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Title: War%20on%20Drugs%20-%20Background


1
War on Drugs - Background
  • Drug Wars both cause and encompass all forms of
    deviance street crime, addicts, prostitutes to
    organized crime, political and organizational
    corruption, government assassination plots and
    corporate profiteering.
  • Drug Wars designers take advantage of racism and
    xenophobia, frame them in Christian morality, and
    employ them for personal and political profit.
  • Drug laws can turn a law-abiding person into a
    criminal with the stroke of a pen.
  • The Drug War is the direct cause of the
    quadrupling of the US prison population and has
    led to a mass imprisonment society.
  • What Drug Wars rarely do is prevent or reduce
    drug addiction or use.

2
War on Drugs
  • Punishment for non-prescribed drug use is not
    correlated with health risk.
  • Consider alcohol causes numerous health and
    social problems but it was seen that Prohibition
    was a disaster (although extreme consumption was
    reduced as a result, although a powerful
    education program might have been also
    effective). Also now legal but controlled,
    although there are some dry counties. It is not
    illegal to be an alcoholic, although it can have
    serious consequences.
  • Consider tobacco about 400,000/yr die in the US
    from diseases caused or exacerbated by tobacco.
    It is not illegal but it is controlled. Why do
    people smoke? What would happen if it were
    suddenly made illegal?
  • Consider marijuana no fatalities or
    illness-related deaths. May aggravate (or
    relieve) depression, reduce motivation and drive.
    Appears to cause a higher risk of
    throat/esophageal cancer.

3
War on Drugs
  • Substances for altering ones state of
    consciousness are found in all cultures.
  • Even in the animal kingdom.
  • Even children.
  • These substances include natural substances such
    as tobacco, chocolate, coffee, marijuana, coca,
    opium, certain kinds of mushrooms, peyote, and
    many others found in local ecologies.
  • Dont forget alcohol.
  • Development of more powerful and sophisticated
    substances flow from military need as well as
    pharmacological research.
  • Hypothesis drug use can become a drug problem
    when substance migrates to a new culture with
    no cultural role.

4
War on Drugs
  • Our goal To explain the existence, process and
    outcomes of Drug Wars, both in the US and
    internationally.
  • Well use primarily differential association
    (learning theory), functionalism (extant and
    latent), social control and conflict theory
    (symbolic crusades), and social psychology.
  • In addition, well explore the impact of the
    development of the medical profession, government
    regulatory agencies (FDA), migration impacts,
    labor conditions and the economy, political power
    struggles. and US Foreign policy.

5
War on Drugs
  • Basic premises
  • One purposes of identifying a social problem is
    to deflect criticism/attention away from
    structural problems in the distribution of
    economic and political power.
  • US society constructed a drug use mentality for
    both legal and illegal substances.
  • Value contested whats wrong with getting
    high? versus getting high is immoral.
  • All use is abuse versus recreational use can
    be responsible.
  • Drug war laws came into being to serve political
    and career purposes, then became part of the way
    its done even in the face of expert opinion and
    empirical evidence to the contrary.

6
War on Drugs
  • Migration and Drug Wars
  • Drug problems are associated with problematic
    populations that need to be controlled
    immigrants, blacks, Mexicans, other
    Spanish-speaking cultures, Chinese.
  • Drug wars are implemented when there are no other
    enemies (end of wars, times of economic
    stability, but also useful in times of economic
    destabilization, too).
  • Migration directly causes a mixing (and hence,
    confrontation) of cultures, class structure, etc.
  • Migration also supplies labor, may depress wages
    and displace native workers, or at least, be
    perceived as such, and therefore a desire to lash
    out at immigrants becomes more popular.

7
War on Drugs
  • Social psychology of drug use.
  • Compare prescribed and over-the-counter messages
    to illicit substance message.
  • If you dont feel good, or optimal, take a pill.
  • So illicit use is, as weve seen elsewhere in
    differential association and also in anomie,
    utilizing societys techniques but not in
    dominant normative fashion.
  • Reinforced continuously by advertising.
  • Messages about what illegal substances do, about
    users of illegal substances then inform users
    about their roles.
  • Actual and perceived drug effects from
    experience, lore, friends, books, tv, movies
  • Culture (learned from above)
  • Drug War proponents often circulate false
    messages as scare tactics.

8
War on Drugs
  • Labor, the Economy and Political Landscape
  • With 80s, as the nature of the economy changed
    (loss of manufacturing, flow to service) and jobs
    left cities, working class families were left
    economically stranded. With the arrival of the
    Reagan administration, there was a need to
    deflect attention away from the massive
    redistribution of wealth undertaken in the Reagan
    era, the erosion of public services, and the
    official message of states rights which really
    meant loss of federal revenue for states.
  • The results were
  • Nancy Reagans Just Say No campaign, the rise of
    D.A.R.E and other anti-drug programs which are
    actually associated with an increase in drug use.
  • The emphasis on the deserving achieving people
    versus the undeserving poor parasites.
  • Renewed vilification of the Black urban
    communities.
  • Dramatic increase in federal, state and local
    resources for policing and imprisoning of drug
    users.
  • The beginning of the mass imprisonment era

9
Domestic WOD
  • How Policy Could be Handled
  • Clear, accurate information about the substances
    effects both positive and negative.
  • Understanding of motivations to take
    mind-altering substances set and setting
    self-destructive reasons versus self-explorative
    ritual social settings.
  • Internal and external social control focused on
    public health.

10
Domestic WOD
  • Drug Law Addiction
  • Both drugs and drug laws make people feel good
  • Both drugs and drug laws can be abused.
  • Both drugs and drug laws have externalities (side
    effects)
  • Policy History
  • Drug use and abuse was not really recognized as a
    social issue until after the Civil War
  • Morphine
  • Cocaine
  • But to understand domestic drug policy, you need
    to incorporate some aspects of international
    policy.
  • Opium on two fronts US (post-civil war
    experience) and British-Chinese-US trade in the
    Far East and Southeast Pacific. The US saw
    British-run and Chinese crime-supported opium
    traffic as an obstacle to commercial and military
    ties in the Far East and pushes the first
    international policy against drug use and
    trafficking. The State Policy attitude becomes
    part of domestic policy, too.

11
Domestic WOD
  • Beginning of US Policy
  • Pure Food and Drug Act, 1906 correct labeling
    of patent medicines.
  • Foster Bill to restrict non-medical use of
    opium, cocaine, marijuana and chloral hydrate
    (depressant), engineered by Dr. Wright, whose
    anti-black and anti-Chinese attitudes resonated
    to the recently southern democrat congress.
  • Drug Use became associated with unamerican and
    unpatriotic behavior.
  • Foster Bill became the Harrison Act, signed into
    law in 1915, whose purpose was to establish
    government regulation of substances.
  • The attitudes behind these acts also motivated
    the Prohibition, which was ratified in 1919,
    became law in 1920, repealed in 1933.
  • Colonel Levi Nutt created precedent for
    prosecuting addicts and imprisoning them, despite
    protests from physicians and other groups. But
    then Nutt was ousted due to improprieties.

12
Domestic WOD
  • The Harry Anslinger Effect Became commissioner
    of FBN (federal bureau of narcotics). A
    bureaucrat, cultivated political connections,
    drew support from pharmaceutical lobby, utilized
    conservative newspapers.
  • When threatened with efforts to reorganize (and
    end his position) he sought out reasons to keep
    his post in existence.
  • Popularized MJ as associated with blacks in New
    Orleans, and Mexicans in the southwest,
    racializing it.
  • Made erroneous claims about effects
  • Added the danger of the nations children
  • Inflated statistics, or made them up, about its
    ubiquity.
  • Aided by the sensationalist Hearst papers, he
    became aware of the need for an anti-marijuana
    statue..
  • Made leaps of logic regarding causal effects
  • Ridiculed experts pointing out that none of these
    claims were true.
  • And so, Marihuana Tax Act of 1937 came into
    being, and so did a new class of criminals.
  • In 1950s, Anslinger then associated drug use with
    communism, and the link of MJ to harder drugs.
  • Thus, get tougher on drug users Boggs Act.
  • When that was protested by professional
    organizations, the Daniel Commission then
    recommended more control (i.e., punishment
    instead of treatment), hence the Narcotic Control
    Act of 1956.

13
Domestic WOD
  • The Nixon Years Connected drug use with
    anti-government (read anti-war and anti-Nixon)
    behavior.
  • Justified breaking of law for surveillance and
    other purposes.
  • Militarized war on drugs more so than previously.
    See pg 23 of Walker.
  • Carter wanted to decriminalize.
  • Reagan just said no to criminalization, and
    signed a series of increasingly severe laws
    against users and sellers.
  • Also, co-opted opposition so that no one could be
    politically safe and be opposed to drug laws.
  • Greatly emphasized control over education
    Omnibus Antidrug Act of 1986. zero-tolerance
    policies.
  • By politicizing drug users again, he was able to
    stigmatize (discredit) political opposition.
  • Bush I years continued the drug war, expanding
    it, imprisoning more and more,
  • Drug Czar Bennett continued use of misleading
    facts and falsehoods of drug use and users for
    his own political purposes.
  • During Clinton years, imprisonment continued,
    with some saying it is credited with the lower
    unemployment rates, but those were also boom
    years. Names Army General Barry McCaffrey as
    drug czar. Pardons a number of non-violent drug
    users in prison.
  • Bush II more of the same.

14
Domestic WOD
  • LSD as an example
  • Developed by Sandoz initially as a military tool,
    and then with ideas for a new area of
    psychotherapeutic drugs by Albert Hoffman.
  • Military wanted it as a weapon or alternately,
    truth serum.
  • Medical establishment saw substances as medicine.
  • CIA elite deviance (anomie) in justifying any
    behavior (cold war mentality). Differential
    association of cloakdagger methodology applied
    to this context.
  • Enter the psychedelic pioneers therapeutic
    value and spiritual exploration
  • Never saw bummers initially
  • Needed new language since pathology couldnt
    carry the concepts
  • Non-drug factors play an important role in LSDs
    effect. set and setting
  • Used very successfully in treatment of a number
    of emotional conditions.

15
Domestic WOD
  • Conflicts
  • Different intentions behind use of drug between
    military/medical and pioneers.
  • Different schools of thought (paradigm shift)
    regarding outcomes.
  • Medical model couldnt handle this treatment,
    fell outside its framework of understanding.
  • FDA couldnt properly regulate its use.
  • Fell on heels of 1950s conformism, cold war
    mentalities
  • It couldnt be used by corporate America,
    although to some extent they tried.

16
Domestic WOD
  • Drug-testing entrepreneurs
  • Robert DuPont Jr headed NIDA somewhat
    sporadically from 1971 to 1978 but through the
    Reagan administration was able to make his EMIT
    test flourish.
  • Robert Willette former NIDA, head of Clinical
    Research. Claimed 100 accuracy, left to run
    diagnostics lab.
  • Peter Bensinger former DEA director. Left to
    form Partnership for a Drug-Free America. And to
    counsel corporations on drug-testing.
  • Robert Angarola former counsel to ODAP left to
    serve as counsel to corporations regarding
    drug-testing lawsuits from disgruntled employees

17
Domestic WOD
  • Drug-testing (in-)Accuracy
  • The earlier drug-testing methodologies were
    notoriously inaccurate. A poppy seed bagel would
    trigger a positive test for opium.
  • Alcoholism was much harder to catch.
  • Whereas testing for substances had been either a
    tool for medicine, it became a tool for catching
    and firing employees.
  • Could be misused (and sometimes was) for other
    detections (e.g., pregnancy, prescribed
    medications that would trigger health insurers
    concerns for high-risk customers).
  • Marketed as being good for employees well-being
    for treatment facilitation.
  • Steal This Urine Test by Abbie Hoffman
    bladder cops
  • Drug testing is used widely for anyone in
    transportation, as well as those in companies
    with military contracts, and of course, athletes.
  • No clearly established connection between
    productivity and recreational drug use.
  • Consequences loss of pay, termination,
    stigmatization, loss of benefits including
    pension and insurance, denial of disability
    insurance, emotional distress, possible criminal
    charges.
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