News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Michael Massing Responds |
Title: | US: Michael Massing Responds |
Published On: | 1999-09-20 |
Source: | Nation, The (US) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-05 21:28:00 |
MICHAEL MASSING RESPONDS
I'm encouraged to see how much common ground there is between my colleagues
and me. But some key differences remain.
Peter Kornbluh contends that the distorting effect of all those CIA exposes
is temporary, that in the long run they reinforce popular cynicism about
government policy, but this seems naive. John Kerry's investigation into US
drug policy in Central America may have helped dramatize the hypocrisy of
the drug war, but it also built support for the invasion of Panama. Gary
Webb's work may have convinced the Institute for Policy Studies to create a
citizens' fact-finding commission on US drug policy, but it also gave rise
to meetings like the one in Compton that Kornbluh describes. That the
audience felt driven to cheer a major crack dealer like Ricky Ross vividly
illustrates my point about the warping effect these exposes have had.
As Kornbluh candidly notes, most of the authors of these exposes don't
really care about the drug issue. They're interested in it only to the
extent that it can contribute to their efforts to expose US covert
activities abroad. This seems cynical in its own right. That said, I welcome
Kornbluh's assurance that the investigators of CIA drug-running endorse an
enlightened package of drug policy reform.
Mike Gray makes several assertions that--taken as gospel by legalizers--are
nonetheless highly dubious. One is his farfetched contention that
prohibition created the drug problem in the first place. The entrenched
poverty in our inner cities seems a far more important cause. I also
question his assertion that it's easier for teenagers to get marijuana than
beer. Anyone who visits a bar near a college campus can attest to how
readily available alcohol is to minors. The notoriously lax state regulation
of alcohol sales to minors seems a poor model for drug distribution. As for
adults, most cannot find heroin or crack within hours, much less minutes; to
assert that such drugs have a market penetration rivaling Coca-Cola is
preposterous. Even those who do know where to find hard drugs are often
deterred by the fear of arrest. And without such a deterrent, it seems
reasonable to assume that more Americans would use, and abuse, these drugs.
As for the Dutch, they have not legalized heroin; they have fought it with
the types of treatment and prevention programs I advocate in my essay. I
agree with Gray that the Swiss heroin-maintenance experiment is promising
and should probably be tested here. To qualify for the Swiss program,
though, one must be a chronic addict. That leaves the question of how to
deal with people addicted to other drugs, like cocaine, as well as with
those not addicted at all. How should drugs be made available to these
users? Gray--like so many advocates of legalization--offers few specifics.
I agree with most of what Elliott Currie has to say. In my book The Fix, I
discuss at length the need to provide not only more treatment but better
treatment. I wholeheartedly agree that treatment programs work best when
joined to broader efforts to improve addicts' lives through the provision of
steady jobs, affordable housing and the like. Currie loses me, however, when
he engages in rhetorical flights about the need to fight misery and
hopelessness and to raise living standards for the dispossessed--not because
I oppose such goals, but because casting the issue so grandly makes real
reform all the more difficult. Imagine being asked to testify before a state
or Congressional panel about drug reform. How far is one likely to get
talking about the need for paid family leave, quality childcare and national
health insurance? I think it would be far more effective to discuss the need
to ease drug penalties, reduce the number of drug arrests, make treatment
more available and improve the quality of treatment.
With each passing month, more and more Americans become disillusioned with
the drug war and open to a new approach. To gain favor, though, that
approach must (1) be tough on drug abuse, (2) be narrowly focused on the
drug issue and (3) have a real chance of working. I believe that the
public-health strategy I have described--away from punishment and toward
rehabilitation (in the broad sense Elliott Currie advocates)--offers our
best chance of success.
I'm encouraged to see how much common ground there is between my colleagues
and me. But some key differences remain.
Peter Kornbluh contends that the distorting effect of all those CIA exposes
is temporary, that in the long run they reinforce popular cynicism about
government policy, but this seems naive. John Kerry's investigation into US
drug policy in Central America may have helped dramatize the hypocrisy of
the drug war, but it also built support for the invasion of Panama. Gary
Webb's work may have convinced the Institute for Policy Studies to create a
citizens' fact-finding commission on US drug policy, but it also gave rise
to meetings like the one in Compton that Kornbluh describes. That the
audience felt driven to cheer a major crack dealer like Ricky Ross vividly
illustrates my point about the warping effect these exposes have had.
As Kornbluh candidly notes, most of the authors of these exposes don't
really care about the drug issue. They're interested in it only to the
extent that it can contribute to their efforts to expose US covert
activities abroad. This seems cynical in its own right. That said, I welcome
Kornbluh's assurance that the investigators of CIA drug-running endorse an
enlightened package of drug policy reform.
Mike Gray makes several assertions that--taken as gospel by legalizers--are
nonetheless highly dubious. One is his farfetched contention that
prohibition created the drug problem in the first place. The entrenched
poverty in our inner cities seems a far more important cause. I also
question his assertion that it's easier for teenagers to get marijuana than
beer. Anyone who visits a bar near a college campus can attest to how
readily available alcohol is to minors. The notoriously lax state regulation
of alcohol sales to minors seems a poor model for drug distribution. As for
adults, most cannot find heroin or crack within hours, much less minutes; to
assert that such drugs have a market penetration rivaling Coca-Cola is
preposterous. Even those who do know where to find hard drugs are often
deterred by the fear of arrest. And without such a deterrent, it seems
reasonable to assume that more Americans would use, and abuse, these drugs.
As for the Dutch, they have not legalized heroin; they have fought it with
the types of treatment and prevention programs I advocate in my essay. I
agree with Gray that the Swiss heroin-maintenance experiment is promising
and should probably be tested here. To qualify for the Swiss program,
though, one must be a chronic addict. That leaves the question of how to
deal with people addicted to other drugs, like cocaine, as well as with
those not addicted at all. How should drugs be made available to these
users? Gray--like so many advocates of legalization--offers few specifics.
I agree with most of what Elliott Currie has to say. In my book The Fix, I
discuss at length the need to provide not only more treatment but better
treatment. I wholeheartedly agree that treatment programs work best when
joined to broader efforts to improve addicts' lives through the provision of
steady jobs, affordable housing and the like. Currie loses me, however, when
he engages in rhetorical flights about the need to fight misery and
hopelessness and to raise living standards for the dispossessed--not because
I oppose such goals, but because casting the issue so grandly makes real
reform all the more difficult. Imagine being asked to testify before a state
or Congressional panel about drug reform. How far is one likely to get
talking about the need for paid family leave, quality childcare and national
health insurance? I think it would be far more effective to discuss the need
to ease drug penalties, reduce the number of drug arrests, make treatment
more available and improve the quality of treatment.
With each passing month, more and more Americans become disillusioned with
the drug war and open to a new approach. To gain favor, though, that
approach must (1) be tough on drug abuse, (2) be narrowly focused on the
drug issue and (3) have a real chance of working. I believe that the
public-health strategy I have described--away from punishment and toward
rehabilitation (in the broad sense Elliott Currie advocates)--offers our
best chance of success.
Member Comments |
No member comments available...