Pubdate: Sun, 23 Aug 2015
Source: Baltimore Sun (MD)
Copyright: 2015 The Baltimore Sun Company
Contact:  http://www.baltimoresun.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/37
Author: Joseph Scalia
Note: Joseph Scalia is an attorney and Baltimore native who heads 
TheGreatBaltimoreBounceBack.org, an effort to help Baltimore adopt 
pro -growth strategies.

BLAME CITY VIOLENCE ON THE DRUG WAR

Baltimore City State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby recently lamented in an 
op-ed piece about the difficulty of prosecuting crime because 
witnesses refuse to come forward.

Rep Elijah Cummings recently issued an emotional appeal for "blacks 
lives [to] matter to black people." The city police chief recently 
announced that 10 federal agents would embed within the department to 
stem the rising violence.

Baltimore is not unique in its surging crime rate. Politicians, 
police officials and community leaders around the country get on TV 
and appear baffled by the "senseless" violence.

But the cause of the violence is not a mystery nor is it "senseless." 
It is the logical and rational outcome of our public policy choices.

Violence is the currency in an underground economic system that we as 
a society have created. It has nothing to do with poverty, race, 
social status or the availability of guns.

Let's declare the "war on drugs" a failure.

A war can't be launched against inanimate objects.

The war on drugs is a misnomer, disguising what it really is: a war on people.

It's a war launched by the government against taxpayers forced to 
fund it and citizens, mostly black, forced to endure roadside 
searches and late night raids reminiscent of totalitarian regimes. 
(Is it any wonder that citizens distrust an aggressive militarized 
police?) For decades this artificial war has vilified and demonized 
young black men for making what, in economic terms, is a completely 
rational choice given the incentives created by the war on drugs.

The drug business is a big business.

The drug business is a business like any other.

You need customers, supply chains and logistics to deliver a quality 
product at competitive prices in an unregulated market. Unlike other 
businesses, there is no mechanism to resolve business disputes.

Violence serves as the only effective mechanism to ensure that market 
participants adhere to the customs of the trade. Violence is the 
unwritten code needed to make sure that the goods and money flow 
efficiently. It prevents "seepage" of either cash or inventory and is 
an effective tool to expand market share.

The murders and shooting aren't "senseless" from an economic point of view.

The war on drugs creates a huge incentive to get into the drug 
business. A$50 per day habit for Baltimore's estimated 19,000 heroin 
addicts generates $950,000 a day, every day. A sharp kid who corners 
just 1 percent of the market will make $9,500 a day tax free. From 
that angle, it's completely rational to get involved in the drug 
trade and equally rational to use violence to protect it. Add in the 
sales of other drugs, and the market might top $1 billion dollars a 
year in Baltimore alone.

All the lecturing, begging, pleading and cajoling will have no effect.

Legions of cops in bulletproof vests or even tanks and a gaggle of 
ATF agents cruising the streets will not change the attractiveness of 
$1 billion dollars in cash.

Fixing the situation permanently means changing the economic 
incentives. Changing the incentives will stop the violence; nothing 
else will work. New incentives can be created to encourage police, 
social workers, criminal defense attorneys, prosecutors and the 
courts to refer those who want help for treatment.

A reduction in demand causes a price drop.

Dismantling the foolish war on drugs will cause drug prices to 
tumble. Violence is no longer effective in a high-volume, low-margin 
business. As "high crime" areas recede, police departments can 
demilitarize and return to what they did before the war on drugs 
morphed them into paramilitary units.

Ms. Mosby ought to understand that the threat of violence is much 
more persuasive than a prosecutor in a cubicle and that it actually 
would be "senseless" to testify.

The $200,000 earmarked to study the problem should be used to send 20 
heroin addicts to treatment.

The 10 federal agents patrolling the streets should retire to the DEA 
hooker party in Bogota; it would be just as effective and less 
costly. Representative Cummings should immediately start drafting 
legislation to dismantle the war on drugs and the police state it has 
birthed. Freeing black men lured by the siren song of drug-business 
riches may be the greatest civil rights battle ever.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom