Pubdate: Thu, 02 Apr 2009 Source: Columbia Daily Spectator (Columbia, NY Edu) Copyright: 2009 Spectator Publishing Company Contact: http://www.columbiaspectator.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2125 Section: Reasonably Right Author: Jonathan Hollander Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) RETHINKING THE WAR ON DRUGS In 2006, the United States witnessed close to 800 identifiable drug-related murders. Since January 2008, 7,000 Mexicans have died in a brutal drug war between rival cartels. In Afghanistan, NATO forces continue to be killed and maimed by Taliban insurgents financed primarily by opium production. Following the inception of the War on Drugs in 1969 , hundreds of billions of dollars and countless lives have been poured into an unwinnable enterprise-one that America must strongly reconsider. Of any tactic employed against organized crime (and the terrorism it often supports), legalization is certainly the most potent and the most controversial. Currently, the War on Drugs serves to cut back on supply, thereby inflating prices and allowing criminals to profit. If drugs were to be legalized, the government could set the supply such that prices were too low to make organized crime profitable, but still high enough to generate handsome tax revenue-in other words, it would do exactly what it does with alcohol and tobacco. This second point, taxation, is another key point in favor of legalization, which is why states like California are now considering legislation that would decriminalize and tax marijuana in order to help reduce their budget deficits. Production costs for drugs make up only 4 percent of distribution value. Given this incredible differential, the United States government could conceivably realize tens of billions of dollars in tax revenue, not to mention the additional tens of billions that would be saved on enforcement. As the world's single greatest market for drugs, it is clear that the United States has both a moral and strategic responsibility to aggressively target drug producers abroad. America has been involved with Colombia in fighting its drug rebels for decades, and is now beginning to devote more resources to helping Mexico combat its drug cartels. These drug producers are some of the most vicious and barbaric organizations in the world, and their threat to American national security is greater than terrorism if you just consider the body count. In order to effectively take on these groups, the United States needs to start using the full power of its overt and clandestine arsenals against them. This goes beyond just funneling money and weapons to the Mexican government-it means having the CIA conduct operations against the leaders of drug cartels. Standing alone, these forceful tactics are likely to have few positive benefits, but in conjunction with the legalization of drugs in the United States, they threaten to hit drug producers on two fronts, cutting profits while also sending the message that the United States is still tough on drugs where it counts. The final and most difficult issue is how to manage the domestic consequences of legalization. I think in this case, our guiding principle has to be a belief in the individual's liberty to choose what substances he or she takes, in addition to recognizing that the consequences of an individual's choice fall to him or her alone. The reason most people refrain from heroin and cocaine is not because they are illegal, but because they are dangerous. Educating people to make responsible choices is the true path to victory in the War on Drugs, which is why the current policy is so futile-it has tricked Americans into believing that the Drug Enforcement Authority can solve what is really a parental issue. Moreover, society should not use free medical treatment and housing to support the habits of people who make poor choices and refuse to take steps to end their addiction, such as hardcore heroin addicts. Those who want to slowly kill themselves by taking hard drugs will do so regardless of the legality-the question is whether we allow them to exist as wards of the state or simply let nature take its course. I understand that this opinion may seem overly callous to many, but we need to realize that drug legalization grants people liberty, and liberty is a two-way street. Fundamentally, the current prosecution of the War on Drugs has failed. It costs the United States tens of billions of dollars a year, funds organized crime and terrorism, and denies citizens the basic right of control over their own bodies. The only way for the United States to move forward on this issue is through a new policy grounded in economic logic, individual responsibility, and a willingness to keep America safe from criminals and thugs at home and abroad. Such an approach worked with alcohol, and I steadfastly believe it can work with drugs. Jon Hollander is a Columbia college junior majoring in economics. Reasonably Right runs alternate Thursdays. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin