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Drug
Policy: A Smorgasbord of Conundrums Spiced by Emotions
Around
Children and Violence
By Eric
E. Sterling - Valporaiso Law Review Vol. 32 No. 2, pp.
597-645, Spring, 1997
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I. INTRODUCTION
Violent
crime is so widespread in America's cities that the
sound of gunfire is an hourly occurrence in hundreds
of neighborhoods.[1]
For the past five years, teenage use of drugs has increased --
especially the use of marijuana[2].
Criminal gangs enrich themselves selling drugs and enlist
young members by offering brotherhood and identity in
a world of isolation. Parents are in anguish and some
march in the streets against the threat to their children
of drugs, gangs, and guns. Simultaneously, state legislatures
hear the parents and wrestle with the use of marijuana
to treat those struggling with the nausea of cancer
chemotherapy or the wasting of AIDS. Congress regularly
holds angry hearings about drug issues. To the observer
in Washington, it feels as though a swirling thundercloud
of new programs and political charges crashes over the
political landscape with the crack of lightning, thunder,
high winds and torrential rains. In 1996, for example,
the President was repeatedly attacked by his Republican
opponents for being AWOL in the "war on drugs." Yet
the voters in two states, despite warnings from the
nation's "drug czar" that these initiatives would lead
to the "legalization" of drugs, passed initiatives supporting
the medical use of marijuana. At the end of 1996 and
at the beginning of the new term, the highest profile
issue before the nation's drug czar was his counterattack
against those successful efforts at the ballot box.
This
Article weaves through the disparate issues surrounding
kids, guns, gangs, and drugs. The principal thread is
that rhetorical concern for children has overthrown
the analysis of drug policy issues in a variety of contexts.
The rhetorical concern is not directly related to the
well-being of children, but to political positioning.
First, this paper, in commenting upon the proposals
of Professors Polsby and Kleiman in this symposium looks
at issues surrounding "price" versus "availability"
of drugs, the assertion of "zero-tolerance" of drug-use
by children, the assertion of a "right" to use drugs,
the violence of the crack markets, the broad social
issues that need to be addressed for changing drug-using
or drug-selling behavior, and the triumph of punishment
over persuasion. In a second subdivision, this Article
questions the effectiveness of the myriad of strategies
to address urban violence as long as they are constrained
by the conventional wisdom regarding drugs. The final
subdivision of the paper is an overview of the current
status of the conflict over medical marijuana. It analyzes
the text of the California and Arizona propositions,
the political and regulatory attack lodged against them,
and describes the litigation that has been filed in
support of the propositions. A cornerstone of federal
opposition to medical marijuana (and even the 1984 proposal
to allow heroin to be dispensed to terminal cancer patients)
has been that changing the law would send the wrong
message to children.
On
to Part II
Go to Section III
Go to Section IV
Go to Conclusion
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