Deconstructing a Defense of Drug Prohibition

The "war on drugs" was lost the moment it was declared. As we should have learned from the results of that "Noble Experiment" that was conducted between 1920 and 1933, outlawing things that the people, for the most part, usually enjoy without violating the rights of others does not result in orderly and unquestioning compliance, but rather in gangsterism and the corruption and violence of the black markets that naturally form to supply the demand for those outlawed things. Nonetheless, prohibitionists continue to insist that interdiction can eventually work, "if only..."

In a May 29, 2006 commentary for the St. Louis Post Dispatch, Daniel K. Duncan and Edward F. Tasch of the St. Louis area chapter of the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse made yet another weak and logically flawed case for the continuation of a ridiculously ineffective policy of drug interdiction that creates more problems than it solves while masquerading as a solution to itself.

The title of the editorial in question is, "Legalization is a Terrible Idea," which, ironically enough, is a concept with which I heartily agree.

"Legalizing" currently illegal drugs will only serve to unclog our criminal justice system and eventually reduce our prison populations, but it will do nothing about the vast underground economy that supplies the never-ending demand for certain uncontrolled substances.

If we are to ever have any hope of eliminating the black markets and the gangsterism, corruption, and violence that go with them, we must face the reality of our human nature, abandon the pipe dream of a "Drug Free America," and take control of the market, bringing it out of the shadows and into the light so that we can know who is selling what to whom and for how much. For this purpose, "legalizing" illegal drugs is not enough. We must go several steps farther and regulate unregulated drugs.

Strangely enough, Mr. Duncan and Mr. Tasch opened their editorial with a quotation from H.L. Mencken, "For every problem there is one solution: simple, neat, and wrong," an axiom that is congruent with regard to prohibitionist policies as well as the notion of "legalization."

Untenable
Defending an untenable position is impossible if one plays by the strict rules of logic. Prohibitionists, knowing that such contests almost invariably serve to reveal the numerous weaknesses of their position, do not often engage in actual debates with tangible opponents, but rather with themselves, acting in both roles so that they may avoid the embarrassment of being faced with the inevitable exposure of the untenability of the boondoggle known as the war on drugs.

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Article Author: Margaret Romao Toigo

Margaret Romao Toigo is a retired stripper, beauty school dropout, and wannabe intellectual who dabbles in a wide variety of fleeting endeavors and life-long obsessions. Although Ms. Toigo is not a real writer, she nonetheless has her very own web …

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Article comments

  • 1 - Kirk Muse

    Jun 03, 2006 at 11:19 pm

    Several years ago I had a friend who used to boast
    that he drank at least 25 cups of coffee a day.
    Unfortunately, he died of a heart attack when he was in his mid 40's.



    Suppose my friend was a very famous athlete who had died when he was in his early 20's after consuming more than 30 cups of coffee the previous day. Suppose this famous athlete was expected to be the next Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson or Larry Bird.



    Suppose that this famous athletes who had tragically died before his very promising professional career had begun, had his picture on the front page of most of our nation's
    newspapers and his story was on the network news for several days.



    Do you think that self-serving politicians would have called for the prohibition of all caffeine containing beverages?


    Would we now be involved in a war on caffeine?

  • 2 - Howard Dratch

    Jun 04, 2006 at 3:55 pm

    Logic. Reason. Discussion of an untenable "fight". How dare you bring logic into an emotional controversy that brings vituperative pleasure to so many? Some people need to blame someone or some thing for all the ills of their society.

    Imagine: "If we are to address drug abuse and addiction as a public health problem rather than as an issue of law enforcement, then we must take our focus away from drugs themselves, regardless of their various legal statuses, for they are not truly relevant to the underlying causes of self-destructive behavior." Logic, again.

    It was a fine article and I enjoyed your extensive and insightful blog.

  • 3 - Ray Ellis

    Jun 04, 2006 at 5:49 pm





    The so-called "war on drugs" was never anything more than a PR spin by a government diverting attention from its own complicity in the international drug trade.
    But you, Ms. Toigo, speak eloquently about the fallacy of the prohibitionists' strategies. Consequently, I would not expect an invitation from the Administration anytime soon if I were you.








  • 4 - Peter J

    Jun 04, 2006 at 9:02 pm

    Ms Voigo, you stated your case elegantly, unfortunately when you use too many words on the self riteous highbrows who dismiss anything that is logic to their drug situation you provide them with too many avenues to which they will digress. It must be kept short and sweet, very simple.
    To these people I would ask simply how was this countries alcohol problem(problem being associated crimes)solved? Is alcohol not a drug?
    The question answers itself!

  • 5 - Margaret Romao Toigo

    Jun 04, 2006 at 10:10 pm

    Mr. Muse, if ever there was a measure proposed to outlaw caffeine, civil unrest would ensue immediately, with me leading the charge.

    What causes some drugs to be demonized while others are not has always been beyond my comprehension. I still cannot figure out why marijuana is still illegal and have been perplexed by this conundrum ever since I discovered that the outlaw weed is far less intoxicating than the perfectly legal, hard drug known as alcohol.


    Thank you, Mr. Dratch and Mr. Ellis. I assure you that I am not holding my breath in anticipation of receiving an invitation to discuss drug policy with the current administration.


    Mr. J, I understand exactly what you mean about "too many words." Indeed, if you cannot say it in one breath, nobody is going to pay attention.

    However, it is not as if I am expecting to encounter any prohibitionists who will wish to challenge me to a debate as they avoid me like the plague.

    Anyway, my article was not directed at prohibitionists, but rather toward my fellow reformers in the hope that they might find a few good arguments therein and possibly offer me a few that I haven't thought of yet.

  • 6 - Paul S

    Jun 05, 2006 at 9:34 pm

    Nicely put. I think it is always worth pointing out to the supporters of Prohibition that nearly every problem they ascribe to illegal drugs is either directly caused or exacerbated by the fact that those drugs are illegal.

    As for their opinions on alcohol, I will concede to Mssrs. Duncan and Tasch that indeed alcohol kills far more people than any illegal drug. In fact it kills more than all illegal drugs combined.

    And yet, it is still legal. They should consider this, and then ask themselves why we persist in keeping these relatively innocuous drugs illegal, when alcohol is not? They might also meditate on the proposition that the American people consider all of the problems with alcohol abuse to be both manageable and worthwhile, in order to keep it legal.

  • 7 - Kirk Muse

    Jun 06, 2006 at 4:14 pm

    When Coca-Cola contained cocaine instead of caffeine,and sold for 5 cents a bottle, we didn't have "drug-related crime," drug lords or even drug dealers as we know them today.

    The Czech Republic is the only country where adult citizens can legally grow, possess and use marijuana. The Czech Republic has almost no heroin, cocaine or meth problem and their crime rate is a tiny fraction of the U. S. crime rate.

    Will we adopt the Czech drug policy? No.

    Too many people, organizations and institutions have a vested interest in continuing the status quo of marijuana prohibition.

  • 8 - Margaret Romao Toigo

    Jun 07, 2006 at 1:15 pm

    Indeed, many people, organizations and institutions have a vested interest in continuing the status quo and I submit that this is the reason why the silence in the public square with regard to this issue is so deafening.

    For several years now, prohibitionists have avoided publicly debates with reformers because they know they will get their butts kicked every time, which is why the authors of the editorial in question play at debate with some imaginary "drug legalizers," instead of real reformers who will readily expose the untenability of the war on drugs.

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