-Caveat Lector-

Dave Hartley
http://www.Asheville-Computer.com
http://www.ioa.com/~davehart


William F. Buckley, Jr.

THE WAR ON DRUGS IS LOST
http://www.november.org/Buckley.html
"We do know this, that more people die every year as a result of the war
against drugs than die from what we call, generically, overdosing"

Last summer WFB was asked by the New York Bar Association to make a
statement to the panel of lawyers considering the drug question. He made the
following statement: :

We ARE speaking of a plague that consumes an estimated $75 billion per year
of public money, exacts an estimated $70 billion a year from consumers, is
responsible for nearly 50 per cent of the million Americans who are today in
jail, occupies an estimated 50 per cent of the trial time of our judiciary,
and takes the time of 400,000 policemen yet a plague for which no cure is at
hand, nor in prospect. Perhaps you, ladies and gentlemen of the Bar, will
understand it if I chronicle my own itinerary on the subject of drugs and
public policy. When I ran for mayor of New York, the political race was
jocular, but the thought given to municipal problems was entirely serious,
and in my paper on drugs and in my post election book I advocated their
continued embargo, but on unusual grounds. I had read and I think the
evidence continues to affirm it that drug-taking is a gregarious activity.
What this means, I said, is that an addict is in pursuit of company and
therefore attempts to entice others to share with him his habit. Under the
circumstances, I said, it can reason ably be held that drug-taking is a
contagious disease and, accordingly, subject to the conventional
restrictions employed to shield the innocent from Typhoid Mary. Some sport
was made of my position by libertarians, including Professor Milton
Friedman, who asked whether the police might legitimately be summoned if it
were established that keeping company with me was a contagious activity. I
recall all of this in search of philosophical perspective. Back in 1965 I
sought to pay conventional deference to libertarian presumptions against
outlawing any activity potentially harmful only to the person who engages in
that activity. I cited John Stuart Mill and, while at it, opined that there
was no warrant for requiring motorcyclists to wear a helmet. I was seeking,
and I thought I had found, a reason to override the presumption against
inter cession by the state.

About ten years later, I deferred to a different allegiance, this one not
the presumptive opposition to state intervention, but a different order of
priorities. A conservative should evaluate the practicality of a legal
constriction, as for instance in those states whose statute books continue
to outlaw sodomy, which interdiction is unenforceable, making the law
nothing more than print on-paper. I came to the conclusion that the
so-called war against drugs was not working, that it would not work absent a
change in the structure of the civil rights to which we are accustomed and
to which we cling as a valuable part of our patrimony. And that therefore if
that war against drugs is not working, we should look into what effects the
war has, a canvass of the casualties consequent on its failure to work. That
consideration encouraged me to weigh utilitarian principles: the Benthamite
calculus of pain and pleasure introduced by the illegalization of drugs.

A year or so ago I thought to calculate a ratio, however roughly arrived at,
toward the elaboration of which I would need to place a dollar figure on
deprivations that do not lend themselves to quantification. Yet the law,
lacking any other recourse, every day countenances such quantification's, as
when asking a jury to put a dollar figure on the damage done by the loss of
a plaintiff's right arm, amputated by defective machinery at the factory. My
enterprise became allegorical in character-I couldn't do the arithmetic-but
the model, I think, proves useful in sharpening perspectives.

Professor Steven Duke of Yale Law School, in his valuable book, America's
Longest War: Rethinking Our Tragic Crusade against Drugs, and scholarly
essay, "Drug Prohibition: An Unnatural Disaster," reminds us that it isn't
the use of illegal drugs that we have any business complaining about, it is
the abuse of such drugs. It is acknowledged that tens of millions of
Americans (I have seen the figure 85 million) have at one time or another
consumed, or exposed themselves to, an illegal drug. But the estimate
authorized by the federal agency charged with such explorations is that
there are not more than 1 million regular cocaine users, defined as those
who have used the drug at least once in the preceding week. There are
(again, an informed estimate) 5 million Americans who regularly use
marijuana; and again, an estimated 70 million who once upon a time, or even
twice upon a time, inhaled marijuana. From the above we reasonably deduce
that Americans who abuse a drug, here defined as Americans who become
addicted to it or even habituated to it, are a very small percentage of
those who have experimented with a drug, or who continue to use a drug
without any observable distraction in their lives or careers. About such
users one might say that they are the equivalent of those Americans who
drink liquor but do not become alcoholics, or those Americans who smoke
cigarettes but do not suffer a shortened lifespan as a result.

Curiosity naturally flows to ask, next, How many users of illegal drugs in
fact die from the use of them? The answer is complicated in part because
marijuana finds itself lumped together with cocaine and heroin, and nobody
has ever been found dead from marijuana. The question of deaths from cocaine
is complicated by the factor of impurity. It would not be useful to draw any
conclusions about alcohol consumption, for instance, by observing that, in
1931, one thousand Americans died from alcohol consumption if it happened
that half of those deaths, or more than half, were the result of drinking
alcohol with toxic ingredients extrinsic to the drug the as conventionally
used.

When alcohol was illegal, the consumer could never know whether he had been
given relatively harmless alcohol to drink-such alcoholic beverages as we
find today in the liquor store-or whether the bootlegger had come up with
paralyzing rotgut. By the same token, purchasers of illegal cocaine and
heroin cannot know whether they are consuming a drug that would qualify for
regulated consumption after clinical analysis, But we do know this, and I
approach the nexus of my inquiry, which is that more people die every year
as a result of the war against drugs than die from what we call,
generically, overdosing, These fatalities include, perhaps most prominently,
drug merchants who compete for commercial territory, but include also people
who are robbed and killed by those desperate for money to buy the drug to
which they have become addicted. This is perhaps the moment to note that the
pharmaceutical cost of cocaine and heroin is approximately 2 per cent of the
street price of those drugs. Since a cocaine addict can spend as much as $
1,000 per week to sustain his habit, he would need to come up with that
51,000.

The approximate fencing cost of stolen goods is 80 percent, so that to come
up with 51,000 can require stealing 55,000 worth of jewels, cars, whatever.
We can see that at free-market rates, $20 per week would provide the addict
with the cocaine which, in this wartime drug situation, re quires of him
$1,000.

My mind turned, then, to auxiliary expenses-auxiliary pains, if you wish.
The crime rate, whatever one made of its modest curtsy last year toward
diminution, continues its secular rise. Serious crime is 480 per cent higher
than in 1965. The correlation is not absolute, but it is suggestive: crime
is reduced by the number of available enforcers of law and order, namely
policemen. The heralded new crime legislation, passed last year and
acclaimed by President Clinton, provides for 100 000 extra policemen, even
if only for a limited amount of time. But 400 000 policemen would be freed
to pursue criminals engaged in activity other than the sale and distribution
of drugs if such sale and distribution, at a price at which there was no
profit, were to be done by, say, a federal drugstore.

So then we attempt to put a value on the goods stolen by addicts. The figure
arrived at by Professor Duke is $10 billion. But we need to add to this pain
of stolen property' surely, the extra-material pain suffered by victims of
robbers. If someone breaks into your house at night, perhaps holding you at
gunpoint while taking your money and your jewelry and whatever, it is
reasonable to assign a higher "cost" to the episode than the commercial
value of the stolen money and jewelry. If we were modest, we might
reasonably, however arbitrarily, put at $1,000 the "value" of the victim's
pain. But then the hurt, the psychological trauma, might be evaluated by a
jury at ten times, or one hundred times, that sum. But we must consider
other factors, not readily quantifiable, but no less tangible, Fifty years
ago, to walk at night across Central P ark was no more adventurous than to
walk down Fifth Avenue. But walking across the park is no longer done, save
by the kind of people who climb the Matterhorn. Is it fair to put a value on
a lost amenity? If the Metropolitan Museum were to close, mightn't we,
without fear of distortion, judge that we had been deprived of something
valuable? What value might we assign to confidence that, at night, one can
sleep without fear of intrusion by criminals seeking money or goods
exchangeable for drugs ?

Pursuing utilitarian analysis, we ask: What are the relative costs, on the
one hand, of medical and psychological treatment for addicts and, on the
other. incarceration for drug offenses ? It transpires that treatment is
seven times more cost-effective. By this is meant that one dollar spent on
the treatment of an addict reduces the probability of continued addiction
seven times more than one dollar spent on incarceration. Looked at another
way: Treatment is not now available for almost half of those who would
benefit from it. Yet we are willing to build more and more jails in which to
isolate drug users even though at one-seventh the cost of building and
maintaining jail space and pursuing, detaining, and prosecuting the drug
user, we could subsidize commensurately effective medical care and
psychological treatment.

I have spared you, even as I spared myself, an arithmetical consummation of
my inquiry, but the data here cited instruct us that the cost of the drug
war is many times more painful, in all its manifestations, than would be the
licensing of drugs combined with intensive education of non-users and
intensive education designed to warn those who experiment with drugs. We
have seen a substantial reduction in the use of tobacco over the last thirty
years, and this is not because tobacco became illegal but because a sentient
community began, in substantial numbers, to apprehend the high cost of
tobacco to human health, even as, we can assume, a growing number of
Americans desist from practicing unsafe sex and using polluted needles in
this age of AIDS. If 80 million Americans can experiment with drugs and
resist addiction using information publicly available, we can reasonably
hope that approximately the same number would resist the temptation to
purchase such drugs even if they were avail able at a federal drugstore at
the mere cost of production. And added to the above is the point of civil
justice.

Those who suffer from the abuse of drugs have them selves to blame for it.
This does not mean that society is absolved from active concern for their
plight. It does mean that their plight is subordinate to the plight of those
citizens who do not experiment with drugs but whose life, liberty, and
property are substantially affected by the illegalization of the drugs
sought after by the minority .

I have not spoken of the cost to our society of the astonishing legal
weapons available now to policemen and prosecutors; of the penalty of
forfeiture of one's home and property for violation of laws which, though
designed to advance the war against drugs, could legally be used-I am told
by learned counsel-as penalties for the neglect of one's pets. I leave it at
this, that it is outrageous to live in a society whose laws tolerate sending
young people to life in prison because they grew, or distributed, a dozen
ounces of marijuana. I would hope that the good offices of your vital
profession would mobilize at least to protest such excesses of wartime zeal,
the legal equivalent of a My Lai massacre. And perhaps proceed to recommend
the legalization of the sale of most drugs, except to minors.

Mr. Buckley is editor at large of The National Review Magazine.


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