Drug-War Hogwash
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
DIGG THIS
About the
only industries the American government is skilled at creating are
the war industries and the smuggling industries.
The fiasco
some people call the "war on drugs" is proof positive
that most people learn nothing from history. What happened when
the government outlawed the sale of alcohol? It created organized
crime, vast organizations that smuggled booze into the country and
set up wholesale and retail distribution of it. Since criminal organizations
are denied the benefit of the law for settling disputes, you got
gang wars for turf and distribution rights.
Prohibition,
as it was called, was supported by the same barnyard-style rhetoric
that you hear about drugs. Enormous government organizations were
formed to fight illegal alcohol. Corruption became rampant. It became
a standard joke that the big supporters of prohibition were the
cops and bootleggers. The American public finally got fed up with
corruption and hypocrisy, and repealed the amendment that had created
Prohibition.
The politicians
were smarter the next time. They didn't use a constitutional amendment
for outlawing drugs, which would give the people a choice to reject
it. They outlawed them by statute, and it is a well-known fact that
the group with the least influence on the legislative process is
the American people.
The exact
same thing happened that had happened with prohibition. Organizations
were formed that smuggled drugs into the U.S. and set up wholesale
and retail distribution systems. Law enforcement expanded, and so
did corruption. Illicit money in vast quantities always breeds corruption.
The illegal
drug business boils down to a retail industry. There are suppliers
and wholesalers, but in the end the money comes from the individual
users. Therefore, if your local gendarmes tell you there are a lot
of drugs in the area, but they can't find them, you need to ask
this question: How is it the customers can find them, but you can't?
You need to look closely at drug arrests. If they are all street
sellers, then you've got a problem. Chances are, the suppliers are
paying somebody off.
Never underestimate
the power of money to corrupt, especially when it's untraceable
and tax-free.
Like the earlier
gangs in Prohibition days, drug gangs can't go to court to settle
disputes, so you have killings. As long as one drug dealer is killing
only another drug dealer, the cops shouldn't even bother to investigate.
A lot of today's criminals, however, can't shoot straight and often
hit innocent people. Those criminals should be caught and executed.
The real answer
lies in one of two alternatives. Alternative one is to crack down
hard and levy severe penalties on users. The present policy of giving
users a slap on the wrist, especially if they are celebrities, just
creates a market. No amount of law enforcement will keep drugs out
of the hands of eager customers with money. For one thing, drugs
like marijuana, cocaine and heroin are dirt-cheap to produce. Drugs
flow to the market. Eliminate the market and the drug flow will
cease.
Frankly, if
I were a cop in Colombia, I'd be darned if I would risk my life
to stop drugs when I can see celebrity drug users in the U.S. going
free with a smirky smile.
The
second alternative is to legalize and regulate drugs. These drugs
are so cheap to produce that they can be sold legitimately at a
far lower price than illegal drugs. The whole illegal-drug business
would go bust. If addicts could buy their drugs at a reasonable
price from a noncriminal enterprise, then you would eliminate the
necessity of addicts having to commit crimes to feed their habit.
You could also provide education and treatment in a noncriminalized
environment. You would eliminate a lot of corruption, and you could
greatly reduce the prison population.
To continue
as we are is to fulfill the definition of insanity and chronic stupidity
by repeating the same acts that result in the same repeated failures.
July
19, 2008
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2008 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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