CONSERVATIVES SHOULDN'T SUPPORT DRUG WAR Thank goodness for Paul Craig Roberts. Whenever conservatives retreat from their enthusiasm for reining in the abuses of the state, he doesn't hesitate to call them on it. A former economic adviser to President Reagan, he is among the most unapologetic free-marketers in the American punditry. On one issue, unfortunately, too many conservatives have not been listening. In fact, since Sept. 11, conservative rhetoric on the drug war has only become more preposterous. "Think about it," Roberts urges. "In the name of what other cause would conservatives support unconstitutional property confiscations, unconstitutional searches and Orwellian Big Brother invasions of privacy?" Now just for the record, I regret that drug use so pervades our society. But, quite frankly, what does that matter? I'm no fan of cigarette smoking either, but I would never seek to impose that view on the populace. Anti-drug paranoia has given the state an excuse, time and time again, to overstep its bounds. Journalist Robert Novak believes that our efforts against terrorism strengthen the case for such governmental overreachings. That our war on terror is not "linked inextricably to the war on drugs" is, in his view, "an unfortunate failure, making it more difficult to defeat either scourge." The Office of National Drug Control Policy has been running some new "public service announcements" blaming drug users for subsidizing terrorism. We should not, of course, condone the physically and psychologically destructive use of mind-altering substances; to disapprove of a behavior does not, or should not, imply an intention to proscribe it. But the idiocy of drug abuse notwithstanding, does it make one bit of sense to run television advertisements decrying the terrorist profit from the drug trade? I'm certain that if a television commercial urges one to drop his drug addiction, the addiction wins out ten times out of ten. Many terrorist entities do indeed gain financial support from the illicit drug trade. Opium, for example, proved a lucrative cash crop for the Taliban. This nexus of terrorism and illegal drugs, however, lends not a scrap of good sense to the criminalizing of such substances and, if anything, strengthens the case against it. Terrorist groups and terrorist harbors can only profit from the drug trade because it is illegal. If our national leaders learned to view the drug problem with a modicum of common sense they would understand that legitimate drug purveyors would be much better suited to control an industry that, at present, provides financial support to terrorists who thrive on criminal enterprises. Terrorists couldn't very well benefit from a legal industry subject to government regulations, could they? Drug warriors will, of course, condemn this position as "giving up." It may break the terrorism-drug trade connection, but what of the domestic threat it poses? Our nation has, however, done a great deal more damage in its efforts against drugs than in allowing them to proliferate. The government can invest a great deal in law enforcement and forced treatment, but the social and financial burdens that result from these policies indicate that they aren't worth it. Anti-legalization conservatives like former drug czar William J. Bennett point contentedly to the statistics showing that when the drug war was executed most strenuously, during the Reagan administration, cases of drug abuse fell notably. They fail, however, to take into account the carnage wrought when the drug trade becomes such a dangerous undertaking. During prohibition, after all, the buying and selling of alcohol wasn't such a safe business either. Drug warriors dismiss this historical analogy without any substantive refutation. "Many Americans who buy dope," writes commentator Bill O'Reilly, "say that they have the right to do that because alcohol is legal. If booze can be served, then society is hypocritical for outlawing drugs." To which I say, damn straight. O'Reilly proceeds to argue against legalization on the vacuous basis that most Americans are against it. He would do well to rethink his position. Not only is the drug war an unworkable mess, it is of no benefit to him professionally: The less a society uses controlled substances, the more intelligent it is, thus producing fewer people who would watch O'Reilly's idiotic, self-aggrandizing program on Fox News Channel. As recent events have proven, America has plenty to worry about. We would be better off acknowledging that, by paying so much attention to drug-related activities, we waste precious time and effort. - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel