Source: HUFFINGTON POST
May 14, 2009
When it comes to addressing America’s disastrous war on drugs, the Obama administration appears to be moving in the right direction — albeit very, very cautiously.
On the rhetorical front, all the president’s men are saying the right things.
In his first interview since being confirmed, Obama’s new drug czar, Gil Kerlikowske, said that we need to stop looking at our drug problem as a war. “Regardless of how you try to explain to people it’s a ‘war on drugs” or a ‘war on product,'” he told the Wall Street Journal, “people see war as a war on them. We’re not at war with people in this country.”
He also said that it was time to focus more on treatment and less on incarceration.
Earlier this year, Attorney General Eric Holder announced that the federal government would no longer raid and prosecute distributors of medical marijuana who operate in accordance with state law in the 13 states where voters have made it legal.
Holder has also said that his department intends to eliminate the outrageous and prejudicial sentencing disparity between crack and powder cocaine.
And while on the campaign trail, President Obama called for repealing the ban on federal funding for anti-AIDS programs that supply clean needles to drug users.
All positive signs that we are ready to move beyond our failed war on drugs.
But when it comes to putting its rhetoric into action, the Obama administration has faltered.
Just a week after the Attorney General said there would be no more medical marijuana raids, the DEA raided a licensed medical marijuana dispensary in California.
Obama’s ’09-’10 budget proposes to continue the longstanding ban on federal funding of needle exchange programs.
The current budget is still overwhelmingly skewed in favor of the drug war approach — indeed, it allocates more to drug enforcement and less to prevention than even George Bush did.
Testifying today in front of the House Judiciary Committee, Holder, in his opening statement, called for a working group to examine federal cocaine sentencing policy: “Based on that review, we will determine what sentencing reforms are appropriate, including making recommendations to Congress on changes to crack and powder cocaine sentencing policy.” A working group? Why? As a senator, Obama co-sponsored legislation (introduced by Joe Biden) to end the disparity. What further review is needed?
(To be fair, during questioning, Holder said he and the president both favored doing away with the crack/powder disparity and said that Justice would even consider doing away with mandatory minimums altogether. But why the initial equivocation and the use of the very familiar needs-further-review dodge?)
So the question becomes: is the Obama administration really committed to a fundamental shift in America’s approach to drug policy or is this about serving up a kinder, gentler drug war?
And this at a time when the tide is clearly turning. Inspired by the massive budget crises facing many states, and the increase in drug violence both at home and abroad — leaders on all points across the political spectrum appear more willing to rethink our ruinous drug policies.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has called for “an open debate” and careful study of proposals to legalize, regulate, and tax marijuana. Former Mexican President Vicente Fox has also urged renewing the debate, saying that he isn’t convinced taxing and regulating drugs is the answer but “why not discuss it?” Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard, pointing to evidence that Mexican drug cartels draw 60 to 80 percent of their revenue from pot, suggested legalization might be an effective tool to combat Mexican drug traffickers and American gangs.
And, in a major shift in the global drug policy debate, a Latin American commission, headed by the former presidents Fernando Cardoso of Brazil, Ernesto Zedillo of Mexico, and Cesar Gavaria of Colombia issued a devastating report condemning America’s 40-year war on drugs.
“Prohibitionist policies based on eradication, interdiction and criminalization of consumption simply haven’t worked,” the former presidents wrote in a joint op-ed. “The revision of U.S.-inspired drug policies is urgent in light of the rising levels of violence and corruption associated with narcotics. The alarming power of the drug cartels is leading to a criminalization of politics and a politicization of crime.”
They called for “a paradigm shift in drug policies” that begins with “changing the status of addicts from drug buyers in the illegal market to patients cared for by the public health system.”
And in Congress, Sen. Jim Webb has introduced legislation, with co-sponsors from both sides of the aisle, to create a blue-ribbon commission to examine criminal justice and drug policies and how they have led to our nation’s jam-packed jails — now filled with tens of thousands of nonviolent drug offenders.
“With so many of our citizens in prison compared with the rest of the world,” Webb wrote in a recent Parade cover story, “there are only two possibilities: Either we are home to the most evil people on earth or we are doing something different–and vastly counterproductive. Obviously, the answer is the latter.”
I understand that drugs continue to be a political hot potato, fueled by what the Latin American presidents described as “prejudices and fears that sometimes bear little relation to reality.” And I can easily picture some on the president’s team advising him to keep the issue on the backburner lest it turn into his “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.”
But the cost of the drug war — both human and financial — is far too high to allow politics to dictate the administration’s actions. Indeed, with all the budget cutting going on, how can anyone justify spending tens of billions of dollars a year on an unwinnable war against our own people?
Change won’t be easy. The prison-industrial complex has a deeply vested interest in maintaining the status quo. Which is why we need to keep the pressure on the president and his team to follow through on their drug policy promises.
As with the regulation of Wall Street, real reform of our nation’s drugs policies won’t happen without someone in the administration making it a top priority.
The jury is still out on Kerlikowske. His law enforcement background could make him the drug war equivalent of Tim Geithner — too enmeshed in the system he is tasked with overhauling.
Holder shows more promise. But he’ll have to avoid the let’s-have-a-working-group-review-decisions-that-have-already-been-decided approach.
As a reminder, I’m planning to send the Attorney General a few copies of This Is Your Country On Drugs, a book out next month on the history of drug use and drug policy in America by our HuffPost Congressional correspondent Ryan Grim. In it, he argues that the goal of U.S. policy should not be to eliminate drugs, but to prevent and treat the addiction and other problems that come with them: “As currently understood and implemented, drug policy attempts to isolate a phenomenon that can’t be taken in isolation. Economic policy is drug policy. Healthcare policy is drug policy. Foreign policy, too, is drug policy. When approached in isolation, drug policy almost always leads to unfortunate and unintended consequences.”
With three-quarters of the drug offenders clogging our state prisons there for nonviolent offenses — and a disproportionate number of those young men of color — the time has come to wage a full-scale war on the war on drugs.

ENDING THE WAR ON DRUGS: THE MOMENT IS NOW
I am severely puzzeled by the stubborness of the “advocates of the war on drugs”. Everybody can see that this war is not working. For instance: it is well and scientifically documented that the use of cannabis is signifficantly lower in a country like the Netherlands with a moderate policy on cannabis, then in the US with a very severe and harsh policy on cannabis. So the most effective way to minimize cannabis usage should be searched in this direction and all possible variations that include informing and educating the population, and most likely the children in school.
This is nothing new: we all know what the war on alcohol has brought upon th US in the beginning of the 20’th century. In the process of those wars many young people have found their futures being destroyed. It seems logical to take these views into account on any drug.
But the biggest puzzle for me is WHY? Why is it seemingly impossible for policy makers and decissionmakers in some countries and the UN to see this? How can their behaviour be explained? I have been told that behaviour normally is being conditioned by rewards and punishments, also with human beings. What is the punishment that these people fear once they step away from this ineffective war? Or is there a reward for them to consequently hanging on to a policy the KNOW does not work. I don’t think that these people are stupid, they can read and calculate, Yet they refuse to understand what they read, and refuse to do the math.
Has anyone ever investigated what those punishments or rewards are, or could be?
This is a serious question, not just a remark to blacken anyone. I just want to understand this (to me) irrational behaviour.
ENDING THE WAR ON DRUGS: THE MOMENT IS NOW
Dear friend
In my view there are two reasons for this behaviour:
1. There is the fact that some people believe (in the religious way) that prohibition is the best answer to drug use, they deny the facts because they think all facts and statistics are politically inspired. Even in the Netherlands Christian politicians are advocating the end of tolerant cannabis policies because they maintain that cannabis is not normal and because prohibiting it would be the best way to avoid problematic use. For an excellent piece on Prohibition as a Religion, see https://encod.org/info/IMG/pdf/PETER_WEBSTER.pdf
2. Then the other reason is more perverse: it is the fact that some people act with the sole purpose to maintain prohibition. Their goal is to avoid any discussion at all, because THEY KNOW their policies are not working. They have vested interests in this system. They are working in the drug war bureaucracies that have been created over the past 30 years, thanks to the increasing investment of public money in the fight against drugs. Internationally of course in the UN etc., but also on a national and local level, these bureacracies are in the hands of those (coming from various political ideologies) who prefer the “law and order”- model above an open and tolerant society where human rights are respected. They don’t care if prohibition works or not. It works for them, as they can use it to justify increased repression on whoever they choose as a scapegoat….
ENDING THE WAR ON DRUGS: THE MOMENT IS NOW
I cannot answer WHY they dont see these simple arguments but we can build on WHY we should change it.
Thats easy, everything has cause and effect.
UN and anti-drug policy simply try to change effects of drug consumption
but that cause even more and more side effects.
Changing cause is the whole purpose of ENCOD strategy,
and we believe that it will change all primary effects
without causing any side effects of anti-drug policy.
Now we must find answer to “HOW we can change that drug policy”