Nietzsche and History

Drug Deaths and Prohibiition Deaths

Death of a London girl

She was involved

Is there a responsibility for her death beyond the immediate perpetrator's?

Suspect 1: Drug Users (see Tropa de Elite, 28'-34'). Is their use causal? Is it against the law? Should it be punished? What if they have a right to use drugs? (Douglas Husak). In that case, the law would have to allow drug use and drug commerce. How would that affect violence?

Suspect 2: Prohibition of goods and services creates a black market, which in turn creates structures and profits for organized crime. Lack of access to legal conflict regulation leads to violent ionternal sanctions as well as turf wars for domination and demarcation of markets.

Suspect 3: Legislators responsible for law-making. Legal reform could re-create more peaceful conditions. It is their responsibility to do something. But why don't they?

Suspect 4: The public does not demand legalisation. So is it the people's own fault?

Suspect 5: Political parties and governments are responsible for informing the public, organising inquiries, initiate discusssions about various policy alternatives. The government keeps silent, though. Why? It's a vicious circle.





Drug Policy: Prohibitionism and Alternatives

1. Why is drug policy a topic - or better: why should it be?

The world is suffering from an absurd over-incarceration. In the United States. In Brazil. In the Philippines. Single cases: Kenya. One of the main factors responsible for this tragic situation is our drug policy.

The world is suffering from an absurd return to the Middle Ages in terms of punishments. Things that belonged to pre-modern times such as torture and the death penalty had been on the way out for something like 200 years - the gallows and the sword was replaced by the prison and rehabilitation, expressed in what Amnesty International called an irreversible worldwide trend towards the abolition of the death penalty. This trend has been reversed - over the last decades, more and more countries have decided to introduce the death penalty or to re-introduce it even for non-violent offenses. What are these offenses? Drug offenses. Drug policy is responsible for this trend.

The world is suffering from seismic changes in the relation between individual and state rights. Individual rights have been reduced, state rights have been extended so there is less autonomy and more subordination. This is the case in criminal procedure especially in terrorism cases and in drug cases. In both cases, there is no doubt that enemy criminal law has replaced citizens' criminal law. While terrorist legislation has been important, drug legislation has been first to pave the way and to organise consensus for this development. Drug policy is responsible for the erosion of citizenship and the unhealthy growth of police powers.

The world is suffering from ever more terrible infringements of human rights like torture and extrajudicial killings. This cannot only be attributed to the "dark side" of the war on terror. It also ahs to do with the war on drugs - and again, many of the barbaric practices in the war on terror were just copies of the models developed in the war on drugs. The militarization and barbarization of crime control is a central element of a larger process that we are witnessing today. We can call it the process of de-civilization or of the re-barbarization of the world. Drug policy is a central element of this process. And if we do not re-think and re-organize drug policy from scrap, nothing will be able to stop that.

Does drug policy work? Is it effective? Is it efficient?

1. Drug Prohibition is a Real Prohibition Maybe even "the" real Prohibition - because alcohol prohibition in the US was limited to one drug only and very soft on consumers.

2. Drug Prohibition is Much Worse than You Think It's not only about having to hide your marihuana and to deny use and transactions when talking with the outside world. It's not only about the anxiety to be discovered and entering the criminal justice system.

It is also about gangs of the black markets, about no access to law for dispute solution. It is also about weapons, bloody feuds, bloody encounters with law enforcement, and police corruption.

It is about militarisation and competing orders of violence challenging and permeating state powers.

It is also about massacres and the disintegration of institutions. Mexico. And Institutional Anomie Theory.

It is also about the hidden police state - and the hidden state revealing itself in slums in Rio. Drug policy serves as a pretext for continuing coronelismo, dictatorship, überflüssige werden diszipliniert. Ex-Slaveholder-Countries are worse off than others.

3. Drug Prohibition does not influence what it should influence (indifference, Werb 2013)

4. Drug Prohibition affects the very social life (it is supposed to protect): Philippines and Brazil as extremes for youth risk, USA too.

5. Drug Prohibition destroys the fabric of legality - failure does not lead to reform, but to more of the same: earlier intervention, precursors, follow-up phenomena, higher sentences etc.

6. At the Root of the Problem: the International Drug Conventions. They must be introduced and explained shortly and precisely. The incompetence of the governing bodies. The problem of lacking exits. Stifling reform (Jamaica). What hinders countries to just leave by denouncing the treaties?

7. The legal options - why they do not work.

8. What about the Dutch Way?

9. What about the Portuguese Way?

10. What about California and other US states?

11. What about Uruguay?

12. Nothing makes sense if the drug problem is not solved.


Contents: Conventions, injustice and idiocy, how to get out: legal options and impediments, social options (Uruguay) and impediments (good people dirty work).

See also

O Trilema da Proibição e a Saída de Emergência