Pubdate: Mon, 25 May 2009
Source: Orange County Register, The (CA)
Copyright: 2009 The Orange County Register
Contact:  http://www.ocregister.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/321
Author: Gary M. Galles, Economics professor, Pepperdine University
Referenced: The Los Angeles Times editorial 
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v09/n521/a01.html
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Kerlikowske

BE WARY OF 'WARS' ON SOCIAL PROBLEMS

They Usually Become Freedom-Squeezing Government Programs.

President Barack Obama's new drug czar, R. Gil Kerlikowske, said in a 
recent interview that we need to abandon the phrase, "war on drugs." 
The Los Angeles Times offered editorial support, arguing that "[t]he 
phrase itself shaped flawed thinking and yielded disastrous policies."

Recognizing that framing the drug issue in terms of war distorts our 
understanding and, with it, our responses, is insightful. However, 
there are a host of other government-sponsored domestic "wars" to 
which that same argument applies, yet the policies and programs 
adopted to fight those wars are more often escalated than abandoned.

It is ironic that there is widespread opposition to real wars, 
because of their adverse consequences, yet politicians and their 
backers like to call every new domestic policy initiative of theirs a 
war, in order to galvanize support. In fact, war imagery may be the 
most commonly abused analogy in politics.

We have heard that "war is hell," "all's fair in love and war," and 
"war is politics by other means." We heard that the 1970s oil crisis 
was the moral equivalent of war (although government price controls 
did far more damage than OPEC). And government wars have been 
declared not just on drugs, but on everything from crime to poverty 
to illiteracy.

Unfortunately, the imagery of urgency, resolve and "giving all we've 
got" for the good of the country doesn't match the policies actually 
implemented or their effects on taxpayers' pockets and citizens' 
liberties. Rather, declarations of such "wars" are often just 
dramatic rhetoric used to promote politicians' pet programs. Further, 
those programs often do far more harm than good, such as the vast 
invasions of property and privacy, as well as increases in violence 
and corruption, triggered by the war on drugs.

War imagery is invoked to show determination to win. But shooting 
wars have no winners; just those who lose more and those who lose 
less as casualties Mount. However, the casualties caused are the last 
thing social "war on X" supporters ever discuss, although any honest 
evaluation would find many casualties, as with large public housing 
projects that became instant slums or the litany of failed training 
programs during the war on poverty.

"Real" wars are against people who intend to harm us. But domestic 
policy wars target the social consequences of actions of citizens, 
who America was created to protect, made necessary by scarcity, which 
we cannot eliminate. They cannot be won in the same way. When such 
wars cannot be won, we should abandon war rhetoric that can only mislead us.

Because of its powerful emotional impact, war imagery and language is 
also used in other ways that would make George Orwell proud.

We hear of trade wars, in language implying that they are contests 
between domestic and foreign producers, so that protectionism for 
"our" firms against "their" firms sounds sensible. However, both 
buyers and sellers expect to gain by trading, or they would not 
voluntarily participate, so that trade creates wealth (which is why 
every defensible study of protectionism finds that it destroys 
wealth). Protectionism, in fact, is an alliance between domestic 
producers and the government, declaring war on consumers to force 
them to pay higher prices.

Many public servants declare war to "solve" every domestic crisis 
(often caused by their "solutions" to earlier alleged crises). But 
those policy wars are never won. Rather than being abandoned, 
however, programs created through war rhetoric tend to not just 
persist, but grow, expanding government encroachment on our shrinking 
freedoms, with increasingly adverse effects. Expanding government 
intervention in innumerable areas of our lives because politicians 
declare every problem a war cannot stand up to careful examination. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake