Pubdate: Mon, 05 Apr 2010 Source: Western Courier (Western Illinois U, IL Edu) Copyright: 2010 Western Courier Contact: http://www.westerncourier.com/main.cfm?include=submit Website: http://www.westerncourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3953 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) DRUG WAR LOST: STOP THE WASTE Editor's note: The writer of this column wishes not to be named, as expressing one's personal beliefs against government policy can severely hinder a future career with many government agencies. The "War on Drugs" was born under the Nixon administration in 1969. It truly took off during Reagan and Bush (Sr.). Since then this campaign has seen about as much success as the United States' War on Terror. The government has been successful in: spending billions upon billions of tax dollars, incarcerating non-violent offenders and perhaps one of the greatest heists in history. The War on Drugs has been a gift that keeps on giving to those who control it and manipulate it for their own purposes. For the less advantaged it can be viewed as an attack on the people, creating and sustaining a new lower class. So far in 2010, $11 billion has already been spent according to the ONDCP. That breaks down to about $5 billion on a federal level and $6 billion on that of the state. A little more than an eighth of that goes straight into federal prisons, while about $2 billion are spent on state and local prisons. It costs about $30,000 a year to house in inmate with the average five-year sentence, making it about $150,000 per prisoner per year. This would be a small price to pay if it was actually effective. However, drug use in America is as prevalent now as it was then. National surveys performed by the DEA state about 40 million people use drugs yearly. In 2007 it was estimated that 6,000 people a day would try marijuana for the first time. Since the early 1980s the number of people in America's prison system has spiked dramatically, so much so that our prison systems have been overcrowding and lacking funds. The government has even toyed with concept of the privatization of prisons, which is a whole different issue (conflict of interest, perhaps?). According to the Uniform Crime Report, someone is arrested for violating a drug law every 17 seconds. Some 411,180 people have been arrested this year alone, of those 194,900 for cannabis violations. The U.S. Department of Justice believes the number of arrests for drug violations in 2010 is expected to exceed the 2007 number of 1,841,182. Not alarming considering that since 1995, the U.S. prison population has grown an average of 43,266 inmates per year. With one of the largest ratios of imprisoned people in the world, the flaw in the system should be painfully obvious. A less obvious but now prominent theme in African-American culture is the Drug War's biased eye. A Washington Post Staff writer wrote a piece entitled "Whites Use Drugs, More Blacks Imprisoned." He states that although blacks make up a smaller percentage of drug users than whites, they are arrested at 13 times the rate. So much so that blacks make up 62 percent of drug offenders in prison. Activists argue that this discrimination impedes any possible success, or access to education for the lower class. Criminal records permanently scar and stigmatize ex-addicts, making it extremely difficult if not impossible to find legitimate jobs; creating a perpetuating cycle. A New York Times article written by Catherine Rampell discussing a study proving how areas with higher unemployment rates tend to have higher rates of drug use (coincidence, or completely logical?) These impoverished areas could be lacking good health care and with the use of synthetic drugs, such as Ritalin or Vicodin rising, the use of cheaper illicit drugs should not be too surprising. What is surprising is how few people point out the real problem. Like an old mobster movie, the corrupt officials have been lurking in the shadows. Consider this a mere flashlight's glimpse into a rabbit hole. In 1986 the CIA was caught with its hands in the cookie jar. Reagan was secretly trying to negotiate a deal with Iran: weapons in exchange for hostages. The real blow came when Oliver North, a then-White House aide, wrote a memo explaining plans to use profit from the arms deal to aid the Contra in Nicaragua. The event became known as the Iran Contra Affair. Attorney General Edwin Meese III reported that $10 million to $30 million were diverted to the Contras. Robert McFarlane was convicted along with North and other key players. Although there has been no evidence to link the two, McFarlane brought to Congress that Reagan directly ordered the entire operation in 1984. The CIA has been known to get their hands dirty too. Project Watch Tower was an operation in Latin America, in which the CIA used set beacon towers from Columbia through Panama to fly undetected moving cocaine through the borders. After being implicated for the murder of his wife Private Bill Tyree opened suit against the U.S. Army and the CIA. In his case he alleged FEMA was illegitimately funded through "Black Ops" using documentation to support his claims. Tyree is serving a life sentence right now, but there are many people who believe he was framed for speaking out against Watchtower. Is it possible that the "War on Drugs" cannot be won when people are being arrested by their own drug dealers? What if the system is broken on purpose? Portugal won their war on drugs when they abolished all criminal penalties for personal possession of marijuana, cocaine, heroin and meth. They are replacing prison time with therapy and rehabilitation. Prohibition did not work with alcohol here, and as Portugal is finding out control is always better then prohibition. The Times article "Did Decriminalization Work?" Maia Szalavitz writes that along with the decline in older teens using drugs, "the number of people on methadone and buprenorphine treatment for drug addiction rose to 14,877 from 6,040, after decriminalization. Perhaps it is time we pull out and relieve the victims of our Drug Wars. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom