The Drug Crisis
by
Harry Browne
by Harry Browne
Few
people are aware that before World War I, a 9-year-old girl could
walk into a drug store and buy heroin.
That's
right heroin. She didn't need a doctor's prescription or
a note from her parents. She could buy it right off the shelf. Bayer
and other large drug companies sold heroin as a pain-reliever and
sedative in measured doses just the way aspirin is sold today.
Cocaine, opium, and marijuana were readily available as well. No
Drug Enforcement Agency, no undercover cops, no "Parents
the Anti-Drug" commercials. Just people going about their own business
is whatever way they chose.
Seeing
today's never-ending crisis of teenagers using drugs, you can imagine
how bad it must have been when there were no laws to stop children
or adults from using drugs. But, in fact, there was no drug
crisis at all. A few people were addicted to heroin or cocaine,
just as a few people today are addicted to sleeping pills or Big
Macs, but there was no national uproar about it. Such people, if
they wanted to break their habits, could freely consult doctors
without fear of being sent to prison.
There
were no black-market drug dealers preying on school children. There
were no gang wars over drug profits, because there were no drug
gangs. After all, who would buy dangerous drugs from a gangster
at outrageous prices when he could buy safe drugs made by a reputable
drug company at modest prices?
Americans
got a taste of what a Drug War might be like when they endorsed
the 18th Amendment invoking alcohol Prohibition in 1919. The result
was gang warfare, people dying from drinking bathtub gin, corruption
in police departments, and non-violent citizens sent to prison for
indulging in a vice that was strictly personal. Most Americans rejoiced
when Prohibition was repealed in 1933. The chances of them supporting
another such Constitutional amendment within the next 50 years were
slim to none.
So
the federal government didn't dare try amending the Constitution
when politicians and bureaucrats decided to reinstate all the trappings
of Prohibition in a new Drug War. This War That Will Never End was
begun in stages probably starting with the rarely-enforced
Harrison Act of 1914. In my recollection, the Drug War as we know
it today began during the 1960s, moved into second and third gears
during the Nixon administration of 19691974, and shifted into
overdrive during the Reagan administration of 19811989.
The
Drug War has been easily the greatest cause of violent crime in
American history: Gangs fighting over monopoly territories, children
killed in drive-by shootings, families in the inner city living
with the constant sound of gunfire outside their doors, police killing
innocent people in misguided drug raids, crooked cops helping to
spread poisonous drugs, non-violent citizens sent to prison to be
terrorized by violent prisoners none of which would exist in the
absence of the federal drug laws.
There
is nothing that could make our cities safer than repealing the drug
laws all of them.
Does
the idea of heroin, cocaine, and opium being sold over the counter
sound too ludicrous to be true? You can check it out for yourself.
A marvelous
website, maintained by the University of Buffalo's Addiction
Research Unit, shows the actual labels and ads from patent medicines
of the 19th and early-20th centuries. You can see the claims made,
the ingredients used, and the acceptance of what so many Americans
fear today.
That
era of innocence didn't end because America was threatened by a
drug crisis. It was ended in the traditional way by politicians
looking for new worlds to conquer, politicians who have no interest
in examining dispassionately the chaos they cause, and who will
never face a single personal consequence for the lives they have
ruined.
February
3, 2005
Harry Browne [send
him mail], the author of Why
Government Doesn't Work
and many other books, was the Libertarian presidential candidate
in 1996 and 2000. See his website.
Copyright
© 2005 Harry Browne
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