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- Should the United States End Drug Prohibition?
-
-
- The Federal Government, while trying to protect us from our human nature,
- developed harsh anti-drug policies with the hope of eradicating drugs. At
- the time, these policies seemed simple enough: we will impose penalties on
- those who use substances illegally, we will intercept drugs coming from
- other countries while ending all drug cultivation in the States, and we will
- even try to prevent foreign governments from growing these substances. The
- idea of the Drug Prohibition surely made sense: lower demand of drugs by law
- enforcement, and reduce supply through domestic and international means.
- Unfortunately, the Drug Prohibition led to heavy costs, both financially and
- otherwise, while being ineffective, if not, at times, counterproductive.
- Today, we can see the unforeseen costs of the "Drug Prohibition," and we
- should consider these costs before expanding the "War on Drugs."
- First, among the costs of the "War on Drugs," the most obvious is monetary
- cost. The direct cost of purchasing drugs for private use is $100 billion a
- year. The federal government spends at least $10 billion a year on drug
- enforcement programs and spends many billions more on drug-related crimes
- and punishment. The estimated cost to the United States for the "War on
- Drugs" is $200 billion a year or an outstanding $770 per person per year,
- and that figure does not include the money spent by state and local
- government in this "war" (Evans and Berent, eds. xvii).
- The second cost of this "war" is something economist like to call
- opportunity costs. Here, we have two resources which are limited: prison
- cells and law enforcement. When more drug crimes take up law enforcement's
- time and when more drug criminals take up cells, less ability to fight other
- crime exists. This becomes significant when an estimated 35-40 million
- Americans use drugs per year. In 1994, law enforcement arrested some
- 750,000 people on drug charges, and of those 750,000, 600,000 were charged
- merely with possession. Sixty percent of the prison population are drug
- offenders (Wink). The police, therefore, most work to find these 35 million
- "criminals," thereby exhausting their resources. Also, in major urban
- centers, the number of drug offences brought to trial are outstanding. For
- example, in Washington in 1994, 52% of all indictments were drug related as
- opposed to 13% in 1981 (Evans and Berent, eds. 21). All aspects of our
- legal system are being exhausted on drugs when it could be used more
- effectively on other felonies or focused on preventing children from buying
- drugs.
- Another two legal aspects of Drug Prohibition are interesting since they
- show how the "Prohibition" is not only ineffective, but also
- counterproductive. The first of which is the fact that the illegality of
- drugs leads to huge profits for drug dealers and traffickers. Ironically,
- the Drug Prohibition benefits most the drug traffickers and dealers as
- prices are pushed well above cost (Evans and Berent, eds. 22). The second
- aspect of the "Drug Prohibition" that undermines law enforcement is the need
- for drug users to commit personal property crimes. One-third of the people
- arrested for burglary and robbery said that they stole only to support their
- habit, and about 75% of personal property crimes were committed by drug
- abusers. Studies also suggest that these people, when placed on outpatient
- drug therapy or sold drugs at a lower price commit much less crime (Duke).
- Even the DEA admits that, "Drug use was common among inmates serving time
- for robbery, burglary, and drug offenses" ("Crime, Violence").
- Drug Prohibition has been very costly, detrimental to our relations with
- other countries, and harmful to users and society alike. All this while
- trying to battle an enemy who is not as dangerous as it is currently
- believed by most of the American public. The unpleasantries of the history
- of Drug Prohibition also show us how the public has been mislead through
- Prohibition. Many of these disagreeable acts were not circumstances of Drug
- Prohibition, rather goals of it, whether it was understood or not.
- The United States' image in Latin America has been precarious nearly from
- its birth. The image of the American intent on dominating the New World
- plays in the minds of our neighbors. Recently, though, the situation is
- interesting since the countries involved are growing less and less
- complacent to deal with the losses of sovereignty that they are incurring.
- Drug Prohibition not only plays out on the American stage, but is a focal
- point of US relations with the countries of Latin America. So, as each of
- these countries has to pay the costs of Yankee Imperialism, the tension
- between neighbors is increasing.
- The first of the tensions comes from Colombia. Unfortunately, our crusade
- against drugs has caused the famous cartels of South America and,
- especially, those of Colombia. Many wonder if we are justified in putting
- pressure on these countries just to slow the drug trade. The deaths of
- thousands of innocent Colombians were the result of our actions in these
- countries (Evans and Berent, eds. 58). The growth of the cartels,
- especially the Cali cartel, has led to political corruption in that country.
- "The President [Ernesto Samper] was said to have taken money from drug
- traffickers so that the government would stop other groups from exporting
- cocaine. He promised in his campaign a fight against drugs, but nobody can
- trust a President who took money from the cartels," said David Casas, a
- resident of Cali, Colombia. This unnecessary death and corruption in other
- countries due to United States' drug policy sometimes lead to hostility
- toward us (Casas). Because of the problems South American countries have
- faced because of Drug Prohibition, Colombia's Nobel Prize winning author
- Gabriel Garcφa Mßrquez has written a manifesto declaring the drug war as
- "useless" (15).
- Action abroad by the United States has also led to an increase in
- subversive organizations worldwide. Civil war is currently being threatened
- in Bolivia by a coca-growing union. The group, which feels that the
- Bolivian government has been too open to challenges in sovereignty, is
- fighting "Yankee Imperialism" and control by the DEA of a coca-growing
- region (Epstein 1). In Colombia and Peru, groups like the communist Fuerzas
- Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia)
- and Sendero Luminoso (Shining Path), both Communist groups, that survive on
- drug money lead such acts as kidnaping foreign visitors, leading bombings on
- American buisnesses in the country, and attempting to destroy institutions
- of governments friendly to the United States (Spiegel 480). This subversion
- of government can even reach our beauracracy as the CIA is rumored to have
- allowed the Nicaraguan Contras to sell drugs in the US to fund their
- revolution against the Sandinistas ("CIA" 20).
- Therefore, in South America, our persistence on Drug Prohibition has not
- only been unable to prevent the further imports of drugs, but also could
- lead to the installation of Communist regimes in the area. Since the other
- costs of Drug Prohibition has its base domestically, the conversation will
- turn to rights and liberties which help to explain why the drug war is not
- American and why it might not be effective. This requires a discussion on
- the role of government.
- The ultimate end of government is to protect our rights. We've entered a
- social contract with our governments: that we will give our obedience and
- taxes in return for protection of our rights. The United Nations classifies
- these rights in three "generations": civil, socioeconomic, and solidarity
- rights (Peterson). Shielding our people from the dangers of a threatening
- world, therefore, seems to be an appropriate use of the state's power under
- socioeconomic rights. The danger in thinking in this manner is that it
- overlooks the individual's contributions to the nation. These
- contributions, either positive or negative, are generally difficult to
- regulate by broad legislation. In fact, at times, legislation can be
- counterproductive, trying zealously to protect one right by violating many
- others.
- We saw in the former U.S.S.R. what can happen when government begins to
- enforce positive liberty. Positive liberty is different from what we
- usually think of as liberty, which is negative liberty. A negative liberty
- is one like the First Amendment which keeps the government from doing
- something, namely limiting your rights to speech and religion. A positive
- liberty is one which forces the government to provide some service to its
- citizens. An example of a positive liberty is the government's
- responsibility to protect our inalienable rights. The danger with expanding
- positive liberties is that it gives government a more active role in
- people's rights. For that reason most would believe that government should
- not give itself too many positive liberties as did the Soviet Union
- (Peterson). Drug Prohibition is an example of a positive liberty because it
- gives the government the go ahead to do what it must to give us a drug-free
- America. However, we should ask the question: is it worth keeping Drug
- Prohibition as a positive liberty when it infringes upon both our negative
- and positive liberties, not the least of which are life and liberty? U. S.
- District Judge William W. Schwarzer helped explain this when he said ending
- drug use is useless "if in the process we lose our soul" (Trebach and
- Inciardi 29). Today he might say "since" instead of "if" since the
- injustice and the cost on society of Prohibition is already well ingrained
- into our society.
- There could be two possible explanations for Drug Prohibition: we must
- protect people from harming themselves, or we want people to avoid drugs
- because extensive drug use harms society. Proponents of Drug Prohibition
- think one or both of these reasons is adequate for continuing Prohibition.
- The first is based on the people's right to life, and the second is based on
- the right for pursuit of happiness. However, there are fallacies in both
- statements, as will be shown.
- Before we can admit that our reasoning for Drug Prohibition is wrong, we
- must find a better alternative. The solution proposed in this essay is one
- of establishing free markets both internationally and domestically. The
- proponents of drug decriminalization have basic assumptions about what would
- result from a free market. For now, we will focus on what proponents of
- drug legalization think the implications of a free drug market would be for
- the individual users. These assumptions are that illegal drugs are not as
- dangerous as currently legal drugs and that the decriminalization of drugs
- will not greatly increase the number of drug addicts.
- First, most illegal drugs are not as dangerous as believed, and those that
- are truly dangerous will be avoided. This is essential to the argument for
- decriminalization since we do not wish to have a large number of people die
- from a policy. However, if we compare the number of people who die annually
- from "appropriate" drugs to that of the number of people who die annually
- from illicit drugs, we would be inconsistent to think of the illicit drugs
- as dangerous. For example, 60 million Americans have tried marijuana and not
- one of these 60 million have died of an overdose. If this is compared to
- the 10,000 people who die annually from overdosing on alcohol, one can
- assume that marijuana is much less dangerous than alcohol. Also, many drugs
- have minor side-effects when compared to acceptable drugs. One example,
- heroin, is highly addictive, but when used in a clean environment with clean
- needles, its worst side effect is constipation (Evans and Berent, eds. 24).
- Overall, while 35 million people use drugs each year in the United States,
- only 6,000 to 30,000 ever die of drug use; therefore, there is little reason
- to consider illicit drugs as a great danger to the individual, considering
- our opinions of alcohol and tobacco (Wink).
-
- Deaths Caused by Use of Alcohol, Illegal Drugs, and Tobacco
- Drug Number of Users (per year) Number of Deaths Caused by Drug (per
- year)deaths per 100,000 users
- Alcohol 106 million 150 thousand 142
- Nicotine 57 million 400 thousand 702
- Illicit Drugs 35 million1 18 thousand 51
-
- Data on number of users and number of deaths are from Walter Wink's
- Getting Off Drugs: The Legalization Option except 1 which comes from
- Evans and Berent, eds. Drug Legalization: For and Against p.21. Deaths per
- 100,000 users is derived from the number of deaths divided by number of
- users multiplied by 100,000.
-
- Another assumption of drug decriminalization is that there will not be a
- large increase in the number of people who abuse drugs. If many people were
- likely to become addicts, there would be good reason not to go through with
- drug decriminalization. While both decriminalizationists and
- prohibitionists agree that the legalization of drugs will lead to more
- people using drugs, decriminalizationists believe that there would not be a
- large increase in drug abuse. This belief stems from a study of the
- difference between the drug use and abuse between poor urbans and well-offs.
- The study states that the percentage of poor urbans using drugs is much
- higher than the percentage of well-offs who used drugs. To believe that
- increased use leads to increase abuse, the percentage of poor, urban addicts
- should be higher than the percentage of well-off addicts. The result,
- however, was contrary to this belief, since the percentages of addicts in
- both groups was almost equal. What this implies is that an increase in
- users does not translate to an increase in addicts (Evans and Berent, eds. 239).
- Thomas J. Gorman, Deputy Chief of the California Attorney General's Bureau
- of Narcotic Enforcement, in his report "The Myths of Drug Legalization" uses
- outlandish statistics from "experts" to scare the reader into believing that
- legalization "could lead to the downfall of the United States as we know
- it." He uses Dr. H. Kelbrs assertion that legalization could lead to a
- fivefold increase in drug use (æMyths'). Comparing this type of increase
- in drug use and the idea that 35 million people now use drugs, the
- conclusion would be that 165 million people would be drug users in the
- United States. Considering the United States has only 200 million people
- over age 12, believing that such a high number of people would use drugs is
- hard. Gorman's report also includes Dr. Dupont's projection that if drugs
- were legal 50 million people (1/4 the over 12 population) would use
- marijuana regularly and that 60 million (nearly 1/3 the over twelve
- population) would use cocaine regularly (æMyths'). These statistics are
- scary, but they are just not possible and are not founded in the truth.
- They are not possible because they would imply that one out of every three
- people over age 12 walking down the street would become "regular cocaine
- users." They are not founded in the truth because they use a statistic that
- states, without explanation, that 70-75% of illicit drug users become
- addicted (æMyths'). Only three percent of the users of cocaine, considered
- one of the most addictive illicit drugs, that currently has 12.2 million
- users annually, use cocaine once a week, and only 3.7% of users said that
- they tried to quit, but couldn't. If we were to assume that all 200 million
- Americans over 12 in the United States would use cocaine if it were legal,
- then approximately 7.4 million people could not quit if they wanted to
- (Berent and Evans, eds. 24).
- Many Prohibitionists point to experiments on rats which imply that many
- rats, when allowed access to cocaine, would prefer to use the cocaine over
- eating. The problem with the experiment, however, was that the rats were
- left isolated in cages. A similar experiment in which they placed rats in
- more social environments found that rats consumed 16 times less cocaine than
- the solitary rats. Also, the rats wouldn't use the cocaine at all until the
- scientists made it very sweet with sugar, a taste rats cannot resist
- (Trebach and Inciardi 37-38). Also, Prohibitionists argue that before drugs
- were criminalized that 4.59 per 1,000 US citizens were addicts. This
- implies two things: that when addiction was worst in the United States 99.6
- percent of the people were not addicted to a drug, and that if we would
- expect a return to these rates of addictions if drug Prohibition were
- repealed, then about one million people would be addicted, a clear
- contradiction to the claim that 70-75% of drug users become addicted
- (Trebach and Inciardi 49).
- Prohibition does not prevent a large number of people from harming
- themselves, but while not helping users, the health of these individuals is
- put in jeopardy. First, the illegalities of drugs make the drugs themselves
- more unsafe. For example, marijuana is laced with unsafe fertilizers.
- Also, when cocaine and heroin users receive an unexpected potent dose, they
- may kill themselves when the same amount of a regulated dose would have
- given the desired effect (Evans and Berent, eds. 22). This is what happened
- to the Mia Wallace character in Pulp Fiction when she snorted cocaine that
- was so potent that it nearly killed her (Pulp Fiction). Another outcome of
- prohibition on the individual could also be considered a concern of society
- since the spread of AIDS affects both groups. The transfer of AIDS through
- needles needed most commonly during the use of heroin has become the most
- common manner in which the disease currently spreads. The treatment and
- prevention of the people who get AIDS from heroin use cannot be effective so
- long as users are being persecuted by law enforcement (Trebach and Inciardi
- 35-36).
- The implications of these two beliefs of proponents of decriminalization
- are imperative to defense of the individual. "Defense of the individual"
- means the protection of users and abusers from themselves. If drugs are not
- as dangerous as currently legal drugs, addiction does not significantly
- increase and the health of the users suffers, then proponents of Drug
- Prohibition have no grounds on which to say that legalization would lead to
- millions of deaths and addictions inflicted on drug users by themselves.
- The United States needs to reconsider its view of drugs as leading to the
- unavoidable downfall of the individual and instead as the choice of people
- with social problems to avoid them.
- In contrast with the defense of the individual, how Drug Prohibition does
- not protect society, but instead harms it will complete the chain of
- fallacies that plague proponents' arguments. To protect society, it should
- be that its citizens should somehow be better off. This is not true as the
- most expensive cost of the "Drug Prohibition" is the personal cost carried
- by the citizens. In the cities, these costs are manifested in murders over
- "turf" or "business," fear of walking the streets, robberies, and mothers
- leaving children to pursue their expensive addictions (Wink). Proponents of
- "Drug Prohibition" must ask themselves this question: "Would you be willing
- to sacrifice your son (daughter, best friend) to keep drug users from
- hurting themselves?" The reason I would have them to think of this is that
- their children are not the ones dying on the street from a
- drive-by-shooting. A famous economist Milton Friedman once said of the Drug
- Prohibition, "While both groups of victims are to be pitied, the innocent
- victims surely have a far better claim to our sympathy than the self-chosen
- victims" (Evans and Berent, eds. 58). By examining the world around them
- opponents of Drug Prohibition believe legalization will lead to less crime
- and violent behavior, less racism, and the end of the infringement of
- certain rights.
- It is clear that Prohibition has a hand in each of these societal problems.
- We would greatly reduce crime, for example, which repeatedly appears high on
- surveys on the biggest problem America faces, if legalization were to
- happen. Much of the concern about drugs and crime is that the use of drugs
- somehow causes crime. These studies are usually faulted by the attempt to
- label a cause on correlative data. While it is true that people who commit
- crimes often use drugs as well, it cannot be said that the use of drugs
- causes the crime. To use a less controversial example, I could notice that
- every time my roommate puts on a certain shirt, his girlfriend comes over.
- It would be silly to say that she comes over because he puts on the shirt.
- In fact, we might say the opposite: that he puts on the shirt because his
- girlfriend comes over. Saying either without having other knowledge would
- be incorrect. Similarly, saying that drug use causes crime on this kind of
- correlative data is not appropriate (Miller 61). Instead, many experts
- claim that much of what is labeled "drug-related" crime is instead due to
- criminality.
- This criminality of drugs is a causal factor in crime because of the high
- costs to consumers and high profits for suppliers. The market prices for
- marijuana, cocaine, and heroin are about 100 times what the price would be
- in a free market. This means crime results from consumers trying to fund
- their artificially-expensive habit and suppliers trying to protect their
- extremely high profits. Drug users committed about 75% of robberies,
- thefts, and burglaries. These æcriminals' do not commit as many crimes when
- drugs are available to them at lower prices. On the other hand, one in four
- murders and assaults involve suppliers protecting turf, settling disputes,
- or stealing drugs (Duke). PCP, one of the most feared drugs, does not
- incite aggressiveness or violent behavior, as previously believed (Miller
- 57). Dr. Lawrence Kolb, assistant surgeon general of the United States in
- the 1920s said after a study of 225 addicted prisoners, "No opiate ever
- directly influenced addicts to commit crime." He continued:
- No addict who receives an adequate supply of opium and has money enough to
- live is converted into a liar or thief by the direct result of the drug
- itself. The direct effect is to remove the irritability and unrest so
- characteristic of psychopathic individuals. The soothing effect of opiates
- in such cases is so striking and universally characteristic that one is to
- believe that violent crime would be much less prevalent if all habitual
- criminals were addicts who could obtain sufficient morphine or heroin to
- keep themselves fully charged with one of these drugs at all times. (Trebach
- and Inciardi 57)
-
- Violent crime by drug users is rare. A low percentage (7.5%) of homicides
- involving drugs were classified in a way that implied that the drugs had
- driven the user to murder. The other 92.5% of violent crime by drug users
- could be expected to disappear once drugs were legalized and the cases
- involved in the 7.5% would be expected to become more common as drug use
- increased (Trebach and Inciardi 120). Nevertheless, for there to be an
- equivalent number of drug-related homicides, the number of people driven by
- drugs to commit murder would have to increase by tenfold. One example is
- New York City, where about of six of 414 studied murders were caused by drug
- use (see attached graph) (Miller 58).
- Two social problems people tie together are crime and racism. Therefore,
- Drug Prohibition must play a role in racism since it plays a key role in
- crime. Researchers can show that the more efficient the "War on Drugs"
- gets, the more racism that incurs. Black males 15- 24 had a homicide rate
- nine times higher than white males in the same group. This high rate of
- black-on-black crime has two unfortunate results: first, the black victims,
- of course, and second, the fear of blacks by many whites. A racist person
- would point to this large discrepancy between black and white homicide rates
- as some sort of an inferiority (Trebach and Inciardi 34). The sad reality
- is that Prohibition has created much of this discrepancy. The analogy
- between selling drugs and stealing diamonds shows why this difference might
- exist. If the death penalty were applied to people who stole diamonds, it
- would discourage people from stealing diamonds since the value of the
- diamonds did not increase. However, if the death penalty were applied to
- drug dealers, there would still be an incentive to sell drugs since the
- ability to receive profit from dealing drugs would increase. The difference
- would then be that the people who had very little to lose have even more
- incentive to deal drugs. These people who have little to lose are
- disproportionally blacks or Hispanics. These forces drive many people into
- the most despised positions of society (Trebach and Inciardi 35).
- Also, the drug laws in the past have been and continue to be tools of
- racism. In 1930, before the government had implemented many of the tools of
- Drug Prohibition, a Colorado newspaper editor wrote, "I wish I could show
- you what a small marihuana cigaret [sic] can do to one of our degenerate
- Spanish-speaking residents." However, more of the resentment of Mexicans
- seemed to be because Mexican labor was willing to work for lower wages
- thereby producing fear in Anglos over their pocketbooks. The only tool they
- could use to keep Mexican labor out of the market was the drug laws (Miller
- 98-99). During the 1950s, many places had laws against addiction. Due to
- the nature of addiction, police could and did use this as an excuse to
- harass African-Americans and Hispanics (Miller 101). This similarly
- happened to the Chinese and opium, a drug previously used by many Anglos
- (Miller 104). One could see how this could transfer into today as many
- minorities complain about selective prosecution, which is understandable
- considering the racial undertones of the original Drug Prohibition.
- Since the inner cities receive a far greater share of the crime and racism
- involved with Drug Prohibition, it is much more difficult for a rural
- citizen to understand what these regulations do to the cities, but one
- aspect of the Drug Prohibition that does harm to all of us by violating
- our civil liberties. A government which calls 35 million of its citizens
- criminals for actions which are within the scope of civil liberties is,
- thereby, violating civil liberties. Government is supposed to allow us to
- do what we wish if we do not interfere with others (Evans and Berent, eds.
- 58). With drugs, many proponents of drug decriminalization claim that few
- users when allowed to use drugs in a free market would harm anyone. The
- government has also gone beyond this violation of civil liberties into the
- violating the democratic process by silencing discussion of the issue. For
- example, no commission has ever been held on the issue. Since the
- government does not investigate the issue, this suggests that the government
- wishes to remain unaware of the issue (Evans and Berent, eds. 202). Also,
- many pieces of legislation such as H.R. 135 are very undemocratic. The bill
- asks that "no department or agency of the United States Government shall
- conduct or finance, in whole or in part, any study or research involving the
- legalization of drugs" (H.R. 135). This kind of legislation banning
- research of the issue is, at least, scary. If the fact that enforcement
- breeds poor international relations, undue cost on public health, crime, and
- racism is bad, the fact that the government is infringing our rights every
- day because of Drug Prohibition is atrocious and threatens our freedom.
- Drug users are not the only ones crying out for their rights in this war.
- Even Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall called many polices "the drug
- exception to the Constitution." For example, one drug policy is that
- customs officials can detain people for no less than 24 hours and not
- release them until they agree to deficate in the examiners presence, they
- allow the feces to be examinated, and no traces of drug appear. These
- searches can be done without reason to believe guilt even without any
- evidence at all (Trebach and Inciardi 26).
- Enforcing Drug Prohibition requires invasions into the home since drug use
- is generally something done in the home (Trebach and Inciardi 26). In
- another case in Illinois, a couple was going on vacation to Florida. An
- informant told the police department that they were going to Florida to buy
- drugs. The problem was that this was not the usual informant that the
- police picks up from time to time. This informant was totally anonymous,
- even unknown to the detectives. The conviction was upheld though most the
- evidence sprouted from the anonymous, invisible informant we associated with
- the Soviet Union (Trebach and Inciardi 28-29). Finally, the act of
- forfeiture is extremely heinous. If, for example, two kids were smoking
- marijuana on your property, the police could take all your property. Even
- if no charges are brought up against you, you must go to court and prove
- your complete innocence (not just reasonable doubt) to reclaim your property
- from the government. In fact, half of all people who forfeit their property
- never get charged (Trebach and Inciardi 32).
- How Drug Prohibition has not been beneficial to society now having been
- demonstrated completes the long string of problems that have stemmed from
- Drug Prohibition in the realms of international relations and public health
- show where the costs appeared without any consideration having been given to
- benefits. In contrast, when the benefits were considered, as was the case
- on the issues concerning the drug user and society, the benefits did not pan
- out or were not as important in the first place as the costs that have
- resulted have been.
- Clearly, Drug Prohibition harms international relations. However, one may
- not be so willing to accept that it has the profound effects on public
- health and societal problems. If we look back upon Alcohol Prohibition,
- alcohol was considered as the worst evil, as we think of drugs now. In both
- cases, the fear about the denegration of society was not well founded. The
- health of the users suffered as they would drink stronger and stronger
- alcohol as to keep the volume transported. Also, the unregulated
- contraband was more dangerous than it would have been. Alcohol Prohibition
- also created crime as Drug Prohibition does as we can see in the appearance
- of the mafias like Al Capone which turned Chicago into a city troubled with
- crime. The same cries for protection of rights were being heard as the FBI
- was seen as invading our rights.
- Our history demonstrates the evils of prohibition. One should wonder why
- we would be willing to fight the righteous fight again when it is neither
- righteous nor possible. Also, public opinion is peculiar given some facts.
- First, Alcohol Prohibition was dissolved by popular opinion because of
- crime, yet people continue to support Drug Prohibition although it creates
- similar crime. Second, that we continue to support politicans who support
- Prohibition eventhough not one has given a creative solution, or at least,
- one we have not tried before. Finally, it is strange that people cannot see
- through the problems associated with drugs and not see they are due to
- Prohibition and not use itself. If the drugs were sold at what would be the
- market price, the people who steal and rob would not have any reason to
- steal, or at least would have to steal less often to support their now
- cheaper habit. The people who have become the "evil welfare mothers" who
- waste all their government money on drugs instead of caring for their
- children could not squander all their precious money on drugs because they
- would be so cheap their would be no reason to. All of these terrible
- problems I've discussed, if not created by Prohibition, were greatly
- intensified by Prohibition. The end of drug laws would mark a never before
- seen improvement in the lives of every citizen. It is unfortunate that our
- politicans, and even ourselves are too stuborn to even consider it.
-
-
- WORKS CITED
-
- Casas Arcila, David. Student at Fairmont Senior High School. Personal
- Interview at his home, Fairmont, WV. 21 Sep. 1996.
-
- "CIA, Contras, and Crack." The Christian Science Monitor. 1 Oct.
- 1996:20.
-
- "Crime, Violence, and Drug Use Go Hand-in-Hand." Online. World Wide Web.
- http://www.usdoj.gov/dea/pubs/legaliz/claim1.html. 27 Aug. 1996.
-
- Duke, Steven B. "How Legalization Would Cut Crime." Los Angeles Times. (21
- Dec. 1993). Online. World Wide Web.http://calyx.com/~schaffer/misc/
- media2.html. 27 Aug. 1996.
-
- Epstein, Jack. "Coca Czar Protests US War on Drugs." The Christian
- Science Monitor. 26 Sept. 1996: 1
-
- Evans, Rod L., and Berent, Irwin M., eds. Drug Legalization: For and
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