URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v13/n287/a06.html
Newshawk: http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm
Votes: 0
Pubdate: Thu, 20 Jun 2013
Source: Daily Press (Victorville, CA)
Copyright: 2013 Freedom Communications, Inc.
Contact: http://www.vvdailypress.com/sections/contactus/
Website: http://www.vvdailypress.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1061
Author: John Stossel
THE WAR BY POLITICIANS ON THE REST OF US
As Americans obsess over NSA spying, abuse by the IRS and other
assaults on our freedom, I can't get my mind off the thousand other
ways politicians abuse us.
In their arrogance, they assume that only they solve social problems.
They will solve them by banning this and that, subsidizing groups
they deem worthy and setting up massive bureaucracies with a mandate
to cure, treat and rescue wayward souls.
Their programs fail, and so they pass new laws to address the
failures. It's one reason that 22 million people now work for government.
Some of the things they do seem like bigger assaults on our freedom
than NSA spying, although we've become accustomed to the older abuses.
Take the drug war.
It's true that some Americans destroy their lives and their families'
lives by using drugs. Others struggle with addiction. But if illegal
drugs are as horrible and addictive as we've been told, how come the
government's own statistics say millions try those drugs but only a
small percentage continue using?
Ninety-five percent of those who have tried what we think of as "hard
drugs" report not using the substances in the past month.
Columbia University psychology professor Dr. Carl Hart, author of
"High Price: A Neuroscientist's Journey of Self-Discovery," says
"hard" drugs are not as dangerous as the media make them out to be.
For 15 years, he's studied the effects of marijuana, methamphetamine,
crack cocaine and more on users.
"The data simply shows that the vast majority of people who use these
drugs don't go on to become addicted," he said on my show. "In fact,
some of these people go on to become president."
He means Presidents Clinton, Bush and Obama. "All those guys used
illegal drugs at some point."
Society has grown more accepting of marijuana, but many people
believe crack and meth are far more dangerous and addictive, and that
they quickly lead to violent criminal behavior.
"The same thing was said about marijuana in the 1930s," Hart
cautions. "People said you use this drug, you go on to commit murder,
you go on to use heroin." New drugs always frighten the authorities.
When the panic over meth passes, we may look back on it with
amusement, much the way people now look back on the anti-marijuana
propaganda film "Reefer Madness."
"That was allowed to happen because few people actually used
marijuana," says Hart. The unknown is scarier than the familiar - like beer.
To learn what drugs really do, Hart advertises for drug users on
Craigslist, and then, with government approval, he gives users drugs
at his lab at Columbia. He's discovered that drug users' brains react
in similar ways to the brains of alcohol consumers.
"The vast majority of people who use drugs like cocaine use it on
weekends, monthly or every six months," says Hart. "Most hold jobs.
Pay taxes. They do those things, in a similar way that we use drugs
like alcohol."
Government's anti-drug crusaders think they protect kids by hyping
the threat, but Hart says they actually make it harder for people
like him to educate the public about real dangers. After the hype
over marijuana, young people no longer trust warnings about other drugs.
Finally, he adds, politicians' futile war kills more people than the
forbidden substances themselves.
The gangs of today, like the Crips and the Bloods, are motivated by
the absurd profits created when legitimate businesses aren't allowed
to sell something - just as Al Capone's empire and the violence of
his turf wars were created by forbidding mainstream businesses to sell alcohol.
In fact, Hart says, the drug war is worse than Prohibition. It costs
more, has lasted longer and doesn't just kill people in the U.S.:
From Afghanistan to Colombia, American helicopters try to destroy
drug crops. Foreigners gain one more reason to hate Yankees.
Arrogant and ignorant politicians do more harm than the social
problems themselves.
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom
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