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Thomas Szasz The Ethics of Addiction Millions of people

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Title: Thomas Szasz The Ethics of Addiction Millions of people


1
Thomas SzaszThe Ethics of Addiction
  • Millions of people legally use drugs every day.
  • How should we distinguish permissible drug use
    from impermissible drug abuse?
  • Szasz argues that because of the definition of
    drug abuse incorporates the notion of being
    detrimental to the individual and society the
    issue is not a medical concept, but an ethical
    one.
  • Szasz compares our current disease conception of
    drug addiction to Victorian views on sex.
  • Masturbation and homosexuality were both once
    classified thought to be both pathogenic and
    pathological, and the cause of all kinds of
    physical and social ills.

2
Propaganda and Prohibition
  • Those who wish to prohibit something tend to
    distort and falsify facts about that thing.
  • Consider the claim that cigarettes have arsenic
    in them.
  • This is true, but misleading there is more
    arsenic in a glass of tap water than in a
    cigarette.
  • The facts about how the dangerousness of a drug
    isnt enough they need to employ scare tactics.
  • Think about Refer Madness.
  • More recently, consider the 2002 ads that claimed
    that drug money funds terrorism.
  • Nancy Regan if youre a casual drug user youre
    an accomplice to murder.

3
Drugs and Death
  • Drugs are obviously dangerous. But so are guns,
    highways and swimming pools.
  • We need to distinguish intentional and accidental
    overdoses.
  • Szasz is a notorious advocate of the right to
    suicide.
  • If people want to kill themselves (a) thats
    their right and (b) even without drugs theyll
    find a way.
  • This is no argument for prohibition.
  • As for accidental overdose, these would be far
    fewer if drugs were legal and regulated.
  • Most such overdoses are the result of inconstant
    purity and veracity of the product.
  • This is actually an argument FOR legalization.

4
Free Minds and Free Markets
  • Szasz admits that he would favor free trade in
    drugs regardless of danger
  • For the same reason the Founding Fathers favored
    free trade in ideas.
  • In an open society, it is none of the
    governments business what idea a man puts in his
    mind likewise, it should be none of the
    governments business what drug he puts in his
    body.

5
Kicking Addiction and Blame
  • Szasz is skeptical about the idea of addiction.
    He thinks that anyone can kick any habitif they
    really want to.
  • Objection even if this is true, Szasz seems to
    gloss over the important fact that doing so is
    (for some drugs) REALLY hard.
  • The behavior-altering nature of hard-drugs makes
    it hard to claim that theyre not undermining the
    individuals autonomy.
  • We blame drugs for turning people into addicts
    (lazy, unproductive, sick, etc.)
  • But many people are attracted to drugs because it
    offers them an excuse.
  • Moreover, drugs can have good effects on
    productivity look at the Beatles.

6
Wide-Spread Drug Use?
  • Szasz dismisses the argument that large numbers
    of people would abuse drugs if they were legal.
  • We trust people to be responsible with cars and
    guns, why not drugs? Why infantalize them?
  • Objection Some drugs (i.e.heroin) are highly
    addictive from the very first use.
  • Thus, even a mild increase in casual
    experimentation would likely lead to more
    addicts.
  • Even if large numbers of people did abuse drugs,
    shouldnt Szasz maintain that if this is what
    people really want to do they should be allowed
    to?

7
The Futility of Prohibition
  • Prohibition creates a serious profit motive for
    people to trade drugs on the black market.
  • The harder we crack down, the higher the profit.
  • Financial incentives are proportional to the
    prohibition.
  • Consider alcohol prohibition in the 20s.
  • Clearly a failure drinking actually went up, and
    so did violent crime.
  • Never mind the fundamental violation of our right
    to control what goes into our bodies.

8
D.A.R.EDrugs Are Really Expensive
  • The federal government spends 17 billion per
    year fighting drugs.
  • 61 goes for criminal justice and interdiction,
    while 39 goes for treatment and prevention
    programs.
  • State/local governments spent 15.9 billion in
    1991 (the last year for which the federal
    government tallied that figure.) 
  • At that time federal spending on drug eradication
    was half what it is today.
  • 1.7 million people are in prisons and jails, 22
    to 33 percent of those for drug offenses. 
  • At an average annual cost of 20,000 per inmate,
    this adds 11.3 billion to the price tag.
  • All told were spending about 50 billion a year
    on the war on drugs 1,585 every second.

9
Rejoinder Legalization Is Really Expensive
  • We need to contrast those figures with increased
    costs due to
  • Loss of productivity due to drug use
  • Loss of productivity due to health problems
    associated with drug use
  • Premature death due to drug use
  • Drug abuse by pregnant mothers and children and
    associated health problems
  • Concomitant crime
  • Szasz has issues with all of these, but they have
    to be considered.

10
Do Drugs Cause Crime?
  • A 1000 dollar a week cocaine habit requires the
    addict to steal 5000 worth of goods to support
  • 20 being a fair exchange rate for fenced goods.
  • But that very same 1000 dollar dose would cost a
    mere 20 in a free market.
  • So is it the drugs or the war on them thats
    causing all this crime?
  • Legalization would also free up 1/3rd of prison
    space, 1/3rd of of trial time as well as the
    estimated 400,000 policemen.
  • (Source www.drugwarfacts.org)

11
Rejoinder Yes, Drugs DO Cause Crime
  • There are good reasons to doubt that crime will
    drop in a free market.
  • Even in a free market, habits can be expensive.
  • Look at smoking and alcohol since theres a lot
    of money to be made, people find a way to profit.
  • Crack-cocaine is relatively cheap, yet its users
    have a high rate of concomitant criminal
    activity.
  • Studies show that drug addicts steal not just to
    support their drug habits, but also to cover
    daily expenses.
  • Even if crime to fund drugs were to go down crime
    as a result of drugs might go up.
  • PCP and steroids causes rage and aggression in
    their users, which frequently lead to outbursts
    of violence.

12
Some Historical Insights.
  • George Washington was one of many colonialists
    who grew marijuana (in the form of hemp) as a
    cash crop.
  • Thomas Jefferson used legal opium on a regular
    basis as an elder man, successfully extending his
    life.
  • Today this would land our 1st president and the
    drafter of the Declaration of Independence in
    prison.
  • Elliot Ness, the untouchable prohibition-era
    enforcer would, after a long day busting
    bootleggers, buy cocaine (which was legal at the
    time) over the counter at a drug store.

13
The Right To Self-Medication
  • Just as freedom of speech, and religion are
    fundamental rights, Szasz thinks the right to
    self-medication is a fundamental right.
  • This right follows from Mills claim that Over
    his own body and mind, the individual is
    sovereign.
  • But there should be limits, controls and
    regulations.
  • Sale to children should be prohibited (but in the
    absence of financial incentive, who would want
    to?)
  • People should not be allowed to be intoxicated in
    public (as with alcohol), nor drive under the
    influence.

14
J.S. Mill On Liberty
  • Szasz ends with a famous quote from Mills essay
    On Liberty
  • The only purpose for which power can be
    rightfully exercised over any member of a
    civilized community, against his will, is to
    prevent harm to others. His own good, either
    physical or moral, is not sufficient warrant. He
    cannot rightfully be compelled to forebear
    because it will make him happier, because in the
    opinions of others to do so would be wise, or
    even right In the part of his conduct which
    merely concerns himself, his independence is, of
    right, absolute.
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