Conservative Nonsense in the War on Drugs
by
Jacob G. Hornberger
by Jacob G. Hornberger
Conservatives
never cease to fascinate me, given their professed devotion to freedom,
free enterprise, and limited government and their ardent support
of policies that violate that principle. One of the most prominent
examples is the drug war. In fact, if youre ever wondering
whether a person is a conservative or a libertarian, a good litmus-test
question is, How do you feel about the war on drugs? The conservative
will respond, Even though I believe in freedom, free enterprise,
and limited government, weve got to continue waging the war
on drugs. The libertarian will respond, End it. It is
an immoral and destructive violation of the principles of freedom,
free enterprise, and limited government.
The most recent
example of conservative drug-war nonsense is an article entitled
Winning the Drug War, by Jonathan V. Last in the current
issue of The Weekly Standard, one of the premier conservative
publications in the country. In his article, Last cites statistics
showing that drug usage among certain groups of Americans has diminished
and that supplies of certain drugs have decreased. He says that
all this is evidence that the war on drugs is finally succeeding
and that we just need to keep waging it for some indeterminate time
into the future, when presumably U.S. officials will finally be
able to declare victory.
Of course,
weve heard this type of positive drug-war nonsense
for the past several decades, at least since Richard Nixon declared
war on drugs back in the 1970s. What conservatives never tell us
is how final victory will ultimately be measured. Like
all other drug warriors for the past several decades, Last doesnt
say, The statistics are so good that the drug war has now
been won and therefore we can now end it, but rather, Victory
is right around the corner. The statistics are getting better. Lets
keep going.
Last failed
to mention what is happening to the people of Nuevo Laredo, Mexico,
where drug lords compete violently to export illegal drugs into
the United States to reap the financial benefits of exorbitant black-market
prices and profits that the drug war has produced. Recently drug
gangs fired high-powered weapons and a grenade into the newsroom of
La Manana, killing Jaime Orozco Tey, a 40-year-old
father of three. Several other journalists have been killed in retaliation
for their stories on the drug war, and newspapers are now self-censoring
in fear of the drug lords. There are also political killings in
Nuevo Laredo arising out of the drug war, including the citys mayor after he had served the grand total of
nine hours in office. According to the New York Times,
In Nuevo Laredo, the federal police say average citizens live
in terror of drug dealers. Drug-related killings have become commonplace.
The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists says that the
U.S.-Mexico border region is now one of the worlds most dangerous
places for reporters.
Not surprisingly,
Last did not mention these statistics in his Were winning
the drug war article.
During Prohibition,
there were undoubtedly people such as Last claiming, Booze
consumption is down. Were winning the war on booze. Al Capone
is in jail. Weve got to keep on waging the war on booze until
we can declare final victory.
Fortunately,
Americans living at that time finally saw through such nonsense,
especially given the massive Prohibition-related violent crime that
the war on booze had spawned. They were right to finally legalize
the manufacture and sale of alcohol and treat alcohol consumption
as a social issue, not a criminal-justice problem.
Both conservatives
and liberals have waged their war on drugs for decades, and they
have reaped nothing but drug gangs, drug lords, robberies, thefts,
muggings, murders, dirty needles, overcrowded prisons, decimated
families, record drug busts, government corruption, infringements
on civil liberties, violations of financial privacy, massive federal
spending, and, of course, ever-glowing statistics reflecting drug-war
progress.
Americans
would be wise to reject, once and for all, the war on drugs, and
cast drug prohibition, like booze prohibition, into the ashcan of
history.
February
18, 2006
Jacob
Hornberger [send him mail]
is founder and president of The Future
of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright
© 2006 Future of Freedom Foundation
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