16 March 2016

The War on Drugs

Here's an extended quote from a Harper's Magazine story on legalizing drugs, by Dan Baum.

If you support(ed) the War on Drugs, or think/thought that the government was doing its best to protect us, I hope you feel like a complete idiot. And if you don't, you should.

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In 1994, John Ehrlichman, the Watergate co-conspirator, unlocked for me one of the great mysteries of modern American history: How did the United States entangle itself in a policy of drug prohibition that has yielded so much misery and so few good results? Americans have been criminalizing psychoactive substances since San Francisco’s anti-opium law of 1875, but it was Ehrlichman’s boss, Richard Nixon, who declared the first “war on drugs” and set the country on the wildly punitive and counterproductive path it still pursues. I’d tracked Ehrlichman, who had been Nixon’s domestic-policy adviser, to an engineering firm in Atlanta, where he was working on minority recruitment.

I started to ask Ehrlichman a series of earnest, wonky questions that he impatiently waved away. “You want to know what this was really all about?” he asked with the bluntness of a man who, after public disgrace and a stretch in federal prison, had little left to protect. “The Nixon campaign in 1968, and the Nixon White House after that, had two enemies: the antiwar left and black people. You understand what I’m saying? We knew we couldn’t make it illegal to be either against the war or black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities. We could arrest their leaders, raid their homes, break up their meetings, and vilify them night after night on the evening news. Did we know we were lying about the drugs? Of course we did.”

The rest of the story is not great, but is interesting and informative. Read it here.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

This is seriously f'ed up. No other way to put it. Power almost always does this. It's a highly enlightening article, in a very sick and twisted kind of way that lets the reader see our human farmers and their collective cages a little more clearly. Thanks for posting this!