Pubdate: Sun, 22 Mar 2015 Source: Sunday Star-Times (New Zealand) Copyright: 2015 Sunday Star-Times Contact: http://www.sundaystartimes.co.nz Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1064 Author: David Herkt JUST ASK WHY CHASING THE SCREAM: The First and Last Days of the War on Drugs, Johann Hari, Bloomsbury Circus $27 Johann Hari's new book is a clear-eyed look at the war on drugs, writes David Herkt. MOST OF us know the war against drugs has been a comprehensive failure. Many of the negative effects of drug use are due to its criminalisation. In Portugal, Switzerland, and Uruguay, which have removed some of the legal consequences of drug use, we see countries that haven't collapsed into chaos, but have, in fact, a decreasing social problem. Johann Hari's Chasing the Scream is an observational survey of drug use in the UK, US, South America and Europe. Drug prohibition began with Harry Anslinger, the ambitious head of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics in 1920s America. Faced with a reduction in budget, Anslinger ramped up hysteria levels to create a problem that didn't exist and secure increasing funds for the organisation he would head for 32 years. In Anslinger's version, marijuana was a drug that caused insanity, rape, and murder. Hari describes how he targeted the American black community in particular, focusing on highprofile users including singer Billie Holiday. His account of how Anslinger's agents hounded and planted drugs on Holiday is just the first of the book's great tragedies. Even on her deathbed she wasn't safe from perjury and harassment by Anslinger's agents. Hari's international emphasis means that examples can be usefully compared. He travels to Mexico, where the influence of American drug policy has nurtured the world's first narcoeconomy. The human effects of this brutal private war between competing cartels is harrowing. Against this, Hari discovers initiatives in Switzerland and Portugal where drugs are decriminalised, and even supplied, leading to better health, lower crime, and fewer social costs. The personalities and places of Chasing the Scream are memorable. There is the insanity of Sheriff Joe Arpaio's personal mission in Maricopa County, Texas, where he has created a virtual concentration-camp, filled with orange jumpsuited inmates. Possession of a single joint earns time in a cage under blistering desert sun. On the other hand, Uruguay's last president, Jose Mujica, legalised marijuana in 2014 and presides over a nation without any of the consequences of the same drug war. Marijuana is grown, taxed, and purchased at pharmacies with a valid ID. The book is scrupulously noted and recordings of its interviews available online, a consequence of the 2011 discovery that Hari had taken quotes from previously published profiles of his subjects and used them in his own articles. Chasing the Scream is a humbled and honest comeback. It is a rational, well-argued book, filled with enlightening examples that make a well-worn subject new. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom