[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 90 (Wednesday, June 22, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H4373]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE FAILED DRUG WAR
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Colorado (Mr. Polis) for 5 minutes.
Mr. POLIS. Mr. Speaker, 40 years ago this month, President Nixon
launched the war on drugs. Four decades later, I've asked through New
Media for Americans to share with me their thoughts on what I believe
to be a major public policy failure. Just listen to this story of Neil
from Baltimore that Law Enforcement Against Prohibition shared with me.
Late in the evening on October 30, 2000, Neil was awoken by the
ringing of a telephone. As the commander of training for the Baltimore
Police Department, late night calls were not unusual, but this call was
different. He was told that one of his officers had been shot and taken
to the hospital.
The officer was a corporal and a 15-year veteran and undercover
narcotics agent for the Maryland State Police. He was assigned to a
drug enforcement task force and on that night was making his final drug
buy in Washington, D.C., from a mid-level drug dealer when the dealer
decided he wanted both the drugs and the money for himself. He returned
to the car the officer was driving, paused for a moment, and shot the
police officer at point-blank range in the side of the head.
Arriving at the hospital among the scores of family and friends, Neil
was guided into the room where the officer laid with his head bandaged
and bloodied. Neil had to face the officer's wife and children and
explain why their caretaker was no longer with him.
Neil finished his story by writing, ``When the people are gone and
quiet comes, so does the question: Why? Initially thinking of the
covert operation, you rehash the event. How could this happen? What
went wrong? What was the protocol? But then I realized that the
questions I was asking dealt only with the symptoms of a much larger
problem, the war on drugs--the broken policy of drug prohibition.''
Every comprehensive objective government study over the last four
decades has recommended that adults should not be criminalized for
using marijuana, and medical science tells us that by any reasonable
health standard marijuana is comparable to alcohol. It is less
addictive, less toxic, and, unlike alcohol, marijuana does not make
users aggressive and violent.
{time} 1010
We also know that criminalization comes at a very high cost. Each
year, more arrests are made for marijuana possession than for all
violent crimes combined. Marijuana arrests in the U.S. average 850,000
a year. That's one every 37 seconds; and 89 percent of those are just
for possession, not sale or manufacture. Marijuana prohibition is even
having a negative impact on our national parks and forests. We have
Mexican drug cartels growing millions of plants on Federal land.
We've been down this prohibition path with alcohol, and it failed. It
increased crime and violence. Crime bosses got rich, murder rates
skyrocketed, the prisons filled, and deaths from tainted booze soared.
We're seeing the same results today from marijuana prohibition.
Prohibition does not stop people from using marijuana. In fact,
marijuana is the largest cash crop in the country. It just gives
criminals and violent gangs an exclusive franchise on marijuana sales.
It drains resources from law enforcement that would be better spent
fighting violent crime. It makes it harder to keep marijuana away from
children.
So what have we learned in four decades of the failed drug war? It's
this: The biggest part of the harm involving marijuana is caused by the
criminalization of marijuana. And it's time to bring it to an end.
Let me end with a story of Brian from DuPage, whose son was caught up
in the senseless criminalization of marijuana. When Brian's son was in
eighth grade, an incident at school led to the discovery of a small
amount of marijuana. Charges were brought. He was sentenced to
community service. But the real tragedy followed. As a result of the
incident, Brian's son was expelled and barred from reentering any
school in the district. He was forced into a school for delinquents
where he was grouped with kids who had committed violent crimes. He was
basically treated like a criminal. Needless to say, his education
suffered immensely.
Here's what Brian, the father, had to say about his son's experience:
``Did doing this teach my son a lesson? It did not help him. It harmed
him. It disrupted his academic achievement. The school district's
solution to finding a small bag of marijuana was to expel four
students. No education. No counseling. No help. Just kick them out and
wash their hands of the whole thing.''
Using marijuana is harmful. Smoking is harmful. Drinking is harmful.
In fact, I applaud the FDA's new highlighting of the dangers of smoking
and encourage similar efforts to discourage marijuana, which are
impossible under the current criminalization regime. The war on drugs
hurts America, wastes billions of dollars of taxpayer money, fosters
drug-related violence, and does nothing to help Americans who are
confronting serious addiction or serious health issues.
After 40 years, it's time Congress put an end to the drug war's 40-
year failure.
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