Ending the Global War on Drugs
The drug war destabilizes America’s friends and finances its enemies.
And those deaths have been taking place on their streets and before their eyes--not in a distant jungle.
In my talk, I tried to highlight a number of mistaken assumptions underlying the War on Drugs and to offer alternatives with different policy implications. One of these is the assumption that "drugs cause crime, corruption, and disease "—leading to a prohibitionist policy implemented by a war on drugs. Unfortunately, the drug war creates a gigantic black market that undermines the stability of friendly countries—witness Colombia and Mexico—and finances our enemies—for example Al Qaeda and the Taliban. Attempts to suppress the black market by force merely spread it, from one country to another or, in response to local police crackdowns, from one neighborhood to another.
Instead of "drugs cause crime, corruption, and disease," a more accurate formulation is "drug prohibition causes a black market; and the black market causes crime, corruption, and disease." This alternative implies a policy of drastically shrinking the black market, by creating a regulated legal market.
One exciting development discussed at the conference has been the uniting of key figures, such as the former Presidents of Brazil (Cardoso), Mexico (Fox and Zedillo), and Colombia (Gaviria) to advocate for reversing the drug war policy that is causing such havoc in their countries.
Image Source:
Timeline of total number of inmates in U.S. prisons and jails. From 1920 to 2008.
Wikimedia Commons http://bit.ly/uEkXwD
Check out my most recent book, The Myth of Race, which debunks common misconceptions, as well as my other books at http://amazon.com/Jefferson-M.-Fish/e/B001H6NFUI
The Myth of Race is available on Amazon http://amzn.to/10ykaRU and Barnes & Noble http://bit.ly/XPbB6E
Friend/Like me on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/JeffersonFishAuthor
Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/@jeffersonfish
Visit my website: www.jeffersonfish.com
Link:
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/looking-in-the-cultural-mirror/201111/ending-the-global-war-drugs
No comments:
Post a Comment