News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Web: Wasted Resources |
Title: | US: Web: Wasted Resources |
Published On: | 2002-07-30 |
Source: | National Review (US) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-22 21:39:44 |
WASTED RESOURCES
John Stossel Takes On The Drug War.
ABC News correspondent John Stossel once again exposes the cost, folly, and
failure of big government. He somehow always manages to do that. This time,
his fat and lumbering target is the War on Drugs, a 30- year-old project
that can show amazingly little for the billions of taxpayer dollars it has
incinerated and the millions of nonviolent offenders it has incarcerated.
Airing tonight at 10:00 P.M. Eastern, 9:00 P.M. Central time, War on Drugs,
A War On Ourselves spends an hour asking if government efforts to stamp out
drug use are even worse than the drugs themselves. Stossel largely avoids
the libertarian argument (which I embrace) that adults should have the
cognitive liberty to alter their minds in whatever way they choose, so long
as they do not infringe on the rights of others or endanger them by, say,
driving while stoned.
In fact, Stossel repeatedly says, "There's no question that drugs hurt
people." He also shows highly unglamorous footage of sketchy-looking
addicts injecting heroin between the tattoos on their arms and smoking
crack in venues that clearly are not Malibu beach houses.
Still, Stossel's question remains: "Doesn't the drug war hurt far more?"
Apparently so.
For starters, consider the highly visible hands that police use to fight
this war. Stossel presents numerous shots of SWAT teams in Kevlar suits
screaming as they batter down front doors in residential drug raids. He
shows Detroit police seizing a drug suspect's house. Before putting it on
the market and enjoying the revenues from its sale, cops hurl the home's TV
set into a Dumpster and splinter its furniture with sledgehammers. Treating
such private property with respect, apparently, is simply too much trouble.
Stossel shows us 50 Detroit cops who arrest several dozen people in a sting
operation. Most of the police's victims tried to purchase less than $25
worth of pot each.
In 2000, according to the FBI, there were 734,498 marijuana-related
arrests, 88 percent of them for mere possession. Stossel reports that
drug-related arrests and federal antidrug spending both have increased
nearly 50 percent in the last ten years while the number of users has
remained the same. "We have flatlined," admits Drug Enforcement Agency
director Asa Hutchinson.
Stossel nicely juxtaposes two pieces of footage. In one, Academy
Award-nominated actor, Robert Downey Jr., is sentenced to prison for
illegal drug abuse. Meanwhile, Betty Ford goes home after undergoing
medical rehabilitation for alcohol abuse. Why no jail time for the former
First Lady? Was she any less self-destructive than Downey appeared to be?
Detroit police chief Jerry Oliver bravely goes on camera to explain how all
of this handcuffing and imprisonment diverts law-enforcement resources from
worthier pursuits. "Up to three quarters of our budget somehow can be
traced back to fighting this War on Drugs," he says.
"If we did not have this drug war going on, we could spend more time going
after robbers and rapists and burglars and murderers. That's what we really
should be geared up to do."
Of course, some cops have cashed in on this war. We see an April 24, 1999
surveillance tape of a crooked San Antonio police officer collecting a
$3,000 bribe for delivering what he thought was 20 pounds of cocaine. One
dealer says he made $20,000 per week with police assistance. "The cops are
just another gang," he says.
Overseas, the War on Drugs has so elevated profits that new cocaine labs
arise more quickly than U.S. and South American forces can destroy them.
Coca plantations that have been shuttered in Bolivia simply shift to
Colombia. When Colombian police killed cocaine bigwig Pablo Escobar on
December 2, 1993, his death was supposed to drain the coke vial once and
for all. Then the Cali cartel took over. Yet others stepped forward when
their leaders were arrested. The local FARC narco-terrorists, meanwhile,
are so fond of kidnapping and homicide that Colombia's president-elect has
chosen to relax in Europe until his August inauguration.
Searching for a better way, Stossel travels to Europe where governments
across the continent are relaxing drug laws. England, Spain, and
Switzerland have decreased penalties for possession of small amounts of
marijuana. Portugal has decriminalized all drugs.
Holland, most famously, allows so-called "coffee shops" to offer consumers
marijuana buds, joints, clumps of hashish, cannabis-laced baked goods and
even psychoactive chocolates. These establishments - - as I discovered on
an early June visit to clean, scenic, and friendly Amsterdam - are not
sequestered in nasty parts of town. On the contrary, coffee shops thrive
beside elegant restaurants and exclusive boutiques. One coffee shop on a
fashionable thoroughfare called Nieuwezijds Voorburgwalsits just two blocks
from the Royal Palace and directly across the street from a local police
precinct. As its smiling patrons inhale and listen to electronic music, no
one outside seems to care, or even notice.
Stossel missed Amsterdam's new "smart shops" that sell high-energy
nutritional supplements, "herbal ecstasy" and crush-proof plastic boxes
that contain individual servings of fresh, moist-to-the-touch psilocybin
cubensisor "magic mushrooms." These attractive, brightly- lit
establishments also operate legally and in the open.
By bringing soft drugs, at least, into the sunshine, the Netherlands
apparently has made such substances boring to their youth. While 38 percent
of American adolescents have tried marijuana, Stossel says, just 20 percent
of Dutch teens have done so.
One only can hope that Stossel's tough journalism finally will knock some
sense into federal officials. Since the Constitution does not delegate to
Washington the power to control psychoactive substances, the 10th Amendment
holds that such powers should be "reserved to the States respectively, or
to the people." Why not let all 50 states experiment with a variety of drug
policies, ranging from the status quo in some places to the Dutch
decriminalization model in others and even Portuguese-style legalization in
yet others?
Even better, why not follow the Ninth Amendment's instruction that "The
enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights shall not be construed to
deny or disparage others retained by the people?" Just because the
Constitution does not explicitly recognize a right for adults to get baked
(just as there is no specific right to eat high- fat potato chips), that
alone does not obviate such a freedom. Government should bear the burden of
proving that a compelling public purpose trumps the basic human liberty to
get inebriated.
John Stossel interviews someone who makes this case in a way that should
confound any drug warrior: "There is no risk to the population when a
person sits in their living room at the end of a long day's work and lights
up a joint," says a professional, 30-something woman in a black suit, and
pressed, white blouse.
"But it makes you stupid," Stossel replies. "It makes you lazy."
"I don't think I'm stupid, and I don't think I'm lazy," she confidently
continues. "I'm a responsible adult. I'm an attorney. I pay my taxes. I
live a good, clean life. And if I feel like smoking a joint when I feel
like it, that's my business."
John Stossel Takes On The Drug War.
ABC News correspondent John Stossel once again exposes the cost, folly, and
failure of big government. He somehow always manages to do that. This time,
his fat and lumbering target is the War on Drugs, a 30- year-old project
that can show amazingly little for the billions of taxpayer dollars it has
incinerated and the millions of nonviolent offenders it has incarcerated.
Airing tonight at 10:00 P.M. Eastern, 9:00 P.M. Central time, War on Drugs,
A War On Ourselves spends an hour asking if government efforts to stamp out
drug use are even worse than the drugs themselves. Stossel largely avoids
the libertarian argument (which I embrace) that adults should have the
cognitive liberty to alter their minds in whatever way they choose, so long
as they do not infringe on the rights of others or endanger them by, say,
driving while stoned.
In fact, Stossel repeatedly says, "There's no question that drugs hurt
people." He also shows highly unglamorous footage of sketchy-looking
addicts injecting heroin between the tattoos on their arms and smoking
crack in venues that clearly are not Malibu beach houses.
Still, Stossel's question remains: "Doesn't the drug war hurt far more?"
Apparently so.
For starters, consider the highly visible hands that police use to fight
this war. Stossel presents numerous shots of SWAT teams in Kevlar suits
screaming as they batter down front doors in residential drug raids. He
shows Detroit police seizing a drug suspect's house. Before putting it on
the market and enjoying the revenues from its sale, cops hurl the home's TV
set into a Dumpster and splinter its furniture with sledgehammers. Treating
such private property with respect, apparently, is simply too much trouble.
Stossel shows us 50 Detroit cops who arrest several dozen people in a sting
operation. Most of the police's victims tried to purchase less than $25
worth of pot each.
In 2000, according to the FBI, there were 734,498 marijuana-related
arrests, 88 percent of them for mere possession. Stossel reports that
drug-related arrests and federal antidrug spending both have increased
nearly 50 percent in the last ten years while the number of users has
remained the same. "We have flatlined," admits Drug Enforcement Agency
director Asa Hutchinson.
Stossel nicely juxtaposes two pieces of footage. In one, Academy
Award-nominated actor, Robert Downey Jr., is sentenced to prison for
illegal drug abuse. Meanwhile, Betty Ford goes home after undergoing
medical rehabilitation for alcohol abuse. Why no jail time for the former
First Lady? Was she any less self-destructive than Downey appeared to be?
Detroit police chief Jerry Oliver bravely goes on camera to explain how all
of this handcuffing and imprisonment diverts law-enforcement resources from
worthier pursuits. "Up to three quarters of our budget somehow can be
traced back to fighting this War on Drugs," he says.
"If we did not have this drug war going on, we could spend more time going
after robbers and rapists and burglars and murderers. That's what we really
should be geared up to do."
Of course, some cops have cashed in on this war. We see an April 24, 1999
surveillance tape of a crooked San Antonio police officer collecting a
$3,000 bribe for delivering what he thought was 20 pounds of cocaine. One
dealer says he made $20,000 per week with police assistance. "The cops are
just another gang," he says.
Overseas, the War on Drugs has so elevated profits that new cocaine labs
arise more quickly than U.S. and South American forces can destroy them.
Coca plantations that have been shuttered in Bolivia simply shift to
Colombia. When Colombian police killed cocaine bigwig Pablo Escobar on
December 2, 1993, his death was supposed to drain the coke vial once and
for all. Then the Cali cartel took over. Yet others stepped forward when
their leaders were arrested. The local FARC narco-terrorists, meanwhile,
are so fond of kidnapping and homicide that Colombia's president-elect has
chosen to relax in Europe until his August inauguration.
Searching for a better way, Stossel travels to Europe where governments
across the continent are relaxing drug laws. England, Spain, and
Switzerland have decreased penalties for possession of small amounts of
marijuana. Portugal has decriminalized all drugs.
Holland, most famously, allows so-called "coffee shops" to offer consumers
marijuana buds, joints, clumps of hashish, cannabis-laced baked goods and
even psychoactive chocolates. These establishments - - as I discovered on
an early June visit to clean, scenic, and friendly Amsterdam - are not
sequestered in nasty parts of town. On the contrary, coffee shops thrive
beside elegant restaurants and exclusive boutiques. One coffee shop on a
fashionable thoroughfare called Nieuwezijds Voorburgwalsits just two blocks
from the Royal Palace and directly across the street from a local police
precinct. As its smiling patrons inhale and listen to electronic music, no
one outside seems to care, or even notice.
Stossel missed Amsterdam's new "smart shops" that sell high-energy
nutritional supplements, "herbal ecstasy" and crush-proof plastic boxes
that contain individual servings of fresh, moist-to-the-touch psilocybin
cubensisor "magic mushrooms." These attractive, brightly- lit
establishments also operate legally and in the open.
By bringing soft drugs, at least, into the sunshine, the Netherlands
apparently has made such substances boring to their youth. While 38 percent
of American adolescents have tried marijuana, Stossel says, just 20 percent
of Dutch teens have done so.
One only can hope that Stossel's tough journalism finally will knock some
sense into federal officials. Since the Constitution does not delegate to
Washington the power to control psychoactive substances, the 10th Amendment
holds that such powers should be "reserved to the States respectively, or
to the people." Why not let all 50 states experiment with a variety of drug
policies, ranging from the status quo in some places to the Dutch
decriminalization model in others and even Portuguese-style legalization in
yet others?
Even better, why not follow the Ninth Amendment's instruction that "The
enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights shall not be construed to
deny or disparage others retained by the people?" Just because the
Constitution does not explicitly recognize a right for adults to get baked
(just as there is no specific right to eat high- fat potato chips), that
alone does not obviate such a freedom. Government should bear the burden of
proving that a compelling public purpose trumps the basic human liberty to
get inebriated.
John Stossel interviews someone who makes this case in a way that should
confound any drug warrior: "There is no risk to the population when a
person sits in their living room at the end of a long day's work and lights
up a joint," says a professional, 30-something woman in a black suit, and
pressed, white blouse.
"But it makes you stupid," Stossel replies. "It makes you lazy."
"I don't think I'm stupid, and I don't think I'm lazy," she confidently
continues. "I'm a responsible adult. I'm an attorney. I pay my taxes. I
live a good, clean life. And if I feel like smoking a joint when I feel
like it, that's my business."
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