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The below
information is from www.ontheissues.org
War on Drugs
President Bush
Senior initiated the War on Drugs in the late 1980s. The
Office of National Drug Control Policy, directed by Drug Czar John P.
Walters, sets federal policy.
The updated
2008 drug strategy includes:
Stopping Drug Use Before It Starts;
Intervening and Healing Americas Drug Users;
Tackling Transnational Threats;
Disrupting the Market for Illicit Drugs;
Ending
illegal sales of controlled substances on the Internet.
The 2008
policy updates the basic 1999 drug policy, which includes:
Expanding drug prevention and drug treatment;
Establishing drug courts and fighting drug legalization;
Focusing on cocaine, heroin, and methamphetamine;
Increasing border shielding.
Background information:
Drug
offenders who serve jail time or traditional probation have a
recidivism rate of 45%. Of those who completed drug courts
monitored treatment programs, the rate was 4%.
In April 2000,
Hawaii's legislature passed a law permitting people to use marijuana
as a medical treatment for AIDS, glaucoma, epilepsy, and to alleviate
cancer chemotherapy side-effects. There are five other states in
which voters have passed initiatives permitting restricted medical
use of marijuana, but Hawaii is the first state to enact a law. Users
will be able to grow their own marijuana, limited to six plants.
60% of
federal prison inmates are drug offenders, as are 22% of state prisoners.
20% of
all felony convictions are for drug trafficking; another 12% are for
drug possession.
About
270,000 people are incarcerated on drug charges, up from 48,000 at
the start of the Drug War.
Direct
federal spending on the Drug War is currently $17 billion
per year.
Reducing
the Demand
Methods of
reducing drug demand include: random drug testing; increased
incarceration of users; and drug education. Since 1986, the courts
have upheld random drug testing for federal employees; high school
students; job applicants; transportation employees; motorists; and
others. The current stated federal goal is a Drug-Free Workplace.
Reducing
the Supply
Methods of
reducing drug supply include: increased border patrols; increased
enforcement against drug traffickers at home; and pressuring Latin
American countries to do the same abroad. Federal counterdrug
interdiction currently focuses on five High Intensity
Drug Trafficking Areas: Los Angeles, New York City, Miami,
Houston, and the Southwest border with Mexico.
Reducing
the Effects
Methods of
reducing drugs effects on society include: legalization; drug
abuse treatment; and needle exchange programs. At congressional
hearings on The Pros and Cons of Drug Legalization,
Decriminalization, and Harm Reduction in June 1999, the federal
government reiterated its opposition to legalization, medical
marijuana, and needle exchanges, and emphasized that the War on Drugs
is an unending effort.
Drug War Buzzwords
The biggest
components of the drug debate is how to reduce drug usage: by
prevention or by punishment.
Hard-line
liberals and libertarians generally favor legalization. Look for
buzz-phrases like "the failed Drug War" or "allow
medical marijuana."
Moderate
liberals and libertarians will generally favor prevention of drug
abuse. Look for buzzwords like "more treatment" or
"reduce demand."
Describing
drug use as a health problem (instead of a crime problem) is a
buzzword for treatment. Seeking to reduce "prison
overcrowding" by means such as "drug courts" (as
opposed to building more prisons) is a call for drug tolerance or legalization.
Conservatives
and populists generally favor punishment for all aspects of the Drug
War. Look for buzzwords like "death penalty for drug
dealers" or "the scourge of drugs."
Moderate
conservatives and populists favor punishment while paying lip-service
to other aspects of dealing with drugs. Look for buzzwords like
"reduce drug supply" or "protect our borders."
Centrists
nowadays are Drug War advocates -- the New Democrats (led by Clinton
and Gore) support maintaining funding for the War on Drugs.
Equating
alcoholism with drug abuse is a buzzword for marijuana legalization,
as is pointing out the hypocrisy of respecting the right of self-harm
with alcohol but not of self-harm with drugs.
Amendment
XVIII and XXI to the US Constitution
18) ...the
manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors... is
hereby prohibited. (1919)
21) The
eighteenth article of amendment to the Constitution of the United
States is hereby repealed.... (1933)
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