The Drug Czars Testimony
On "The Drug Legalization Movement In America" Has Three Parts:
Lie About The Anti-Prohibitionist Movement; Lie About Marijuana; Lie About The
Netherlands.
With A Little Lying About Me.
See
Committee
Investigating Anti-Prohibitionist Movement
Rescinds Invitation For NORML To "Testify." But NORML Still Tells Congress:
"Legalize Marijuana! There Is Nothing Wrong With Responsible Marijuana Use By
Adults."
and
Testimony
Of NORML Director David Boaz At The Hearings on Drug Policy Reform Movement
and
Czar Joined By
NIDA Head Leshner In Lying About Marijuana At Hearings;
An Appetizer Before The Buffet(Marijuananews note:
This is even worse than I had expected.
The greatest sin against the public discourse is to misrepresent the views of ones
opponents. If they are wrong, then refute what they are actually saying.
That is one reason that I like to present the views of the prohibitionists in their own
words, and why most prohibitionist web sites never provide links to anti-prohibitionists.
Below is the full text of the Czars testimony. It is rather long, but it is worth
reading in its entirety so that you can fully appreciate the degree to which DEAland
"drug" policies are based on outright lies.
As always, there is the bait and switch between "drugs," substance abuse,
including alcohol, and marijuana. As always the real topic is marijuana.
The rest is an attempt to identify the marijuana reform movement with
"legalization of drugs" and to confuse the costs of alcohol and other drugs, and
prohibition in general with marijuana use.
When we are candid in our support of the legalization of marijuana, or in describing
the role of medical marijuana or hemp in the movement, he says that we are being
duplicitous in our support of "legalizing drugs."
Once again, the Czar is using data on the Netherlands that he must know to be untrue. He
has elevated lying about the Dutch from a subtheme of DEAland policies to a major focus.
Also, he has quoted me twice. In one instance, he takes my words out of context in such
a way as to completely twist their meaning. I am frankly a little bit flattered, but I am
also grateful in that this has given me knowledge certain of the level of duplicity
involved in this exercise.
I have provided minimal commentary but a variety of links to specific items. This site is
really a commentary on this testimony. As always, I have confined my remarks to marijuana
prohibition.
I have said many times that marijuana prohibition is an enormous tragedy and the
greatest fraud ever perpetrated on the American people, but we can see here that it is
definitely no accident.
There has been minimal media coverage of this hearing, and it will be as much as two
months before the transcripts are available on the rest of the "testimony."
That is unfortunate. The lights should be shining very
brightly on this hearing.)
TESTIMONY OF BARRY R. McCAFFREY DIRECTOR, OFFICE OF NATIONAL DRUG CONTROL POLICY BEFORE
THE HOUSE GOVERNMENT REFORM AND OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE, SUBCOMMITTEE ON CRIMINAL JUSTICE,
DRUG POLICY, AND HUMAN RESOURCES
THE DRUG LEGALIZATION MOVEMENT IN AMERICA
June 16, 1999
Chairman Mica, Congresswoman Mink, thank you for the opportunity to testify before you
today on the drug legalization movement in the United States. Before discussing this
issue, on behalf of the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) allow me to thank
the leadership and members of this Subcommittee for the strong bipartisan support you have
provided to our National Drug Control Strategy. With your help we are making substantial
progress in reducing the threat of illegal drugs to our nation.
INTRODUCTION
Given the negative impact of drugs on American society, the overwhelming majority of
Americans reject illegal drug use. Indeed millions of Americans who once tried drugs now
turn their backs on themthey no longer "do drugs," and most importantly,
dont want their children doing them. While most Americans
steadfastly reject drugs, small elements of the social spectrum argue that
prohibitionand not drugscreates the problems we face. These people offer
solutions in various guises, ranging from outright legalization to so-called "harm
reduction." In fact, all drug policies seek to reduce the harms of drug use. No
rational approach would seek to increase harms to families, children and our nation. The
real question is: what policies actually do the most to decrease the harms drugs cause?
Part I of this testimony provides an overview of what proponents
of legalization really want to achieve through their efforts, namely: legalization of not
only marijuana, but other more dangerous drugs such as heroin and cocaine. Part II
of this testimony cuts through the haze of this misinformation to expose the fallacies and realities of what legalization would mean to this
nation, namely: significantly higher rates of drug abuse, particularly among young people,
and exponentially increased human and social costs to our society. Part III of this
testimony sets out the balanced approach to fighting drugs provided in our National Drug
Control Strategy. This part summarizes how we intend to reach our goal of cutting drug use
and its consequences in America by half over the next ten years.
I. WHAT PROPONENTS OF LEGALIZATION REALLY WANT: EASY ACCESS TO
ALL DRUGS OF ABUSE
Our nations democratic system of government is founded upon free and open debate.
Our nation holds no beliefs or icons above challenge and examination. We all must be
willing to lay the facts and our analysis on the table of public scrutiny, and make the
case for what we believe.
However, in the marketplace of ideas, just as in other
marketplaces, there are people willing to use deceptive claims, half truths and flawed
logic to hawk ill-considered beliefs. Nowhere is this problem more clear than with respect
to the drug legalization movement.
Proponents of legalization know that the policy choices they advocate are unacceptable
to the American public. Because of this, many advocates of this approach have resorted to
concealing their real intentions and seeking to sell the American public legalization by
normalizing drugs through a process designed to erode societal disapproval.
For example, ONDCP has expressed reservations about the legalization of hemp as an
agricultural product because of the potential for increasing marijuana growth and use.
While legitimate hardworking farmers may want to grow the crop to support their
families, many of the other proponents of hemp legalization have not
been as honest about their goals. A leading hemp activist, is quoted in the San Francisco
Examiner and on the Media Awareness Projects homepage (a group advocating drug
policy reforms) as saying he "cant support a movement or law that would lift
restrictions from industrial hemp and keep them for marijuana."[1] If legalizing hemp
is solely about developing a new crop and not about eroding marijuana restrictions, why
does this individual only support hemp deregulation if it is linked to the legalization of
marijuana?
(Marijuananews note: Actually, it would seem that this advocate, Jack Herer, is
being quite honest about his goals, but so what? In any case, the views of one person do
not define an issue. There are many other advocates of hemp who go to great lengths to
dissociate themselves from marijuana.)
See
Chairman of the North
American Industrial Hemp Council
Replies To Attack On Its Former CIA Director By Drug Watch/Minnesota
In Letter To Washington Post. And The Post Leads With An Insult.
Similarly, when Ethan Nadelmann Director of the Lindesmith Center (a drug research
institute), speaks to the mainstream media, he talks mainly about issues of compassion,
like medical marijuana and the need to help patients dying of cancer. However, Mr.
Nadelmanns own words in other fora reveal his underlying agenda: legalizing drugs.
Here is what he advocates: "Personally, when I talk about legalization, I mean three
things: the first is to make drugs such as marijuana, cocaine, and heroin legal ..."
[2]
"I propose a mail order distribution system based on a right of access ..."
[3]
"Any good non-prohibitionist drug policy has to contain three central ingredients.
First, possession of small amounts of any drug for personal use has to be legal. Second,
there have to be legal means by which adults can obtain drugs of certified quality, purity
and quantity. These can vary from state to state and town to town, with the Food and Drug
Administration playing a supervisory role in controlling quality, providing information
and assuring truth in advertising. And third, citizens have to be empowered in their
decisions about drugs. Doctors have a role in all this, but lets not give them all
the power."[4]
"We can begin by testing low potency cocaine productscoca-based chewing gum
or lozenges, for example, or products like Marianis wine and the Coca-Cola of the
late 19th centurywhich by all accounts were as safe as beer and probably
not much worse than coffee. If some people want to distill those products into something
more potent, let them."[5]
"But if there is a lot of PCP use in Washington, then the government comes in and
regulates the sale."[6]
Mr. Nadelmanns view that drugs, including heroin and other highly addictive and
dangerous drugs, should be legalized are widely shared by this core group of like-minded
individuals. For example, Mr. Arnold Trebach states:
"Under the legalization plan I propose here, addicts ... would be able to purchase
the heroin and needles they need at reasonable prices from a non-medical drugstore."
[7]
International financier George Soros, who funds the Lindesmith
Center, has advocated: "If it were up to me, I would establish a strictly controlled
distributor network through which I would make most drugs, excluding the most dangerous
ones like crack, legally available." [8] William F. Buckley, Jr. has also called for
the "legalization of the sale of most drugs, except to minors." [9]
Similarly, when the legalization community explains their theory of harm
reductionthe belief that illegal drug use cannot be controlled and, instead, that
government should focus on reducing drug-related harms, such as overdosesthe
underlying goal of legalization is still present. For example, in a 1998 article in
Foreign Affairs, Mr. Nadelmann expressed that the following were legitimate "harm
reduction" policies: allowing doctors to prescribe heroin for addicts; employing drug
analysis units at large dance parties, known as raves, to test the quality of drugs; and
"decriminalizing" possession and retail sale of cannabis and, in some cases,
possession of "hard drugs." [10]
Legalization, whether it goes by the name harm reduction or some
other trumped up moniker, is still legalization. For those who at heart believe in
legalization, harm reduction [11] is too often a linguistic ploy to confuse the public,
cover their intentions and thereby quell legitimate public inquiry and debate. Changing
the name of the plan doesnt constitute a new solution or alter the nature of the
problem.
(Marijuananews note: It is my belief that any realistic program of harm reduction must
begin with the separation of the marijuana market from hard drugs, the essence of the
Dutch model, but there are many steps toward "harm reduction" that stop well
short of "legalization" of anything. The Czar is simply trying to make
"harm reduction" synonymous with "legalization" of all drugs, which it
is not. It is certainly not synonymous with marijuana legalization.)
In many instances, these groups not only advocate public policies that promote drug
use, they also provide people with information designed to encourage, aid and abet drug
use. For example, from the Media Awareness Project (a not-for-profit organization whose
self-declared mission is to encourage a re-evaluation of our drug policies) website a
child can "link" to a site that states: Overthrow the
Government* Grow your own stone* Its easy* Its fun* Everybodys doing it*
Growing marijuana: a fun hobby the whole family can enjoy* [12]
The linked website goes on to provide the reader with all the information needed to
grow marijuana, including a company located in Vancouver, Canada that will ship seeds or
plants.
The Media Awareness Project website also includes links to instructions about how drug
users can defeat drug tests. [13] Similarly, the websites of both the Drug Policy
Foundation, a self-proclaimed drug policy reform group, and the Media Awareness Project,
both provide links to a site that gives instructions for how to manufacture the drug
"ecstasy." [14]
(Marijuananews note: The Mapinc site also has links to most of the
leading prohibitionist sites.)
Careful examination of the wordsspeeches, webpostings, and
writings and actions of many who advocate policies to "reduce the harm"
associated with illegal drugs reveals a more radical intent. In reality, their drug policy
reform proposals are far too often a thin veneer for drug legalization. [15]
(Marijuananews note: Oddly, this note about a quote from an
overly optimistic NORMLizer column I wrote for High Times, shortly after I became
National Director. I spelled out my objectives, which naturally involved the legalization
of marijuana, but made no mention of any other drugs. NORML takes no position on any drugs
other than marijuana. So this quote does not prove anything about "a thin veneer for
drug legalization." Perhaps the Czar should have made a more "careful
examination of the wordsspeeches, webpostings, and writings" of
anti-prohibitionists.)
What do drug "legalizers" truly seek? They want drugs made legaleven
though this would dramatically increase drug use rates. They want drugs made widely
available, in chewing gums and sodas, over the Internet and at the corner storeeven
though this would be tantamount to putting drugs in the hands of children. They want our
society to no longer frown on drug use even though each year drug use contributes to
50,000 deaths [16] and costs our society $110 billion in social costs. [17]
(Marijuananews note: This 50,000 deaths figure, which is
attributed to an unpublished 1999 study, is far higher than most studies, which
place deaths from illicit drugs at less than 20,000. Of course, none can be directly
linked to marijuana.)
See
Aspirin And
Related Drugs Are 15th Leading Cause Of Death In DEAland
-- Context For Medical Marijuana Debate
And, they want the government to play the role of facilitator, handing out drugs like
heroin and LSD.
Let me emphasize, there is nothing wrong with advocating for
change in public policy. From civil rights to universal suffrage, much of what
makes our nation great has been the result of courageous reform efforts. Our nation
benefits from the airing of dissent. However, we all have a
responsibility to be honest in debate about our motives. We all have an obligation to be
open with the American people about the risks inherent in what we advocate. To date,
advocates of legalization have not been so forthcoming.
II. THE FALLACIES AND REALITIES OF DRUG LEGALIZATION FALLACY: There is a large movement
to legalize drugs in America.
REALITY: THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS A DRUG LEGALIZATION
"MOVEMENT" IN AMERICA.
(Marijuananews note: Okay, can we all go home now? Actually,
the movement he describes does not exist.
This is a very odd section. The Czar lists all sorts of civic organizations that oppose
"youth drug use" but most are primarily involved in other activities. Then he
lumps all anti-prohibitionist groups together.)
One recent account placed the number of groups advocating drug policy reform at roughly
four-hundred nation-wide, including local chapters of national organizations.[18] By
contrast, there are roughly 1,300 local chapters of the American Red Cross; 3,400 units of
the American Cancer Society; 9,000 Veterans of Foreign Wars posts; 2,351 local YMCA
chapters; 121,948 local Boy Scouts Units; and, 4,300 Community Anti-Drug Coalitions.
(Marijuananews note: This is a national government funded national
prohibitionist propaganda organization that lobbies for prohibitionism locally.)
The "Prevention Through Service Alliance" alone, established by ONDCP, brings
together forty-seven national civic, service, fraternal, veterans,
and womens organizations, representing one hundred million people and nearly one
million local chapters, in a coordinated effort to reduce youth drug use. These
organizations are at the forefront of real movementsto safeguard lives and health,
to honor those who served our nation, to end the plague of cancer, to mentor young people,
and to protect our youth from drugs. By this standard there is no movement in America to
legalize drugs.
There is, however, a carefully-camouflaged, well-funded,
tightly-knit core of people whose goal is to legalize drug use in the United States. It is
critical to understand that whatever they say to gain respectability in social circles, or
to gain credibility in the media and academia, their common goal is to legalize drugs.
FALLACY: Americans increasingly support drug legalization.
REALITY: RIGHTFULLY, THE AMERICAN PUBLIC OPPOSES DRUG LEGALIZATION.
The American people understand the risks that drug legalization would entail and
overwhelmingly reject this ill-considered approach. Youth access to and use of alcohol and
cigarettes is bad enoughAmerican parents clearly dont want children able to
use a fake ID at the corner store to buy heroin. We have enough problems with drinking and
drivingfamilies dont want to live in fear that the driver of the eighteen
wheeler motoring alongside their minivan is high on marijuana, methamphetamines or LSD. Thousands of our loved ones already die from drug-related
causesreasonable people dont want drugs to be accessible over the Internet.
Study after study confirms the concerns of Americans about drugs, and their desire to
guard against the risks of these deadly substances. A 1998 poll of
voters conducted by the Family Research Council found that eight of ten respondents
rejected the legalization of drugs like cocaine and heroin, with seven out of ten in
strong opposition. Moreover, when asked if they supported making these drugs legal in the
same way that alcohol is, 82 percent said they opposed legalization.
See
Family Research
Council Issues A (Misleading) Correction, But No Apology.
and
Prohibitionism After
the IOM Report; Analysis by Richard Cowan
Repeat After Me: No Medicine Is Smoked! No Medicine Is Smoked! No Medicine Is Smoked!
Thats It. You Are Now Qualified To Start Your Very Own Government Funded Anti-Drug
Group!
Similarly, a 1999 Gallup poll found that 69 percent of Americans oppose the legalization
of marijuana.[19]
See
Gallup Poll Shows 73% Favor
Medical Marijuana;
29% Favor Outright "Legalization"!
So What Are The Politicians Really Afraid Of?
A recent study by the Chicago Council on Foreign Affairs found that the American public
consider drug abuse the third biggest problem facing our country today.[20]
See
"Americans Say
Drug War Should Continue" -- You Can Fool Most Of The Pollsters Most Of The Time
Not only do Americans reject legalization, they also support policies to rid their
communities, schools, and workplaces of drugs. For example, a 1995 Gallup poll found that
72 percent of Americans want drug testing in the workplace.[21] Sixty-seven percent
supported random drug testing by employers.[22] This same survey found that 73 percent of
all American employees support their employers drug-free workplace policies and programs.
Another 23 percent of American employees want their employers to go even further and adopt
tougher programs. Similarly, a soon-to-be released Gallup poll finds that 85 percent of
Americans support greater funding for drug interdiction.[23]
(Marijuananews note: The Czar is very selective in his use of
surveys. He also ignores the results of the actual medical marijuana initiatives,
especially in D.C.)
See
Democracy In Limbo: The Court Still
Hasnt Ruled On The D.C. Medical Marijuana Vote
and
"States Push
Medical Marijuana Challenge," The UPI Reports.
One of the best measures of the publics rejection of drugs is the number of
Americansfifty-millionwho have used drugs during their younger years, but now
reject them. Even among individuals who themselves tried drugs, 73 percent believe that
parents should forbid children from ever using any drug at any time.[24]
(Marijuananews note: Millions of Americans have stopped smoking
tobacco and drinking alcohol. Does that mean that they favor outlawing those drugs? No, of
course not. Also, wanting children to avoid "drugs" does not mean that one
necessarily favors arresting adults for using them.)
The American publics opinion about illegal drugs is clear:
they want no part of them. Americans dont want their children, friends or family
members doing drugs. They dont want drugs in their workplace. They dont
want to live in fear that their pilot or bus driver is on drugs. And, they support
efforts, ranging from education to treatment to law enforcement, to combat drug use.
(Marijuananews note: This is a collectivist formulation that reminds
me of the late Chairman Mao. In fact, even by the Czars own numbers, there is
anything but a consensus on prohibition, especially as it relates to marijuana.
Moreover, millions of Americans use illegal drugs, and millions of others oppose
various aspects of prohibition. They are at least as American as anyone else.)
FALLACY: Drug legalization will not increase drug use.
REALITY: DRUG LEGALIZATION WOULD SIGNIFICANTLY INCREASE THE HUMAN AND ECONOMIC COSTS
ASSOCIATED WITH DRUGS.
Proponents argue that legalization is a cure-all for our nations drug problem.
However, the facts show that legalization is not a panacea but a poison. In reality,
legalization would dramatically expand Americas drug dependence, significantly
increase the social costs of drug abuse, and put countless more innocent lives at risk.
A. "The Dutch Model"
Those who support legalization often hold up the Netherlands as an example that
legalization can work. While the Dutch have adopted a "softer" approach to some
drugs, they have not legalized them. Under the Dutch system possession and small sales of
marijuana have been decriminalized.
However, marijuana production and larger scale sales remain criminal. Drugs such as
cocaine and heroin remain illegal. Most importantly, while the Dutch have not legalized
drugs, the softening of Dutch criminal laws against marijuana has led to a normalization
of drug use more broadly. The accompanying change in public attitudes has, arguably,
played as critical a role in Dutch drug use patterns as has the shift in the actual law.
If the Dutch experience with drugs is an appropriate model at all, it is because it
illustrates the harms that result from increased tolerance of illegal drugs. This
conclusion was brought home to all of us from the Office of National Drug Control Policy
who traveled to the Netherlands in July of 1998 to gain a better understanding of the
Dutch approach.[25]
When the so-called Dutch "coffee shops," started selling marijuana in small
quantities, use of the drug more than doubled between 1984 and 1996 among 18 to 25 year
olds.26 According to an article, "Hollands Half-Baked Drug Experiment",
which appears in the current (May/June 1999) edition of Foreign Affairs: "In 1997,
there was a 25 percent increase in the number of registered cannabis addicts receiving
treatment, as compared to a mere 3 percent rise in cases of alcohol abuse." [27]
(Marijuananews note: Here we know that he knows that he is lying. He has consistly
misrepresented both the nature and the results of Dutch drugs policy.
See
Foreign
Affairs Pushes The Party Line At the Highest Levels:
Anti-Dutch Prohibitionist Propaganda for the Elites.
April's Reefer Madness Award Winner
and links
The Drug Czars office has been informed about the errors in the Collins article, but
they continue to cite it. In any case, it is more than a little odd that someone who
should have the best primary sources should quote someone who is misquoting someone else.)
See
An Official Statement
On The Netherlands Drug
Policy; Published In The Most Improbable Place
Moreover, Dutch tolerance of drug use has created a climate that drug manufacturers and
traffickers have seized upon to produce and market more addictive and dangerous drugs. For
example, Peter Reijnders, Assistant Chief Constable and Chief of the Dutch National Unit
on Synthetic Drugs, recently told the 25th European Meeting of Heads of
National Drug Services, that:
"...[T]he Netherlands is a major country as far as it concerns involvement in the
production of illicit synthetic drugs." [28]
Dutch drug manufacturers are also producing a new form of
marijuana, Nederwiet, with THC contents as high as 35 percentas much as ten times
the THC of the cannabis available just a few years ago.
(Marijuananews note: The Czars office has to know that this 35% number is
nonsense. They are either incompetent or pathological liars, or both.)
See
The
Prohibitionists In Stockholm Reveal The Shocking Truth
About The Potency Of Dutch Marijuana
Cannabis seeds can even be ordered over the Internet from an Amsterdam-based
dealer.[29] The well-respected journal Foreign Affairs describes the situation as follows:
"... [T]he annual Nederwiet harvest is a staggering 100 tons a year, almost all
grown illegally. And it does not stay in the Netherlands. Perhaps as much as 65 tons of
pot is exportedequally illegallyto Hollands neighbors. Holland now
rivals Morocco as the principal source of European marijuana. By the Dutch Ministry of
Justices own estimates, the Nederwiet industry now employs 20,000 people. The
overall commercial value of the industry, including not only the growth and sale of the
plant itself but the export of high-potency Nederwiet seeds to the rest of Europe and the
United States, is 20 billion Dutch guilders, or about $10 billionvirtually all of it
illegal and almost none of it subject to any form of Dutch taxation. The illegal export of
cannabis today brings in far more money than that other traditional Dutch crop,
tulips."[30]
The impact of high potency marijuana on Dutch youth has been severe. In Foreign Affairs, Dr. Ernest Bunning of the Ministry of Health, is
quoted as saying: "There are young people who abuse soft drugs ... particularly those
that have high THC. The place that cannabis takes in their lives becomes so
dominant they dont have space for other important things in life. They crawl out of
bed in the morning, grab a joint, dont work, smoke another joint. They dont
know what to do with their lives. I dont want to call it a drug problem because if I
do, then we have to get into a discussion that cannabis is dangerous, that sometimes you
cant use it without doing damage to your health or your psyche. The moment we say,
There are people who have problems with soft drugs, our critics will jump on
us, so it makes it a little bit difficult for us to be objective on this matter.[31]
(Marijuananews note: Actually, his name is Duning, and the name of
the ministry is wrong, too. He has said he was misquoted, completely out of context, and
he favors current Dutch policies.)
During this period of tolerance, the Netherlands has also experienced a serious problem
with other substances of abuse, in particular heroin and synthetic drugs, which remain
illegal. According to a 1998 report from the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug
Addiction, the number of heroin addicts in Holland has almost tripled since the
liberalization of drug policies.[32] Similarly, the 1998 European Monitoring Centre for
Drugs and Drug Addictions overview report states that drug-related
arrests in the Netherlands were up over 40 percent in the last three years, with the main
offense being trafficking in so called hard drugs.[33]
(Marijuananews note: All that this proves is that the Dutch
also have prohibition, just as the Czar acknowledges.)
Increasingly this problem is spilling over to other nations.[34] The Netherlands is
more and more seen as Europes synthetic drug production center by law enforcement
agencies. It is reported that British Customs has determined that virtually all the
synthetic drugs seized in the United Kingdom last year were manufactured in the
Netherlands or Belgium.[35] Similar reports suggest that 98 percent of the amphetamines
seized in France in 1997 came from Holland, as did 73.6 percent of the ecstasy tablets.36
Synthetic drugs manufactured in the Netherlands are also now increasingly turning up in
the United States.[37]
(Marijuananews note: All of this is from the same Foreign Affairs
article. Did the CFR think that they were discretely whoring or did they realize how much
they would be used?)
These impacts are not lost upon the Dutch people who increasingly support a more
balanced approach to fighting drug use. A 1995 poll by
Telepanel, a polling organization associated with the University of Amsterdam found that
nearly three-quarters of the Dutch people want tougher measures against those who deal in
and use drugs.[38] Despite the normalization of marijuana in the Netherlands over half the
Dutch people believe "soft drugs" should be criminalized.[39] By way of
comparison, these numbers are far higher than the support for alternative drug policies in
the United States.[40]
(Marijuananews note: First, marijuana is technically illegal in
Holland so I am not sure what that means. Second, a more recent poll showed that a
majority of the Dutch have now accepted that marijuana use is "normal." Third,
the Dutch police are overwhelmingly in favor of either the current marijuana policies or
outright legalization. The source on these numbers cited below is the Swedish
prohibitionist propaganda organization Hassela, which is obsessively anti-Dutch.)
Proponents of legalization argue that the Dutch experience provides a model for a
"softer approach" to fighting drug use. Upon close examination the pitfalls of
the Dutch experience offer more than ample evidence to dissuade the United States from
adopting the drug policies of the Netherlands.[41] Instead the Dutch example clearly
argues in favor of continuing the balanced U.S. approach, which is producing results.
See
Austrian And Swiss
Papers Look Favorably On Cannabis Reform and Dutch Policies
B. The American Experience
American experiences with drug legalization portend similar risks to those experienced
in Holland. During the 1970s, our nation engaged in a serious debate over the shape of our
drug control policies. (For example, within the context of this debate, between 1973 and
1979, eleven states "decriminalized" marijuana). During this timeframe, the
number of Americans supporting marijuana legalization hit a modern-day high.[42] While it
is difficult to show causal links, it is clear that during this same period, from 1972 to
1979, marijuana use rose from 14 percent to 31 percent among adolescents, 48 percent to 68
percent among young adults, and 7 percent to 20 percent among adults over twenty-six. [43]
This period marked one of the largest drug use escalations in American history.
A similar dynamic played out nationally in the late 1800s and early 1900s.
Until the 1890s, todays controlled substancessuch as marijuana, opium, and
cocainewere almost completely unregulated.[44] It was not until the last decades of
the 1800s that several states passed narcotics control laws.[45] Federal regulation of
narcotics did not come into play until the Harrison Act of 1914.
Prior to the enactment of these laws, narcotics were legal and widely available across
the United States. In fact, narcotics use and its impacts were commonplace in American
society. Cocaine was found not only in early Coca-Cola (until 1903) but also in wine,
cigarettes, liqueur-like alcohols, hypodermic needles, ointments, and sprays. Cocaine was
falsely marketed as a cure for hay fever, sinusitis and even opium and alcohol abuse.
Opium abuse was also widespread. One year before Bayer introduced aspirin to the market,
the company also began marketing heroin as a "nonaddictive," no prescription
necessary, over-the-counter cure-all.
During this period, drug use and addiction increased sharply. While there are no
comprehensive studies of drug abuse for this period that are on par with our current
National Household Survey on Drug Abuse and Monitoring the Future studies, we can, for
example, extrapolate increases in opium use from opium imports, which were tracked.[46]
Yale Universitys Dr. David Musto, one of the leading experts on the patterns of drug
use in the United States, writes: "The numbers of those overusing opiates must have
increased during the nineteenth century as the per capita importation of crude opium
increased from less than 12 grains annually in the 1840s to more than 52 grains in the
1890s."[47] Only in the 1890s when societal concerns over and disapproval of drug use
began to become widespread and triggered legal responses did these rates level off.[48]
Until this change in attitudes began to denormalize drug use, the United States
experienced over a 400 percent increase in opium use alone. This jump is even more
staggering if one considers that during this period other serious drugs, such as cocaine,
were also widely available in every-day products.
Moreover, while we do not believe that the period of prohibition
on alcohol is directly analogous to current efforts against drugs,[49] our experiences
with alcohol prohibition also raise parallel concerns. While prohibition was not without
its flaws, during this period alcohol usage fell to between 30 to 50 percent of its
pre-prohibition levels.[50] From 1916 to 1919 (just prior to prohibition went into effect
in 1920), U.S. alcohol consumption averaged 1.96 gallons per person per year.[51] During
prohibition, alcohol use fell to a low of .90 gallons per person per year.[52] In
the decade that followed prohibitions repeal, alcohol use increased to a per capita
annual average of 1.54 gallons and has since steadily risen to 2.43 gallons in 1989. 53
Prohibition also substantially reduced the rates of alcohol-related illnesses.[54]
The United States has tried drug legalization and rejected it
several times now because of the suffering it brings. The philosopher Santayana was right
in his admonition that "those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat
it." Let us not now be so foolish as to once again consider this well worn, dead-end
path.
(Marijuananews note: DEAland has not "tried drug
legalization and rejected it several times now because of the suffering it brings.
Frankly, I find this statement bizarre, even for the Bizarro.)
C. The Impact on Youth
Most importantly the legalization of drugs in the United States would lead to a
disproportionate increase in drug use among young people. In 1975, the Alaskan Supreme
Court invalidated certain sections of the states criminal code pertaining to the
possession of marijuana. Based on this finding, from 1975 to 1991, possession of up to
four ounces of the drug by an adult who was lawfully in the state of Alaska became
legal.[55] Even though marijuana remained illegal for children, marijuana use rates among
Alaskan youth increased significantly.[56]
(Marijuananews note: The author of the study cited here specifically
said that there were too many variables to attribute the increase to the change in the
laws.)
In response, concerned Alaskans, in particular the National Federation of Parents for
Drug-Free Youth, sponsored an anti-drug referendum that was approved by the voters in
1990, once again rendering marijuana illegal.
(Marijuananews note: The vote was 55% to 45%.)
In addition to the impact of expanded availability, legalization would have a
devastating effect on how our children see drug use. Youth drug use is driven by
attitudes. When young people perceive drugs as risky and socially unacceptable youth drug
use drops. Conversely, when children perceive less risk and greater acceptability in using
drugs, their use increases. If nothing else, legalization would send
a strong message that taking drugs is a safe and socially accepted behavior that is to be
tolerated among our peers, loved ones and children. Such a normalization would play a
major role in softening youth attitudes and, ultimately, increasing drug use.
See
They Are Legal, So They Must Be Safe:
"Teens Abusing Drugstore Medicines"
Should We Have Drug-Free Drugstores?
Context For Medical Marijuana and "Drug Education" Debates
The significant increases in youth drug use that would accompany legalization are
particularly troubling because their effects would be felt over the course of a generation
or longer. Without help, addictions last a lifetime. Every additional young person we
allow to become addicted to drugs will impose tremendous human and fiscal burdens on our
society. Legalization would be a usurious debt upon our societys futurethe
costs of such an approach would mount exponentially with each new addict, and over each
new day.
D. The Impact of Drug Prices
If drugs were legalized, we can also expect that the attendant drop in drug prices to
cause drug use rates to grow as drugs become increasingly affordable to buy.[57] Currently
a gram of cocaine sells for between $150 and $200 on U.S. streets.[58] The cost of cocaine
production is as low as $3 per gram.[59] In order to justify legalization, the market cost
for legalized cocaine would have to be set so low as to make the black market, or bootleg
cocaine, economically unappealing.[60] Assume, for argument sake, that the market price
was set at $10 per gram, a three hundred percent plus markup over cost, each of the fifty
hits of cocaine in that gram could retail for as little as ten cents.
With the cost of "getting high" so as low as a dime (ten cents) -- about the
cost of a cigarettethe price of admission to drug use would be no obstacle to anyone
even considering it.[61] However, each of these "dime" users risks a life-long
drug dependence problem that will cost them, their families, and our society tens of
thousands of dollars.
In addition to the impact on youth, we would also expect to see falling drug prices
drive increasing drug use among the less affluent. Among these individuals the price of
drug useeven at todays levelsremains a barrier to entry into use and
addiction. The impact of growing use within these populations could be severe. Many of
these communities are already suffering the harms of drug usechildren who see no
other future turning to drugs as an escape, drug dealers driving what remains of
legitimate business out of their communities, and families being shattered by a loved one
hooked on drugs. Increased drug use would set back years of individual, local, state and
federal efforts to sweep these areas clean of drugs and build new opportunities.
FALLACY: Drug legalization would reduce the harm of drug use on our society.
REALITY: DRUG LEGALIZATION WOULD COST BILLIONS OF DOLLARS AND RISK MILLIONS OF
ADDITIONAL INNOCENT LIVES.
By increasing the rates of drug abuse, legalization would exact a tremendous cost on
our society. If drugs were legalized, the United States would see significant increases in
the number of drug users, the number of drug addicts, and the number of people dying from
drug- related causes.
While many of these costs would fall first and foremost on the user, countless other
people would also suffer if drugs were legalized. Contrary to what libertarians and
legalizers would have us believe, drug use is not a victimless crime.
A. Increases in Child Abuse and Neglect
Innocent children suffer the most from drug abuse. In No Safe Havens, experts from
Columbia Universitys Center for Addiction and Substance Abuse found that substance abuse (including drugs and alcohol) exacerbates seven of
every ten child abuse or neglect cases.[62] In the last ten years, driven by substance
abuse, the number of abused and neglected children has more than doubled, up from 1.4
million in 1986 to three million in 1997.[63] In 1994, the American Journal of Public
Health reported that children whose parents abuse drugs or alcohol are four times more
likely to be neglected and/or abused than children with parents who were not drug
abusing.[64]
If drugs were made legal, among the growing ranks of the addicted will be scores of
people with children. Given the clear linkage between rates of addiction and child abuse
and neglect, more drug use will cause tens of thousands of additional children to suffer
from abuse and neglect as parents turn away from their children to chase their habit.
B. Increases in Drugged Driving Accidents Over the last ten years, Americans have grown
increasingly aware of the death toll related to drinking and driving. While we focus less
on the risks of drugged-driving, the fact is that if the driver on the road next to you is
drugged, you and whoever is riding with you are at risk. A National
Transportation Safety Board study of 182 fatal truck accidents revealed that 12.5 percent
of the drivers had used marijuana, in comparison to 12.5 percent who used alcohol, 8.5
percent who used cocaine and 7.9 percent who used stimulants.[65] Illegal drugs
(marijuana, cocaine, and stimulants combined) were present in more accidents than
alcoholeven though alcohol is legal and far more available. "A study of 440
drivers, ages 15 to 34 years old, who were killed in California during a two-year period
detected alcohol and marijuana in one-third of victims. More than one-half consumed a drug
or drugs other than alcohol."[66]
(Marijuananews note: This is a 1990 study of accidents that took
place in 1988 and 1989. Fatigue was the number one cause of the accidents, with excessive
hours of service being the biggest problem. Very few of the accidents involved marijuana
alone. Most involved other drugs, including alcohol and benzodiazapines.
See
The Lancet Reports
That Thousands Are Killed In Accidents Caused By Tranquilizers
Also, the tests were often of the sort that detect metabolites,
not marijuana itself and hence mean nothing for current impairment. In short, this study
really does not tell us anything about the effect that ending marijuana prohibition would
have on driving.)
See
Australian Study Of 2,500
Injured Drivers Showed Those Who Used Marijuana
Less Likely To Have Caused Accident Than Even Drug-Free Drivers
But How Do The Swedish Prohibitionists Report It?
and
1994 Dutch Study On
"Marijuana Use And Driving" In Real World Conditions
and
Canadian Study
Confirms That Marijuana Impairs Driving Far Less Than Alcohol
Historically, we believe that impaired drivers drive more recklessly. A 1995 roadside
study conducted in Memphis, Tennessee of reckless drivers not believed to be impaired by
alcohol, found that 45 percent tested positive for marijuana.[67]
Most disturbingly, drugged driving often appears among the most
inexperienced drivers, namely young people. The 1996 National Household Survey on Drug
Abuse found that 13 percent of young people aged sixteen to twenty drove a car less than
two hours after drug use at least once during the past year.[68] These young drivers are
generally unaware of the dangers they present to themselves and others. Among 16 to 20
year olds who drove after marijuana use, 57 percent said they did so because they were not
"high enough to cause a crash."[69]
(Marijuananews note: Okay. Actually, what this demonstrates
is that confounding variables make it difficult to determine whether marijuana use has any
impact at all on driving safety.)
When a person using drugs takes the wheel, his drug use is likely to have human costs.
Not only is the drugged driver at risk, but all those around him are as well. On January
29, 1999, a car with five young girlshigh school juniors in a middle class suburb of
Philadelphiacrashed into a tree, killing the driver and the other occupants.[70] The
medical examiners report concluded that the driver lost control of the car not because of
speed or inexperience but because she was impaired from
"huffing" inhaling a chemical solventto get high. Three of
the passengers were also found to have used the drug. Five
more young people, all with bright futures, are dead because of drug use behind the wheel.
(Marijuananews note: This is perhaps the most bizarre example. A
chemical solvent is a "drug" yes, but it is perfectly legal, and
therefore it must be harmless by the Czars logic.)
See
Lungren
Delayed Release of Survey of California "Student Drug And Alcohol Use"
Showing Increase In Inhalants During His Tenure, But No Increase In Marijuana Use After
Prop 215
Deceiving the People To The End
If drugs were legalized the rate of drugged driving would increase.
(Marijuananews note: Alcohol is legal, but the rate of drunk
driving has been declining.)
Added to the countless tragedies caused by drinking and driving would be scores of deaths
and injuries from people taking legalized drugs and driving while impaired.
According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), there were
16,189 alcohol-related traffic fatalities in 1997 (38.6 percent of the total traffic
fatalities for the year).[71] NHTSA also reports that in 1997, more than 327,000 people
were injured in auto crashes where police reported that alcohol was present.[72] These
tragic statistics make abundantly clear the risks we would face if other drugs, such as
heroin, marijuana and LSD, were made legal and widely available.
(Marijuananews note: They appear to be very widely available
already.)
C. Increases in Workplace Accidents, Decreasing Productivity
Just as drug impairment behind the wheel puts others at risk, so too does impairment on
the job. Since over 60 percent of drug users in the United States
are employed,[73] it is not surprising that workplace drug use is a significant problem
According to a 1995 Gallup survey, 35 percent of American employees report having
seen drug use on-the-job by co-workers.[74] One-in-ten report having been offered drugs
while at work.[75] Drug use in the workplace diminishes productivity and increases
costs.[76] Drug using employees are more likely to have taken an unexcused absence in the
last month, and are more likely to change or leave a job.[77] The National Institute on
Drug Abuse and the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism estimated that the
cost to our nations productivity from illegal drug use was $69.4 billion in
1992.[78] Increasing rates of drug use burden our economy as a whole. They also place
businesses, in particular small businesses, at risk. In the end, it is the American
consumer who ultimately pays these costs. When drugs are mixed with the heavy machinery of
industry, the results can be devastating. In 1987, a Conrail freight
train operated by an engineer who had been smoking marijuana struck an Amtrak passenger
train, killing sixteen people and injuring more than one- hundred.[79] Last July, a
passenger train and a truck carrying steel coils collided.[80] The driver of the truck,
who was cited by police for more than a dozen violations relating to the crash, tested
positive for marijuana immediately following the accident. The collision dislodged one of
the twenty-ton coils, causing it to roll through the trains first passenger
compartment, killing three and injuring others.[81]
(Marijuananews note: I think that this is what the Czar would call anecdotal evidence.
Even taking these statements at face value, all that is proved is that marijuana
prohibition has not prevented these accidents. Certainly these anecdotes do not prove that
marijuana is a major cause of accidents.)
Highly publicized disasters like these capture the publics attention. However,
the harms of drug abuse build incrementally on job sites all across the nation, every day.
Utah Power & Light employees who tested positive on pre-employment drug tests were
five times more likely to be involved in a workplace accident than those who tested
negative.[82] The 1995 Gallup survey similarly found that 42 percent of American employees
believe that drug use greatly affects workplace safety.[83] Even these numbers are likely
to underestimate the harms caused by drugs on-the-job; for a variety of reasons
drug-related on-the-job injuries are likely under-reported.
One way to factor the risks presented by on-the-job drug use is to extrapolate from the
rate at which drug-free workplace programs can reduce job-related accidents. For example,
the Boeing corporations drug-free workplace program has saved over $2 million in
employee medical claims.[84] At Southern Pacific railroad, the injury rate dropped 71
percent with the development of a drug-free workplace assistance program.[85] One of the
major auto manufacturers has reported 82 percent decline in job-related accidents since
implementing an employee substance abuse assistance program. Similarly, an Ohio study
found that substance abuse treatment programs significantly reduced on-the-job
injuries.[86] If job- related drug assistance programs can prevent such high rates of
accidents, it follows that drugs cause large numbers of injuries among Americas
employees.
(Marijuananews note: If alcohol is included in that number, then the
conclusion follows.)
See
Survey
Of Costs Of Alcohol and "Drug" Abuse Shows
Most of Latter Is From Prohibition;Where Is Marijuana?
If drugs were made legal, useincluding on-the-job drug usewill increase.
Growing numbers of drug users operating heavy equipment, driving tractor-trailers, and
operating buses, would inevitably lead to greater numbers of workplace injuries. While the
impaired drug user is most at risk from their own actions, countless innocent
peopleco-workers and ordinary citizenswould also face added dangers.
Additionally, apart from the human costs, significantly increased numbers of on-the-job
drug-related accidents would cost the American economy countless millionsranging
from rising insurance costs, to personal injury settlements, to losses through decreased
productivity.
FALLACY: Drugs are harmful because they are illegal.
REALITY: DRUGS ARE HARMFUL NOT BECAUSE THEY ARE ILLEGAL; THEY ARE ILLEGAL BECAUSE THEY
ARE HARMFUL.
(Marijuananews note: This is a great slogan, but no one is claiming
that all of the dangers of "drugs" derive from their illegality. However,
prohibition makes "drugs" more dangerous than they would be if they were legal.
The severity of this problem varies from one drug to another, but this is a cost of
prohibition that the prohibitionists refuse to recognize. Great slogan, though.
Moreover, if drugs are illegal because they are harmful, then why
are alcohol and tobacco legal? Why are the penalties not related to proven harm?)
Critics argue that the harm to our society from drugs, such as the costs of crime,
could be reduced if drugs were legalized. The logic is flawed. By increasing the
availability of drugs, legalization would dramatically increase the harm to innocent
people. With more drugs and drug use in our society, there would be more drug-related
child abuse, more drugged driving fatalities, and more drug-related workplace accidents.
None of these harms are caused by law or law enforcement but by illegal drugs.
Even with respect to the crime-related impact of drugs, drug-related crimes are driven
far more by addiction than by the illegality of drugs. Law enforcement doesnt cause
people to steal to support their habits; they steal because they need money to fuel an
addictiona drug habit that often precludes them from earning an honest living. Even
if drugs were legal, people would still steal and prostitute themselves to pay for
addictive drugs and support their addicted lifestyles. Dealers dont deal to children
because the law makes it illegal; dealers deal to kids to build their market by hooking
them on a life-long habit at an early age, when drugs can be marketed as cool and
appealing to young people who have not matured enough to consider the real risks. Make no
mistake: legalizing drugs wont stop pushers from selling heroin and other drugs to
kids. Legalization will, however, increase drug availability and normalize drug-taking
behavior, which will increase the rates of youth drug abuse.
For example, although the Dutch have adopted a more tolerant approach to illegal drugs,
crime is in many cases increasing rapidly in Holland. The most recent international police
data (1995) shows that Dutch per capita rates for breaking and entering, a crime closely
associated with drug abuse, are three times the rate of those in Switzerland and the
United States, four times the French rate, and 50 percent greater than the German
rate.[87]
(Marijuananews note: Mostly what this shows is the difficulty of
comparing crime statistics from one country to another. For one thing, the Dutch are
apparently much more likely to report burglaries. And crime data from DEAland is very
unreliable.)
See
Crime Rates In
England Reported Higher Than US,
So Government Wants To Ban Marijuana Seeds To Give Police Something To Do 2
Articles
and
The
DEAland Crime Rate May Be Three Times Higher Than Is Reported
"A 1997 report on hard-drug use in the Netherlands by the government-financed
Trimbos Institute acknowledged that drug use is considered the primary motivation
behind crimes against property -- 23 years after the Dutch [drug] policy was
supposed to put a brake on that."[88]
(Marijuananews note: Here is continuing to quote the Foreign Affairs
article. Dutch drugs policy was not simply supposed to "brake" addiction related
crime, so it is being measured by an unrealistic standard. In any case very little, if any
of this, has anything to do with cannabis, although there is an effort to make it seem
to.)
Moreover, Foreign Affairs recently noted that in areas of Holland where youth cannabis
smokers are most prevalent, such as Amsterdam, Utrecht and Rotterdam, the rates of
juvenile crime have "witnessed skyrocketing growth" over the last three to four
years.[89] Statistics from the Dutch Central Bureau of Statistics indicate that between
1978 and 1992, there was a gradual, steady increase in violence of more than 160
percent.[90]
(Marijuananews note: This is really disgusting. This statement is
based on a survey that showed that marijuana use in Holland is even lower than in DEAland,
but is concentrated in a few cities. Theses cities have most of the juvenile crime. There
is no other connection between the use of marijuana and the violent crime.)
See
Drug Czar Uses Foreign
Affairs Magazine Article For Anti-Dutch Propaganda,
Elevating The Lying To Official Status. Analysis By Richard Cowan
and links
In contrast, crime rates in the United States are rapidly dropping. For example, the
rate of drug-related murders in the United States has hit a ten-year low.[91] In 1989,
there were 1,402 drug-related murders. By 1997 that number fell to 786. In 1995, there
were 581,000 robberies in the United States. By 1997, that number fell to roughly
498,000.[92]
See
2 Items From Sweden:
25% Increase In Violent Crimes In Holland; French Cannabis Report Blamed On
"Drug Liberal."
and
Drug Bizarro
Acknowledges Error On Dutch Murder Rate, But Wont Apologize, Instead Blames Interpol
Americas criminal justice system is not the root cause of drug-related crime. It
is the producers, traffickers, pushers, gangs and enforcers who are to blame, as are all
the people who use drugs and never think about the web of criminality and suffering their
drug money supports.
FALLACY: We are fighting a war on drugs.
See
The 50th
Anniversary of The Publishing Of Orwells 1984
Analysis By Richard Cowan
REALITY: OUR BALANCED EFFORTS AGAINST DRUGS ARE ANALOGOUS TO THE FIGHT AGAINST CANCER.
Wars have defined end statesvictory over an enemy. Our efforts against drugs have
no such neatly defined end; with each generation the struggle to prevent drug use begins
anew. Addicted Americansparents, siblings, and childrenare not the enemy, they
require treatment. Wars are waged with weapons and soldiers; prevention and treatment are
our primary tools against drugs. Consequently, our efforts tho reduce drug use are
analogous to the fight against cancer.
Nevertheless, an effective counter-drug strategy must focus on both supply and demand
reduction. Supply-side efforts (law enforcement and interdiction) are necessary because,
as basic economic rules dictate, unabated supply will ultimately create its own demand.
However, those of us who have experienced combat know that such supply-side efforts are a
far cry from "war." In fact, the use of civilian authorities to protect against
drugs is no more war-like than the same role these same police officers play in combating
robberies, car thefts, or domestic violence. It is sheer folly to suggest that when a
police officer patrols a neighborhood to stop these other crimes he is doing a community
service, however when he finds drugs, his efforts somehow become part of a conjured up
"drug war."
FALLACY: Our current approach to drugs is not making a difference.
REALITY: WE ARE MAKING STRONG, STEADY PROGRESS IN REDUCING DRUG USE AND PREVENTING
YOUNG PEOPLE FROM TURNING TO DRUGS.
Rather than trade rhetoric, we should focus on results:
- Over the last twenty years we have cut drug use (past month) in the United States by
half and reduced cocaine use by 75 percent (past month).[93]
- The number of drug-related murders has now hit a ten-year low. In 1989, there were 1402
drug-related murders; by 1997 that number had fallen to 786. [95]
(Marijuananews note: The crack epidemic has subsided and the market
has stabilized. This is hardly a success.)
- Spending on illegal drugs has dropped 37 percent from 1988 to 1995, an annual savings of
$34.1 billion.[96]
Such results against any other societal ill would be called a huge success. Let me
thank the Committee and the Congress as a whole for your bipartisan support of our
counter-drug programs. Without your strong support results like these would not have been
possible.
III. THE SOLUTION TO AMERICAS DRUG PROBLEM IS THE BALANCED APPROACH
EMBODIED IN OUR NATIONAL DRUG CONTROL STRATEGY
There is no simple solution to Americas drug problem. In order to effectively
address this problem we must attack both the supply and demand for drugs. Pursuing one of
these goals at the expense of the other will only unbalance our efforts and reduce the
likelihood of success.[97]
The National Drug Control Strategy establishes a multi-year framework to reduce illegal
drug use and availability by 50 percent within ten years. If this target is achieved, less
than 3 percent of the household population aged twelve and over would use illegal
drugsthe lowest recorded drug-use rate in modern American history. Drug-related
health, economic, social, and criminal costs would be reduced commensurately. To achieve
this target, the Strategy focuses on prevention, treatment, research, law enforcement,
protection of our borders, and international cooperation.
The National Drug Control Strategy is guided by five goals that cover the three broad
aspects of drug controldemand reduction, supply reduction, and the adverse
consequences of drug abuse and trafficking. Reducing the demand for illegal drugs is the
centerpiece of our Strategy, but supply reduction and consequence management are also
critical components of a well-balanced strategic approach to drug control. The five goals
reflect the need for prevention and education to protect all Americans (especially
children) from the perils of drugs, treatment to help the chemically dependent, law
enforcement to bring traffickers and other drug offenders to justice, interdiction to
reduce the flow of drugs into our nation, and international cooperation to confront drug
cultivation, production, trafficking, and use.
1. Goals of the 1999 Strategy
Goal 1: Educate and enable Americas youth to reject illegal drugs as well as
alcohol and tobacco.
See
LA Times Editorial
Calls For Alcohol to Be Added To Czars Propaganda Campaign
Goal 2: Increase the safety of Americas citizens by substantially reducing
drug-related crime and violence.
See
Australian Study
Finds That Alcohol Is The Drug Most Commonly Associated With Violence,
Followed By "Amphetamines, Heroin And Benzodiazepines (Tranquilizers)."
Marijuana Is Conspicuously Missing From List.
Goal 3: Reduce health and social costs to the public of illegal drug use.
Goal 4: Shield Americas air, land, and sea frontiers from the drug threat.
Goal 5: Break foreign and domestic drug sources of supply.
2. Overview of the Strategy
The National Drug Control Strategy takes a long-term, holistic view of the
nations drug problem. The document maintains that no single solution can suffice to
deal with the multifaceted issue, that several solutions must be applied simultaneously,
and that focusing on outcomes measured in declining drug use and a lessening of attendant
social consequences can achieve our goals. Our Strategy focuses on those approaches that
we know work in reducing drug use.
3. Educating Young People
Our primary focus is on preventing youth drug use. Studies show that attitudes about
drugs drive youth drug use rates. Preventing drug use before it starts is more effective
and cost efficient than trying to break a person free from an already established
addiction. By reaching young people before they try drugs, we can help them reject these
deadly substances and go on to full, safe, and productive lives.
Our commitment to prevention is backed by significant resources. With the support of
Congress in passing our FY2000 counter-drug budget, we will increase federal drug
prevention funds by 55 percent since FY1996. Your continued support for our drug
prevention efforts is critical to protecting our nations children and will build
upon our common efforts to date.
For example, with the bipartisan support of Congress, we have launched the National
Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign, a five-year $2 billion public-private partnership. The
Media Campaign is using the full power of modern mediafrom television to the
Internet to sports marketingto educate children, parents, and other adult
influencers about the dangers of drugs.
Already, the Campaign is producing results:
* Phase I of the Campaign achieved our objective of increasing awareness. Our
evaluation shows that youth and teens demonstrated significant increases in ad recall in
the target versus the comparison sitesyouth increases ranged from 11 to 26 percent,
teens ranged from 13 to 27 percent. Parents in target sites had an 11 percent gain in
awareness of the risks of drugs and said that the Campaign provided them with new
information about drugs (a 7 percent increase).
* The Campaigns initial target for "reach and frequency" was to reach
90 percent of our overall teen target audience (young people ages nine to eighteen) with
anti-drug messages four times per week.
* The Campaign is already reaching 95 percent of our youth target audience 6.8 times
per week.
* With respect to our reach, we are reaching nearly every single American child on a
regular basis with anti-drug information. With respect to frequency, we are putting this
information in front of them at a rate of roughly twice our goal.
* We are buying advertising in 2250 media outlets nationwide (newspaper, TV, radio,
magazines, billboards, movie theaters, and others). By any standard, the Campaign is the
strongest multi-cultural communications effort ever launched by the federal government and
rivals that of most corporate efforts.
See
Magazine Publishers
of America Agree To Feature Prohibitionist Propaganda In Content
To Get Share of $775 Million Ad Campaign
* Among African American youth within the target age audience, we are doing even
betterreaching 95 percent of the young people 7.8 times per week.
See
Over A Dozen Young
Black Men Arrested For Selling Small Quantities Of Marijuana
In Florida Housing Project Face 3 Year Minimums Because It Is Within 1,000 Feet Of School.
"The police also sold drugs to users to make possession arrests."
Is Marijuana Prohibition Racist?
* Within the Hispanic youth target group, we are reaching 94 percent of our audience
with messages in Spanish 4.8 times per weeknot to mention the substantial impact of
messages in English on bilingual young people.
* The Campaign delivers $33 million worth of anti-drug messages per year to ethnic
young people and their adult influencers (e.g., parents, grandparents, coaches, teachers,
civic leaders, the faith community, and others).
* We are now developing campaign materials in ten additional languages.
* We are the largest governmental advertiser in African American newspapers and are
among the top advertisers on Black Entertainment Television.
* The Campaigns target is a one-for-one match; for every taxpayer dollar we
spend, we require an added dollars worth of anti-drug public service, pro bono
activity.
See
A Proposal For A
Rational Allocation Of Drug Education Budgets
Based On The Harm Done By Various Substances -- Analysis By Richard Cowan
* The Campaigns private sector match is now at the 109 percent level (or $165
million) for the broadcast industry (matches of ad time on TV and radio). Overall, the
corporate match for all Campaign efforts is at the 102 percent level (or $175.4 million).
See
When The Partnership
For A Marijuana-Free America Speaks,
The Media For A Marijuana-Free America Parrots.
Widely Reported Press Release About Kids and "Drugs" Mentions Marijuana 29
Times, Alcohol 0!
* Since last July, over 47,000 thirty second PSAs have run on television and radio
because of the Campaign.
* In addition to the pro bono match, we have received over $42 million of corporate
in-kind support. Companies, such as Gateway and UPS, were quick to join our team.
* Thirty-two network television episodes have airedon the shows our young people
most watch, using the stars they most knowthat have included the Campaigns
strategic anti-drug message points.
* Our corporate efforts are as diverse as the rest of the Campaign. We have productive
partnerships in place with BET, Univision, Telemundo, and numerous other specialized
ethnic media outlets.
The messages of the Media Campaign serve as a vital counter-force to the pro-drug use
messages that buffet our children. For too long, the unfiltered
Internet has been the media province of the legalizers.[98] Legalizers not only use the
Internet to push their policy views,[99] they also use it, for example, to tell young
people specifically where the best drugs can be bought at the best price in their
city.[100] Some of these websites even provide young people with direct access to
drugs.[101]
However, today, through the Media Campaign, when a young person enters search words
that relate to drugsfrom straightforward words like "marijuana" to slang,
like "bud" or "stone"our advertising messages are keyed to
respond with accurate drug prevention information. We are also developing web content that
will give young people the information they need about drugs in a manner that is
interesting and eye-catching. For example, working with Disney, a leader in reaching young
people, we recently launched a new teen anti-drug website.
Our web presence is now substantial enough to balance that of the
drug legalization community.
See
Page On The Drug
Czars Web SiteProjectknow.ComIs Called "True Lies" And It
Truly Is
and
AOL and Disney Help
The Drug Czar Encourage Children To Use Hard Drugs
By Getting Their Parents to Lie To Them About Marijuana.
Cynical Distortion Of IOM Report
For example, our two youth websites, "ProjectkNOw" and
"Freevibe.com" have respectively received 4,721,249 and 866,833 page views since
each went online. Through web advertising (e.g., Internet "banner" ads) our
Campaign has generated 221 million impressions.
Prevention, however, requires more than just mass media messages. Prevention begins
with parents and families, and requires the support of schools and communities.
The most important tool we have against drug use is not a badge or a gun, it is the
kitchen table. Parents can prevent drug use by sitting down with their children and
talking with themhonestly and openlyabout the dangers of drugs to young lives
and dreams. While parents often doubt the impact they have on their childrens drug
use, the fact is young people listen to their parents. For example, recent study by the
Partnership for a Drug-Free America found that 65 percent of young people (ages thirteen
to seventeen) believe that "a great risk if you use marijuana is upsetting your
parents."[102] This same study found that 80 percent of our youth (ages thirteen to
seventeen) believe that "an important reason for not smoking marijuana is so that
your parents will respect you and will feel proud of you."[103]
To help parents we are reaching outacross the Internet, in newspapers, on the
airwaves, and through community groupsto provide them with the information they need
to be able to help their children make the right decision and stay drug-free. For example, through a Media Campaign alliance with AOL, we have created a
Parents Resource Center, that can provide information at the click of the mouse.
The Department of Education has also recently published Growing Up Drug-Free: A Parents
Guide to Prevention to give parents the facts and arm them with what to say to their
children.
As part of this comprehensive prevention framework, Secretary Riley has recently sent
Congress the Administrations proposal for a revamped Safe and Drug Free Schools
Program. If adopted this new program will improve accountability, require schools to adopt
programs proven effective, and hold the entire systemfrom the federal government to
the local school accountable for producing real results for our children.
Through the Drug Free Communities Grant Program we are also providing local anti-drug
coalitions with support in working to protect young people in their communities from
drugs. In the first year of the program we made grants to 92 communities, from across 47
states and the District of Columbia. These groups are helping mobilize grassroots efforts
to prevent drug use.
4. Combating Normalization
With attitudes being so critical in shaping drug use trends, it is vital that we ensure
that drug taking never is perceived as "normal" behavior that is accepted or
even tolerated by our society. The imperative to fight the normalization of drug use has
played a critical role in the development of federal policies with respect to both medical
marijuana and hemp.
With respect to medical marijuana, the recent Institute of Medicine (IOM) report,
Marijuana and Medicine, Assessing the Science Base, is the most comprehensive summary and
analysis of what is known about the medical use of marijuana.[104] The report emphasizes
evidence-based medicine (derived from knowledge and experience informed by rigorous
scientific analysis), as opposed to belief-based medicine (derived from judgment,
intuition, and beliefs untested by rigorous science). ONDCP is delighted that the
discussion of medical efficacy and safety of cannabinoids can now take place within the
context of science.
See
Column By Authors of
the IOM Report On Medical Marijuana
Shows Why The Public Does Not Trust The Medical Establishment
And Why They Should Not! With Analysis by Richard Cowan
and
Washington Post and
New York Times on IOM Medical Marijuana
Compare and Contrast A Split In The Establishment?
The Drug Czars Quote In The Post Wins The Prize.
The IOM report concludes that there is little future in smoked marijuana as a medically
approved medication.[105] Although marijuana smoke delivers THC and other cannabinoids to
the body, it also delivers harmful substances, including most of those found in tobacco
smoke. The long-term harms from smoking make it a poor drug delivery system, particularly
for patients with chronic diseases. In addition, cannabis plants contain a variable
mixture of biologically active compounds, therefore they cannot be expected to provide a
precisely defined drug effect. Medicines today are expected to be of known composition and
quality. Even in cases where marijuana can provide relief of symptoms, the crude plant
mixture does not meet this modern expectation. If there is any future in cannabinoid
drugs, it lies with agents of more certain, not less certain composition. The future of medical marijuana lies on classical pharmacological drug
development.
(Marijuananews note: This completely ignores the fact that
the IOM report acknowledges that right now there is no substitute for smoked marijuana for
many people. Whatever the future may bring, the present brings suffering to those who
cannot find any alternative to smoked marijuana, and the Drug Czars policies adds
fear to their suffering.)
See
NORML Special Bulletin -- IOM
Acknowledges:
"There is no clear alternative for people suffering from chronic conditions
that might be relieved by smoking marijuana, such as pain or AIDS wasting."
But Still Opposes Smoked Marijuana --
The study also provides a detailed analysis of marijuanas addictiveness. It
concludes that marijuana is indisputably reinforcing for many people. It states that a
distinctive marijuana and THC withdrawal syndrome has been identified, but it is mild and
subtle compared to the profound physical syndrome of heroin withdrawal.
See
Will The Titanic Of
Marijuana Prohibition Be Sunk By The Ice Cube Of The IOM Report?
-- Analysis.
and
The Relative Addictiveness of Drugs According to NIDA's Own Researcher
The study notes that few marijuana users become dependent but those who do encounter
problems similar to those associated with dependence on other drugs. Slightly more than
four percent of the general population were dependent on marijuana at one time in their
life. After alcohol and nicotine, marijuana was the substance most frequently associated
with a diagnosis of substance dependence.
In response to the studys recommendations that "clinical trials of marijuana
use for medical purposes should be conducted," on May 21, 1999, the Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS) released new guidance on procedures for the provision of
marijuana for medical research purposes.[106] "To facilitate research on the
potential medical uses of cannabinoids, HHS has determined that it will make research-
grade marijuana available on a cost-reimbursable basis ..." However, pursuant to this
guidance, HHS will only provide research cannabinoids for studies that strictly meet the
conditions contained in the guidance, including that such research must: meets good
clinical and laboratory research practices; examine the use of cannabinoids only "in
the treatment of serious or life threatening condition[s]"; and will address
"unanswered scientific questions about the effects of marijuana and its constituent
cannabinoids or about the safety or toxicity of smoked marijuana."
See
Drug Czar Issues
Statement On Marijuana For Medical Research:
"Such uses must only be part of clinical studies to expand the body of scientific
understanding."
Helping the Patients Does Not Enter Into It.
and links
ONDCP endorses the Department of Health and Human Services decision to facilitate
further research into the potential medical uses of marijuana and its constituent
cannabinoids. Such research will allow us to better understand what benefits might
actually exist for the use of cannabinoid-based drugs, and what risks such use entails. It
will also facilitate the development of an inhaler or alternate rapid-onset delivery
system for THC or other cannabinoid drugs. Advisors to both the National Institutes of
Health and the Institute of Medicine have concluded that such research is warranted. This
decision underscores the federal governments commitment to ensuring that the
discussion of the medical efficacy and safety of cannabinoids takes place within the
context of medicine and science.
Research toward the development of cannabinoid-based medicines is a medical and
scientific question that Americas health and science establishment must address.
However, there are those who want to use medical marijuana as a wedge issue to drive open
a hole in counter-drug programs. For example, Richard Cowan, a
member of the Advisory Board of an advocacy group called the "Drug Policy
Foundation," in 1995 stated: "Key to legalization is medical access [to
marijuana] because once you have hundreds of thousands of people using marijuana medically
under medical supervision, the whole scam is going to be blown. Once there is medical
access and we continue to do what we have to, and we will, well get full
legalization."[107]
(Marijuananews note: Usually the prohibitionists have me
saying that medical marijuana is a "scam" that will be bought." Here
the Czar uses my own words, but taken completely out of context. My next sentence was
"I mean what we know is that marijuana prohibition is the greatest fraud ever
perpetrated on the American people." That would rather change the meaning. In any
case, all this proves nothing about the merits of the arguments for medical marijuana. It
is just a misrepresentation of my views.
See
Fooling Our
Childrens Children: Lying About the Medical Marijuana Movement;
Is There Any Difference Between The Drug Czar and A Crackpot?
and
Is medical marijuana
just the opening wedge to legalize marijuana generally?
and
Isn't legalizing marijuana just the opening
wedge to legalizing all drugs?
Amazingly the source cited for this is "State of Oregon,
Medical Marijuana: A Smoke Screen (1997) (videotape)." This means that the state of
Oregon used tax dollars to make a video to lie to its citizens about medical marijuana.)
While we must exercise compassion and move ahead with the development of treatments
that can relieve human suffering, we cannot and will not allow progress on the medical
front to jeopardize the futures of millions of young people.[108] Regardless
of developments with respect to the use of cannabinoid-based medicines, we will continue
to fully enforce the full range of Federal laws pertaining to the non-medicinal use of
marijuana.
See
Drug Czars Office Endorses Arresting,
Jailing Medical Marijuana Smokers;
Canadas Parliament Resumes Historic Medical Marijuana Debate -- NORML Press Release
We face a similar challenge with hemp. Growing numbers of farmers, rightfully or
wrongfully, believe that hemp may offer a new crop that can help the farm economy. However, there are those who want to use de-regulation of hemp to erode
Americas disapproval of drugs. Still others with criminal intent see hemp as
providing a new way to conceal the production of marijuana plants.
See
And With Friends Like
These; Part 2.
Former Head of CIA, Now at the North American Industrial Hemp Council, Tells Post That
NORML is "welcome to join his side, though its presence on his team borders on
absurd:"
"Hemp is natures own marijuana eradication system."
If we allow farmers to test the viability of this crop in the marketplace, we must not
do so in a manner that allows the normalization of marijuana. Products
that market their hemp content with marijuana leaves do so only to sell their products
relationship to marijuana. The appeal of these products is not that they are made of hemp
but that they are marijuana-related. The hype built around these marijuana-related
products serves only to glamorize the counter- culture appeal of a drug that has serious
consequences for our young people who use it. We cannot allow our policies toward hemp to
directly or indirectly increase the use of marijuana among our youth. Americas
farmers, who have long been among the most steadfast supporters of our counter-drug
programs, will help us police their own. Similarly, ethical farmers seeking solely to make
an honest living off a viable legal crop should be more than willing to take the necessary
security steps to provide the public with confidence that they are growing hemp and not
marijuana.
(Marijuananews note: It would appear that the Czar is paving the way to approving hemp
cultivation, but it will probably involve "security steps" that will make it
uneconomical.)
See
The Ban On Industrial
Hemp May Be Hurting Marijuana Prohibition
Even More Than Legalizing It Would.
Is The Czar Considering A Tactical Retreat? An Article And A Great Editorial
5. Expanding Treatment
Drug treatment is proven to reduce drug use, drug-related crime, and other related
social ills. Studies show that for people who have successfully completed a drug treatment
program, even one year after treatment, drug use drops 50 percent, illicit activity falls
by 60 percent, drug selling drops by nearly 80 percent, arrests fall by more than 60
percent, homelessness drops by 43 percent, dependence on welfare decreases by 11 percent
and employment increases by 20 percent.[109] In short, treatment works. Our FY2000
counter-drug budget requests $3.5 billion for drug treatment and treatment research
programs, representing a 5.5 percent increase from our FY1999 budget. Overall, assuming
our FY2000 request is approved, we will increase federal spending on treatment by 25
percent since FY1996. Yet, we still have a long way to go to close the treatment gap. In
1996, approximately 4.4 to 5.3 million people were estimated to need drug treatment.[110]
Slightly less than two million people currently receive drug treatment.[111] These figures
show that we continue to have a significant treatment gap. Expansion of the Substance
Abuse and Mental Health Services Administrations drug treatment and block grant
programs, as called for in the Administrations proposed counter-drug budget, will
add much needed treatment slots. However, even these gains will not nearly close the
current treatment gap.
In a move that will help close this gap, on June 7, 1999, the Office of Personnel
Management sent a letter to the 285 participating health plans of the Federal Employee
Health Benefits Plan informing them that they will have to offer full mental health and
substance abuse parity[112] to participate in the program. This step will provide full
parity for nine million beneficiaries by next year and will ensure that the Federal
government leads the way in providing parity.
Additionally, we are developing new guidelines for methadone treatment, which will
expand access to this treatment for those who can benefit from it. These new guidelines
will also improve the quality of methadone treatment programs by shifting them to a
clinic-based modality. Properly administered, methadone treatment can offer drug-addicted
people an important bridge to a drug-free lifestyle. By expanding and improving on
existing methadone treatment programs we can offer addicted individuals the hope of a
brighter, more productive, drug-free future.
6. Breaking the Cycle of Drugs and Crime
Drug dependent people are responsible for a disproportionate amount of our
nations crime. According to the 1998 ADAM report, roughly two- thirds of adult
arrestees and more than one-half of juvenile arrestees tested positive for at least one
illicit drug.113 In 1997, one-third of state prisoners and about one-in-five federal
prisoners said they had committed the offense that led to their imprisonment while under
the influence of drugs.[114] Nineteen percent of state inmates said they perpetrated their
current offense leading to incarceration in order to obtain money to buy drugs.[115]
Drug-law offenders are filling our nations prisons and imposing tremendous
correctional costs on our society. The nations incarcerated population is now over
1.8 million people. Under the present system, far too many addicted individuals enter the
cycle of drugs, crime, and prison only to spend the rest of their lives caught in this
cycle.
We cannot arrest our way out of our nations drug problem. We need to break the
cycle of addiction, crime, and prison through treatment and other diversion programs. It
costs the American taxpayer $25,000 a year to imprison a drug-addicted criminal.[116] By
comparison, a year of outpatient treatment costs less than $5,000, and the cost of even
more comprehensive residential treatment programs range from $5,000 to $15,000 per
year.[117]
Evidence also shows that drug treatment programs are effective at reducing crime. For
example, treatment programs administered by the Delaware Department of Corrections have
reduced the recidivism rate for drug-related crimes by 57 percent.[118] Birmingham,
Alabamas "Breaking the Cycle" program is also producing promising results.
Since its inception in June of 1997, two thousand offenders successfully completed this
program as a condition of their release. To date, their rearrest rate is about 1
percent.119 Breaking the cyclethrough diversion programs and treatment is not soft
on drugs, it is smart on defeating drugs and crime.
In 1991, the number of federal inmates receiving substance abuse treatment numbered
only 1,236. By 1998, that number reached 10,006. While this is a substantial step forward,
it is still only a first step. We estimate that the number of arrestees who require drug
treatment may be as high as two million a year.[120] If we are to reduce the burdens of
drugs and crime on our nation, we need to expand dramatically the treatment opportunities
in the criminal justice system.
Similarly, we also need to expand the number of drug courts, which offer nonviolent
drug-law offenders supervised treatment in lieu of jail. Defendants who complete a drug
court program either have their charges dismissed or probation sentences reduced. In 1994,
there were roughly a dozen drug courts nation-wide. In October 1998, 323 drug courts were
operating nationwide, and more than two hundred were in planning stages.[121] Even with
their growing numbers, todays drug courts still only reach 1 to 2 percent of the
population of nonviolent drug offenders.[122]
The counter-drug budget now before the Congress seeks to expand current programs in
both of these areas. The Administrations request seeks an additional $100 million to
provide drug abuse assistance to state and local governments in developing and
implementing comprehensive systems for drug testing, treatment and graduated sanctions for
drug offenders. The request also seeks an added $10 million for drug court programs, to
bring the total support for these programs to $50 million in FY2000.
7. Helping Communities Fight Drugs
The High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA) program provides assistance to regions
of the nation with critical drug trafficking problems that impact wider areas of the
nation. HIDTA funds support expanded cooperation between federal, state and local law
counter-drug enforcement authorities. HIDTAs strengthen Americas drug control
efforts by forging partnerships among federal, state and local agencies; and facilitating
cooperative investigations, intelligence sharing and joint operations. There are presently
21 HIDTAs. Through funds provided by the Congress in our current budget, soon we will
announce the creation of five new HIDTAs.
Local counter-drug law enforcement also benefits greatly from federal efforts to
increase the number of police officers on our streets and better equip them to combat
todays high-technology drug traffickers. The Community Oriented Policing Services
program, known as COPs, has funded over 92,000 new and redeployed police officers to help
protect our communities and streets. Through the work of the Counter-drug Technology
Assessment Center (CTAC) we are also helping local law enforcement authorities obtain the
most up-to-date drug fighting tools.[123]
8. Strengthening the Southwest Border
The shared two-thousand-mile border with Mexico attracts drugs and provides Mexican
drug traffickers ample opportunity to move large quantities of heroin, cocaine, marijuana,
and methamphetamine into the U.S. Drug violence spills over this border into the
neighboring statesNew Mexico, California, Texas, Arizona. Drugs that cross this
border pass into our heartland (into Kansas, Iowa, Illinois) and beyond (Massachusetts,
New York, Oregon) and attack cities, suburbs, and rural communities alike.
Improving our counter-drug efforts along this border first requires us to better
organize our existing efforts. We need to improve our chain of command and accountability
for programs in this region. Our Southwest Border programs must also become more flexible
and intelligence-driven.
We need to better understand the emerging threats and deploy our resources to counter
these threats.
We also must shift from a system that is dependent upon manpower to one that relies on
cutting-edge technology. We simply cannot think that in an era of expanding interchange
that we will be able to unpack every crate of carrots or search every railcar by hand. We
need to develop and deploy a family of complementary systems within the next five years
that can inspect increasing numbers of in-bound containers, shipments, and conveyances for
drugs. We want to provide major ports of entry with the capacity to subject in-bound
shipments to non-intrusive inspections by complementary systems. Through technology, we
shall put in place a seamless curtain against drugs. This curtain will not be iron but
informationderived from technology and intelligence. It will be held in place by
good organization and shared commitmenta commitment based on common values and
interests. It will be permeable to trade and culture but impermeable to drugs, crime, and
violence.
9. Attacking Drugs in the Transit Zone
Transit zone interdiction plays a critical supporting role to source county programs.
Transit zone interdiction programs remove significant amounts of illicit drugs from the
pipeline each year that would otherwise reach the United States. These efforts also raise
the costs and risks to traffickers of moving cocaine into the United States. Additionally,
interdiction operations in the transit zone produce information that can be used to attack
trafficking organizations, thereby strengthening the overall U.S. law enforcement effort
against international crime. Transit zone interdiction programs reinforce international,
bilateral, and regional cooperation against the threat of illegal drugs and strengthen the
capabilities of transit nation law enforcement institutions.
Drug traffickers are adaptable, reacting to interdiction successes by shifting routes
and changing modes of transportation. Large international criminal organizations have
extensive access to sophisticated technology and resources to support their illegal
operations. The United States must surpass traffickers flexibility, quickly
deploying resources to changing high-threat areas. Consequently, the U.S. government
designs coordinated interdiction operations that anticipate shifting trafficking patterns.
Drugs coming to the United States from South America pass through a six-million
square-mile transit zone that is roughly the size of the continental United States. This
zone includes the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and eastern Pacific Ocean. The Coast Guard is
the lead federal agency for maritime interdiction and co-lead with U.S. Customs for air
interdiction. The interagency mission is to reduce the supply of drugs from source
countries by denying smugglers the use of air and maritime routes in the transit zone. In
patrolling this vast area, U.S. federal agencies closely coordinate their operations with
the interdiction forces of a number of nations. In 1998, roughly eighty metric tons of
cocaine were seized in the transit zone.
Stopping drugs in the transit zone involves more than intercepting drug shipments at
sea or in the air. It also entails denying traffickers safe haven in countries within the
transit zone and preventing their ability to corrupt institutions or use financial systems
to launder profits. Consequently, international cooperation and assistance is an essential
aspect of a comprehensive transit zone strategy. Accordingly, the United States is helping
Caribbean and Central American nations to implement a broad drug-control agenda that
includes modernizing laws, strengthening law-enforcement and judicial institutions,
developing anti-corruption measures, opposing money laundering, and backing cooperative
interdiction.
The Caribbean Violent Crime and Regional Interdiction Initiative will expand
counter-drug operations targeting drug trafficking-related criminal activities and
violence in the Caribbean region including South Florida, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin
Islands, and the independent states and territories of the eastern Caribbean. This
initiative will implement mutual cooperative security agreements between the United States
and Caribbean nations, implement commitments made by the U.S. President during the
Caribbean Summit held in Barbados in May 1997, develop regional maritime law enforcement
capabilities; increase the capability of Caribbean nations to intercept, apprehend, and
prosecute drug traffickers through modest expansion of training, equipment upgrades and
maintenance support, and institutionalize the Americas Counter Smuggling Initiative (ACSI)
to provide at-risk commercial carriers, industry, and government offices with training to
prevent goods and conveyances from being used to smuggle illegal drugs.
Nonetheless, traffickers have demonstrated that they can absorb interdiction losses in
the transit zone as the cost of doing business while increasing source country cultivation
and production to make up interdiction losses. In the transit zone, traffickers have the
initiative and can choose when, where, and how to challenge interdiction forces. They are
able to alter routes and methods in response to effective law enforcement interdiction
activity. Transit zone operations will be most effective when source country programs are
able to effectively constrain drug production potential, preventing trafficking
organizations from making up interdiction losses.
10. Building International Cooperation
The United States continues to focus international drug control efforts on supporting
the critical work of drug source countries. International drug trafficking organizations
and their production and trafficking infrastructure are most concentrated, detectable, and
vulnerable to effective law enforcement action in source countries. The coca and opium
poppy growing areas are easily detectable and relatively fixed. The cultivation of coca
and opium poppy and production of cocaine and heroin are labor intensive and can be
disrupted by concerted law enforcement action.
To be successful on the scale necessary to disrupt the illegal drug industry, drug
source countries must have control of growing areas, adequate law enforcement resources,
capabilities, and the will to confront a sometimes politically powerful segment of the
population or one that is protected by well-armed and well-equipped insurgent groups. The
international drug control strategy seeks to bolster source country resources,
capabilities, and political will to reduce cultivation, attack production, and disrupt and
dismantle trafficking organizations, including their command and control structure and
financial underpinnings. Our actions focus on assisting the host nation expand law
enforcement control over drug crop growing areas, reestablish the rule of law, and
eliminate illegal drug crops in ways that protect human and democratic rights. The
political will and long-term commitment of these other nations are critical to our common
success against drugs.
These international efforts are making a difference, for example:
- Cocaine production in Bolivia and Peru has dropped by 300 metric tons over the last
four years.[124]
- Coca cultivation in Peru has plunged 56 percent from 115,300 hectares in 1995 to 51,000
hectares in 1998. [125]
CONCLUSION
Mr. Chairman, Ranking Member Mink we thank you, the rest of the Committee, and the
Congress as a whole for the bipartisan support we have received in our efforts to reduce
drug use and its consequences in the United States. Your support is critical to progress
we are now making. Look at the results.
Here at home, in the last two years, youth drug use rates have leveled off and in many
cases are now in decline (this marks a sharp departure from the prior six years, which saw
the number of our children doing drugs steadily increase). Overall drug use in the United
States is now half what it was in the 1970s. During this same period cocaine use has
fallen by 75 percent. Drug-related murders have reached their lowest point in over a
decade.
On the international front, cocaine production in Bolivia and Peru has decreased by 300
metric tons over the last four years. We have built a common consensus against drugs. We
have eliminated the distinction between producer and consumer nations, and built a common
understanding that drugs threaten all nations. Working with the rest of the international
community we have built strong counter-drug cooperation through the United Nations, and
within this hemisphere through the Organization of American States.
These advances provide a solid foundation upon which to build. With your continued
support we can continue to significantly reduce the threat of drugs to our nation and our
people. Clearly, the answer is not to make dangerous, addictive substances more available
or to drop our societal guard. Instead, we must focus on prevention, treatment,
enforcement, interdiction and international cooperation. In other words, we must remain
focused on those things that we know work.
Thank you for the opportunity to appear before you today.
Footnotes:
1 Katherine Seligman, Legalization Sought for Cousin of Pot, San Francisco Examiner,
May 9, 1999, C1 (quoting hemp activist Jack Herer).
2 Ethan Nadelmann, Should Some Drugs Be Legalized?, 6 Issues in Science and Technology
43-46 (1990).
3 Ethan Nadelmann, Thinking Seriously About Alternatives to Drug Prohibition, 121
Daedalus 87-132 (1992).
4 Ethan Nadelmann and Jan Wenner, Toward a Sane National Drug Policy, Rolling Stone May
5, 1994, 24-26.
5 Id.
6 Ethan Nadelmann, How to Legalize, interview with Emily Yoffe, Mother Jones, Feb./Mar.
1990, 18-19.
7 Arnold Trebach & James Inciardi, Legalize It? Debating American Drug Policy,
109-110 (1993).
8 George Soros, Soros on Soros, p. 200 (1995).
9 William F. Buckley, The War on Drugs is Lost, National Review, Feb. 12, 1996, 35-48.
10 See Ethan Nadelmann, Commonsense Drug Policy, 77 Foreign Affairs 111-126 (1998).
11 It should, however, be emphasized that not all advocates of harm reduction support
drug legalization. Nor, does harm reduction, by itself, require legalization. In fact,
aspects of the National Drug Control Strategy, such as methadone treatment, properly adopt
harm reduction programs as part of a comprehensive, balanced approach to reducing drug
use. Nevertheless, the fact remains that many who advocate harm reduction use it as a
subterfuge for legalization.
12 See "www.cannabisculture.com/grow".
13 See "www.mapinc.org" ("drug
links" 7 and 8 link to the following two websites: "www.hightimes.com/ht/tow/tes/index.html"
and "www.cannabisculture.com/usage/dtfaq.shtml").
14 See "www.mapinc.org", which includes
as part of its site "www.mapsorg/news.html",
which then links to "www.ecstacy.org/links/index.html",
which then includes "www.hyperreal.org/~lamont/pharm/faq/faq-mdma-synth.html".
This same information is also found on "www.lyceum.org/drugs/synth . .
./mdma/synthesis/mdma.mda.synthesis".
15 See Richard Cowan, Building a New NORML, High Times, Jan.
1993, p. 67. Mr. Cowan has made clear how harm reduction policies fit into the
legalization agenda as follows:
(Marijuananews note: I said nothing about "harm
reduction." That is not a term that I like or use very much, nor have I ever said
that the legalization of marijuana is a means to legalizing other drugs. I think that
ending marijuana prohibition will discredit the liars like the Czar and other
prohibitionists, and will bring about an end to drug prohibition as we know it, but that
is their fault, not mine.)
Based on our objective of "Legalization by 97" we must begin by demanding: 1 --
immediate access to marijuana for the sick. 2 -- The immediate cessation of all attacks on
users, growers and sellers of marijuana. 3 -- An immediate end to lying about marijuana
and its users. 4 -- Recognition of the economic and environmental importance of hemp, and
studies on how it can be best exploited by American agriculture and industry. Id.
16 CSR Inc., unpublished research prepared for ONDCP, 1999.
17 NIDA and NIAAA, The Economic Costs of Alcohol and Drug Abuse in the United States,
1992, NIDA/NIH pub. no. 98-4327, Sept. 1998.
18 See Ken Kraysee, Pot Politics, Hartford Advocate, May 20, 1999. The Drug Reform
Coordination Networks website claims just 6,000 activists in its network. Similarly,
the Drug Policy Foundations website claims "23,000 supporters." And, we
believe that there is substantial overlap between groups such as these, as well as other
"reform" groups.
19 Gallup Organization, Americans Oppose General Legalization of Marijuana (1999).
20 See John E. Reilly, Americans and the World: A Survey at the Centurys End, 114
Foreign Policy 97, 110 (1999).
21 Gallup Organization, What American Employees Think About Drugs (1995)
(prepared for the Institute for a Drug-Free Workplace).
22 Id.
23 Gallup, soon to be released poll, prepared for ONDCP (1999).
24 Partnership for a Drug Free America, Parents and Marijuana in the 90s, Partnership
Attitude Tracking Study (1997).
25 See Director Barry R. McCaffrey, Memorandum for the Presidents Drug Policy
Council, ONDCP Trip to Europe (11-18 July 1998), September 2, 1998.
26 Larry Collins, Hollands Half-Baked Drug Experiment, 78 Foreign Affairs 82, 88
(May/June 1999); see also Robert Dupont, Eric Voth, Drug
Legalization, Harm Reduction, and Drug Policy, 123 Annals of Internal Medicine 461-465
(1995) (citing a 30 percent increase in the number of Dutch marijuana addicts from 1991 to
1993 alone).
See
"Tremendous
Increase In The Number Of Dutch Cannabis Users Asking For Help"
Swedish Prohibitionists Claim
27 Larry Collins, Hollands Half-Baked Drug Experiment, 78 Foreign Affairs 82, 88
(May/June 1999).
See
Foreign
Affairs Pushes The Party Line At the Highest Levels:
Anti-Dutch Prohibitionist Propaganda for the Elites.
April's Reefer Madness Award Winner
28 See Lecture by Peter Reijnders, llc., Assistant Chief Constable, Chief of the
National Unit Synthetic Drugs of the Netherlands, delivered at the 25th
European Meeting of Heads of National Drug Services, Edinburgh, UK, May 4-6, 1999.
29 See "www.aloha.nl".
30 Larry Collins, Hollands Half-Baked Drug Experiment, 78 Foreign Affairs 82, 89
(May/June 1999); see also Director Barry R. McCaffrey, Memorandum for the Presidents
Drug Policy Council, ONDCP Trip to Europe (11-18 July 1998), September 2, 1998.
31 Id. at p. 87. In this same article, Dr. Wallenberg, head of the Jellinek Clinic,
Hollands best known drug clinic, stated: "We have indulged ourselves in a kind
of blind optimism in Holland concerning cannabis." Id. This apparent inability to
critically examine the impacts of quasi-legalized drug policies on drug use trends has
substantially aided those in the United States who want to legalize drugs. Absent a full
assessment of the increasing drug use trends, proponents of legalization are free to say
whatever they like about the success of the model.
32 See European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction, Study to Obtain
Comparable National Estimates of Problem Drug Use, Dec. 1998 (finding 28,000 Dutch heroin
addicts in 1997, up from 10,000 in 1979); Larry Collins, Hollands Half-Baked Drug
Experiment, 78 Foreign Affairs 82, 92 (1999) (citing Dutch government funded Trimbos
Institute data indicating a tripling of the rate of heroin addiction); see also Robert
Dupont, Eric Voth, Drug Legalization, Harm Reduction, and Drug Policy, 123 Annals of
Internal Medicine 461-465 (1995) (citing a 22 percent increase in the number of registered
addicts between 1988 and 1993).
33 The European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction, Annual Report on the
State of the Drugs Problem in Europe, 31 (1998). The Netherlands was the only nation among
fifteen EU member states listed with trafficking of hard drugs as the main offense driving
these increases in drug-related arrests. Id.
34 See Lecture by Peter Reijnders, llc., Assistant Chief Constable, Chief of the
National Unit Synthetic Drugs of the Netherlands, delivered at the 25th
European Meeting of Heads of National Drug Services, Edinburgh, UK, May 4-6, 1999 (noting
that 26 different countries worldwide have reported seizures of MDMA originating in the
Netherlands, including 124 cases involving more than 500 grams).
35 Larry Collins, Hollands Half-Baked Drug Experiment, 78 Foreign Affairs 82, 84
(1999).
36 Id.
37 Id. at 97.
38 Hassela Nordic Network, Press Release, Nov. 9, 1995.
39 Hassela Nordic Network, Press Release, June 14, 1995 (poll by the newspaper Algemeen
Dagblad); Hassela Nordic Network, Press Release, Nov. 9, 1995 (poll by Erasmus University,
Rotterdam, finding 61 percent of Dutch think all drugs should be prohibited).
40 See, e.g., Gallup Organization, Americans Oppose General Legalization of Marijuana
(1999).
41 The experiences of ot |