Pubdate: 18 Oct 1999 Source: Forbes Magazine (US) Copyright: 1999 Forbes Inc. Contact: 28 West 23rd Street, 11th Floor, New York, NY 10010 Fax: (917) 606-7262 Website: http://www.forbes.com/forbes/current/ Author: Philip E. Ross Periodic waves of puritanism inspire politicians to ban alcohol or tobacco or other drugs. But history shows that legislating sobriety achieves nothing--and may aggravate the excesses it is aimed at: THE FUTILE CRACKDOWN Governments, decreeing zero tolerance of drugs, have 400,000 drug offenders in this country in jail. Mothers Against Drunk Driving persuades legislators to raise the drinking age and now wants to restrict advertising of alcohol. The Justice Department concocts a convoluted theory about how tobacco vendors deplete federal coffers and sends them a bill for $20 billion a year. What you are witnessing is the New Prohibition. It is the Volstead Act all over again, in different guises. It aims to enforce clean living by edict. And it is almost certain to fail, as greatly as the last Prohibition failed in the 1920s. These conclusions come from a small band of experts specializing in the history of temperance crusades. The urge to legislate health and sobriety comes in cycles spaced 60 or 80 years apart, they tell us, and the cycle is peaking right now. And yet, perversely, the result may be more tobacco and alcohol consumption a decade or two on. "Every 80 years or so we come out with all these laws against people's personal, pleasurable pursuits: tobacco, alcohol, meat, sex," says Ruth C. Engs, a professor of applied health science at Indiana University in Bloomington, Ind. and author of Clean Living Movements: American Cycles of Health Reform, due out this winter. "Consumption of drugs, tobacco and alcohol peaked around 1980; the reform laws seem to be peaking now, and that means clear backsliding should occur by 2010." The up-and-down cycle of addictions seems to have its own natural rhythm related to people's memories of what those addictions did to an earlier generation. But crackdown legislation, far from tempering these swings, probably aggravates them. Look at the paradoxical increase in teenage smoking of the past several years. There may be a certain forbidden-fruit glamour to the cigarette habit. The antitobacco crusade, that is, may be backfiring. Engs explains the temperance rhythm: In the first third of the cycle, reformers agitate against the reviled behavior, which peaks and begins to decline. Only then--when the horse has fled the barn--does the electorate close the barn door with restrictive laws. In the middle third of the cycle, people either lose interest in the laws or actively rebel against them; this is when it becomes "cool" to flout the law. Engs says that the 4.6% rise in smoking by teenage girls over the past five years suggests that this lax phase is beginning with tobacco, whereas with alcohol the rebound in consumption is still a few years away. In the last third of the cycle, the police barely enforce the laws still on the books, the banned behavior comes out into the open, and consumption continues to rise, but at a slower pace. Then it peaks, as another generation comes to witness the devastation wrought by drug use. And the cycle begins anew. The crack-cocaine epidemic followed a course like this, although it took place in quintuple-time. This drug's addictive powers are so great--and its ability to destroy lives so complete--that the up-and-down cycle covered a span of only about a dozen years or so, trailing off in the late 1990s. Urban police departments responded to the epidemic with a wave of arrests that put millions of drug offenders in jail. But the enforcement action did not make crack go away, crack made crack go away. The cycle is vicious, because most of the time we are overreacting to a previous generation's experiences. The lurching from one extreme to another is particularly exaggerated in America, where it dates back to the Puritan fathers themselves, although versions of it--with respect to alcohol, at least--can be seen in northern European countries, including Britain, Scandinavia and Russia. These colder cultures experience feasts and famines of ethanol, and they make quite a contrast with the southern European countries, which have neither the binges nor the temperance crusades. France, Italy and Greece have integrated wine into normal mealtime consumption since Roman times. It is striking how pointless the laws against substance abuse generally are by the time they are introduced, how harsh the punishments quickly become, and how total is the switch to tolerance at the end. In each campaign, most of the decline in consumption came before the laws took effect. You see the pattern again and again, for tobacco, for opium and for cocaine, says David F. Musto, a physician and historian of medicine at the Yale University School of Medicine. Reason: the time lag between a surge in consumption and the emergence of a popular consensus for legislating against it. "That's why it makes sense that laws would come in after the peak and get more severe as demand goes down," he says. Musto has documented how cocaine first struck even the medical elite as a wonder drug, promoted in prestigious medical journals with language suggestive of what we hear now in support of Prozac. In the 1890s Sir Arthur Conan Doyle could portray the protagonist of his whodunit novels injecting cocaine as he went about hunting down criminals. Then the evils of cocaine addiction became apparent, the drug became associated with lowlifes, revulsion against it grew, consumption cratered and, oh yes--laws were passed against it before World War I. By the 1930s it had fallen through the memory hole. Forty years later it was back, with a vengeance. Musto notes that a third of Americans don't drink, a third drink only occasionally, and the rest drink 90% of the alcohol. There is thus always a simple majority of voters that lacks any stake in the free use of liquor, beyond a commitment to the principle of live and let live. To enact Prohibition, you don't have to convert the drinkers, you have only to energize the nondrinkers. Look at the inordinate resources now devoted to suppressing drugs. "The problem we have fallen into is a kind of a ratchet in these laws," says Daniel D. Polsby, a professor of law at George Mason University. "They have become very harsh, and they only get harsher." A typical cocaine offender spends 10.5 years in federal prison--35% longer than a typical rapist. Can you argue that today's laws are based on a scientific understanding of drugs and tobacco that our grandfathers lacked? You can't. The opposition to smoking around the turn of the century employed many of the same arguments, right down to the idea that passive smoke was a danger to nonsmokers, so the cigar-smokers should be corralled into their own cars on trains. For that matter, many other supposedly scientific precepts--eating oatmeal, avoiding red meat, exercising regularly--were as integral to the clean-living movements of yesteryear as they are to today's. Science plays a small role in this swinging of the pendulum. Popular emotions play a large role. Musto thinks that with the victory of the antitobacco forces, the next target for restrictive legislation will be alcohol. That might begin with dissuading people from drinking, then progress to marginalizing those who do, to demonizing them and finally to enacting laws against them. That such laws generally fail to improve matters, and in many cases have made them worse, has been argued long and hard by libertarians, notably Milton Friedman. He has pointed out that banning, like rationing, produces economically perverse outcomes, among them a thriving business in the banned substance, fueled by jacked-up prices and swollen profit margins. Another perverse result comes from the substitution effect: If you make it hard (or expensive) for kids to get beer, they will get marijuana instead. An unfortunate effect of temperance laws is that they glamorize the banned product. Engs sees this glamorization in the small statistical edge in drunkenness in underage kids compared with those of drinking age. Apparently, once you can legally belly up to the bar, you don't want to. Unfortunately, lifelong habits often form at around that stage in life, and those who rebelled by drinking at 19 sometimes find that they cannot stop at 21. That is, raising the drinking age may have boosted alcoholism in the long run. Listen carefully to what Engs and Musto and Polsby are saying. Their argument is not that substance abuse is harmless, but that it is inevitable, and that we should lay the whip on lightly. That doesn't come naturally to someone sitting on a high horse. Make no mistake: Alcohol, tobacco and narcotics cause much human misery, and people would be well advised to use them little or not at all. Advised--but not commanded--for coercion doesn't work in the long run. Problem is, we live in the short run, particularly when it comes to what are commonly deemed the guilty pleasures. With the waning of the generation that witnessed Prohibition, the last, and greatest, failure of legislated morality, apple-cheeked reformers arise to repeat the same old mistakes. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake