Pubdate: Sat, 20 Oct 2007
Source: Daily Telegraph (UK)
Copyright: 2007 Telegraph Group Limited
Contact:  http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/114
Author: Sam Leith
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Richard+Brunstrom
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

WHY EUROPE HOLDS THE ANSWER TO ILLEGAL DRUGS

Richard Brunstrom, the Chief Constable of North Wales, seems to me to 
be an admirable man. It would be easy for him, politically and 
socially and in terms of his own career, to toe a downbeat or 
crowd-pleasing line.  Instead, he annoys selfish motorists by arguing 
that prosecuting people for speeding is a reasonable thing to do; and 
- - still more impressively - he is prepared to tell the truth about drugs.

Earlier this week, before the Home Office concluded its review into 
drug policy, Mr Brunstrom's local police authority supported and 
forwarded to the Home Secretary a series of recommendations he summed 
up as follows: "If policy on drugs is in future to be pragmatic not 
moralistic, driven by ethics not dogma, then the current 
prohibitionist stance will have to be swept away as both unworkable 
and immoral, to be replaced with an evidence-based unified system 
(specifically including tobacco and alcohol) aimed at minimisation of 
harms to society."

Now, to say that the war on drugs has failed is not an especially 
brave thing to do - though, if you are a senior police officer, it 
carries more in the way of risk than if you are, say, a newspaper 
columnist answerable only to the invective of your readers. The dogs 
on the street know that the war on drugs has failed; the sniffer dogs 
on the street, come to that, are experts on the matter.

What seems to me particularly admirable about his remarks is that he 
not only identifies prohibition as unworkable, but also as immoral. 
He's right, and it needs saying.

There is not a single moral argument - not one - for the prohibition 
of drugs. It is a fraud, and a bore besides, to pretend otherwise. 
Yet the spectre of moral censure has long distorted proper discussion 
of the subject. As long as drugs are regarded as a "scourge of 
society" and a "corrupter of innocence" - as long as the "pusher" 
takes his place alongside the paedophile in the bestiary of 
macintosh-clad menaces at the school gates - they remain politically toxic.

At the same time, there are strong moral arguments for their 
legalisation. Our whole social and economic set-up is based on the 
idea of the right to private property, and at the very base of that - 
at the very plughole of our legal system and the fountainhead of our 
freedoms, in the form of habeas corpus - is the ownership of your own 
body, and the right to do with it as you damn well choose.

Taking drugs - any drugs at all - cannot be in and of itself an 
immoral act; except under prohibition, inasmuch as it is arguably 
moral to obey even an unjust law, and, much more pressingly, inasmuch 
as by buying drugs you are contributing to the criminal economy that 
sustains a whole range of moral abuses.

So, away with the moral argument. The moral argument is, as I say, 
all on the side of legalisation. But the blinding light of moral 
certainty is the province of saints and fanatics.

The arguments against prohibition are also practical.  They are that 
it doesn't work. The war on drugs is such a failure it makes the 
pacification of Helmand look like the Entebbe Raid. Cocaine - once 
available only to glamorous celebrities such as Frank Bough - now 
drifts about us like snow; ecstasy, which back in the day cost north 
of a tenner a tablet, is now a couple of quid a pop.

Drug-related crime is through the roof, gangsters are swimming in 
cash, and our eradicationist efforts abroad - against the poppy 
harvest in Afghanistan, say - are costing lives and damaging any hope 
of winning support from the local population.

But after this, Mr Brunstrom and I (hesitantly) part ways. For the 
practical argument against legalisation in Britain, things being as 
they are now, seems to me insuperable. I don't doubt that a legalised 
and regulated drug trade would be infinitely better than the 
situation we have now. But the question is how to get from here to there.

If Britain were unilaterally and radically to alter its policy - 
surrounded as we still are on every side by, and intimately involved 
in trade with, prohibitionist nations - what effect would that have? 
We would become the crack-den of Europe; the clearing-house and 
transport hub of a global trade that remained substantially illegal, 
and that brought with it, in a concentrated form, all the problems 
and miseries of that trade. It would be a macroscopic equivalent of 
Brixton's muddle-headed experiment with decriminalisation - in which 
demand was encouraged and supply criminalised. That had the 
advantages neither of moral clarity nor of reducing harm.

The case for legalisation would need to be made Europe-wide, at the 
very least. And that, I'm afraid, is where things start to get trickier. 
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake