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we.lost.the.war
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1996-05-06
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Date: Sat, 10 Jun 1995 02:01:44 -0400
Message-Id: <Pine.3.89.9506100125.A9202-0100000@mojo>
From: Richard Evans <devans@calyx.com>
To: Multiple recipients of list <drctalk@drcnet.org>
Subject: David Nyhan's Op-Ed (long)
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Sat, 10 Jun 1995 00:52:59 -0400
From: Richard Evans <devans@mojo>
To: drtalk@drcnet.org OOPS
Subject: David Nyhan's Op-Ed
Thanks to Adam Smith for pointing out the Nyhan piece in today's
Boston Globe.
It deserves to be read in its entirety, so here it is. Typos are mine.
The Globe's address is:
Letters to the Editor
The Boston Globe
Boston, Massachusetts 02107-2378
letter@globe.com
-- Dick Evans
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
We Lost the war -- legalize drugs
by David Nyhan
The Boston Globe June 9, 1995
The indictments in Miami of three former federal prosecutors for
smoothing the legal path of Cali cartel drug lords is the most
persuasive evidence yet that America is going to have to legalize, or at
least decriminqalize, drugs in order to control the damage mood-altering
chemicals do to our society.
The drug war, as waged by every American president within living
memory, is over. We lost. So many Americans sniff, inject, swallow,
inhale and imbibe narcotics, and so many foreigners wax rich supplying
them, that our government cannot cope. It is too risky a step for any
but the most courageous or foolhardy elected official to say so, but the
drug war is lost, lost to human nature.
There is so much money to be made in narcotics trafficking, so
many ways to corrupt the legal system, police, judiciary, the military,
the Coast Guard, customs officials, the probation system, that no device
of government can stem the tide.
Face facts. The corruption that we've seen creeping north from
Colombia, from Mexico, from the island nations that transship the dope in
huge container-ship lots, is here. It's not *coming.* It's here. The odd
federal judge, the odd rogue cop, the gone-bad DEA agent, the obscure air
traffic controller, the easily blackmailed prosecutor gone wrong--we've
read about them all for years.
Now it's a former senior Justice Department official, once this
country's chief operator in extraditing bosses of Colombia's drug
conglomerate, charged himself with abeting the criminal conspiracy that is
the ruination of America's underclass.
Two other former officials of our Justice Department were among
the 62 people indicted in the biggest legal move in American history
against an octopus whose head is in Colombia but whose tentacles span the
planet.
The case, if proved, will demonstrate that the temptation of huge
sums of cash overwhelms even the people we trusted to perform the most
important tasks of our drug war. Human nature succumbs, as ever, to the
tantalizing prospect of near-limitless riches. There is simply too much
money in drugs to allow the drug trade to flourish outside the formal
economy.
Yes, it will kill some of our fellow citizens if we legalize or
decriminalize. Yes, some of our young, maybe even slightly more of our
young, for a period of time, will misread our signal and overdose, or
worse. But the money in the illegal system overwhelms any attempt [to]
stem the drug tide. We tried. We lost. We have to go in another direction.
In the 80's, we tried "Just Say No," and spent billions on planes
and radar balloons to spy on drug planes. The government seemed to think
it could stop the deadly trade.
It was a colossal and expensive failure.
Where can you not buy cocaine in America? Where can marijuana
not grow by the roadside, in plastic attic pots, under cellar grow lights?
What chemistry major cannot manufacture hallucinogens by junior year in
college? What US port can lock itself tight against shiploads of
contraband that give a chancer a year's wage for a night's work?
How many thousands of out-of-work boatmen have turned to
offloading drugs from mother ships, risking jail on right runs to obscure
moorings and piers, tossing the bales into rental trucks or under fish
baskets, moving the junk Americans crave?
How can you stop it? You can't. Just as Colombia can't stop it.
And the Mexicans can't stop it. Now the USA can't stop it. Drugs that
made street crime in America what it is today. Drugs drive the B&Es, the
car thefts, the purse snatches, the subway necklace-snappers. Drugs are
a career for thousands of inner-city teen-agers. Drugs bring guns,
violence, the terrorizing of lower-end neighborhoods.
Legalize drugs. Or decriminalize drugs. Regulate the flow, like
alcohol. Let the potential addicts pay legally what they now pay
illegally. Tax the junk. Parcel it out, in carefully measured doses,
like alcohol. Let the junkies fry their brains in public instead of in
private. Bring back shame.
Use the tax revenue and profits off sales for more treatment,
conselling, housing, child care. Take the money out of the underground
economy and put it into the above-ground economy.
Do it now. Because we are heading for total corruption. There
are drug judges and drug cops and drug military men. There will soon,
inevitably, be drug congressmen, if there aren't now, drug senators, and
maybe one day a president elected either wholly or in part with drug
money. It happened in Latin America; it can happen here. Drug money is
unstoppable.
When the prosecutors have to be prosecuted, it's time to give
up. The drug war is over. We lost.
###