Upon taking office, Attorney General John Ashcroft
promised to "relaunch" the War on Drugs, to the applause of
hard-line Republicans in Congress. Dissatisfied with 1999's number of drug
arrests - more than 1.5 million, a record 620,500 of them for pot
possession - the administration is determined to increase funding for
enforcement and prison construction; the $18 billion already spent each
year by the federal government is deemed insufficient.
But this year the White House will face newly galvanized resistance. A
range of newcomers, including police officers, doctors, ravers, minority
advocates and Republicans, have been questioning the drug-prohibition
orthodoxy and gaining political power. Six thousand
doctors have joined an organization called Physician Leadership on
National Drug Policy, which advocates that drug addiction be treated
as a chronic illness. Chapters of a group called Students
for Sensible Drug Policy, which works to reverse a law
restricting those with drug convictions from access to federal loans,
thrive on 140 campuses. Urban activists, in groups such as Prison
Moratorium Project and Mothers of the
Disappeared, are protesting the incarceration of hundreds of
thousands of nonviolent black men in rural white towns that rely on full
prisons for jobs.
The highest-ranking official to attack the drug
war is New Mexico's Republican governor, Gary Johnson, who,
but for his radical stance on drug-law reform, would undoubtedly be a
rising star of the GOP. A handsome, teetotaling self-made millionaire,
Johnson hardly fits the countercultural mode of most reform advocates. He
is an accomplished triathlete and a poster boy for the healthy lifestyle.
But Johnson, much to the consternation of party leaders such as New Mexico
senator Pete Domenici, is calling for the
legalization, regulation and taxation of drugs, including pot, cocaine and
heroin. Johnson enjoys high approval ratings in New Mexico, and
drug-law reformers hope that he will help unify the disparate forces of
the harm-reduction movement.
At the end of May, Johnson welcomed more than 800 members of this new
coalition to Albuquerque for a conference held by the
George Soros-funded Lindesmith Center-Drug Policy Foundation.
There, the governor addressed a raucous group that included former
inmates, fellow Republicans, religious leaders, ravers, anti-DARE drug
educators, addiction counselors and the token handful of permanently
stoned individuals. In his speech, he employed the good-conservative
argument that drug prohibition is too costly. "There is not a bigger
issue that is going unaddressed," he maintained, "when you
consider that fifty percent of spending on law enforcement, courts and
prisons is going to the War on Drugs." But he also reached out to
recreational users, saying, "We're all looking for a heightened sense
of reality." He was then met with respectful silence when he claimed
that anyone who stops drinking for a while will probably join him in
quitting for good, because, in his case, "It was the best decision I
ever made in my life."
Johnson would certainly be the perfect
frontman for a legalization movement, but this audience does not uniformly
believe that ingesting drugs should be legal. Few minority leaders, for
example, insist on the potential spiritual benefits of psychedelics - they
are focused on minimizing the damage drugs and drug trafficking do to
their communities. Young activists want to draw attention to the economics
of life in the ghetto, where dealing drugs may be the only well-paying
option, and they want to get their friends and relatives out of prison.
Dedicated ravers, on the other hand, want to make sure their drugs are
safe, so they can party without friends getting sent to the hospital.
|
Why People
Want Drug Law Reform
1.
To end the taboo against explicit discussion and debate about drugs
and drug control policy
2.
To minimize the damage drugs and drug trafficking to
communities
3
4.
To increase availability of drug treatment
5.
To get friends & relatives out of jail
6.
To draw attention to ghetto conditions where drug dealing is the only
well paying option
7.
To make sure the drugs people use are safe
8.
To
make sure people can get treated for overdose and other drug-related
medical complications without being arrested
9.
To end racial profiling and other discriminatory drug enforcement
practices
10. To
assure psychedelic drugs are available for spiritual experiences
11.
To correct the misperception that kids are increasingly dangerous &
stop the national hysteria leading prosecuting juveniles as adults
12.
To stop the spread of hepatitis C, HIV, and AIDS |
One goal that young drug-war opponents have in common is to correct the
misperception that kids are increasingly dangerous. National hysteria has
led forty-one states to make it easier to prosecute juveniles as adults,
even though in 1998 violent crime by youth decreased to its lowest point
in twenty-five years. "Maybe we should have a right-to-vote movement
for youth, if they're going to criminalize us," says Rashid Shabazz,
a member of the Drop the Rock coalition in New York, which aims to repeal
the state's harsh mandatory-minimum-sentencing laws. "I'm sick and
tired of youth being put last," says Samantha Snow, 18, a recovering
heroin addict and advocate for homeless youth in Albuquerque. "We're
the future leaders. If we all get STDs or go to prison or get shot, what's
going to happen to this country?"
These agitators are fed up with society's taboo against explicit
discussion of drugs. "We don't need bullshit education like
DARE," says fifteen-year-old Albuquerque AIDS activist Kenny
O'Malley. "Education needs to go into the details, with people who've
been through it, or it's not going to work." Sandra Karpetas, a peer
educator with the Higher Knowledge Network in British Columbia, points to
a misconception about why kids try drugs. "Making a strong decision
when I was in school was always about refusal skills," she says.
"But in my experience talking to kids, peer pressure is often pretty
low. There's many kids with very good self-esteem
who take drugs for evolution, to learn more about themselves."
Appreciating the potential benefits of recreational drugs is a luxury
that minority activists don't have time for. "Everyone knows: Why do
you take drugs? To get fucked up!" says Shabazz. "Crack and
heroin are not fun drugs, not party drugs - we're talking about escape
drugs," says Rachel Jackson, state field director of Books Not Bars
in San Francisco. "People turn to drugs because
of abuse and desperation. Then there's a limited number of things you can
do to get the money you need for them: panhandle, rob people, deal dope,
burglarize homes, hook people up with dealers, prostitute yourself - when
women are giving blow jobs in parking lots, that's not for fun."
Last November, the white middle class made clear that it is far more
ready to sympathize with the white drug user than with the black drug
seller. Voters in California approved Proposition 36, which diverts
addicts into treatment, by sixty-one percent to thirty-nine percent, but
an initiative in Massachusetts, which would have allowed addicts who are
also low-level dealers to get treatment instead of jail, failed by
fifty-three percent to forty-seven percent. The low-level dealers most
often arrested are black or Hispanic, a fact the public is conscious of
through television coverage of the drug war.
Minority activists are trying to cope with society's loathing of the
drug pusher. Dorsey Nunn, an African-American lawyer from violence-ridden
East Palo Alto, California, says he supported Proposition 36 on the
premise that "the drug war was being fought in my community, and I
was the rabbit being chased." But he doesn't view the new law as a
magic spell that will dissipate decades of tension. "I knew the
police chief wasn't going to come over now and say, 'Your homeboys are
some great guys, y'all come on over,' " he says sadly. "And the
district attorney wasn't going to jump up and down and spread froufrou
dust on us, and suddenly all this shit would be over."
Police officers now openly acknowledge the racial
strategies used to fight the drug war. In March, state troopers in
New Jersey testified that Drug Enforcement Administration agents
originated racial profiling to catch drug couriers. Joseph McNamara,
former police chief of San Jose, California, and author of the forthcoming
Gangster Cops: The Hidden Cost of America's War on Drugs, argues
that mutual hostility between minorities and law enforcement is built into
the current system. "As long as you have prohibition," he
maintains, "you have a police-state mentality at work: The police
don't know who has drugs, so they have to suspect everyone, but especially
people of color."
As long as you have drug
prohibition,
you have a police-state mentality!
Although America's law-enforcement agencies may concede that the drug
war causes racial discrimination, police will never be leading protests on
behalf of drug users. Doctors, however, might be expected to, especially
since a study published in October in the Journal of the American
Medical Association described drug addiction as a chronic medical
condition, like hypertension or diabetes.
Every year, thousands of people across the world are newly infected
with hepatitis C and HIV through heroin injection. In the United States,
10,000 people contract HIV from dirty needles every year. But syringe
possession is illegal in most states, and the federal government has
refused to fund needle exchange. This is "tantamount to murder by
social policy," says the NAACP Legal Defense Fund's Teddy Shaw.
Doctors have stayed on the sidelines, says Brown
University's Dr. David Lewis, founder of Physician Leadership on National
Drug Policy, because they "have been more or less driven out by the
overwhelming presence of criminal-justice interests" - and by the
stigma associated with drug and alcohol addiction. "It's very
similar in some ways to the stigma that was attached to tuberculosis and
cancer at one point," he says. "But I do believe, as the
treatments get better, the stigma will lessen, and we'll rely less on the
criminal-justice system to handle the disease."
As doctors begin to rally in support of treatment over incarceration,
activists wait impatiently. Gov. Johnson says he was shocked to learn there
are drugs available, such as Naloxone, that can reverse heroin
overdoses. "Overdose is a function of prohibition; we can
arguably bring that number down," he says. In New Mexico, he
successfully pushed for a law allowing police officers to administer these
drugs.
Support from the medical profession will be essential in the next big
drug-reform campaign: Initiatives in 2002 are
tentatively planned in Florida, Ohio and Michigan that, like
California's Proposition 36, would mandate treatment over prison for
first-time, nonviolent drug offenders. These are incremental, poll-tested
campaigns, but ultimately, says Ethan Nadelmann,
the Lindesmith Center's executive director, drug-law reformers
will have to get bolder. They must address the nation's justified fears
about illegal drugs, he argues, in order to convince the public that
adults should not be punished for what they put in their bodies. "We
need to assert freedom of control over our own consciousness and
sovereignty over our minds and bodies!" he exclaimed in a closing
speech at the conference and was met with a standing ovation.
(RS 874 - Aug. 2, 2001)