Pubdate: Tue, 29 June 1999
Source: Washington Post (DC)
Copyright: 1999 The Washington Post Company
Address: 1150 15th Street Northwest, Washington, DC 20071
Feedback: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm
Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/
Author: Barry R. McCaffrey
Note: The writer is director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy.

DON'T LEGALIZE THOSE DRUGS

Three-quarters of the U.S. population opposes the legalization of
psychoactive drugs such as heroin, cocaine, LSD, methamphetamine, and
marijuana. Therefore, the term "drug legalization" has rightfully acquired
pejorative connotations. Many supporters of this position have adopted the
label "harm reduction" to soften the impact of an unpopular proposal that,
if passed, would encourage greater availability and use of drugs --
especially among children. The euphemism of "harm reduction" implies that
legalizing dangerous substances would reduce the harm these substances
cause. In fact, condoning drugs would increase their use and hence their harm.

Drug use imposes an unacceptable risk of harm on the user and others. The
evidence supporting this viewpoint is chilling:

Substance abuse wrecks families. A survey of state child-welfare agencies
found substance abuse to be one of the top two problems exhibited by 81
percent of families reported for child maltreatment. Researchers estimate
that chemical dependence is present in at least half of the families
involved in the child welfare system. One study published in the Journal of
the American Medical Association revealed that non-drug users who live in
households where drugs are used are 11 times more likely to be killed than
individuals from drug-free households.

Drug-dependent individuals are responsible for a disproportionate percentage
of our nation's violent and income-generating crimes such as robbery,
burglary or theft. National Institute of Justice surveys consistently find
that between one-half and three-quarters of all arrestees have drugs in
their system at the time of arrest. In 1997, a third of state prisoners and
about one in five federal prisoners said they had committed the crimes that
led to incarceration while under the influence of drugs.

Injection-drug users place themselves at great risk. A University of
Pennsylvania study of Philadelphia injection-drug users found that four
times as many addicts died from overdose, homicide, heart disease, renal
failure and liver disease as did from causes associated with HIV disease.
Dr. James Curtis, director of addiction services at Harlem Hospital Center,
explains: "It is false, misleading and unethical to give addicts the idea
that they can be intravenous drug abusers without suffering serious
self-injury."

Clearly, drugs themselves harm users. A significant percentage of all
current drug users are addicted to illegal substances. Addiction is a brain
disease that changes a person's neurochemistry. For 4 million chronically
addicted people, drug use is not a choice and hence has little to do with
personal liberty. Removing the threat of criminal sanctions would eliminate
the possibility of forced treatment and condemn countless addicts to
miserable lives.

One argument given for drug legalization by harm-reduction advocates is that
the "war against drugs has been lost." Aside from the fact that this is not
a war, much progress has been made. Current drug policies are reducing drug
use and its consequences. Drug use in this country has declined by half
since 1979. The number of current users dropped from 25 million in 1979 to
13 million in 1996. The decrease in current use of cocaine has been even
more dramatic.

This is not to say that drug policies cannot be improved. The 1999 National
Drug Control Strategy is implementing important changes. The strategy's
number one goal is prevention. In the past four years, the administration
increased spending on prevention by 55 percent while spending on treatment
rose 25 percent. The strategy calls for more treatment in the criminal
justice system to break the cycle of drugs and crime.

At root, the debate over drug legalization boils down to a question of risk.
Studies show that the more a product is available and legitimized, the
greater will be its use. If drugs were legalized, the cost to the individual
and society would grow astronomically. Removing the criminal status
associated with drug use and sale would not make such activity less criminal
when drug abuse wrecks young lives. It is criminal that more money is spent
on illegal drugs than on art or higher education; it is criminal that crack
babies are born addicted and in pain; it is criminal that thousands of
adolescents lose their health and the freedom to create a bright future.

Harm-reduction advocates tolerate drug use because they consider it part of
the human condition that will always be with us. Many other perennial
problems such as racism, theft and aggression cannot be extinguished
entirely, but we still resist their damage and criminalize the practices. No
one argues that we should legalize these activities to make them more
sanitary or provide tax revenues.

On a judicial level, the question of drug legalization comes down to whether
we should legalize destructive behavior. With respect to the individual,
society at large and the environment, American jurisprudence has run in the
opposite direction. Americans have decided that people do not have a right
to ride motorcycles without wearing helmets, drive cars without using seat
belts, pollute the environment at will, or endanger the self and others by
refusing vaccination or similar life-saving health measures. In general, our
laws indicate that self-destructive activity should not be permitted or
condoned. Drug consumption damages the brain, which in turn produces other
forms of destructive behavior. U.S. law does not grant people the right to
destroy themselves or others. Addictive drugs were criminalized because they
are harmful; they are not harmful because they were criminalized.

The writer is director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy.

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