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Dewey and the War on Drugs

Every year, tens of thousands of Americans are sentenced and jailed for nonviolent drug offenses. These criminals are often victims of mandatory sentencing, a byproduct of the decades old and frankly, outdated, war on drugs. While I understand that the politicians of the past saw a link between crime and rising drug use, the failure of the war on drugs proves that the decriminalization of drugs is necessary. The laws once made sense, but as evidenced by the enormous prison population of America, they are leading to numerous negative consequences. These ridiculous drugs laws unfairly target the poor and minority communities as richer drug offenders often have the means to better lawyers and buy drugs from more discreet and safer places. As I have noted before, a penal legal system is not a productive one. We need a system in place for drug abusers that aims at reform, not jail time. Currently, our tax dollars are being used to house and feed thousands of harmless drug offenders while that money could instead be used to rehabilitate them within their own communities and provide resources for all. If we replace police force with education, we will see better results. Much like the successful no smoking campaign, the war on drugs should aim to educate, not force. An educated community is less likely to do drugs- or at least make more informed decisions on them.

Laws must be judged on their consequences, just like actions. The action of doing a drug affects only yourself and possibly your immediate family who may have to deal with your constant intoxication. However, the mandatory sentencing laws have countless negative consequences. These laws rip families and communities apart, force users to turn to dirty needles and sketchy drugs and push the drug market further into the black market. The role of the government is not to predict that doing drugs will hurt the community, it is to react. The government is needed to react to the workings of drug cartels, as those have many negative affects on the community in which they operate, but the government is not needed to react to the daily using of drugs on the personal level. Users only hurt themselves, sellers hurt many. Drug use is simply not a public matter, just as alcohol consumption by adults isn’t regulated by the government. If the citizen has effective media about drug use, much like cigarettes, the rate of drug use will naturally decline.

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