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CN AB: Column: You Can't Tell Us Drug Legalization Is - Rave.ca
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News (Media Awareness Project) - CN AB: Column: You Can't Tell Us Drug Legalization Is
Title:CN AB: Column: You Can't Tell Us Drug Legalization Is
Published On:2009-04-18
Source:Calgary Herald (CN AB)
Fetched On:2009-04-19 01:52:34
YOU CAN'T TELL US DRUG LEGALIZATION IS IMPOSSIBLE

Writing in The American Interest, esteemed political scientist
Francis Fukuyama called on the United States to do more to help
Mexico in its battle with the drug trade --namely by boosting
security on both sides of the border and assisting reform of the
Mexican justice system. So far, so routine. But then Fukuyama made an
interesting observation.

The ultimate source of the problem, Fukuyama noted, is American
demand for illicit drugs--and "the most straightforward way to reduce
demand, of course, would be legalization under a tightly controlled regime."

Note the phrase "of course." Fukuyama is a leading American thinker,
a conservative, whose views are widely respected by powerful people.
And he is saying, almost with a shrug, that it's perfectly obvious
that legalization would do away with the most terrible problems
associated with illicit drugs. But then politics rushes in. "While
legalization has been proposed by many people over the years,"
Fukuyama writes, "it has very little chance of being enacted by
Congress, and therefore is not for the time being a realistic policy choice."

For those of us who think the criminal prohibition of the production,
sale and possession of (some) drugs is the single most destructive
public policy of the last century, Fukuyama's argument may be
frustrating. First, he raises the possibility that serious policy
thinkers finally get it. Then, he dismisses legalization as a fantasy.

But keep some history in mind. "There is as much chance of repealing
the 18th Amendment as there is for a hummingbird to fly to the planet
Mars with the Washington Monument tied to its tail," claimed Morris
Sheppard, aU. S. senator from Texas.

The 18th Amendment was the constitutional provision banning alcohol.
It was passed in 1920. Sheppard made his statement in 1930.

The 18th Amendment was repealed in 1933. Sheppard wasn't the only one
caught out by history. Far from it.

"They can never repeal it," boasted Congressman Andrew Volstead in 1921.

"I will never see the day when the 18th Amendment is out of the
Constitution of the U. S.," said Senator William Borah in 1929.

Prohibition's supporters had good reason to be confident.
Legalization wasn't merely unpopular. It required an amendment to the
Constitution. "Thirteen states with a population less than that of
New York state alone can prevent repeal until Halley's Comet
returns," Clarence Darrow observed when Prohibition came into force
in 1920. "One might as well talk about his summer vacation on Mars."

So what happened? Prohibition failed. It failed blatantly,
spectacularly. Instead of the sunny nation where children grew up
innocent of the evils of alcohol, the United States became the land
of bathtub gin and speakeasies. It also became the land of
opportunity for every thug looking to make big money, which
inevitably meant corruption and gangland violence on a scale never
before experienced.

But just as important was the coming of the Depression. While the
economy roared, most people were prepared to put up with an
idealistic, but futile crusade. But with banks crashing and
unemployment soaring, Prohibition felt like what it was--an asinine
waste of time and money.

The solution became obvious. It became something you describe with
the phrase "of course."Of course alcohol should be legalized. Of
course. In the end, Prohibition went quietly. No, I don't think we
are at our own "of course"moment. But it is conceivable we are
heading that way.

In private conversations, I have heard many senior people say "of
course." I suspect the number of those thinking "of course" grows daily.

CNN's coverage of the bloodshed in Mexico has repeatedly raised
legalization as an option worth debating. That's a big change.

Critically, however, we lack the personal experience that people had
when they judged alcohol prohibition a failure. Most people today
don't know that drugs have not always been criminalized. Fewer still
know that when drugs were legal, they were not a source of ghettos,
gang wars and narco-states.

They do know, however, that developed countries spend tens of
billions of dollars every year trying to stamp out the illicit drug
trade. And they do know drugs are cheaper and more widely available than ever.

They also know we face an economic crisis. As in 1933, they may
conclude that there are better ways to spend precious tax dollars
than trying to enforce unenforceable laws.

The political barrier remains massive, but in politics even the
mightiest wall can turn to vapour with startling speed--a fact
Fukuyama implicitly acknowledged when he said legalization was not a
realistic policy choice "for the time being."

It was impossible that alcohol would be legalized only a few years
before it was legalized. It was impossible that a black man would
become president of the United States in the year that the black
president of the United States was born.

The history of politics is stuffed with such transformation. Only 15
years ago, the NDP government of Ontario tore itself apart over a
modest plan to extend benefits to same-sex partners. Gay marriage?
Gay marriage was a fantasy. And today, that fantasy is law.

Never doubt that hummingbirds can fly to Mars.
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