[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 65 (Wednesday, April 27, 2016)]
[House]
[Pages H1999-H2000]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
UNGASS REFLECTIONS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, last week I had the opportunity to be an
official observer at the United Nations as they had a special meeting
dealing with the international war on drugs.
Much has happened since President Clinton addressed the Global Drug
Summit at the United Nations in 1998, carrying the American war on
drugs to the international stage. But this, in my mind, solidified the
need for us to reset these failed drug policies.
[[Page H2000]]
People across the political spectrum now agree that this approach to
drug policy is flawed and ineffective. We have spent over $1 trillion
on this effort over the years.
We have undermined countries in Latin America and helped unleash an
unprecedented wave of violence in Mexico, killing tens of thousands of
people in the drug wars.
Yet, despite all the effort, all the money, drugs are still widely
available in the United States, actually less expensive than before we
started. We seem unable to even keep drugs out of our own prisons.
America's failure to deal with harm reduction, treatment, and
prevention has helped lead to the epidemic of opioid addiction and
death. In 2013 alone, we lost 20,000 people to prescription drug
overdose.
As people get hooked on amazingly over-prescribed prescription drugs,
it leads to heroin addiction when they substitute it when they can no
longer get access to opioids.
Now, it is interesting that some of the countries that have been most
devastated by this war on drugs, in dealing with the international
cartels--Mexico, Colombia, Guatemala--were there at the United Nations
leading the charge for a different approach.
Many of the presentations that I witnessed were suggestions to the
Outcome Document, with the common theme that it did not go far enough
in reforming the path forward.
Calls for harm reduction, greater access to treatment, and fighting
the barbaric practice of executing drug offenders energized that
consensus.
Now, America was on the sidelines. America was not calling for
adjustment and change in reform. We were sort of between those more
progressive forces, including those countries that have really been in
the throes of the drug wars.
And then there is Iran and China and Russia, and we were sort of
floating in between. It is kind of embarrassing, as an American, to see
the United States not leading.
I come back to Washington, D.C., more committed than ever for the new
administration and the next Congress to be a voice of reform to change
these failed policies.
We need to put an end to the mindless military action and hard-edged
policies that fail and replace them with policies that will make a
difference, saving lives, and having effective regulations as tools.
Now, the United States is moving ahead at reform at the State and
local levels. Forty States now provide some access to medical
marijuana. Four States and the District of Columbia deal with adult
use, and there will be four or five more States that will join this
year.
In 2019, when we go back to the United Nations, hopefully to be able
to make some of these reforms, the world is going to look different.
First of all, there are moves in both Canada and Mexico to expand the
use of medical marijuana and to legalize adult use.
In 2019, virtually every American will have a legal access to medical
marijuana, and we will continue the action at the State level, making
those critical changes. Public opinion, once and for all, will be
settled in favor of regulation, taxation, and responsible adult use.
We will break the shackles of research on marijuana, where the
Federal Government actually gets in the way of being able to have the
information that the scientists and doctors can produce to settle the
question so we don't have to guess.
I am hopeful that the United States will be on the right side of
reform, that we will stop expensive and regressive policies that don't
work, and that we will be able to respond to the emerging American
consensus of the people at the State and local levels to do it better.
This is one effort we can't afford to fail.
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