See Go Dutch! for
several articles
From Het Parool (The Word)
Amsterdam
July 21, 1998
By Craig Reinarman
Dr. Reinarman is Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and
Visiting Scholar at the Centrum voor Drugsonderzoek at the Universiteit van Amsterdam. His
most recent book is "Crack In America: Demon Drugs and Social Justice," with
Harry G. Levine et al.
(Ed. note: He is also a director of NORML. See The Case of Califano vs The Netherlands by Craig Reinarman, from the
International Journal of Drug Policy, which is online at the University of Amsterdam
Center for Drugs Research site at http://www.frw.uva.nl/cedro/library/craig/califano.html#note01
Het Parool is a mass circulation mid-market newspaper based in Amsterdam. The Dutch are very grateful to the US for liberating them from the
Nazis in World War II, and they identify the US with personal freedom, which they
still value so highly. Consequently, they find US drugs policy incomprehensible, and have
been incredulous when US officials blatantly lie about Dutch policies and their results.
Craig Reinarmans article is simply a blunt explanation of why the DEAland
officials have to lie about the Netherlands. I think that this article will reinforce the
impact on the Dutch of Drug Czar Barry McCaffreys bizarre behavior. They will be all
the more convinced of the rightness of their policies. While Reinarman is correct in
saying that the Dutch have no desire to impose their policies on others, the fact is that
freedom anywhere is a threat to tyranny everywhere. The Drug Bizarro understands, so
DEAland is now waging a full-scale prohibitionist propaganda war against our oldest ally.)
WHY DUTCH DRUG POLICY THREATENS THE US
He said it would be a "fact finding tour," but U.S. Drug Czar, General Barry
McCaffrey, made it clear before he ever left home that he would bring his own
"facts" about Dutch drug policy. He did his best impersonation of a man
"listening" during his few hours here, but in the end it was clearly a
"fact bringing" tour. Dutch officials and journalists immediately caught him
with his evidentiary pants down and chastised him for making false claims about drug use
and crime in the Netherlands.
Such slanders are nothing new. A few years ago, McCaffreys
predecessor claimed that all the Dutch youth in Vondel Park were "stoned
zombies." An earlier Drug Czar proclaimed "you cant walk down the street
in Amsterdam without tripping over junkies." It is said that truth is the first
casualty of war, and drug wars are no different.
My Dutch friends and colleagues ask me in astonishment why Drug Czars behave in such a
strange manner? U.S. officials are threatened by Dutch drug policy because it cuts against
the grain of the moral ideology underlying U.S. drug policy. That ideology runs deep in
American culture and politics. The U.S. has a history of hysteria about intoxicating
substances dating back to the 19th century Temperance crusade. For over a
hundred years, Americans believed that Satans "demon drink" was the direct
cause of poverty, ill health, crime, insanity, and the demise of civilisation. This
fundamentalist crusade culminated with national alcohol prohibition in 1919.
Alcohol Prohibition Agents quickly took over the job of creating U.S. drug policy.
Without debate, they chose criminalization. A series of antidrug scares since then has led
to the criminalization of more drugs and the imprisonment of more drug users for longer
terms. What animated each of these scares, from the crusade against alcohol on, was less
public health than the politics of fear -- fear of change, of "foreigners," of
the working class, of non-whites, of rebellious college students, of lost control.
Having scapegoated drugs for so long, U.S. politicians cannot contemplate a
"tolerant" system like the Dutch. They compete for votes on the basis of whose
rhetoric is "tougher" on drugs. The Right-wing Republicans who control Congress
call President Clinton "soft on drugs" even though more drug users are
imprisoned now than ever. Clinton appointed McCaffrey Drug Czar not because the General
has any training in drugs, but because he was a military man who would symbolize
"toughness."
U.S. drug policy has been getting "tougher." The
Czars budget was increased from $1 billion in 1980 to $17 billion this year. The
number of drug offenders imprisoned in the U.S. has increased 800% since 1980, helping the
U.S. achieve the highest imprisonment rate in the industrialized world -- 550 per 100,000
population, compared to the Netherlands 79 per 100,000.
Under the banner of the war on drugs, a kind of creeping totalitarianism tramples more
human rights and civil liberties each year: tens of millions of "clean" citizens
subjected to supervised urine tests at work; hundreds of thousands searched in their homes
or, on the basis of racist "trafficker profiles," at airports or on freeways;
possessions seized by the state on suspicion alone. And U.S. school children have been
bombarded with more anti-drug propaganda than any generation in history.
The results of all this suggest why U.S. officials are lashing out. Their own surveys
show that illicit drug use by American youth has increased in five of the last six years.
The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration admits that hard drugs are just as available,
less expensive, and more pure than ever. Hard drug abuse and addiction among the urban
poor remain widespread. Some judges have even refused to apply harsh drug laws. Opinion
polls now show a majority of Americans do not believe the war on drugs can be won. More
and more are voicing their opposition and seeking alternatives to punitive prohibition.
The drug policy reform movement in the U.S. is growing larger and more diverse.
And when these pesky heretics argue that there are alternatives
to punitive prohibition, one of their key examples is Dutch drug policy. U.S. drug
warriors wish the Netherlands example did not exist, but since they cannot make even small
countries disappear, they are reduced to making up their own "facts" about it.
Dutch drug policy is a threat to drug warriors precisely because it has NOT led to what
McCaffrey called an "unmitigated disaster." Dutch society has its drug problems,
of course, but no more and often less than most other modern democracies. In fact, more people have tried cannabis in the U.S. where millions have
gone to prison for it than in the Netherlands where citizens may buy it lawfully. The U.S.
drug control complex fears Dutch drug policy like the Catholic Church feared Gallileo --
96 they MUST believe the Dutch model is a failure, for if it is not their whole cosmology
shatters.
U.S. drug control ideology holds that there is no such thing as use of an illicit drug,
only abuse. Drug use patterns in the Netherlands show that for the overwhelming majority
of users, drugs are just one more type of genotsmiddelen [food, spice, or
intoxicant giving pleasure to the senses] that the Dutch have been importing and
culturally domesticating for centuries.
U.S. officials tend to lump all illicit drugs together, as if all were equally
dangerous and addictive. Dutch drug policy makes pragmatic distinctions based on relative
risks. When U.S. officials are confronted by the scientific evidence that cannabis is
among the least risky drugs, they fall back on the claim that it is a "stepping
stone" to hard drugs. But here, too, the evidence from Dutch surveys is heresy: despite tolerant policies and ready availability, most Dutch people never
try cannabis, and most who do try it dont continue to use even cannabis very often,
much less harder drugs. In short, the Dutch facts are a Drug Czars nightmare.
Leaders more secure about the effectiveness and fairness of their own drug policies
would feel less need to attack Dutch drug policy. Dutch officials do not proselytize,
urging other nations to adopt their methods, and the U.S. is obviously not obliged to
adopt any part of the Dutch approach. By the same logic, the U.S. should realize that
other societies do not share its phobias and do not appreciate its tendency toward drug
policy imperialismparticularly when what the U.S. offers is repressive, expensive
failure.
We inhabit an increasingly multi-cultural world, which is also a multi-lifestyle and
multi-morality world. Drug policy, therefore, cannot be as simple as stretch socks --
"one size fits all." Neither European integration nor globalized markets erase
differences in language, culture, behavior, or politics. Thus, a cookie cutter approach in
which each nations drug policy is identical -- whether punitive prohibition or any
other model --makes no sense. Dutch drug policy has bravely broadened the range of
possibilities to examine, which is as useful for those who want to learn something as it
is fearful for those who do not.