Pubdate: Thu, 18 Oct 2001
Source: AlterNet (US Web)
Copyright: 2001 Independent Media Institute
Contact: http://www.alternet.org/discuss/
Website: http://www.alternet.org/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1451
Author: Maia Szalavitz
Note: This web only source does not have a LTE section.

BUST THE BOOM FOR DRUG WAR HYPOCRISY

When boomers did it, promiscuity was "free love," breaking the law was 
"questioning authority" and getting high was "mind expansion." But if their 
children dare experiment, it's off to boot camp or worse.

As a person born in the '60s, I find the boomers' enthusiasm for the drug 
war unnerving: at least their parents didn't know better. Why did "let it 
be" become "let 'em rot" and freedom just another name for something kids 
shouldn't have? How did getting zonked yield to zero tolerance?

Even more bafflingly, why does it seem that many boomers privately know 
harsh drug policies are wrong (and that youthful marijuana smoking is less 
dangerous to most kids' future than being expelled from school or jailed as 
punishment for doing so is), but refuse to speak publicly?

One reason may be media bias. The '80s and early '90s saw thousands of 
stories that presented only the law enforcement perspective. In fact, at a 
national meeting of top newspaper editors in 1990, most agreed that 
objectivity should be set aside to fight drugs. As Dan Baum reported in his 
book, "Smoke and Mirrors: The War on Drugs and the Politics of Failure" 
(Little, Brown, 1996), Katherine Graham was in a minority when she argued 
for skeptical coverage. Most editors agreed instead with an editor who 
said, "It's our duty to get involved. I suggest it's time to quit polishing 
our halo of detachment."

That halo was long gone by the time ABC decided to devote the network to a 
"March Against Drugs" in 1997. Most of the news division complied quietly 
(Nightline's Ted Koppel was a notable exception).

And though there was outrage when Dan Forbes revealed in Salon in January 
2001 that networks and newspapers had been paid for favorable drug war 
coverage and TV storylines as part of the government's anti-drug media 
campaign, this provision had actually been announced in Congress two years 
earlier but played only in the back pages. Few recognized that taking 
government money to air anti-drug propaganda was news since so many already 
did it for free.

A study published in Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly suggests 
the danger of such pervasive bias. It found that biased coverage doesn't 
influence people's own opinions about issues -- but it does influence their 
perceptions about what other people think. This could account for the fear 
many people seem to have of expressing dissenting views: everyone thinks 
that everyone else supports the status quo.

It may also explain why, in private, many big name media people will tell 
me they oppose the drug war and admit their own harmless drug use -- but 
refuse to go on the record.

Boomers are actually conformists, not rebels, says feminist Susan 
Brownmiller, author of "In Our Time" (Dial, 1999). She believes that much 
of the backlash comes from those who never favored radical freedom in the 
first place. "They went along," she says, because it was fashionable. "But 
they were never comfortable with it."

Mark Kleiman, professor of policy studies at UCLA, suggests that boomers 
see drugs the way they see sunbathing. "No one says its hypocritical for a 
tanning champion of the '60s to use sunscreen now -- we know better," he says.

Of course, our "knowing better" about marijuana is the result of a massive 
propaganda campaign -- and the silence of those who know it's false -- 
rather than new research. Despite an exhaustive search for harm, marijuana 
has not proved to be particularly dangerous. Driving stoned is safer than 
driving drunk, according to several studies. Marijuana addiction is rare -- 
despite pot being the most commonly used illicit drug, with 59 percent of 
all current users taking no other illicit drug.

There also isn't a single treatment facility in the U.S. devoted just to 
cannabis. The majority of people in drug programs for pot were mandated by 
courts, not evaluated as addicts. Alcohol is causally linked to violence 
(including rape); pot is not. Marijuana isn't a "gateway" to harder drugs, 
according to the National Academy of Sciences. Even the best shot -- lung 
cancer-- hasn't materialized in increased mortality statistics amongst pot 
smokers, according to a large study by the Kaiser foundation.

Kleiman thinks self-loathing tinges the insistence on toughness. "I don't 
know if there's ever been such a self-hating generation," he says. "Someone 
has to be punished for their bad behavior-- it might as well be their kids."

Newsweek's Jonathan Alter is more sympathetic. He opposes drug war 
excesses, but believes they stem from a feeling amongst boomers that some 
users became a "lost generation."

"Most people did drugs in moderation and were fine and outgrew it," he 
admits. "But a core group, maybe 20 percent -- the real stoners and freaks 
- -- just didn't live up to their potential." As a result, people don't want 
to talk about benign drug experiences -- for fear of encouraging the next 
generation, he says.

But this view conveniently overlooks the fact that a similar percentage of 
the boomers' parents' generation was lost to alcohol or tranquilizers -- as 
well as the fact that the drug laws haven't reduced addiction or drug-death 
rates. "We're torn, ambivalent, hypocritical, self-flagellating. " Alter 
says, "Sometimes we lie, sometimes we tell a little bit of the truth. We're 
a big soppy mess when it comes to dealing with drugs."

New Yorker writer Janet Malcolm once said: "Hypocrisy is the grease that 
keeps society functioning in an agreeable way by allowing for human 
fallibility and reconciling the seemingly irreconcilable human needs for 
pleasure and order." With regard to drugs in America, the pendulum seems 
suspended on the order side. There's no recognition of the value of 
pleasure, of the fact that drug use is a human universal or that risk is 
part of life. Few dare argue that some might make a valid choice to seek 
drug highs rather than other thrills -- even though marijuana use (with no 
reported overdose deaths), for example, is less dangerous than skiing 
(which kills about three dozen people a year). Boomers may have been right 
not to trust anyone over 30.
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