Friday, March 13, 2009

The same-old, same-old futility

You may be aware an international UN conference on drug control has been taking place in Vienna. We sent Peter Dunne who has been talking about New Zealand's means and end approach, the end being 'ultimate abstinence' and 'the elimination of illegal drugs'.

Who is he kidding?

Consider efforts to date;

What has the Drug War done for you lately?

WASHINGTON--A decade ago, the U.N. General Assembly set an objective of "eliminating or significantly reducing" narcotics cultivation and trafficking "by the year 2008." According to the data of the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime, the effort has been an unmitigated disaster. Opium and cannabis production has doubled, while cocaine has slightly increased. The same proportion of adults--5 percent--consumes drugs today, mostly marijuana, as in 1998.

As officials from around the world gather in Vienna this week to chart the next decade of the anti-drug effort, it may be time to rethink the entire approach.

Echoing the Prohibition era in the United States, illegality has engendered organized crime empires that, in order to supply narcotics, undermine the peace and institutions of many countries. The latest example is Mexico, where President Felipe Calderon has unleashed the wrath of the state against the drug lords. The war between the state and the cartels, and among the mafias themselves, has mostly taken place in northern cities such as Ciudad Juarez, Tijuana and Culiacan. Ten thousand people have been killed and drug-related corruption has been exposed at the highest levels, including the attorney general's office.

The anti-drug budget worldwide is staggering: The United States alone devotes more than $40 billion yearly to the effort. Yet whenever attempts to limit supply manage to raise street prices in one country, prices go down in other countries: In Europe, the price of cocaine has dropped by half since 1990. But the crackdown has reduced the purity of the drug, increasing the harm to people's health. According to the police, in Britain the purity has decreased from 60 percent to 30 percent in a decade.

Not to mention the consequences to individual liberty. Those who banned alcohol in 1920 felt compelled to amend the Constitution before they could pass Prohibition. No such amendment was ever presented to legitimize what Richard Nixon first called the "war on drugs" in 1971. The excesses committed in its name have created all sorts of social stigmas--including the fact that about 30 percent of black males in America spend some time in jail in large part due to drug-related offenses.

Three Latin American former presidents--Brazil's Fernando Henrique Cardoso, Mexico's Ernesto Zedillo and Colombia's Cesar Gaviria--recently put out a report condemning the war on drugs as a counterproductive failure, advocating a public health-based approach instead of repression. In anticipation of the meeting in Vienna, the latest issue of The Economist magazine, the bible of many current and aspiring enforcers of the law, devoted its cover, a survey and an editorial to making the case for legalization. For years, conservative publications such as The Wall Street Journal have run articles expressing the same view, including those by its expert on Latin America, Mary O'Grady. Leaders on the right (Henry Kissinger) and organizations of the center-left (George Soros' Open Society Institute) have also spoken out on the issue.

No one knows exactly how drug use would be impacted by its legalization or its decriminalization. In countries where it is severely punished, consumption is high, which might mean that it would stabilize or even drop. Many European countries--Spain, Portugal, Italy, several Swiss cantons--have extremely lenient drug policies; consumption in those countries (except for Spain) is not very high. But even assuming a moderate increase in consumption, decriminalization or legalization would eliminate or substantially diminish the horrific side effects of the current war.

A movement in favor of legalization has existed in the United States for years. Because it is associated with the cultural war that has raged since the 1960s, its impact has been small. But the debate goes on. In many states the police do not go after personal possession of marijuana, and California is considering a bill that would make it legal. The vestiges of Puritan dogmatism--which H.L. Mencken memorably called the "inferior man's hatred of the man who is having a better time"--have made it difficult to open a serious debate nationwide.

Today we regard the Opium Wars of the 19th century--by which the British retaliated against China for clamping down on opium imports--as crazy. One and a half centuries from now, people will read in total amazement that so much blood and treasure was wasted in the failed pursuit of a private vice that a relatively small percentage of the world population was not ready to give up.

Alvaro Vargas Llosa is a senior fellow at the Independent Institute and the editor of Lessons from the Poor.

13 comments:

deleted said...

Cultures of Abstinence are for those who can't get any. Dunne shoudl remember that.

Anonymous said...

Singapore succesfully controls widespread drug use. At no great cost or effort.

deleted said...

No great cost?

What planet are you on?

They have the death penalty for drugs.

Oh, and it doesn't work. I've been to both singapore and malaysia, and seen widespread drug use, and had mates who had no trouble procuring over there.

And this was while around people involved in the govt.

Anonymous said...

"I've been to... singapore.. and seen widespread drug use,"

Bullshit.

Anonymous said...

Last speech I saw by the prime minister of Singapore said about 1000 people have been arrested that year, double the year before. They have executed people for marijuana. They have a strict control over civil liberties. Just a few weeks ago they arrested 65 in one day, 11 "traffickers" and 54 users. Another press release says that another raid brought in 73 arrests. Another raid is listed as having netted 68 arrests. Those are all in the last few weeks. No great cost?

All that comes from the Central Narcotics Bureau. So apparently drug use is widespread otherwise so many arrests in so short a time wouldn't be possible.

deleted said...

So you think I'm making it up, when one of the people I was traveling with was able to procure pot in within about 5 minutes of checking into his hotel room.

Anonymous said...

Excessive drug/alcohol use (abuse, addiction) leads to paracitism. Lindsay post the statistics for the "poor unfortunates" who are on the invalids and sickness benefits for reasons of substance abuse. Post the weekly cost to the tax payer. Approximate the "mothers" who are on the DPB but are also under the "care" of A&D services. Your enthusiasm for liberalisation of drug laws might wane.
Murray

Anonymous said...

As a matter of interest, Alvaro is the son of Mario Vargas Llosa, distinguished writer (perennial Nobel prize contender), and once presidential candidate in Peru.

As a guest of the Centre for Independent Studies, I attended Mario's exceptional lecture (Questions of Conquest and Culture)in Wellington over a decade ago.

In Alvaro's case we can say with confidence: intelligence is inherited.

Psycho Milt said...

In one sense, Redbaiter is right - if you're happy to trade liberty for tighter restrictions on recreational drug use, it's do-able. Can't see why anyone would want to do it, mind, but it is do-able.

Anonymous said...

Psycho: Actually Redbaiter is not right even if one accepts that tradeoff. Prisons allow virtually no liberty yet drugs are found in use in prisons around the world. So precisely how much liberty would we have to surrender to reach this drug-free illusion?

Anonymous said...

Anyone who supports drug prohibition has noi business calling anyone else socialists or busy body control freaks.

If you support a free market in economics on the moral premise that its about freedom and property rights you must, to be consistent, support a free market in socialital interaction and consentual indulgement in vices on the exact same principles...indeed you can't seperate the two areas...they are corollaries.

Sorry Red but you are in the wrong here....

Anonymous said...

"Sorry Red but you are in the wrong here....'

No need to apologise James, dissent is fine with me. But wrong about what?

I've merely challenged the claim that drugs cannot be controlled by law enforcement. They can be, as Singapore proves. Without the social restrictions the drug freaks here claim.

If it was so, people would not go on living there. People are free to leave Singapore any time they choose.

I reject this argument as bullshit.

I make no comment on whether adults should have unrestricted access to drugs. That's a separate argument.

Anonymous said...

"Sorry Red but you are in the wrong here....'

No need to apologise James, dissent is fine with me. But wrong about what?

I've merely challenged the claim that drugs cannot be controlled by law enforcement. They can be, as Singapore proves. Without the social restrictions the drug freaks here claim."

But should they be....? Aside from children why and by what right has anyone to use force to curtail the consentual choices of another?

You know the context in which I say this so I won't go on about personal responsibility being upheld etc...we aren't there at this time.


"I make no comment on whether adults should have unrestricted access to drugs. That's a separate argument."

True.....my position for the record is that consenting adults have the right to make WRONG choices....and suffer trhe consequences themselves....not have the State spread them to the rest of us....I know your would agree.I wouldn't care a damm if drugs disappeared tomorrow....but they are here so lets be real about them.....and human beings.