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DrugReporter

Getting the Pointlessness

By David Borden, DRCNet. Posted May 2, 2005.


The criminalization of responsible drug users is only one of the many pointless aspects of drug prohibition.
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Amidst the continuing furor of anti-drug polemics and hysterics, it's easy to make the casual observer forget one of the basic realities of this issue: Most people who use drugs are okay. For most of the people who use drugs, it's OK that they are using drugs. We may legitimately worry about those who truly have problems with their drug use, and the people they may affect; we legitimately worry about the consequences of the illicit trade in drugs -- which is to say, the consequences of prohibition. And we would like to see the drug trade made less accessible to children.

But when one faces facts straight on, they say a simple thing: Most people who use drugs are okay. If results are what count, in most cases it's okay that people are using drugs. Not in all cases, to be sure. But in most cases.

Certain types of civil disobedience can illustrate the pointlessness of criminalization of drug use in a vivid enough way to be both noticed and understood. Members of the European Parliament Marco Cappato of Italy and Chris Davies of Great Britain accomplished this three years ago when they presented themselves to police in the London suburb of Manchester with minute quantities of marijuana attached to the back of a couple of postage stamps, getting arrested in the process. Cappato and Davies weren't even using the marijuana, it wasn't even enough to be used, they clearly were not menacing society in any way, they are highly respectable citizens. Yet it was enough to get them sent to jail in handcuffs. That is an effective demonstration of the pointlessness of criminalization.

Drug reformers in the formerly Communist nation of Hungary are doing something similar right now. Roughly 30 of them have turned themselves in as drug users to Budapest and other city police headquarters since the beginning of April. Among them was a famous novelist who is also grandmother -- clearly not a threat to society. Police are being forced to arrest these people and make the law look ridiculous in the process. It is fueling discussion, not only about casual use of marijuana but also how society deals with the truly problematic drug users. It is raising the issue of the unlucky ones who get caught and might not get a lenient sentence. It may well help to change the country's drug laws.

The criminalization of responsible drug users is only one of the many pointless aspects of drug prohibition. Criminalization of the trade in drugs itself is also pointless, though for more complex reasons that involve economics, public health and many other factors. But criminalization of users is pointless on its face. People may miss that obvious point a lot of the time. But they are capable of grasping it, without a lot of effort, if it is pointed out in a clear and compelling manner.

I believe they can understand the rest of it too. As New Mexico's former governor, Gary Johnson, has put it, support for the drug war is a mile wide but an inch deep. Our drug policies are so far off-base, with such serious consequences, it isn't that hard to get a lot of people, perhaps most, to understand at a minimum that some things are wrong. Prohibition is pointless, but our efforts to end it need not be.

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David Borden is executive director of DRCnet.

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WHY HOPE FOR FAIRNESS OR MORALITY FROM AMERICA?
Posted by: LMNOP on May 3, 2005 3:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Of course I agree with the author except where he says that there is no point to the arrests of illicit drug users. No valid or just point, that is. There is no point with regard to justice or the safety and well being of the citizenry, the purpose of the law. But if your purpose is to lock up fellow citizens unjustly for profit, then, of course, the point is obvious. Such a policy is consistent with a government that makes all decisions for the benefit of an elite few at the expense of the rest of us. How can so many thousands of people behave so immorally? Why do so many millions support such unfairness? What's to stop them? There is no moral input into this nation anymore except whatever little has been learned in the American churches. That apparently is all that one can expect from that ethical system, one that supported the Salem witch burnings and the southern lynchings in this country as well as an Inquisition and a holocost in Europe. And now it sits by idly and watches honest, harmless people being incarcerated for profit. What is it that justifies hope for this culture? What natural or supernatural force are we expecting to make a nation of such people morally fit again? Expect it to get a lot worse before it gets better, if ever. If you want freedom from oppressive and unjust American laws, consider emigrating to a more evolved and civilized nation. It's time to stop talking like we have a will to solve this problem because as a collective, we have neither the moral clarity nor the intellect to do better. The American government wants your compelled obedience, and the 'good' people of this nation are not good enough to see a need, let alone ameliorate it. The good people of Canada and Holland (and several other enlightened societies) have done so for their compatriots, but that is because their morality, being based on reason rather than the bible, is secular and humane. It's remarkable how these conservative insects that run this country can keep offering that same failed ethical system as a solution for the problems which it has not been able to prevent or correct. When the leader of the free world pontificated, "fool me twice...uh, we don't get fooled again", he wasn't talking about the American people. Fool them all you want. It's easy. They're defenseless.

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what will it take
Posted by: naturalbornflyer on May 3, 2005 7:53 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
what would you do if you were in charge of running a nation?
do you really think you could offer a different way of running things that have been cementing over the last 200+ years. Do you think you could reverse this trend in a few years? I see the vast amount of people just trying to make it, and keep their families together, and protected. I just finished working in the supermarket industry partly because of the strike that went on in Southern California, and what I saw was an effort of both the food industry, and the unions to take away a living wage from people, who for the most part, have stayed out of a necessity to support their families, than as a belief in their work. What it comes down to is "looking out for #1".
I know that everyones priorities are different, but people will do things that aren't necessarily in their best interest....I see that idea being crammed down the throats of the American people by our insidious media machine. It is getting people to go against their own best interests. Why else would we be governed by a group that continually fails to represent the people.....
WE ARE ALL TOO DISTRACTED BY THE NOISE, AND WE NEED TO FIND A WAY TO SIMPLIFY THE IMPORTANT THINGS IN OUR LIFE. I TRULY HOPE THAT WE CAN TURN THE PAGE, AND ENCOURAGE OUR FELLOW AMERICANS TO RISE UP TO THE CHALLENGE. IF NOT, IT MAY BE TIME TO LOOK ABROAD.

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Sixpack6t9
Posted by: sixpack6t9 on May 5, 2005 5:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In response to the criminalization of drug users, I'd like to share what I have found. In Oregon, about 33% of our legislature is using cocaine--according to their dealer. Why then, would they pass such draconian drug laws? It's the money! not the moral issues or impact on the citizenry. It's just the fact that it is very lucrative to arrest, prosecute, confiscate all assets, and use that info to scare the people into giving up their rights. Can anyone tell me of any place else where the most aggressive campaign is to con people into watching each other, secreting information to police (often for a price) and then being scared by the environment they themselves created? The government has us chasing our own tails here, and most are too blind to see it! As long as they can keep everyone against each other, there can be no unity, no way to join together and fight back! Oregon has an "evidence fund" used to keep confidential informants on RETAINER! and our DA's "purchase" evidence with money from the same fund.
It's called "DIVIDE AND CONQUER! And as history is showing us, it works.
It's not morality- it's the money that keeps them hunting the drug users(who are most vulnerable). It's the federal grants (6.7 million for Oregon)that roll in for crisis intervention. The easiest way to disarm the public, is to coerce them into laying down their own arms. Then the state profits from slave labor in prisons.

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» RE: Sixpack6t9 Posted by: MegOnTheMountain
There is hope... The Centrust Party
Posted by: lamoyer0 on May 6, 2005 6:39 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is hope! I found THE CENTRUST PARTY, a new and developing political party, based on Truth, Integrity and Transparency - . www.centrustparty.org It is a developing movement at the moment, open and welcoming -- a "jumping off place" for those who are tired of the status quo and the historic bases for political philosophy. There are millions upon millions of us: citizens, residents and public servants alike. It's for those who have had, or are having, a shift in consciousness - and who are willing and want to make a major shift in how we relate to each other and our planet - and how we conduct "our" politics. The Centrust Party is about the "how" of politics. When we make a shift in "how" we do it, the "what we do" and the "solutions" will be more creative, effective, just and sustainable.

Clearly, humanity is losing ground... The Centrust Party has been created because it had to be created. It occurs to me that we could truly create a world that is a joy to live in.

What is your dream?

To the possible.... www.centrustparty.org

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There is hope... The Centrust Party
Posted by: lamoyer0 on May 6, 2005 6:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is hope! I found THE CENTRUST PARTY, a new and developing political party, based on Truth, Integrity and Transparency - . www.centrustparty.org It is a developing movement at the moment, open and welcoming -- a "jumping off place" for those who are tired of the status quo and the historic bases for political philosophy. There are millions upon millions of us: citizens, residents and public servants alike. It's for those who have had, or are having, a shift in consciousness - and who are willing and want to make a major shift in how we relate to each other and our planet - and how we conduct "our" politics. The Centrust Party is about the "how" of politics. When we make a shift in "how" we do it, the "what we do" and the "solutions" will be more creative, effective, just and sustainable.

Clearly, humanity is losing ground... The Centrust Party has been created because it had to be created. It occurs to me that we could truly create a world that is a joy to live in.

What is your dream?

To the possible.... www.centrustparty.org

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An exerpt from an ongoing related website..
Posted by: menmoc on May 30, 2005 6:27 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is an exerpt from an ongoing look into the life of a Canadian addict caught up in pushing another man's drugs for his profits. The man involved is under payed, under appreciated and has chosen to put his story out to show others what goes on in these circumstances, and what behaviours and patterns evolve in this complicated world within a world.

This is the author saying his career is over, that the inevitable has happened and he will fill in the interveening pieces as the site is pushes forward.


Well they say all good things must come to an end; well this story has come to an end. The writings and updates will continue right on as they have, the story started long ago and will take while to recall, but after the recollections have been put to paper so to say, the site will take a new direction. Everything came to a close after I spent some time inside. In street lingo that means I got pinched, busted, arrested, put in cuffs, nailed, taken down, popped, etc. The many names and phrases are as long as the court records are. In a few days I will have my day so to say, I will appear before a judge. This sucks in a couple ways, in all my life I had only been arrested once, never charged and could always suprise people with my 10-10 status. Thats cop lingo for an all clear person check. The police officers were always surprised when they ran my name and nothing came up. It was a badge of honour, been involved yet never nailed. Well that was the past. In the very least I will end up with a conviction for possesion. I went in with a possible charge for trafficking, which I was told was rather severe. When I left twenty-four hours later, I was going to court for possesion for the purpose of trafficking, in street terms, PPT. Quite a common charge and not too heavy. I expect to be found guilty, and expect to have to go to whats called drug court; weekly urine screenings, daily three hour classes, and other such stuff. I will be ''red zoned'' from the drug dealing area, part of the unmentioned red light district. I will probaly have a few months probation; which will entitle weekly meetings with somone and certain rules of conduct, no drugs, no drinking and no hanging out. As you the reader can see, it is a pain in the ass; but freedom does have its price and after that twenty-fours inside, anything is better than I six month or multi-year stint. cont....

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