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News (Media Awareness Project) - US PA: OPED: The Cost of Dying
Title:US PA: OPED: The Cost of Dying
Published On:2007-02-14
Source:Philadelphia City Paper (PA)
Fetched On:2008-01-12 15:25:30
THE COST OF DYING

The Drug War Claims More Lives Than Drugs Themselves.

Now that we have the official 2006 Philadelphia murder tally -- 406
killings -- we can start talking about ways to lower it. But wringing
our hands and singing songs of solidarity isn't going to cut it. And
it's unlikely that anyone will seriously propose changing the
ruinously expensive and counterproductive drug policies that make
Philadelphia one of the most violent cities in the country.

By the end of January, the U.S. had already spent well over $4
billion just this year trying to prevent people from putting
controlled substances up their noses and into their veins. The War on
Drugs -- what is it with Americans and declaring war on indefinite
nouns? -- creates a predictable netherworld of nefarious suppliers
and dealers who turn to violence to settle scores and turf wars. No
matter how hard the police may work to disrupt these networks, they
end up plowing the sea. And all that drug money leads inevitably to corruption.

The problems don't stop there. The long reach of America's
coke-starved nostrils wreaks havoc on producing countries, as well.
In places like Colombia and Afghanistan, drug production funds
terrorist organizations and fuels debilitating civil wars. If drug
farmers could sell their wares legally, central governments would
benefit from a tax bonanza, and the global price of prescription
narcotics would come down.

Locally, the drug war destroys more lives than Eagles playoff games
and turns peaceful neighborhoods into killing fields. Addicts who
could be getting treatment from state-controlled clinics end up on
the streets, committing crimes to get their hands on their drug of
choice. People who might otherwise pursue above-the-board careers
take the easy road of drug-dealing (although as economist Stephen
Levitt has shown, most low-level drug dealers make less than minimum wage).

Not only does drug prohibition send violent crime through the roof,
it also sends millions of people into the criminal justice system,
many of them young minorities who will never find the straight path
again. And of course, it is the beleaguered U.S. taxpayer who gets
the bill for this system of mass incarceration. And America that ends
up with a higher percentage of its citizens in prison than the
Khrushchev-era U.S.S.R.

No one should pretend that decriminalizing drugs will instantly solve
Philadelphia's crime and killing problems. Instant solutions to
intractable problems exist only in the minds of ninth-graders and
Heritage Foundation scholars. But neither should we pretend that
there is no correlation between violent crime and drug prohibition.

Philadelphia can't change drug laws on its own. Even if City Council
were to pass a drug-legalization law that established a pot brownie
factory at 20th and Christian streets, state and federal officials
would swoop in and shut down the whole operation. There simply aren't
any politicians with stature and capital who think there should be
any basic changes to America's drug laws. And anyone who argues
publicly that the drug war is a budget-draining fiasco is quickly
shown the door to political oblivion. Just ask former New Mexico Gov.
Gary Johnson, who retired more popular than Clinton yet was treated
like a pariah by his own party for supporting the legalization of drugs.

Predictably, it is distant elites who benefit from the largesse of
the War on Drugs, and denizens of forgotten big cities who suffer the
consequences. Meanwhile, people like U.S. Sens. Arlen Specter and Bob
Casey can make the easy choice to maintain the status quo because
they probably aren't touched by drug crime and because there are so
many entrenched interests that lead them to support prohibition, from
prison guards to Drug Enforcement Administration agents to state
governments who love raking in the cash to fight a war they all know
they can't win.

While we wait for the politicians to figure it out, or for social
libertarians to forge a political coalition, cities like Philadelphia
will continue to suffer. And hundreds of lives seems like an awfully
high price to pay for someone else's failed "war."
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