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Fear and hate are the cornerstones of the
war on drugs. We are taught to hate drug users and fear that we are too weak to
resist the power of drugs. Prohibitionists harness negative emotions about drugs
to create an elaborate system of social control. As we have seen, any atrocity
can be justified by the drug war. However, we generally just imagine the
atrocities could never happen to us, since our fear has kept us away from
illegal drugs. The fear has been so expertly promoted that many Americans have
been willing to forego certain constitutional rights and civil liberties, while
simultaneously ceding more power to government officials and other drug war
profiteers. The institutions trying to control the masses also recognize the
utility of the drug war as social control. Since drug use frequently does not
show outwardly, the drug war is an excuse to invade the private life of the
individual. Everyone is a suspect. In order to see who really is and who really
isn't a drug user, surveillance is necessary. Urinalysis in the workplace is an
excellent example. Drug testing is sold as a safety procedure, but is really
quite a bit more. Not only is it a process which demeans the employee while
demonstrating the great power of the employer, drug testing gives the employer a
glimpse into the employee's medical life, and the process asserts the employer's
right to regulate behavior outside the workplace. Drug fear offers employers a
broad justification to exert additional control over their employees. As we have
seen, the additional control offered to government is even more invasive and
overwhelming.
The drug war offers a slippery slope over which to slide into a completely
authoritarian, surveillance-based police state. Drug war propaganda insists that
individuals are too weak to control drug use. As criticism builds over the
failure of drug policies, law enforcement officials claim they can't do the job
either; instead each individual and institution is obliged to spy on their
fellow citizens.
By zeroing in on the weakness of individuals, drug warriors highlight the need
for themselves and other drug war institutions. If we can't control ourselves,
what can we do? Pay someone else to control us, and give them whatever weapons
they need, constitutional or not.
Ironically, the drug war also reinforces the idea that individuals are solely
responsible for the problems of society. The drug war tells us that when we
approach the problem of workplace safety, all that really matters is the types
of drugs used by individual workers, not the condition of the workplace or its
regulations. The drug war tells us inner cities are deteriorating because of
drugs, not because of poverty and neglect. The propaganda of the drug war
constantly reinforces the idea that drug users should be punished for their
sins, not helped with their problems. Ultimately, the drug war exploits many of
our personal weaknesses, and makes them open for pillage by some of the
strongest institutions in society. If we continue to support the war blindly, it
can only continue to balloon out of control. Drug war logic interprets signs of
"drug problem" improvement as the vindication of getting tough; signs of failure
are interpreted as a failure to get tough. Even though many recognize that this
war can't be won, those promoting the war offer nothing but further escalation.
Fortunately, some brave individuals have stood up against this devastating
crusade.
59. Gilliom, John (1996). Surveillance, Privacy and the Law, pp. 43-51.
How To Pass A Marijuana Drug Test.
60. Reinarman et al, (1997). Crack in America, pp. 37-39.
How To Pass A Marijuana Drug Test.
61. To see how the Partnership for a Drug Free America promotes this ideology,
see Buchanan, et al (Spring, 1998). "This is the Partnership for a Drug-Free
America: Any Questions?" Journal of Drug Issues p. 346. Hit "Back" button to
return to text. If this title is out of print at retailers, you may want to
search Powell's Books.
Source:
"Maximizing Harm: Losers and Winners
in the Drug War," http://www.maximizingharm.com/
Author: Stephen Young
How To Pass A Marijuana Drug Test
Information From Always Test Clean.
How to pass a
drug test is the question more and more people are faced with each and every day. Employee
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