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BAD INVESTMENT
Take it from a businessman: The War on Drugs is just money down the drain.

By Governor Gary E. Johnson (R-NM)

July 10, 2001

As the Republican governor of New Mexico, I'm neither soft on crime nor
pro-drugs in any sense. I believe a person who harms another person should be
punished. But as a successful businessman, I also believe that locking up
more and more people who are nonviolent drug offenders, people whose real
problem is that they are addicted to drugs, is simply a waste of money and
human resources.

Drugs are a handicap. I don't think anyone should use them. But if a person
is using marijuana in his or her own home, doing no harm to anyone other than
arguably to himself or herself, should that person be arrested and put in
jail? In my opinion, the answer is no.

Any social policy or endeavor should be evaluated based on its actual
effectiveness, just as in business any investment should be evaluated based
on its returns. By that standard, the nationwide drug war is a failure. After
20-plus years of zero-tolerance policies and increasingly harsh criminal
penalties, we have over half a million people behind bars on drug charges
nationwide -- more than the total prison population in all of Western Europe.
We're spending billions of dollars to keep them locked up. Yet the federal
government's own research demonstrates that drugs are cheaper, purer, and
more readily available than when this war started. Heroin use is up. Ecstasy
use is up. Teenagers say that marijuana is easier to get than alcohol. No
matter how you slice it, this is no success story.

In 1981, the federal government spent about $1.5 billion on the drug war.
Today, we spend almost $20 billion a year at the federal level, with the
states spending at least that much again. In 1980, the federal government
arrested a few hundred thousand people on drug charges; today we arrest 1.6
million people a year for drug offenses. Yet we still have a drug problem.
Should we continue until the federal government spends $40 billion and
arrests 3.2 million people a year for drugs? What about $80 billion and 6.4
million arrests? The logical conclusion of this is that we'll be spending the
entire gross national product on drug-law enforcement and still not be
addressing our drug problem. I believe the costs outweigh the benefits.

In New Mexico, the cost to the state of treating drug use as a crime is over
$43 million per year -- and this does not even include local and federal
expenditures, which nearly triple that number. Over half of that money goes
to corrections costs. Yet despite this outlay, New Mexico has one of the
highest rates of drug-related crime and one of the highest heroin-usage rates
in the nation. Our results dictate that our money be spent another way.
That's why I have called for a reevaluation of my state's current drug
strategies, and we have begun to make great progress in this area.

A study by the RAND Corporation shows that every dollar spent on treatment
instead of imprisonment saves $7 in state costs. Treatment is significantly
more effective at reducing drug use than jail and prison. I believe the most
cost-effective way to deal with nonviolent drug users would be to stop
prosecuting them, and instead to make an effective spectrum of treatment
services available to those who request it.

I propose a new bottom line for evaluating our success. Currently, our
government measures the success of our drug policies by whether drug use went
up or down, or whether seizures went up or down, or how many acres of coca we
eradicated in South America. These are absolutely the wrong criteria. Instead
of asking how many people smoked marijuana last year, we should ask if
drug-related crime went up or down. Instead of asking how many people did
heroin last year, we should ask whether heroin overdoses went up or down. We
should ask if public nuisances associated with drug use and dealing went up
or down. In short, we should be trying to reduce the harm caused by and
suffered by drug users, instead of simply trying to lock them all up. A drug
policy that has these questions in mind would be much more sensible,
pragmatic, and cost-effective than our current one.

We need to reform our drug policies. The goal should be to help those
addicted to drugs to find a better way. The answer is not imprisonment and
legal attack. The answer lies in sentencing reform, in supplying treatment on
demand, and in delivering honest drug education to our kids. We need policies
that reflect what we know about drug addiction rather than policies that seek
to punish it. The days of a drug war waged against our people should come to
an end. If we take a new approach -- one that deals with drugs through a
medical model rather than a criminal justice model -- I guarantee that prison
rates will drop, violent crime will decrease, property crime will decrease,
overdose deaths will decrease, AIDS and hepatitis C will decrease, and more
of those needing treatment for drug abuse will receive it.

If we take these and other "harm reduction" approaches toward drug use, we
will spend many times less what we currently spend on the drug war, and the
benefit will be a society with less death, disease, crime, suffering, and
imprisonment. By any measure, that's a more sensible investment.



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