Pubdate: Wed, 11 Nov 2009 Source: Collegiate Times (VA Tech, Edu) Copyright: 2009 Collegiate Times Contact: http://www.collegiatetimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/699 Author: Mark Goldstein ANTI-DRUG WAR DOES NOT EQUAL PRO-DRUG Since I have become the leader of the Virginia Tech chapter of Students for Sensible Drug Policy, I have continually encountered the same question: Are you pro-drug? Individuals make the assumption that the fact that I oppose ineffective anti-drug legislation somehow implies that I advocate drug use. In a sense, I find such an assumption sort of confusing. Does being pro-choice imply that one is pro-abortion? Does supporting one's right to eat fatty foods from McDonald's suggest that you are pro-obesity? The simple answer is no. In both of those scenarios, we have acknowledged the fact that a person has the right do what she pleases with his or her own body, so long as nobody else is hurt. Let us briefly consider the purpose of the law. We have laws to prevent people from murdering or raping one another. We have laws to prevent theft and unethical business practices. In each of those scenarios, the law serves to protect people from what other people might do to them. There is a victim and a victimizer. When it comes to drug use, however, the victim and the victimizer are the same person. The one who snorts the coke or shoots up the heroin is the same person who ultimately suffers because of it. So whom are drug laws protecting you from: yourself? It seems the overall purpose of drug laws is to protect people from consuming products that are detrimental to their health. If that is the case, why not pass a law that bans people from eating Twinkies? After all, eating too many sugary foods can also lead to obesity, diabetes and decreased life expectancy. Why not mandate that everybody exercise at least three times a week? Aside from the fact that such laws would be expensive and difficult to enforce, they probably would not be very effective. Each individual is responsible for his own physical well-being. No government mandate can determine how people will ultimately act toward their own bodies. Point in fact: There is still a large amount of drug use despite the fact that drugs are illegal. Almost 50 percent of surveyed American adults have reported using marijuana, and about 17 percent have reported using cocaine. Perhaps it should be considered that irresponsible behavior toward one's own body, while not a good thing, is a matter of personal choice. A person has the choice to stop eating fatty foods and start exercising on a regular basis. Alcoholics can pursue treatment for their addiction without fear of legal sanctions. Obesity and alcoholism are regarded as health issues. Why, then, is drug use considered a legal issue? In fact, a study by the RAND Corporation concluded that drug treatment is a cheaper and more effective method of dealing with the drug problem than law enforcement. Ideally, society should make drug treatment easily available for those who seek it, and create an environment, which is not hostile to those with drug problems. For example, after Portugal decriminalized drugs in the early 2000s, there was a rise in the number of citizens who sought treatment for drug addiction. Drug enforcement, on the other hand, ruins lives far beyond the point of the actual conviction. For example, Indiana Congressman Mark Souder recently proposed an amendment to the Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act (SAFRA), which would have denied federal financial aid to students with minor drug offenses had it passed. (Luckily it was killed due to the efforts of SSDP chapters around the country.) Furthermore, people with criminal drug convictions on their records are less likely to receive jobs than people without such convictions, even if they have cleaned up their acts. These measures seem counter-intuitive because people who are denied jobs or an education are more likely to relapse into drug use. In essence, making drug use a law enforcement issue instead of a health issue creates a hostile environment in which drug users are unable to receive help to pursue the necessary life-style changes for fear of putting a red flag on themselves. One of the consequences of living in a free country is that freedom implies that each individual is responsible for his own actions. This includes what he chooses to do to his own body. Drug use and other unhealthy behaviors are negative lifestyle choices that can cause a great deal of harm, but since there is no distinction between the victim and the victimizer, it is absurd to use law enforcement to deal with the problem. Rather, society should create an open and positive environment that encourages people who partake in such unhealthy behaviors to personally seek treatment for their actions. The role of the law is not to protect people from themselves -- if that was the case, then all the bars in downtown Blacksburg would have been closed a long time ago. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake