News (Media Awareness Project) - US RI: Edu: OPED: The Candidates Ignore the 'War on Drugs.' |
Title: | US RI: Edu: OPED: The Candidates Ignore the 'War on Drugs.' |
Published On: | 2004-11-01 |
Source: | Brown Daily Herald, The (Brown, RI Edu) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-17 20:10:32 |
Taking Their Eyes Off the Ball
THE CANDIDATES IGNORE THE "WAR ON DRUGS."
Perhaps mine is a problem of faith. By which I mean to say that I had faith
- - too much, to be sure - that the important questions would be raised this
election season, that the next leader of the free world would have to
address my specific concerns with regard to our future foreign and domestic
policies.
But as Bob Schieffer wished America goodnight from Tempe and as I watched
Laura and Teresa enter stage right and left respectively, I knew the
opportunity had passed.
I want to talk about drugs. I want to know why we pour billions of dollars
into a "war on drugs" that has no clear end, a "war" built upon the
illusion that we can create a drug-free America without policies that
seriously address or even acknowledge the problems of abuse and addiction.
I suppose I can understand that some of my points are not entirely
palatable. No one wants to hear that at the end of 2002, one in every 143
U.S. residents was incarcerated in a federal, state or local prison, or
that the current non-violent prisoner population in this country is larger
than the combined populations of Alaska and Wyoming. No one wants to take
the time to consider how it is possible for the United States to represent
4.6 percent of the world's total population, when our prisoners constitute
25 percent of the world's prison population.
But even if they leave a sour taste, there are a few questions that should
have been asked of our presidential candidates. In 2003, the U.S. federal
government spent $19.179 billion dollars on the War on Drugs, at a rate of
about $600 per second. Is it worth the cost? What have we achieved?
In 1998, at the UN's Special Session on the World Drug Problem, Secretary
General Kofi Annan declared that the international community's mission was
"to create the momentum for a drug-free world in the 21st century." Five
years later, a UN report on Global Illicit Drug Trends found that of the 92
countries reporting, 85 percent had experienced either an increase or no
significant change in drug abuse.
The total number of drug users worldwide is estimated at 200 million
people, equivalent to 3.4 percent of the world population. What accounts
for the failure of Annan's noble global mission? Maybe we should lock
everybody up, or maybe, just maybe, we should shift our methods, focusing
on harm reduction rather than punishment.
The Bureau of Justice Statistics estimates that 2.8 percent of all American
children under age 18 - a total of 1,941,796 kids - have at least one
parent in a local jail or in state or federal prison, a considerable number
of whom were convicted for drug offenses. A majority of parents in both
state and federal prisons are held more than 100 miles from their last
place of residence.
In 1998, an amendment was added to the Higher Education Act that denies
federal financial aid to anyone convicted of a drug offense. To date, the
"drug provision" has obstructed the path to higher education for more than
150,000 students. Last week in Florida, three third-graders were suspended
from Pine Hills Elementary School and now face felony charges for
possession of two nickel bags of marijuana.
In a recent study of high tech industries, researchers found that "drug
testing programs do not succeed in improving productivity. Surprisingly,
companies adopting drug testing programs are found to exhibit lower levels
of productivity than their counterparts that do not." Most employee drug
testing in American industry happens because of government requirements,
not because it is deemed necessary by employers. Why do we continue to
enforce a policy of distrust in the workplace that mandates tests that
provide no information relevant to job performance?
In order to preserve my faith in our leadership, I'm going to continue
believing that if the questions are posed, the answers may just follow.
Unfortunately, our politicians only spout rhetoric about how we are in an
"all-out war" in response to our drug problem. But if it is indeed a "war
on drugs" we are fighting, then the drugs seem to be winning. We must
accept that although we may never live in a world free of drugs, we can
certainly conceive of policies that reduce the harms associated with
production, trafficking and consumption. We need some new answers.
THE CANDIDATES IGNORE THE "WAR ON DRUGS."
Perhaps mine is a problem of faith. By which I mean to say that I had faith
- - too much, to be sure - that the important questions would be raised this
election season, that the next leader of the free world would have to
address my specific concerns with regard to our future foreign and domestic
policies.
But as Bob Schieffer wished America goodnight from Tempe and as I watched
Laura and Teresa enter stage right and left respectively, I knew the
opportunity had passed.
I want to talk about drugs. I want to know why we pour billions of dollars
into a "war on drugs" that has no clear end, a "war" built upon the
illusion that we can create a drug-free America without policies that
seriously address or even acknowledge the problems of abuse and addiction.
I suppose I can understand that some of my points are not entirely
palatable. No one wants to hear that at the end of 2002, one in every 143
U.S. residents was incarcerated in a federal, state or local prison, or
that the current non-violent prisoner population in this country is larger
than the combined populations of Alaska and Wyoming. No one wants to take
the time to consider how it is possible for the United States to represent
4.6 percent of the world's total population, when our prisoners constitute
25 percent of the world's prison population.
But even if they leave a sour taste, there are a few questions that should
have been asked of our presidential candidates. In 2003, the U.S. federal
government spent $19.179 billion dollars on the War on Drugs, at a rate of
about $600 per second. Is it worth the cost? What have we achieved?
In 1998, at the UN's Special Session on the World Drug Problem, Secretary
General Kofi Annan declared that the international community's mission was
"to create the momentum for a drug-free world in the 21st century." Five
years later, a UN report on Global Illicit Drug Trends found that of the 92
countries reporting, 85 percent had experienced either an increase or no
significant change in drug abuse.
The total number of drug users worldwide is estimated at 200 million
people, equivalent to 3.4 percent of the world population. What accounts
for the failure of Annan's noble global mission? Maybe we should lock
everybody up, or maybe, just maybe, we should shift our methods, focusing
on harm reduction rather than punishment.
The Bureau of Justice Statistics estimates that 2.8 percent of all American
children under age 18 - a total of 1,941,796 kids - have at least one
parent in a local jail or in state or federal prison, a considerable number
of whom were convicted for drug offenses. A majority of parents in both
state and federal prisons are held more than 100 miles from their last
place of residence.
In 1998, an amendment was added to the Higher Education Act that denies
federal financial aid to anyone convicted of a drug offense. To date, the
"drug provision" has obstructed the path to higher education for more than
150,000 students. Last week in Florida, three third-graders were suspended
from Pine Hills Elementary School and now face felony charges for
possession of two nickel bags of marijuana.
In a recent study of high tech industries, researchers found that "drug
testing programs do not succeed in improving productivity. Surprisingly,
companies adopting drug testing programs are found to exhibit lower levels
of productivity than their counterparts that do not." Most employee drug
testing in American industry happens because of government requirements,
not because it is deemed necessary by employers. Why do we continue to
enforce a policy of distrust in the workplace that mandates tests that
provide no information relevant to job performance?
In order to preserve my faith in our leadership, I'm going to continue
believing that if the questions are posed, the answers may just follow.
Unfortunately, our politicians only spout rhetoric about how we are in an
"all-out war" in response to our drug problem. But if it is indeed a "war
on drugs" we are fighting, then the drugs seem to be winning. We must
accept that although we may never live in a world free of drugs, we can
certainly conceive of policies that reduce the harms associated with
production, trafficking and consumption. We need some new answers.
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