Pubdate: Mon, 21 Nov 2011
Source: Wall Street Journal (US)
Copyright: 2011 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.wsj.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487
Author: Mary Anastasia O'grady
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

A PATH TO VICTORY IN THE DRUG WAR

Brazil's Fernando Henrique Cardoso on Why Legalization of Marijuana 
Will Reduce the Cartels' Threat to Latin Democracies.

Washington - The classical argument in favor of marijuana 
legalization rests on personal liberty. Why, proponents ask, should 
the federal government tell free citizens what they may consume? It 
is also one reason why many conservatives fear it. They worry that 
legalization will mean more pot heads, an increase in the consumption 
of hard drugs, and a decrease in the quality of life for the sober 
and for society at large.

Former Brazilian President Fernando Henrique Cardoso believes the 
opposite would occur. In an interview here last week he told me that 
his embrace of global marijuana decriminalization is aimed at 
reducing all drug use, bringing down violence, and diminishing what 
he sees as a serious and growing threat to democracy in Latin America.

Out of politics since 2003, when he finished his second four-year 
term as one of Brazil's most successful presidents, Mr. Cardoso is 
now a high-profile international advocate for ending the war on 
drugs. But he once held the opposite view.

Mr. Cardoso explains that as president he used traditional methods of 
"repression and prevention" to fight the drug problem. He is quick to 
add that neither worked. "Eradication was a failure," he says. Even 
though marijuana plants were destroyed-the government proudly took 
pictures of its handiwork-"later on, again, the crops were there." 
Meanwhile, the state made an "insufficient" effort toward prevention, 
in part because Brazil's drug problem "was not that bad at the time."

Mr. Cardoso says that after he left office and began to spend time in 
countries around the region, notably Colombia and Mexico, he 
recognized the depth and breadth of the problem. "I realized, my God, 
what is at stake now is much more than just the criminality. [It is] 
the institutions, the democracy, being jeopardized by cartels and 
even by repression [in] the way human rights are being violated."

Of course, the state's violation of civil liberties in the "drug war" 
was predictable since the narcotics business involves private 
transactions between voluntary parties. Policing such transactions 
requires informants, and it necessarily implies the broadening of 
state powers beyond what most liberal democracies view as legitimate.

But the cartels, made rich and powerful under prohibition and robust 
demand, also threaten democracy. Mr. Cardoso says "they corrupt 
institutions with money," but they also usurp the elected 
government's authority over what they see as their turf.

This is what happened in Colombia, he says, where the government had 
to "fight cartels and guerrillas together, plus paramilitary and 
militia groups." Now the same thing is happening in Rio, where armed 
groups "have corrupt relationships with the police and with 
politicians" and need to "occupy areas [in order] to produce . . . 
and to distribute drugs." In these areas the population loses its 
democratic rights. "As long as [traffickers] are occupying one area, 
the state is out of that area. They have their own rules, their own 
law, and very often it is very harsh." When the government rightly 
tries to reassert its authority in these areas, violence increases.

Mr. Cardoso says that the overwhelming evidence in drug-abuse 
research shows that a "war" such as the U.S. envisions, "aiming for 
zero consumption and no production of drugs," is the wrong approach. 
Yet it is the global status quo "being enforced by all nations 
because the U.N. today assumes that this is how to deal with drugs."

Mr. Cardoso maintains that it is time for change. He points to the 
successful experience of some European states where marijuana has 
been decriminalized so that the recreational use of pot is permitted 
and addicts are treated.

Portugal is one example, he says. There, spiraling rates of marijuana 
consumption prior to decriminalization have been reversed. His own 
interviews-and the broader data-show that a combination of education, 
treatment and decriminalization, which makes marijuana no longer a 
forbidden temptation among the young, explains why use is no longer going up.

There are other benefits to decriminalization. By eliminating the 
need to chase marijuana consumers, Mr. Cardoso says, the state can 
focus on fighting organized crime. And those gangsters are likely to 
have fewer customers.

As it stands now "the young people have to enter into contact with 
drug traffickers to buy marijuana and the traffickers will induce the 
young people to jump from marijuana to hard drugs because they are 
more profitable. So you have to break the contact," he argues. There 
is also the problem that Brazilian prisons are brimming with inmates 
serving time for trafficking because they were caught with amounts of 
pot above the legal limit. Decriminalization would reduce rates of 
incarceration and the large number of lives ruined by prison systems 
that teach people how to become criminals.

Mr. Cardoso accepts that "the question is a political question." But 
he doesn't expect politicians in Washington or Brasilia to provide 
the answer. "To my mind what is important is civil society being 
involved in this discussion. I don't view the state being even 
capable of change without strong pressure from civil society."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom