Pubdate: Fri, 16 Mar 2001
Source: Washington Times (DC)
Copyright: 2001 News World Communications, Inc.
Contact:  202-832-8285
Website: http://www.washtimes.com/
Author: Jonah Goldberg
Note: Goldberg is the editor of National Review Online, 
(http://www.nationalreview.com).
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/traffic.htm (Traffic)

"TRAFFIC" MOVES PROPAGANDA INTO DRUG-POLICY DEBATE

Whether or not the movie "Traffic" wins the Oscar for best picture, it 
still qualifies as the movie of the year, at least in Washington. Senators 
and policy wonks are invoking it as the motivation for new hearings - and a 
new focus on drug treatment.

Let's not get ahead of ourselves. If the movie helps drug-use prevention 
and treatment efforts, that's great. But before we start basing our drug 
policies on the message of a single movie, we should be clear about what 
that message is.

Stephen Gaghan, the Oscar-nominated script writer for "Traffic," told The 
New York Times last month that "If there is a message to the movie, I guess 
it's that drugs should be considered a health-care issue, rather than a 
criminal issue."

He told ABC's George Stephanopoulos: "It's easier to raise your hand and 
say, 'Hey, I have a health-care problem. I need some help,' than to say, 
'Hey, I'm a criminal. I need some jail.'

After all, he says: "We've just filled up our prisons. I mean, they're just 
full. We build more, and we fill them up."

This all sounds perfectly reasonable and humane. But it's actually very 
misleading and very dangerous.

First of all, while it may make Gaghan feel good to say so, you are not a 
"revolutionary" for saying legalization out loud. William F. Buckley's 
National Review, the flagship magazine of the conservative movement and my 
employer, has been in favor of legalization for years.

Nobel Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman is pro-legalization. Kurt 
Schmoke, the former mayor of Baltimore and current chairman of Yale's board 
of trustees, has been arguing in favor of decriminalization for more than a 
decade. In short, this is not a "revolutionary" topic only spoken about in 
hushed whispers by a few brave souls willing to speak the truth to the 
powerful.

Second, legalizing drugs in a "small place" has been tried. In Switzerland, 
for example, they tried it in a park that quickly became known as needle 
park. They had to shut it down because it became a petri dish of scummy 
addicts, petty criminals and prostitutes. After that experience, the Swiss 
voted by 73 percent to reject drug legalization. If they had noted what a 
sewer Amsterdam turned into because of legalized drugs, they could have 
saved some hassles.

Lastly, and most importantly, it's simply disingenuous to say that addicts 
fear getting help because they're afraid of being called "criminals." 
Nobody ever gets arrested for admitting to past drug use, and most addicted 
criminals are criminals not for using drugs but for robbing or stealing to 
pay for them. (Indeed, it's a myth that our prisons are "full" of 
nonviolent drug offenders.)

Serious addicts are simply afraid of admitting they're serious addicts. 
It's humiliating to admit to a drug problem, but that's an inevitable 
byproduct of our society's reasonable effort to stigmatize drug use.

Which is really the crux of the issue. It's amazing how many people can say 
with a straight face that we vitally need "hate crimes" laws to "send a 
message" about what is and is not acceptable in this country but at the 
same time reject the notion that our drug laws discourage people from doing 
drugs.

More importantly, even if our drug laws don't do a great job discouraging 
drug users, they do have a hampering effect on drug dealers. Gaghan was a 
heroin and cocaine addict until his three primary dealers were arrested. 
"My dealer, my backup dealer and my backup-backup dealer. I was left alone, 
and I just hit that place, that total incomprehensible demoralization," he 
told The New York Times.

Indeed, it was because his supply of drugs was cut off by our draconian 
drug laws that he was able to demand treatment.

You can write to Jonah Goldberg in care of this newspaper or by e-mail at Goldberg is the editor of National Review Online, 
(http://www.nationalreview.com).
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