Pubdate: Thu, 30 Sep 2010 Source: Free Press, The (ME) Copyright: 2010 The Free Press, Inc. Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5204 Website: http://freepressonline.com/ Author: Thomas McAdams Deford MARIJUANA AND PROHIBITION - Live And Learn? During the past 75 years - going back to what was the height of the Great Depression - the US has, by any standard, grown immeasurably stronger and richer. But as our economic power wanes and our military supremacy is challenged by asymmetric warfare, an entirely different issue arises: have we grown any smarter? And in asking this particular question, I'm not focusing on the K-12 education crisis we're suddenly all alert to, though that's bad enough. In 1920, after decades of struggle from a surprising coalition, in today's terminology, of religious fundamentalists and left-wing liberals, Congress passed into law Prohibition. By 1933, just 13 years later, we had evaluated its incredibly negative effects - in terms of organized crime, lost government revenues and increased government corruption, and not incidentally, its negligible impact on alcohol consumption - and repealed it. Fast forward to 1970, when the US initiated our War on Drugs. Forty years on - and the drug war is every bit as big a bust as Prohibition ever was: drugs from marijuana to heroin are cheaper, purer and more available than ever; pushers thrive on every street corner in every big city; and our jails are stuffed with people, mostly minorities, who have been picked up with pot. Yet, politicians, across the spectrum, cling to our current policies. As Albert Einstein famously remarked, the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results. In a speech to the Mid-Coast Forum on Foreign Relations on Monday, Ira Glasser, longtime executive director of the ACLU and, currently, president of the board of the Drug Policy Alliance, a nationwide organization focusing on a more rational drug policy, outlined the depth of the failure of our drug policy and, what's worse, the insidious nature of how it disproportionately affects blacks and other minorities. This column is going to be filled with a lot of statistics, mind-boggling ones - unfortunately, not just the numbers but the realities they represent. Everyone is aware that by making drugs - or anything else, for that matter, that humans are determined to get - illegal, the criminal world flourishes. Worse, it becomes a self-reinforcing situation as those arrested, the majority of whom are poor, less-educated black males, find it just that much more difficult to get a job, so that a marijuana conviction, legally a misdemeanor, contributes directly to unemployment, petty crime, and eventual re-arrest for more serious law-breaking. It's a vicious circle: drug arrests since 1980 have tripled to 1.6 million annually, about half of which are for marijuana. Significantly, about 90% of the marijuana arrests involve possession only, not sale or manufacture. While in 1970, before the war on drugs kicked into high gear, the number of those incarcerated in state and federal prisons was less than 200,000, 35 years later, it was 1.4 million. More people are in jail in the US on drug charges than are in jail in all of Europe, with its larger population, for all criminal offenses. The most revealing statistic of all: during a period when the US population increased by 25%; the prison population grew by 600%. As a result, the US, which has 5% of the world's population, has 25% of the world's prison population. Either there's something fundamentally wrong with the behavior that our form of democracy encourages in its citizens or there's something wrong with our approach to drugs. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D