Pubdate: Spring, 1999 Source: Common Sense For Drug Policy (US) Copyright: 1999 Common Sense for Drug Policy Foundation Contact: 3220 N Street, NW #141, Washington, D.C. 20007 Website: http://www.csdp.org/ Author: Jerry Epstein, President, Drug Policy Forum of Texas http://www.mapinc.org/DPFT/ WHAT HISTORY TEACHES US ABOUT DRUG PROHIBITION In 1936 August Vollmer, highly respected Berkeley, CA police chief addressed the International Association of Chiefs of Police, "Drug addiction ... is not a police problem; it never has been and never can be solved by policemen. It is first and last a medical problem." Vollmer's own experience was different from ours. He'd lived during a period when drugs which are now illegal were popular tonics and important medicines, freely available from drug and grocery store shelves. Cocaine was in Coca-Cola and some 40 other soft drinks as well. Morphine and heroin were two of the three most popular medicines, more widely used than today. When addiction occurred, it was dealt with as a medical problem. The addiction level had stabilized at about 1.5% of the population (the same as 1979 and 1997) - despite recurrent media alarms over "epidemic" drug use. The impact of non-alcohol addiction on society before Prohibition was so small that few historians bother to mention it. As Edward Brecher noted in 1972, addicts weren't treated as much of a problem because in fact they weren't much of a problem. However, no historian fails to note the devastation wrought by Prohibition, starting in 1920. Prohibition was our first Utopian quest for a "drug free" America, and the arch villain was alcohol. Then as now, alcoholics outnumbered heroin and cocaine addicts combined by more than 5 to 1. Voters were told that one drink led to certain addiction and that alcohol was responsible for nearly all of the crime and most of the insanity in America. Doctors even suggested to alcoholics that they become addicted to morphine or heroin to stop their crazed and violent behavior. After passage of the 18th Amendment, the reformers promised, "we will soon live in a world that knows no alcohol." America become swept up in Prohibition fervor - some people also wanted to prohibit the dreaded and ever dangerous 'Hesitation waltz'. Two 5 to 4 Supreme Court decisions in 1919 reinterpreted a 1914 tax act so that, in effect, heroin and cocaine were also prohibited. Prohibition allowed Vollmer and many others to see that the unintended consequences of a prohibition law were far worse than those of the prohibited substance. Repeal of the 18th Amendment followed when concerned mothers - initially led by Republican women - in 1928 realized that children had easier access to alcohol and were using it at a shocking rate even as adult users respect for the law had plummeted. The criminal justice system became swamped. Violent crime and corruption exploded. Petty thugs received a bonanza which spawned today's powerful criminal organizations. Prohibition on alcohol was repealed, but heroin and cocaine prohibition remained as a criminal enterprise which also provided employment for the bureaucracy set up to enforce Prohibition. Over time, and with a hiatus for the second World War, the son of Prohibition grew larger than the father. History has been allowed to repeat itself with a vengeance. This brief history suggests there are many lessons to be learned from careful analysis of the past. A commonly expressed fear is that change in drug policy will produce a "nation of zombies." History tells us that there is a real difference between drug use and addiction, and that a natural human abhorrence of addiction insulates most of us from that danger. There is also strong evidence that those who, for whatever reasons, are prone to addiction are not deterred by force any more than a potential suicide might be. It's clear that our current division of drugs into legal and illegal is arbitrary and no more contributes to solving drug problems than making all Fords illegal would solve traffic problems. (In that analogy, marijuana might be a tricycle.) Through the insight of observers like Vollmer along with the experience of Prohibition, and models ranging from heroin maintenance in Shreveport in the 1920s to modern experience in Switzerland and Holland, we have strong indications that much less damage might be done to a society willing to reach an accommodation with marijuana. And also to allow "hard" drug addicts to get their drugs from doctors instead of criminals. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake