News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: OPED: Just You Wait Until I Grow Up |
Title: | UK: OPED: Just You Wait Until I Grow Up |
Published On: | 2001-07-11 |
Source: | New Statesman (UK) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-25 14:23:01 |
JUST YOU WAIT UNTIL I GROW UP
When today's young get into power, will they pretend they never
sniffed a line of white powder? Surely not. Legalised drugs are
inevitable, argues Johann Hari
Another Cambridge May Week has rolled around, and I, like half of
Cambridge, celebrated with a few tabs of Ecstasy and the odd line of
coke. Oh please, spare me your false indignation. This is the casual
tone in which most people of my age now discuss drugs. Those of you
who thought Cambridge students still celebrated the end of their
finals with a sip of Pimm's and a vigorous game of croquet have an
even hazier grip on reality than your average LSD user.
It is time we admitted that this country is filled with drug-users.
From the granny who sips cannabis tea for her arthritis to the
management consultant snorting charlie in the toilets of
Stringfellows, from the council estates to the grand estates, we are
a nation of druggies.
We have to grow up about drugs, and banish the false rhetoric,
misleading statistics and silly mythology of the well-meaning but
dishonest anti-drugs lobby. All too often, we have allowed them to
exhume the corpses of that tiny handful of people who have died using
drugs. Their abuse of the memory of (amongst others) Leah Betts and
Lorna Spinks is at best deluded, and at worst mendacious.
Let's face reality for a minute. Betts took a risk. It should have
been an informed risk. Just as, every time you get into a car, you
know you might be killed, so it is with Ecstasy. Spinks, who died at
a Cambridge nightclub a few weeks ago, took the same risk. We hear
about her; we don't hear about the quarter-million people (some of
whom were my friends, in the same club that night) who had a great
weekend.
Spinks died not because she took Ecstasy, but because she didn't take
it properly. If a first-time driver whacks straight into a wall, we
do not blame the car for the driver's death. We blame the lack of
adequate instruction. Similarly, Spinks should have been informed
that Ecstasy users should drink lots of water - as she did - but that
they should also dance a lot, to sweat the water off.
If Ecstasy was sold legally, this information would be displayed
clearly on the packet. As such, Spinks would probably be alive today.
Prohibition - not Ecstasy - killed her. If we want more of our
children to live, we must shift our spending on drugs information
from hysterical scare campaigns to communicating information on how
to use drugs properly.
It is argued that this would "legitimise" drug use and give young
people the green light to experiment. But drug-use is already widely
accepted by young people as just another fun leisure activity. A
recent Home Office report found that six in ten people have tried an
illicit drug by late adolescence (so have one-third of all
14-year-olds). More than a quarter of a million people take Ecstasy
each week. That's the equivalent of every single person in Milton
Keynes, every week. Even more smoke cannabis, and almost as many
snort cocaine.
Those who shriek about the dangers of such habits fail to realise
that the number of resulting deaths is so small that, when they do
occur, they become headline news.
In response to these hard facts, the prohibitionists are still
playing that same, scratchy old record. "Kids, please don't use
drugs," they bleat. Why, they proclaim, children simply need to be
told about the innate wickedness of these substances, and implored to
develop the moral fibre to resist them. What they ignore is that
every single one of those 250,000 people in Britain who take Ecstasy
on a Saturday night have endured exactly those sanctimonious lectures
in classrooms up and down the land.
And they ignore the lessons from the United States, which has pursued
stringent anti-drugs policies relentlessly for decades, and which has
been rewarded with millions of unnecessary deaths caused by poor
education and the contaminants introduced into drugs by unscrupulous
criminal gangs. The US Department of Health found last year that the
result of its endless "crackdowns" was that 87 million Americans had
used illegal drugs, and 971,000 regularly used crack cocaine. The
intellectual poverty of the prohibitionists is so obvious that it no
longer merits serious discussion.
In the light of such facts, a brave and sensible government could
take us down the road travelled by the Netherlands. The Dutch have
encouraged the use of EZ tests, which tell users whether their
Ecstasy contains contaminants of any kind. They have told their
police to concentrate on criminals who are harming other people,
rather than cokeheads and dope-smokers. The average age of Dutch
junkies is rising (it is now over 30). While that country's sane
approach is successfully reducing the numbers of young people who use
drugs recklessly, in Britain and the US, our puerile stance is
directly creating junkies who are ever younger. The average age is
now just 21.
Although they have not yet opted for full legalisation, the Dutch
accept drugs as a fact of life. Other countries are moving in this
direction, too. Following a series of Ecstasy-related deaths, the
excellent Toronto Raver Information Project (Trip) was established.
It set up information booths at raves telling people how to use drugs
properly, and how to avoid health risks. This work ranges from the
mundane (handing out earplugs, or encouraging ravers to use reputable
and responsible drug dealers) to the more serious (arranging
referrals for counselling and rehab programmes). There is not any
research into their effectiveness yet, but, anecdotally, ravers in
Toronto report a steep decline in the (already small) number of
illnesses, deaths and unwanted pregnancies at the city's raves.
We, too, could adopt this rational approach - and sooner than you
might think. The UK's prohibitionist consensus is beginning to
crumble. Nick Davies, one of this country's most gifted investigative
journalists, recently exposed the entire intellectual edifice of the
political class (and particularly Keith Hellawell, the "drugs tsar")
as a dishonest sham, in his television programme Drugs Laws Don't
Work: the phoney war. Hella-well has since been humiliatingly
sidelined by the new Home Secretary, David Blunkett, and forced to
admit that his earlier arguments about cannabis were false.
Our politicians are slowly inching away from the old platitudes, too.
Mo Mowlam, the cabinet minister with nominal responsibility for drugs
policy in the last cabinet, came out recently in the Sunday Mirror in
favour of the full legalisation of cannabis. In Labour's first term,
Mo was overruled by a twitchy home secretary, Jack Straw.
Sir Keith Morris, Britain's ambassador to Colombia from 1990-94, is
another who has just called for the legalisation of drugs, arguing,
in the Guardian, that the drugs war is "unwinnable and
counter-productive". From 2 July, Blunkett has allowed experimental
moves by the police in the London Borough of Lambeth (which covers
Brixton) that in effect decriminalise cannabis. Those found in
possession of cannabis will be given a meaningless "formal warning"
and sent on their way. Tim Godwin, deputy assistant commissioner at
the Metropolitan Police, tells us that if, when reviewed at the end
of the year, the scheme proves to have been a success, it "may well"
be adopted for the whole Met area. If cannabis is officially
permitted in London in 2002 - as now seems likely - there will be
irresistible pressure for the policy to be extended across the UK.
In practice, decriminalisation already exists - as long as you're
rich. Do you seriously think that, whatever their choice of drug, any
of the well-to-do students here in Cambridge would be prosecuted for
narcotics offences in May Week? Don't make me laugh. Yet at a
homeless hostel sandwiched between two Cambridge colleges, two
workers faced years in prison just because they were convicted of
turning a blind eye to drug use.
Providing a real choice on the question of drugs is also a
prerequisite to tackling another major social problem in Britain: the
disengagement of young people from politics. How many OAPs would
participate in the democratic process if the entire political
establishment had spent the last decade demonising Zimmer frames?
Paradoxically, this choice may be offered first by the traditionally
authoritarian Conservative Party. Three of the contenders for the
Tory leadership - David Davis, Iain Duncan Smith and Michael Ancram -
have called for a major debate on the legalisation of cannabis.
Michael Portillo says the Tories need to adjust to what Britain has
become, and appeal once more to young people. Well, here's his
chance. He could make the drug laws his Clause Four, a symbolic
repudiation of the Thatcher/Widdecombe years. We shall have to see if
he has the spine. But if not the Tories, sooner or later, Labour.
Today, we only import high-quality drugs from the Netherlands; within
a few decades, we will be importing their high-quality drugs
policies, too. When the cabinet is made up of men and women of my
age, claims that no one in government has had their nose touched by
the odd line of white powder will become risible. They will not be
able to support a law that they know a significant section of the
population blatantly defies.
My friends are tomorrow's doctors, lawyers and, yes, prime ministers
- - and, boy, do they inhale. When tomorrow comes, their minds may be
slightly fuzzier than today's ministers', but at least they won't be
closed.
When today's young get into power, will they pretend they never
sniffed a line of white powder? Surely not. Legalised drugs are
inevitable, argues Johann Hari
Another Cambridge May Week has rolled around, and I, like half of
Cambridge, celebrated with a few tabs of Ecstasy and the odd line of
coke. Oh please, spare me your false indignation. This is the casual
tone in which most people of my age now discuss drugs. Those of you
who thought Cambridge students still celebrated the end of their
finals with a sip of Pimm's and a vigorous game of croquet have an
even hazier grip on reality than your average LSD user.
It is time we admitted that this country is filled with drug-users.
From the granny who sips cannabis tea for her arthritis to the
management consultant snorting charlie in the toilets of
Stringfellows, from the council estates to the grand estates, we are
a nation of druggies.
We have to grow up about drugs, and banish the false rhetoric,
misleading statistics and silly mythology of the well-meaning but
dishonest anti-drugs lobby. All too often, we have allowed them to
exhume the corpses of that tiny handful of people who have died using
drugs. Their abuse of the memory of (amongst others) Leah Betts and
Lorna Spinks is at best deluded, and at worst mendacious.
Let's face reality for a minute. Betts took a risk. It should have
been an informed risk. Just as, every time you get into a car, you
know you might be killed, so it is with Ecstasy. Spinks, who died at
a Cambridge nightclub a few weeks ago, took the same risk. We hear
about her; we don't hear about the quarter-million people (some of
whom were my friends, in the same club that night) who had a great
weekend.
Spinks died not because she took Ecstasy, but because she didn't take
it properly. If a first-time driver whacks straight into a wall, we
do not blame the car for the driver's death. We blame the lack of
adequate instruction. Similarly, Spinks should have been informed
that Ecstasy users should drink lots of water - as she did - but that
they should also dance a lot, to sweat the water off.
If Ecstasy was sold legally, this information would be displayed
clearly on the packet. As such, Spinks would probably be alive today.
Prohibition - not Ecstasy - killed her. If we want more of our
children to live, we must shift our spending on drugs information
from hysterical scare campaigns to communicating information on how
to use drugs properly.
It is argued that this would "legitimise" drug use and give young
people the green light to experiment. But drug-use is already widely
accepted by young people as just another fun leisure activity. A
recent Home Office report found that six in ten people have tried an
illicit drug by late adolescence (so have one-third of all
14-year-olds). More than a quarter of a million people take Ecstasy
each week. That's the equivalent of every single person in Milton
Keynes, every week. Even more smoke cannabis, and almost as many
snort cocaine.
Those who shriek about the dangers of such habits fail to realise
that the number of resulting deaths is so small that, when they do
occur, they become headline news.
In response to these hard facts, the prohibitionists are still
playing that same, scratchy old record. "Kids, please don't use
drugs," they bleat. Why, they proclaim, children simply need to be
told about the innate wickedness of these substances, and implored to
develop the moral fibre to resist them. What they ignore is that
every single one of those 250,000 people in Britain who take Ecstasy
on a Saturday night have endured exactly those sanctimonious lectures
in classrooms up and down the land.
And they ignore the lessons from the United States, which has pursued
stringent anti-drugs policies relentlessly for decades, and which has
been rewarded with millions of unnecessary deaths caused by poor
education and the contaminants introduced into drugs by unscrupulous
criminal gangs. The US Department of Health found last year that the
result of its endless "crackdowns" was that 87 million Americans had
used illegal drugs, and 971,000 regularly used crack cocaine. The
intellectual poverty of the prohibitionists is so obvious that it no
longer merits serious discussion.
In the light of such facts, a brave and sensible government could
take us down the road travelled by the Netherlands. The Dutch have
encouraged the use of EZ tests, which tell users whether their
Ecstasy contains contaminants of any kind. They have told their
police to concentrate on criminals who are harming other people,
rather than cokeheads and dope-smokers. The average age of Dutch
junkies is rising (it is now over 30). While that country's sane
approach is successfully reducing the numbers of young people who use
drugs recklessly, in Britain and the US, our puerile stance is
directly creating junkies who are ever younger. The average age is
now just 21.
Although they have not yet opted for full legalisation, the Dutch
accept drugs as a fact of life. Other countries are moving in this
direction, too. Following a series of Ecstasy-related deaths, the
excellent Toronto Raver Information Project (Trip) was established.
It set up information booths at raves telling people how to use drugs
properly, and how to avoid health risks. This work ranges from the
mundane (handing out earplugs, or encouraging ravers to use reputable
and responsible drug dealers) to the more serious (arranging
referrals for counselling and rehab programmes). There is not any
research into their effectiveness yet, but, anecdotally, ravers in
Toronto report a steep decline in the (already small) number of
illnesses, deaths and unwanted pregnancies at the city's raves.
We, too, could adopt this rational approach - and sooner than you
might think. The UK's prohibitionist consensus is beginning to
crumble. Nick Davies, one of this country's most gifted investigative
journalists, recently exposed the entire intellectual edifice of the
political class (and particularly Keith Hellawell, the "drugs tsar")
as a dishonest sham, in his television programme Drugs Laws Don't
Work: the phoney war. Hella-well has since been humiliatingly
sidelined by the new Home Secretary, David Blunkett, and forced to
admit that his earlier arguments about cannabis were false.
Our politicians are slowly inching away from the old platitudes, too.
Mo Mowlam, the cabinet minister with nominal responsibility for drugs
policy in the last cabinet, came out recently in the Sunday Mirror in
favour of the full legalisation of cannabis. In Labour's first term,
Mo was overruled by a twitchy home secretary, Jack Straw.
Sir Keith Morris, Britain's ambassador to Colombia from 1990-94, is
another who has just called for the legalisation of drugs, arguing,
in the Guardian, that the drugs war is "unwinnable and
counter-productive". From 2 July, Blunkett has allowed experimental
moves by the police in the London Borough of Lambeth (which covers
Brixton) that in effect decriminalise cannabis. Those found in
possession of cannabis will be given a meaningless "formal warning"
and sent on their way. Tim Godwin, deputy assistant commissioner at
the Metropolitan Police, tells us that if, when reviewed at the end
of the year, the scheme proves to have been a success, it "may well"
be adopted for the whole Met area. If cannabis is officially
permitted in London in 2002 - as now seems likely - there will be
irresistible pressure for the policy to be extended across the UK.
In practice, decriminalisation already exists - as long as you're
rich. Do you seriously think that, whatever their choice of drug, any
of the well-to-do students here in Cambridge would be prosecuted for
narcotics offences in May Week? Don't make me laugh. Yet at a
homeless hostel sandwiched between two Cambridge colleges, two
workers faced years in prison just because they were convicted of
turning a blind eye to drug use.
Providing a real choice on the question of drugs is also a
prerequisite to tackling another major social problem in Britain: the
disengagement of young people from politics. How many OAPs would
participate in the democratic process if the entire political
establishment had spent the last decade demonising Zimmer frames?
Paradoxically, this choice may be offered first by the traditionally
authoritarian Conservative Party. Three of the contenders for the
Tory leadership - David Davis, Iain Duncan Smith and Michael Ancram -
have called for a major debate on the legalisation of cannabis.
Michael Portillo says the Tories need to adjust to what Britain has
become, and appeal once more to young people. Well, here's his
chance. He could make the drug laws his Clause Four, a symbolic
repudiation of the Thatcher/Widdecombe years. We shall have to see if
he has the spine. But if not the Tories, sooner or later, Labour.
Today, we only import high-quality drugs from the Netherlands; within
a few decades, we will be importing their high-quality drugs
policies, too. When the cabinet is made up of men and women of my
age, claims that no one in government has had their nose touched by
the odd line of white powder will become risible. They will not be
able to support a law that they know a significant section of the
population blatantly defies.
My friends are tomorrow's doctors, lawyers and, yes, prime ministers
- - and, boy, do they inhale. When tomorrow comes, their minds may be
slightly fuzzier than today's ministers', but at least they won't be
closed.
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