Earleywine Chapters
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Eight Myths About The War On Drugs
1. The war on drugs in Colombia Reduces the flow of drugs
into The United States.
In proclaiming the “war on drugs’’ the United States
has cast itself as a “victim.” But the victims are coca farmers
in Peru, Bolivia, Colombia, peasant workers in central America and the
Caribbean, and people of color in the united states; and the root cause
remains an economic system that has failed to provide all of these people
with the means to earn a livable wage and enjoy a life which satisfies
their most basic needs.
2. Spraying deadly Chemicals on coca Leaves stops cultivation.
Since large scale fumigation began in 1996, coca cultivation in the Andes
region has remained stable. While there is some reduction of cultivation
in the fumigated areas, studies have not accounted for cultivation that
springs up in other areas. More importantly, studies have not accounted
for the negative effects the chemicals have on people, the delicate environment,
and plant and animal species of the Amazon forest.
3. The war on drugs Makes Drugs harder to get in the United States.
The price of cocaine and heroin on U.S. streets is the same as it was
before Plan Colombia began. Drugs are as available, and as pure, as they
were before 2000. Supply is meeting demand as much as ever. The supply-reduction
strategy has been a failure.
4. The war on drugs discourages people from trafficking, selling,
and producing drugs or cultivating coca.
The war against drugs increases the profits from drugs because it makes
them harder to obtain. For poor people in Latin America and other extremely
poor parts of the world drug, production and sale become a way of surviving
when other ways of making a living are not available.
5. The war on drugs helps keep communities of color in the United
States safe.
Regardless of similar or equal levels of drug use during pregnancy, black
women are 10 times more likely than white women to be reported to child
welfare agencies for prenatal drug use. Black and Hispanic children are
also more likely to have a parent in prison.
Human Rights Watch reports that studies have shown that the nation's war
on drugs has overwhelmingly singled out blacks -- even though most drug
offenders are white. Researchers found that 62.7% of the drug offenders
admitted to state prisons are black and black men are sent to state prisons
on drug charges at 13 times the rate of white men.
6. A good drug policy is a policy that outlaws the use of drugs.
Because various drugs pose different risks, individual responses are required
to the drugs used in today’s society. Harm reduction is a set of
practical strategies that reduce negative consequences of drug use, incorporating
a spectrum of strategies from safer use to managed use to abstinence.
Harm reduction also provides a strategy that focuses away from law enforcement
and interdiction toward the idea that reducing consumption will help to
stem profitability and therefore the flow and production of controlled
drugs. This strategy is an alternative approach to drug policy and treatment
that focuses on minimizing the adverse effects of both drug use and drug
enforcement. Critical to reducing harm is reality-based drug education.
Harm reduction strategies meet drug users "where they're at,"
addressing conditions of use along with the use itself.
7. The war on drugs helps Colombian people enforce the rule of
law.
The Colombian government has failed to prosecute high ranking army officials
when they violate human rights. Many of the violations are often carried
out with the complicity of illegal paramilitary groups, who are classified
as terrorists by the State Department. Despite these reports the U.S.
continues to pour hundreds of millions of dollars into funding the Colombian
military.
8. Expanding the war on drugs to include the war on terror will
decrease the ability of terrorists to profit from drugs.
Trying to limit the supply of drugs while there is high demand will only
increase the price of drugs and therefore the profits to be made from
selling, producing, or trafficking in drugs. Intensifying the war on drugs
in Colombia has only increased the amount of money armed groups can make
from illegal production and sale of drugs.
Meanwhile, in the U.S. there are attempts to expand the Patriot Act, to
include the war on drugs. This version of the Act would be called the
Vital Interdiction of Criminal Terrorist Organizations Act (VICTORY Act).
The VICTORY Act would represent a major expansion of laws that allow the
government to conduct surveillance, asset forfeiture, racial profiling
under the guise of the terrorism threat.
If you would like to learn more about Colombia or the “War on Drugs’’
please email us at: colombia@afsc.org
By Natalia Cardona
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See http://www.afsc.org/colombia/learn-about/myths-war-on-drugs.htm
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