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News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: Series: Drugs Uncovered: The Legaliser
Title:UK: Series: Drugs Uncovered: The Legaliser
Published On:2008-11-16
Source:Observer, The (UK)
Fetched On:2008-11-17 02:27:14
Series: Drugs Uncovered: The Legaliser

Danny Kushlick: 'We Need to Manage the People Who Use Them and Help
the People Who Misuse Them, Not Criminalise Either of Them'

Danny Kushlick Is the Founder and Head of Policy and Communications
at Transform Drug Policy Foundation

People will always use and misuse drugs. On that basis, we need to
manage the people who use them and help the people who misuse them,
not criminalise either of them.

Prohibition is a gangsters' charter. It's the second largest
opportunity for organised crime to make money to the value of UKP
160bn a year, every year.

We are being lied to. The public is being duped into believing that
prohibition works when it doesn't. It creates crime, it creates ill
health, and it destabilises producer countries and transit countries
to the point where their development issues become intractable.

Legalisation is not a panacea. There are deep social and political
problems that underlie the misuse of drugs, including inequality,
deprivation, discrimination. The legalisation and regulation of drugs
enables us to deal with these problems, rather than criminalise the
people involved.

Prohibition is one of the most counterproductive policies on earth.
There are 200 million illegal drug users worldwide. When you have
that kind of money involved combined with that level of demand, you
have one of the largest commodity markets on earth totally unregulated.

If my children ever became dependent on heroin and cocaine, I'd far
rather they could buy them or be prescribed them legally than have to
score them from a dodgy bloke around the corner and prostitute
themselves in order to support their habit.

We need to take the supply of drugs out of the hands of some of the
nastiest people on the planet and put it back into the hands of
government and democratic society.

We have a thing called Green Room Syndrome. Most politicians, before
the recording light goes on, will tell you that having a war on a
commodity that is used by 200 million people and perpetuates all
sorts of wars and conflicts around the world should stop. But to
maintain short-term political power, they'll tell you the complete
opposite on the record.

Drugs should be legalised because they're dangerous, not because
they're safe. They should be brought within the law where consumers
would have information like ingredients and purity guides.

It was my experience of working with crack and heroin users in the
criminal justice system that made me want to work towards drug
legalisation. In prisons I saw drug users who were damaged in almost
every way they could be - the last thing they needed was to be incarcerated.

Most people who want to use illegal drugs are already using them.
Their illegality is not a deterrent.

I see legalisation as ultimately inevitable. Alcohol prohibition - a
13-year experiment - ended catastrophically after it created the
mafia and corrupted every US federal institution.
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