Pubdate: 22 Nov 1999 Source: Nation, The (US) Copyright: 1999, The Nation Company Contact: http://www.thenation.com/ Author: Michael Massing Note: This is Michael Massing's reply to some of the 11 PUB LTE in The Nation, posted at: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99.n1225.a05.html Related: All the special issue articles are linked at: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n963/a03.html MASSING REPLIES My calls for more realism in the drive 'for drug reform elicited much positive response but also some protests, especially regarding my position on marijuana, and I'd like to clarify it. Chris Ford, Thomas Leighton and Aaron Wilson are correct in pointing out that if pot is simply decriminalized, rather than fully legalized, politicians can still target low-level marijuana offenders. Yet legalizing pot would likely cause an increase in its availability, especially for kids. In our special issue, Robert J. MacCoun and Peter Reuter described how, when Holland went from the simple decriminalization of pot to its widespread sale in coffee shops, use among youths soared. So we face a dilemma: Either decriminalize marijuana and run the risk of having politicians like Rudolph Giuliani continue to make war on it, or legalize the drug and risk soaring pot use among young people, The ideal marijuana policy, I think, would be benign neglect, with the police turning a blind eye to possession and low-level sales. Reaching this point, of course, would require greater public tolerance of pot, which, as the medical marijuana initiatives show, may already be taking place. I appreciate Patrick O'Hare's remarks regarding the distinction between harm reduction and legalization. I should have been clearer on that point. As he notes, harm reduction incorporates the basic principles of a public-health approach to drugs, which I support. What I oppose is using harm reduction as a pretext for denying that drug abuse itself (as opposed to just drug prohibition) can cause significant harm to users and society at large, It was in this context that I used the phrase "tough on abuse," which Robert Cogswell objects to. I share his concern about treatment programs that deal too harshly with clients. What I meant is that drug reformers should seek not simply to alleviate the ill effects of the drug war but also to reduce the level of drug addiction in the United States and the harms associated with it. I find Kevin Zeese's letter curious. The reform agenda he proposes, and which he outlined in a four-page ad in the special issue, largely overlaps with my own. Certainly the budget allocations that Zeese and his organization favor - two-thirds for treatment and prevention, one-third for law enforcement and criminal justice - coincide with my recommendations. As I try to show in my book The Fix, this was the proportion that the Nixon Administration allotted. And, while Nixon did initiate many harmful programs, his overall policy was very enlightened. Zeese may feel uncomfortable in acknowledging that Nixon got there first, but this should not blind him to the one time in US history when illicit drugs were treated as a public-health problem, to great effect. Michael Massing New York City - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake