Click here
for printer-friendly version
The movie “Traffic” not only “captures the hopelessness
and tragedy of drug addiction,” as William J. Bennett
observed [op-ed, Feb. 18], it captures the hopelessness
and tragedy of the war on drugs.
The number of addicts needing treatment today is roughly
the same as when Mr. Bennett left the drug czar’s office
in 1990 -- 8.9 million persons. The number of dead from
illegal drugs grew from 9,463 in 1990 to 16,926 in 1998.
Emergency room admissions for illegal drugs grew from
371,208 in 1990 to 554,932 in 1999.
Illegal drug availability has increased, prices are
down, and purity is up. Yet federal government anti-drug
spending has nearly doubled, from $9.75 billion in FY
‘90 to $19.2 billion in FY ‘01. The number of drug arrests
is up from 1,089,500 in 1990 to 1,532,200 in 1999, and
the number of drug prisoners is double.
The real lesson is to abandon the approach of zero
tolerance advanced by Mr. Bennett and adopt a reality-based
drug strategy. A conservative strategy of regulation
of drug use, production and distribution offers the
only opportunity to achieve controls over the market
and the users and bring down the social costs.
A drug strategy should not be based on a movie script,
as ours still is “Reefer Madness.”
Mr. Sterling, president of the non-profit Criminal
Justice Policy Foundation in Silver Spring, MD was counsel
to the House Judiciary Committee, principally responsible
for anti-drug legislation, from 1979 to 1989.