Pubdate: Wed, 17 Sep 2008
Source: Cornell Daily Sun, The (NY Edu)
Copyright: 2008 The Cornell Daily Sun, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.cornelldailysun.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1758
Author: Daniel Eichberg
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

PROHIBITION OF SANITY

It's not what you think. The United States is embroiled in an immoral,
racist, and ineffective war, costing taxpayers $69 billion a year with
no end in sight. But unlike Iraq, this war is fought in America's
streets and the casualties are American civilians. Without
exaggeration, the War on Drugs is this country's single most
destructive public policy failure since slavery. The War on Drugs is
America's second attempt at the failed policy of prohibition. In 1919,
Congress ratified the 18th Amendment, banning the sale, manufacture,
and transportation of alcohol. Instead of reducing alcohol consumption
and its associated crimes, Prohibition multiplied them exponentially.
The abolition of legal booze created an incredible demand that fueled
a thriving black market. Increased demand generates increased cost, so
gangsters like Al Capone made millions trafficking illegal hooch with
huge profit margins. These thugs gunned down rival bootleggers, as
well as bystanders caught in the crossfire. Violent alcohol
trafficking disappeared only after Prohibition was lifted and
bootlegging alcohol became unprofitable.

Not much has changed since the '20s, except that gangs have traded in
their Tommy guns for TEC-9s. Competing drug dealers routinely battle
for turf and settle customer disputes with drive-by shootings. Just as
the FBI was unable to stop 1920s gangsters and the flow of alcohol,
modern law enforcement officers and the DEA are powerless to thwart
the army of organized criminals who successfully smuggle hundreds of
tons of illicit substances across our boarders annually. The
incentives for the Drug Barons are simply too great to give up the
fight: their pockets grow fat with an estimated $10 to $50 billion of
untaxable revenue each year. After spending four decades and over a
trillion dollars, narcotics today are cheaper, more potent, and far
easier to get than they were at the beginning of the War on Drugs.

In addition to those murdered in the streets by gang warfare, victims
of drug prohibition include the 37 million Americans arrested and the
58 percent of federal prison inmates incarcerated for nonviolent drug
crimes. Although the United States has only 4.6 percent of the world's
population, we have 22.5 percent of the world's prisoners. Because so
many Americans are in jail, our correctional facilities are at their
breaking points, making prison building the fastest growing industry
in the country. Inmates create an enormous burden for society. Each
one costs the state $16,000 a year to imprison. Further, removing
millions of people from the work force weakens the economy and creates
endless misery by breaking families apart.

Drug prohibition perpetuates racial segregation and permanent
intergenerational poverty of minorities in inner cities. According to
government estimates, only 12 percent of drug users are black, but
nearly 40 percent of those arrested for drug offenses are black. The
disproportionately large number of incarcerated minority parents, and
thus lack of positive adult role models, devastates the inner city
social structure, sustaining a hopeless cycle of poverty. These woes
are compounded by the fact that most street wars between rival drug
factions take place in poor communities, making the inhabitants live
in a literal war zone.

The War on Drugs has quickly evolved into a public health nightmare.
Because narcotics are not quality controlled by the government, they
can be more harmful than they need to be, as they may contain
contaminants or fatal potency levels. Prohibition has also reduced the
availability of hypodermic needles, promoting the sharing of dirty
needles and transmission of HIV. Finally, because government funding
is squandered on imprisoning casual drug users, not enough money is
available for legitimate education about the dangers of drug use and
the building of treatment facilities. A RAND Drug Policy Research
Center study found that treatment is 10 times more cost effective than
incarceration in reducing the use of cocaine. We must prevent
addiction with education, not threats, and learn to treat, not
marginalize, these sufferers.

Some fear that decriminalizing illicit drugs would create a chaotic
environment where drug abuse is rampant. However, it's actually hard
to imagine a society where drugs are more prevalent than our own, as a
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services survey found that 90
percent of High School seniors said that marijuana is "very easy" to
get. Decriminalization may even decrease drug use by removing the
enticing taboo. This was the case in The Netherlands, where nine years
after marijuana was legalized, teen use has actually declined from 10
percent to 6.5 percent.

The government is robbing you of your right to choose what to put into
your own body. Even though I choose not to use drugs, I respect the
decisions of users, as long as they consume drugs in a responsible way
that doesn't harm others. With the onset of the Amythest Initiative,
it is my hope that the informed and unimpeded debate over controlled
substances will also encompass this wasteful, naive, and dangerous
travesty of a war.

Daniel Eichberg is a sophomore in the College of Arts and Sciences.
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MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin