Drug Prohibition Essay, Research Paper
Chris Searls
Public Policy
Drug Prohibition
Under the United States Constitution the federal government is
charged with the responsibilities to protect our individual, as
well as collective, rights to life and liberty. Often times this
charge leads the various branches of the federal government to
create, implement, and enforce policy that is designed to protect
society from itself. Noble in it?s ambition the result although not
apparent initially, sometimes does more to hinder the rights of the
citizens it is attempting to protect, and/or the cost of doing so
becomes a higher price than that of the cost that is being avoided.
In this case it is necessary to re-evaluate the situation and
explore any alternatives that may offer a more fathomable solution
concerning both protection of rights as well as the cost of so
doing.
Introduction
In the late 1980?s the United States government made such policy
and today the results have done little to resolve the problem and
have left the country closer to the danger it sought to prevent.
The policy is known as the? War on Drugs?.. Initially the drug
prohibition was, however idealistic, a valiant attempt to rid the
country of this terrible ?enemy?.. The objectives were simple; to
impose stiff penalties on those who use drugs outlined to be
illicit, quell all to trade and commerce of such substances, and
even to go as far to prevent countries with in our general border
vicinity from producing and exporting these substances.
The illicit drug market, pre-drug war, is estimated to be a hundred
billion dollar a year business. The federal government, since the
beginning the war of drug, spends approximately ten billion dollars
a year on drug enforcement agencies and programs, and another
estimated one hundred and ninety billion dollars a year on
investigating drug related crimes, prosecution of alleged drug
activities, and enforcing punishments and/or imprisonment. That
adds up to be a staggering cost of two hundred billion dollars
($770.00 per person) to attempt to prevent one hundred billion
dollars worth of illicit drug use. (Evans and Berent) Another
consequence of this questionable war lies in Opportunity cost.
Opportunity cost is defined as the cost of opportunity lost in
pursuit of another option. This cost analysis is relevant in the
case of the drug prohibition policy in that the resources use to
implement the policy are limited, police and prisons. The law
enforcement used in this ?war of drugs? has their time nearly
monopolized by the approximate thirty to forty million people
yearly who purchase and use drugs. This inherently leaving various
law enforcement agencies with less ability to confront other
crimes. Then there is the problem of prisons. The space in the
prisons is extremely limited, and the cost of keeping a person in
prison is astronomical in caparison to the prevention being
provided in reference to drug prohibition. The issue of limited
prison space gains significance greatly when you consider an
estimated sixty-percent of prison population is serving time on
drug conviction. In 1994 some seven hundred and fifty thousand
people were arrested in drug related events. Of the seven hundred
and fifty thousand people arrested, six hundred thousand of them
were charged with minor counts of possession. (Wink) Other
indicators that can be easily observed such as the rise in illicit
drug use by teens and children reported the Drug Enforcement
Agency. In fact only twenty-eight percent of teens used illicit
drug compared to a whopping forty percent in 1996. (DEA/CDC) The
misallocation of resources is totally exhausting and paralyzing the
entire legal system that could be better targeted on a more
productive agenda. What does the policy of drug prohibition
actually encourage? The statistics show a rise in crimes concerning
personal property; drug abusers in hopes of supporting their drug
habit committed seventy-five percent of all property crimes such as
burglary and robbery. Studies have shown that out patient drug
programs or programs that offered drugs for a lower cost
drastically reduced the amount of crimes committed. (Duke) As of
1992 an estimated sixty million people have tried and or used
marijuana and there has yet to be one recorded death attributed to
overdose. While it is estimated that ten thousand people die from
overdose of alcohol annually. This would lead one to acknowledge
that maybe our opinion drugs may be based in fear and social
standard rather than in solid facts.
The Goal
The optimal goal of any policy is to protect our rights while
encouraging all the ideals of the society. The problem occurs in
the fact that is fairly impossible to regulate individual
contributions (positive or negative) to the nation in any broad
legislative sense. To more accurately explain the complexity of the
issue of drug prohibition it is pertinent to understand the
difference of positive and negative liberty.
Positive liberty is a
liberty that forces the government to provide a service to its?
citizens such as maintaining a military or a national treasury. A
negative liberty is the type of liberty we most often refer, such
as our first amendment rights. Negative liberties prevent the
federal government from interfering with certain rights for example
freedom of speech and freedom of press. Drug Prohibition is most
closely classified as a positive liberty because it forces the
government to provide services to create and enforce a drug free
America. The difference between the two types of liberties is
significant. Positive liberty calls for the federal government to
fulfill a more substantial role in individual lives thus it is
believed for that reason the federal government should not give
itself too many liberties of this type. (Peterson) Finally one must
step back and objectively ask, ?should we retain our current policy
stance concerning illicit drugs, or is the current drug prohibition
policy ineffective and counter productive?? United States Judge
William W. Schwarzer once said, ??ending drug use is useless if in
the process we lose our soul?..
Evaluation
The first step in changing a policy is to evaluate it effects both
positive and negative. To begin to evaluate a policy, one must be
able to define the parameters of the policy being examined. The
parameters of the drug prohibition policy that will be investigated
are the Untied States prohibition of drugs christened the war on
drugs of 1989. This will include examining the effects this policy
has had on society, on personal rights, the cost of implementation
(monetarily and other wise), and of course the success and/or
failure of drug prohibition policy.
The Policy
United States President George Bush officially began his “war on
drugs” in September 5, 1989. President Bush gave the first prime
time address of his presidency, on which he delineated the federal
government’s scheme for eradicating drug use. This plan would call
for a nearly eight billion dollar budget from Congress, which added
over two billion dollars to over the previous year?s budget. Of the
nearly eight billion that Bush asked Congress to allocate, the plan
outlined that seventy percent would go to law enforcement, which
also included a billion and a half for jails. However, his proposal
only allocated thirty percent to prevention, education, and
treatment. The Bush administration sought to focus the brunt of his
anti- drug campaign in the United States, which, to Bush, meant
attacking and arresting the drug user, rather than focusing on
prevention, education and treatment, or interdiction. Since the
federal government has very limited police resources, it would have
to enlist the combined cooperation of the states to achieve
success. States that did not comply with the Bush plan would be
penalized with a reduction in funding from the federal government.
(Treaster)
Effects on Society
The effects on society are not miniscule like the government would
have you believe. Crime has risen exponentially since the 1989 when
the ?war of drugs? was first introduced. In the early 1900?s before
the prohibition of so called illicit drugs heroin and aspirin both
were sold at about the same price. In contrast today the price of
heroin has sky rocketed to a price of fifty dollars per gram
compared to a mere twenty cents per gram, the cost of aspirin.
(Cundruff) This type of surge in price of illicit drugs have not
reduced the need of users to consume various illicit drugs, but has
in turn encourage them to rob, steal, and kill for them. Today
there is approximately 1.7 million people imprisoned and our murder
rate is close to twelve per one hundred thousand people. That is
highest rate of imprisonment and one of the highest murder rates in
the world. These are significant numbers considering that sixty
percent of the prison population has been jailed due to drug
violations. In the 1980?s casual drug use was mainly in the middle
and upper-classes. Around 1985 that rate dropped a staggering
twenty-two percent among the two classes, but rose exponentially in
the poorer class. The invention of drugs such as crack cocaine, a
cheaper version, began to race through the streets of the poor
neighborhoods. The sudden influx of cheaper drugs led to creation
of drug cartels, a rise of the number of gangs, and a contributed
greatly to the general further destruction of inter- city sub
divisions. The rise in gangs and drug-lords, that recruit people
from as early as childhood, tempt them into the high yield world of
drug sales, promising them a high level of living. These
circumstances then encourage children and teenagers in these poor
neighborhoods to neglect or totally drop out of school, which
leaves a mass group of people uneducated, unskilled, and committing
crime. All of these factors only precede poorer communities
Personal Rights
Prohibition at its? root is an assault on the rights of the
citizens on which it is inflicted. The ?war on drugs? is no
exception. At the most basic of these rights are our inalienable
rights to life and liberty.
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