This Blog is about Cannabis, marijuana, weed, ganja.
Sunday, 31 May 2015
Decades of drug war have brought only crisis
Haime Luna/The Tico Times
Danielle Allen
The new visibility of police violence toward African-Americans in
the United States has stoked public debate about policing: What about
body cameras? Should we reform police training? Perhaps we should go
slow on all that military gear?
I find it almost impossible to sit through any of this while the
underlying issue goes unaddressed: It’s the drug economy, stupid.
It’s well past time to legalize marijuana.
But it’s also time to consider decriminalizing nonviolent crimes
involving other drugs, or at least to reclassify lower-level, nonviolent
offenses as misdemeanors. We should also expunge felony convictions for
many classes of nonviolent drug offenses — those involving marijuana
but for other drugs, too — to re-enfranchise, economically and
politically, those who have staffed the drug trade.
Before I make my case, let me pause to say that I write this as the
last living American, or so it sometimes feels, never to have smoked pot
or used any other banned substance. My motivation, in other words, is
not my own recreational freedom but justice.
What’s the picture of use these days? According to the 2014 National Drug Control Strategy Data Supplement,
as of 2009, more than 41 percent of people in the U.S. aged 12 to 64
had used marijuana sometime in their lifetime. In Canada, that figure
was 51 percent. This contrasts with Mexico, where the figure is 4 percent, and Colombia
(8 percent). Whereas in 2000, the United States consumed an estimated
3,000 metric tons of pot, in 2010 we inhaled or otherwise ingested 5,700
metric tons. And from 2011 to 2014, according to the National Institute
on Drug Abuse, half of high school students reported using illicit
drugs by 12th grade. This number is headed up.
Participation is pretty equal opportunity. According to the 2013 National Survey
on Drug Use and Health, in that year the rate of substance dependence
or abuse was 8.4 percent for whites and 7.4 percent for blacks. Yet, as
is widely recognized, African-Americans are incarcerated for both the
use and sale of drugs at far higher rates than whites. In 2011,
African-Americans were arrested for possession at three times the rate
as whites nationally and, for drug sales and manufacturing, at nearly
four times the rate of whites. In Chicago, the black-white arrest ratio
for marijuana is 15 to 1.
A memorial in Humboldt Park on
Chicago’s West Side for a September 2013 killing. The victim was among
more than 20 people shot in less than an eight-hour span in the U.S.
city.
Scott Olson/Getty Images/AFP
According to researchers, marijuana constitutes about 80 percent of
illicit drug usage, and an estimated 40 to 67 percent of that pot came from Mexico
in 2008; most cocaine and heroin also passes through Mexico. Wholesale
distributors in the United States include Mexican criminal
organizations, Latino and African-American street gangs and domestic
producers of marijuana, a rapidly growing part of the drug economy that
includes plenty of non-ethnically-identified whites. Of course, other
groups also operate at the wholesale level — Russians, Israelis,
Italians, Chinese, Colombians and Jamaicans, to name a few. Producers,
wholesalers and retailers are tied together by brokers, smugglers and
couriers. It’s a commercial zone that looks pretty multicultural based
on the limited information available.
At the retail level, however, most drug users buy from people who
look like them. But this lets some white users turn a blind eye to the
supply chain. A major portion of the pot inhaled by a white smoker has
also passed through the hands of black or brown laborers in the drug
economy.
In 1984, the Drug Enforcement Administration initiated Operation Pipeline
to interdict drug trafficking on the nation’s highways through the use
of traffic stops; this operation launched and provided national training
for police in what we have come to know as racial profiling.
Thanks to
the racially disparate enforcement that was then set in motion, much
drug economy labor is, for all intents and purposes, not free. This is
especially true for the couriers, brokers and lower-tier wholesalers.
Young people are recruited to handle low-level tasks, setting them up to
be booked on a felony as an adult not long after they turn 18. Once
that happens, they find themselves broadly unemployable — with one major
exception: by the drug industry. How voluntary can we consider repeat
participation in the supply chain, then, when a criminal record
precludes other opportunities?
The libertarian vibe in the world of pot smokers and other drug users
makes these issues all the more stark. Freedom for those who want a hit
has been wrung from the exploitation of others. We have numbers for the
price of that freedom: 1.5 million African-American men missing from
U.S. cities. And this doesn’t count the men who are still in those
cities but are trapped by the felonies on their records.
In the mid-1970s, the DEA conducted an anti-heroin campaign in Mexico called Operation Trizo. The DEA website reports, with no apparent sense of irony, that the
campaign was called off at the request of the Mexican government because
“The large numbers of arrests that resulted from Operation Trizo caused
an economic crisis.”
Through decades of the war on drugs, we have indeed bought ourselves
our own economic crisis with the drug economy’s impacts on poverty and
education. But we’ve also delivered a human catastrophe, on par with the
worst of our bad American habits. One of the hardest challenges of
school reform in the context of low-income communities of color is to
protect students from exposure to violence, even on their daily walks to
school.
The precise pathway to a legalized, decriminalized and
nonviolent drug economy and to the reintegration of those formerly
barred from participation will take much collective discussion to
discern. But the general direction to pursue is clear.
Emancipation of our brothers and sisters requires both economic and
political re-enfranchisement. These forms of re-enfranchisement require
not only legalizing marijuana but also decriminalizing as many
nonviolent drug offenses as possible and expunging those convictions.
Call it Operation Equal Justice.
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