Pubdate: Aug 30, 1999 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 1999 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Forum: http://www.chicagotribune.com/interact/boards/ Author: Salim Muwakkil THE PROBLEM WITH ANTI-DRUG FAIRY TALES Carl Sagan, the late astronomer and prolific author, once wrote a pseudonymous essay touting marijuana as a stimulus to his intellectual work. In fact, according to an article by his biographer in the Aug. 22 San Francisco Examiner magazine, Sagan was an avid pot smoker for most of his life. Not surprisingly, news of the influential astronomer's smoking choice had to hide under a pseudonym or wait until his death, lest he suffer America's puritanical wrath. It's the same wrath currently being ducked by George W. Bush, as he refuses to answer questions about his "rebellious" youth. It's a wrath--fed by ignorance, mythology and selective morality--that condemns drug use as irredeemably evil. But the Carl Sagan model of the drug user has been more my experience. To be specific, some of the most creative and productive people I've known also have used drugs. I say that not as an advertisement; for I've also encountered those drug abusers who have made their (and their families') lives miserable. But as one who has witnessed the social carnage of the imbecilic war on drugs, I find it increasingly difficult to tolerate the simple-minded propaganda employed for that war. Thus, Bush's current travail offers a rare opportunity to provide a more realistic portrayal of the typical drug user. While on one hand I support Bush's decision to end the inquisition into his wayward past, I still urge him to fess up if he has used drugs. Aside from the political benefits of candor, his admission would help transform the perception of drug users from stereotypes of depraved sociopaths to something closer to reality. But it's an uphill climb. In order to justify our punitive treatment of those who use illicit substances, our cultural media demonizes them and wildly exaggerates the dangers of the drugs. This "bogeyman strategy" not only insults the intelligence of adult Americans, it also does little to discourage substance abuse. The bogeyman strategy is the modus operandi of Drug Awareness Resistance Education, which is popular in suburban America. According to a recent University of Illinois study, however, DARE participants are more likely to use drugs in the future than students who haven't participated in the program. It's clear that youth are more likely to pay heed to our anti-drug lectures if our "facts" have some connection to reality. The reality is that people use drugs for many reasons. For most of humanity's history, drug use was connected to religious worship. It still is in many cultures: certain Buddhist and Hindu sects, Rastafarians and various Native American groups all use natural sacraments designed to alter consciousness. But even in secular cultures, drug use has been connected to a search for the Divine. The irresponsible use of LSD, mescaline and other "psychedelic" drugs popularized in the West during the 1960s was fueled by these substances' reputed ability to facilitate mystical states. For others, drugs provide different routes of escape; their potential for abuse is a function of our need for escape. The drive to alter consciousness is as ancient as humanity itself. Some anthropologists argue that psychoactive substances are so common to so many cultures, their use may have some evolutionary benefit. But to acknowledge this ancient relationship, to some, is tantamount to sanctioning drug use. Thus we are presented with kindergarten stories about the demonic evils of drugs and the despicable characters who purvey them. In such a cardboard world, drug users can't grow up to be presidents or influential astronomers. True enough, drug addiction is not an effective route to success (unless the drug is Prozac or caffeine) and getting caught with an illegal substance can cause ruinous criminal sanctions. But those consequences are more the result of social attitudes than the intrinsic effects of the drugs. We should have learned that substance abuse is not handled well through prohibition; the last time drive-by shootings were common was during the alcohol prohibition era of the 1920s. The European strategy of "harm reduction"--which decriminalized drug use and transforms the problem of drug abuse from one of criminal justice into one of public health--seems to be the most logical. But until folks like George "Dubya" comes clean, or someone with as high a profile as Carl Sagan can candidly express his affections for pot, we're stuck with anti-drug fairy tales and erroneous notions that competence and drug use are mutually exclusive. - --- MAP posted-by: manemez j lovitto