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<A HREF="aol://5863:126/alt.government.abuse:37504">::: War on Drugs as the
Health of the State :::</A>
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Subject: ::: War on Drugs as the Health of the State :::
From: Dan Clore <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Wed, Feb 17, 1999 10:58 PM
Message-id: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

THE WAR ON DRUGS
AS THE HEALTH OF THE STATE

by Robert C. Black

No one ever made a more important observation in
seven words than Randolph Bourne once did: "War is
the health of the state" (Resek 1964: 71). War has
been the main motor for the extension of state power
in Europe for a thousand years (Tilly 1992), and not
only in Europe. War enlarges the state and increases
its wealth and its powers. It promotes obedience and
justifies the repression of dissent, redefined as
disloyalty. It relieves social tensions by redirecting
them outwards at an enemy state which is, of course,
doing exactly the same thing with all the same
consequences. From the state's perspective, there is
only one thing wrong with wars: they end.

That wars end is ultimately more important than whether
they end in victory or defeat. Occasionally defeat
spells destruction for states, as for the Ottoman and
Austro-Hungarian Empires after World War I, but not
usually, and even if it does, they give way to other
states. The state-system not only endures, it prevails.
Usually war is well worth the risk -- not to the
combatants or the suffering civilians, of course: but
well worth the risk to the state.

Peace is something else again. The immediate consequence
may be a recession or a depression, as after the American
Revolution and World War I, whose hardships are all the
more galling when they fall upon the population which
"won" the war and naively supposes it will share in the
fruits of a victory which belongs to its state, not to
the people. The regime may artificially prolong the
wartime climate of repression and sacrifice, as did the
United States by working up the Red Scare after World
War I, but soon the people crave what Warren Harding
promised them, a return to normalcy. The vanquished, of
course, rarely fare as well as occupied Japan and Germany
did after World War II, but even then the Germans
initially experienced famine.

There have been epochs in which certain states were
almost always at war, such as Republican Rome, whose
oligarchs, as Livy (1960) repeatedly demonstrates, were
well aware of the way war was a safety-valve for
dissipating class conflict. Colonial wars well serve the
purpose since they are fought far from the home country
and usually waged against antagonists who are, however
gallant, greatly inferior militarily.

The British Empire in the eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries is a good example. Engorged with the wealth of
commercial capitalism (soon to be unimaginably enlarged
by the Industrial Revolution), secure in its insularity,
shielded by the world's greatest navy, with a robust and
ruthless ruling class wise to the ways of statecraft,
the British State could afford a war anytime it needed
one. The cannon fodder was easy to come by. There
were outright mercenaries such as Hessions on the market.
And yesterday's enemies were today's troops. The Irish,
repeatedly crushed in the seventeenth century, were one
source. Starting in 1746 the British annihilated the
society and culture of the Scottish Highlanders, then
recruited regiments from the survivors. They would repeat
these cost-effective methods in India, in Africa,
everywhere. And then there were the English sources of
expendibles: the peasants forced off the land by enclosure
of the commons, and the urban poor. They would not be
missed, and there were always more where they came from.

But times have changed. Some states can possibly carry
on in the old way for awhile -- maybe Serbia, North Korea,
Iraq -- but the United States cannot, for at least two
reasons: We are too squeamish, and we are too poor.

Too squeamish in the sense that, as Saddam Hussein crowed
before the second Gulf War, America is a society which
cannot tolerate 10,000 dead. He was right, although that
did him no good, since he was unable to inflict 10,000
or even 1,000 deaths. Grenada and Panama were larks, but
even such two-bit gang wars as Lebanon and Somalia were
not, and nobody has any stomach for war in Haiti or Bosnia.
Americans are fast losing their taste for media wars,
to say nothing of real wars.

And too poor for any war long enough to put a lasting blip
in any President's ratings. The attack on Iraq was the
turning-point. As adroitly handled as the manipulation of
the mass mind was, Americans only went along with the war
on the condition that the "Allies" pay for it. Even the
most dim-witted are dimly aware that the lion's share of
their Federal taxes goes to pay for war debts and military
spending they never reaped any benefits from. The trade-off
for lives in a high-tech, media-savvy, photogenic war is
money. It costs more, immensely more, than war ever has.
But America does not have more, immensely more wealth than
it ever has. It has less, and less and less all the time.

Even with the massed forces of ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN and all
the rest of the mainstream media behind him (Black 1992:
ch. 9), and despite an overwhelming victory which owed as
much to luck as skill, George Bush became the first President
to win a war and then lose an election -- to a pot-smoking,
womanizing draft-dodger.

Thus the regime is caught in what the Marxists used to call
a "contradiction." It needs war, for war is the health of
the state, but (with occasional ephemeral exceptions) it
cannot afford either to win wars or lose them. But what kind
of a war is it possible to wage, at not too intolerable a
cost, which avoids these twin pitfalls -- a war which
cannot be won or lost?

The "War on Drugs." Which is not a real war, of course, but
what the Germans call a Sitzkrieg, a phony war. Formerly
they sold us the war to end all wars. Now they sell us an
endless war. The March of Dimes is an instructive precedent.
The March of Dimes raised lots of money which (what was left
of it after most of it went for advertising and administration)
financed research on a polio vaccine. Then came catastrophe:
Jonas Salk found a polio vaccine. So, its purpose accomplished,
the March of Dimes went out of business, right? (Just kidding.)
No, the organization moved on to an amorphous quest, to
conquer "birth defects," of which there are so many varieties
that the March of Dimes can count on doing business for many
years to come. Some people say "the ends justify the means,"
others say they don't. The March of Dimes has transcended
the contradiction: The means justify the end.

Such is the utility, to the state, of the War on Drugs. It
cannot be lost, for there is no enemy to lose it to. And for
countless reasons it cannot be won. The government cannot
inderdict more than a fraction of the cocaine, heroin,
marijuana and other drugs which, by illegalizing them, the
government has raised the price on to the point that they
are well worth smuggling in. And some of the dope, such as
marijuana and opium, is easily produced domestically. Many
tens of millions of Americans have indulged in illegal drugs,
including the President. Their kids see no reason not to try
what their parents did, regardless what the parents are
preaching now. Children tend not to heed their parents when
they know they are lying. Besides, there is always alcohol.

And in the suburbs as in the ghetto, legalizing drugs has
jacked up their prices so far that busting drug dealers has
no "supply-side" effect. Taking a drug dealer off the street
just opens up a vacancy for another entrepreneur. Indeed, it
is standard practice for dealers to get their competitors
busted to take that competitive edge. But it makes no more
difference who is dealing the drugs than it makes who is
running the state. Indeed, they may be the same people! The
Drug War is the health of the state.

Because it is only a phony war, the War on Drugs is fiscally
manageable. The government can spend as much or as little as
it likes, since the result is always the same. Even the
out-of-pocket costs are disguised, divided as they are among
Federal, state and local governments and confused with funding
for law enforcement. The single greatest expense, prisons, is
one which most people mistake for just about the best thing
the government does for them. Underpinning this error is a
misconception about what the product of the criminal justice
system is. It is not crime control, for even if that could
be measured with any accuracy, there is no evidence that law
enforcement in general reduces crime (Jacob 1984). The product
is crime rates (Black 1970), which are a function, not of the
amount of crime, but of the amount of law enforcement. Thus the
authorities can manufacture a "crime wave" if they want
more money, or ease up on enforcement if they want to take
credit for doing exactly the opposite -- a reverse Catch-22,
a no-lose situation. Aside from themselves and their higher-ups,
the only beneficiaries of those 100,000 more police that
President Clinton will put on the streets will be Dunkin' Donut
franchisees.

What's more, to some extent the War on Drugs pays for itself.
Just as armies used to subsist largely by "living off the land,"
pillaging the districts they passed through, so the drug warriors
cram their coffers with booty from forfeitures. And that's just
on the formal, legal level. Off the books, of course, the police
have always seized a lot more drugs than ever found their
way to the evidence room. The dealers and junkies are unlikely
to complain. (The classic scenario: a cop makes an illegal search
on the street. He finds something. He asks, courteously, "Is this
yours?" The answer is always no.) Some dope the police sell on
their own account. Some they use themselves. And some they use
for "flaking" (planting drugs on suspected drug dealers) and
"padding" (adding more dope to what was found to turn a misdemeanor
into a felony) (Knapp Commission 1973: 103-104).

In still another way the War on Drugs offers one of the benefits
of a real war without its costs and risks. Every real war is a
civil liberties holocaust (Murphy 1973). Even on the formal,
legal level, national security -- a so-called compelling state
interest -- tends to trump fundamental rights, at least until
the shooting stops. Meanwhile patriotic vigilantes carry out the
castrations, the lynchings, the arsons -- the dirty work too
dirty for the state to do, even in a supposed wartime emergency,
but not too dirty for the state to wink at afterwards. The United
States during World War I and the Red Scare is one example; the
Italy which the liberals let the Fascists take over, after letting
them extralegally smash the socialists, communists and anarchists,
is another.

But peace returns and the legal ground lost is mostly recovered,
or even more ground is taken. Once the state has demolished the
radical opposition irreparably, it may well restore constitutional
rights to the impotent remnants and bask in its own announced
glory, parading its tolerance once it doesn't matter any more.

The phony war is much more effective. It cannot be conducted
without massive invasions of liberty and property. The single
most important right implicated, and endangered, by the War on
Drugs is the Fourth Amendment, which forbids unreasonable searches
and seizures. This body of law effectively began during Prohibition,
and today it is, as Professor Fred Cohen says, "driven by drugs."
The rights of everyone are defined by the rights the judiciary
grudgingly grants to drug offenders.

Other rights are reduced too. Under the forfeiture laws, private
property is taken without due process or just compensation. Applied
to Native Americans and others, drug laws interfere with freedom
of religion; so does the common practice of forcing drunk drivers
into "rehabs" for indoctrination in the religious tenets of
Alcoholics Anonymous. Even the campaign against gun ownership is
an indirect consequence of the War on Drugs. Participants in
the drug trade have to enforce their own contracts, since the
state will not. And prohibition has made drugs very valuable
commodities: in the inner cities, by far the most valuable
commodities. Meanwhile, drug addicts rob and steal to support
their habits. The result is an arms race and the clamor for gun
control. One prohibition leads to another.

For the criminal, the ultimate challenge is the perfect crime.
For the state, it is the perfect law. Is it prohibition?

Maybe not. Drug prohibition is today much more popular than
alcohol prohibition ever was, but within living memory,
decriminalization was a serious possibility. It might become so
again if the anti-drug hysteria continues to rise till it
reaches a level impossible to sustain. And it probably will
rise, because the drug war has been institutionalized. Various
agencies and organizations have a vested interest in its
unlimited extension, although its unlimited extension is not
only impossible, it would deprive the state of the great
advantage of drug war over real war: its predictability
and manageability. As some organs of government grow and grow,
there is less for others. Since victory, like defeat, is
impossible, there will never be a "peace dividend" to divvy up.
The state is probably already draining more wealth out of civil
society than is consistent with the state's own long-term
interests. If it takes more and more, the parasite will kill
the host -- or the host will kill the parasite.

Eventually the state may succumb to its own success. The state
is huge. And it is bureaucratic. That means that it is intricately
subdivided by function (or by what was initially considered a
division of labor by function: in fact, overlapping or competing
jurisdiction is common and tends to increase over time). Even if
the left hand knows what the right hand is doing, it may not be
able to do anything about it. (Or else, in the words of the German
proverb, "one hand washes the other.") Inter-agency cooperation
becomes more difficult as it becomes more frequent and more
necessary. "The complexity of joint action" thwarts action, or
its purpose (Pressman & Wildavsky 1984: ch. 5).

It is very hard, administratively, to reduce a bureau's budget,
but easy to increase it. Bureaus fiercely resist zero-based
budgeting -- that is, starting from scratch, the annual
rejustification of every line of the budget request -- as
reinventing the wheel. And it is difficult for higher-level
authority to identify areas for cost reduction, if it even
wants to, since the very raison d'etre of bureaucratic
organization is deference to institutionalized expertise. The
easy way is to take the previous budget as presumptively the
next one; it is only departures from the status quo, not
the status quo itself, which require justification. The bureau,
staffed with supposed experts, is itself the usual source of
justifications for departures, and the departures are always in
the direction of more money and more power for the bureau. What
goes for each bureau goes for all of them. Thus government grows.

Referring to the way competition between workers lowers wages for
all of them, Fredy Perlman (1969: 17) observed: "The daily
practice of all annuls the goals of each." Inter-agency interactions
tend to have the same effect. So does inter-agency competition for
tax money.

The long-term implications for the War on Drugs are, for the state,
ominous. The more the state extends its control over society, the
less control it has over itself. The more the state absorbs society,
the weaker the state as an entity responsive to a common will
becomes. It disintegrates into an authoritarian pluralism
reminiscent of feudalism, but lacking its romantic charm. Some
agencies fatten off the War on Drugs, most do not. The ones
that do are the first to go their own way. Attorney General Janet
Reno had no control over the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms when it exterminated the Branch Davidians to win what
amounted to nothing more than a gang war: but she took
responsibility. The Drug Enforcement Administration is likewise
as independent as Hoover's FBI or anybody's CIA.

For the state, another inevitable adverse consequence of the Drug
War is corruption (Sisk 1982). Not that corruption is necessarily
a bad thing for the state. Up to a point, police shakedowns of
drug dealers, bookies, pimps and other extralegal entrepreneurs
benefit the state in more than one way. The more the cops collect
in payoffs and confiscations, the less they have to be paid in
salaries. Cops whose supervisors know they are on the take (as
they do, since they are on the take too) (Chambliss 1988) look
the other way unless and until for some reason they need to get
rid of a particular cop. Corruption is thus a management tool.

But some cops get too greedy and go too far. Most are "grass-eaters"
(bribe-takers) who take what comes their way, but some are "meat-eaters"
(extortionists) -- proactively corrupt -- who actively seek out or set
up corruption opportunities, like the Special Investigative Unit
detectives depicted in the movie Serpico (Daley 1978; Knapp Commission
1973). The grass-eaters cover for the meat-eaters (the "blue code of
silence") since they all have something to hide. Until recently,
police administrators and their academic allies thought that they
could keep corruption under control through various institutional
reforms most of which were initially proposed by the Knapp Commission
(Sherman 1978). Maybe the reforms would have worked, except for one
thing: the War on Drugs. Corruption is making a comeback,
even in the Knapp-reformed NYPD (Dombrink 1988). Because penalties
are much harsher and the profits of drug trafficking much higher,
the protection the police sell commands a much higher price
(Sisk 1982). Drug-driven corruption is the growth sector of police
misconduct (Carter 1990).

For the state, the problem with runaway corruption is that it
cannot be confined to where its benefits exceed its costs. The state
needs the police for a modicum of selective law enforcement and,
much more important, for social control -- as the occasion calls
for, to break strikes, evict squatters, suppress riots, repress
dissidents and keep traffic moving. Even in our sophisticated
times, when manipulation is the hippest of control strategies,
there is often no substitute for the gun and the billy-club.

But a pervasively corrupt police force cannot be counted on when
push comes to shove. Meat-eaters cannot spare the time to enforce
the law. Officers on the nod are ineffective knights of the club.
Police who are enforcing drug laws are unavailable to enforce
others. There's been a tremendous expansion in undercover police
work in recent years (Marx 1988), inevitably accompanied by more
corruption (Girodo 1991). Police, as workers, are notoriously
difficult to manage because they are usually out by themselves,
unsupervised. Detectives especially are in a position to be
secretive about their activities (Skolnick 1975; Daley 1978),
and more drug enforcement means more detective/undercover work.
These cops are pursuing their own agendas. Why do dogs lick their
balls? Because they can.

Corruption scandals demoralise the police and delegitimate the
state. Most people obey the law most of the time, not because they
fear punishment if they don't, but because they believe in the
system. As they cease to believe, they will cease to obey -- not
only the laws that don't matter (like "don't use drugs") but also
the ones that do (like "pay your taxes"). And, ironically, crackdowns
on corruption impair police effectiveness for other purposes
(Kornblum 1976).

The state has overbuilt itself so heavily that the weight begins
to crack the foundations. It is not the sort of elephantiasis that
can be eased by privatization. It doesn't matter who collects the
garbage. What matters is who has the guns. Not "social pork" but the
essence of sovereignty -- the means to enforce order -- is tumorous.
Thus the cancer is inoperable. The state may die, fittingly, of an
overdose.

[references omitted]

--
---------------------------------------------------
Dan Clore

The Website of Lord We�rdgliffe:
http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/9879/index.html
Welcome to the Waughters....

The Dan Clore Necronomicon Page:
http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/9879/necpage.htm
Because the true mysteries cannot be profaned....

"Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn!"

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Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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